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The Romance of Hurrem, The Slave Empress And Suleiman The Magnificent

The Romance of Hurrem, The Slave Empress And Suleiman The Magnificent

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During the 16th century a Christian slave, captured when only 15-years-old, shattered the traditional rules of the Ottoman Empire and through her intelligence and charm became its first Empress, Hurrem Sultan.  Known throughout history in both the East and the West as a temptress, manipulator, witch, seductress, and a scheming foreigner, historians are now working to establish a truer depiction of her extraordinary life. Through novels, plays and exotic paintings her negative reputation became well established but those previous beliefs have been corrected to produce a more realistic assessment of her life and her remarkable accomplishments. Her tarnished reputation had been built mainly on rumors and secondhand accounts from those anxious to discredit her. Most women who dared to step beyond the long-established boundaries of ‘proper female behavior’ were usually condemned by society. Previously historians in the West had no actual accounts nor hard evidence, just stories and speculations that established her as a fictional conception of the European imagination. This negative image of the Turkish culture and of the Ottoman’s most famous woman, Hurrem Sultan, was transmitted to the West by travelers, diplomats and merchants; this false perception of her character endured in historical accounts of the Ottoman Empress for centuries.

Interior of the Harem at Topkapi Palace, Istanbul (Image: Courtesy Micki Pistorius)

As the famous Orientalist Edward Said in his groundbreaking book, Orientalism, stated, “ The web of racism, cultural stereotypes, political imperialism, dehumanizing ideology… is very strong indeed.” The distinction between East and West is often a basis for elaborate theories, novels and social descriptions.  As a cross-cultural and transnational figure, Hurrem was the ideal symbol of the ‘Exotic Female Other’.  As a foreigner, a slave, a Christian and a woman with beautiful long red hair, she was inevitably evil and in possession of powerful supernatural abilities, a threatening figure in the minds of the East and the West. By researching official documents and combing through personal letters and court communications, a new and more accurate understanding of her role in the history of the Ottoman Empire has been presented recently by Ottoman scholars.

Suleiman The Magnificent by Titian - Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien (1530) (Public Domain)

Roxolana The Slave Meets Sultan Suleiman The Magnificent

Known as Hurrem Sultan in the East and Roxolana in the West, this enticing, legendary figure has finally been demythologized by historians who are still revising and rewriting her actual persona and evaluating the influence of her prominent position in the reign and private life of Suleiman the Magnificent (1494-1566). 

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Dr Marion Dolan received her PhD from the University of Pittsburgh, majoring in Medieval manuscripts, minoring in Medieval architecture and history of astronomy. She is the author of several books including Astronomical Knowledge Transmission Through Illustrated Aratea Manuscripts and Decoding Astronomy in art and Architecture.

Top Image: Deriv Roxelana and Süleyman the Magnificent by the German baroque painter Anton Hickel, (1780) and Tughra of Suleiman the Magnificent (Public Domain) (Public Domain)

By: Dr Marion Dolan

 

Marion

Dr Marion Dolan is retired from the University of Pittsburgh where she was an adjunct professor in the history of art and architecture and lectured for the Osher Lifelong Learning program at Carnegie-Mellon University for many years. She published a... Read More
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