Müveddet Kadın

Müveddet Kadın
Empress consort of the Ottoman Empire
Tenure 3 July 1918 – 1 November 1922
Born Şadiye Çıhçı
12 October 1893
Adapazarı, Ottoman Empire
Died c. 1951
Çengelköy, Bosphorus, Istanbul, Turkey
Burial Çengelköy cemetery
Spouse Mehmed VI
(m. 24 April 1911 – 16 May 1926)
Şakir Bey Eminpaşazade
(m. 2 May 1932, div. 28 February 1936)
Issue Şehzade Mehmed Ertuğrul
Full name
Müveddet Kadın
House House of Çıhçı (by birth)
House of Osman (by marriage)
Father Kato Davut Bey Çıhcı
Mother Ayşe Hanım
Religion Sunni Islam

Müveddet Kadın (12 October 1893 c. 1951) was the Empress consort of Sultan Mehmed VI of the Ottoman Empire.[1]

Life

At a very young age Müveddet Kadın was taken to the Çengelköy Palace by Şehzade Vahideddin Efendi's treasurer, Habibe Hanım, who was Müveddet's aunt. While in service in the palace she was noticed by Vahideddin and he fell in love with her. She was married firstly to Vahideddin, as his third wife, on 24 April 1911. The marriage took place at Çengelköy Palace.[2] A year after the marriage in 1912 she gave birth to her only son Şehzade Mehmed Ertuğrul Efendi.[3] When Vahideddin succeeded to the throne as Mehmed VI in 1918, Müveddet became İkinci Kadınefendi (Second Imperial Lady Consort).

She joined the deposed Sultan in exile in San Remo, Italy. In San Remo they were living in a mansion. In 1929 after the death of her husband she moved to Alexandria. She married secondly on 2 May 1932 to Şakir Bey Eminpaşazade at Alexandria but soon she was divorced on 28 February 1936. In 1944 after the death of her son she wanted to return to Istanbul. She was allowed to return to Turkey in 1948.

She died in 1950 at Çengelköy, Bosphorus, Istanbul and was buried in a cemetery in Çengelköy.[4]

References

  1. Günay Günaydın (2006). Haremin son gülleri. Mevsimsiz Yayınları. ISBN 978-9944-987-03-5.
  2. Bir Çerkes prensesinin harem hatıraları. L & M. 2004. ISBN 978-975-6491-31-7.
  3. "Genealogy of the Ottoman Royal Family".
  4. Christopher Buyers. "The Royal Ark – Royal and Ruling Houses of Africa, Asia, Oceania and the Americas". 4dw.net.
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