Meyliservet Kadınefendi

Meyliservet Kadınefendi
Dördüncü Kadınefendi
Tenure 30 May 1876 - 31 August 1876
Spouse Murad V
Issue Fehime Sultan
Full name
Devletlu İsmetlu Meyliservet Dördüncü Kadınefendi Hazretleri (royal name)
House House of Osman (by marriage)
Born 21 October 1854
Batumi, Georgia
Died 9 December 1903
Ortaköy Palace, Istanbul, Ottoman Empire
Burial Eyüp Cemetery
Religion Islam

Meyliservet Kadınefendi (21 October 1854 - 9 December 1903) was the wife of Sultan Murad V of the Ottoman Empire.

Biography

Royal styles of
Meyliservet Kadınefendi
Reference style Her Majesty
Spoken style Your Majesty
Alternative style Kadın

Meyliservet was born on 21 October 1854 to a Circassian noble family in Batumi, Georgia. She came to Istanbul with her family, where she was delivered at the court of the Ottoman Sultan. She was renamed Meyliservet and was given a thoroughly Turkish and Muslim education in the harem department of Çırağan Palace. Receiving her education in the palace, Meyliservet also went unto court service. When she entered her twentieth year she was noticed by Sultan Murad V.

Murad proposed her and Meyliservet consented to the will of their parents in the marriage proposal of the Sultan. At the age of twenty, Meyliservet married Murad on 8 June 1874 in the Ortaköy Palace. A year after the marriage she gave birth to her only daughter, Fehime Sultan. Reining for three months, Murad was deposed due to mental instability and his whole family was imprisoned in the Çırağan Palace.

Once Meliservet got over a fever but was still in a delicate state. One evening she gathered around her the kalfas of whom she was fond and had them read aloud to her the novel Hasan the Sailor. She fainted for some time, and became so ill that she became unable to speak. After three days she made it known that she wanted pen and paper. She wrote the following testament and showed it to Murad: "I shall not recover from this illness. I entrust my daughter into your care." She died on 9 December 1903 and was buried in Eyüp Cemetery, Istanbul.[1]

References

  1. Harun Açba (2007). Kadın efendiler: 1839-1924. Profil. ISBN 978-9-759-96109-1.