Ayà Âe Hubbi Hatun (; "the living one" or "womanly"; died 1590) was a lady-in-waiting to Sultan Selim II and later to his son Sultan Murad III of the Ottoman Empire. She was a notable Ottoman poet of the sixteenth century.
Born as Ayà Âe, Hubbi Hatun spent her early childhood in the city of Amasya. She was the daughter of à Âeyh Akà Âemseddin, and granddaughter of Beà Âiktaà Âlñ à Âeyh Yahya Efendi. She was very well educated, and had learned Arabic, and studied poetry.
She married her first cousin, son of her maternal aunt, Prince Selim's tutor, Akà Âemseddinzade à Âemsi Efendi, milk brother of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent. She had a daughter married to poet Mehmed Vusuli Efendi, known as Molla ÃÂelebi.
A garden in Fñndñklñ belonged to Hubbi Hatun.
After her husband's death in 1551, she remained at the court and was a boon companion of Prince Selim. Hubbi Hatun was famous for her beauty and poetry. She was rumoured to have had love affairs with several of Selim's courtiers. When Selim ascended the throne in 1566, Hubbi Hatun came to Istanbul. After Selim's death in 1574, Hubbi Hatun became a lady-in-waiting to his son, the new Sultan Murad III. She was influential in the reign of both Sultan Selim II and his son Murad III, along with other musahibes (favourites) of Murad, who included mistress of the housekeeper Canfeda Hatun and mistress of financial affairs Raziye Hatun.
Hubbi Hatun died in 1590 in Istanbul and was buried at Eyüp cemetery.
She wrote lyric poems (gazel) and odes (kaside). She also wrote a narrative poem (mesnevi) under the title "Hürà Âid and Cemà Âid", which consisted of more than three thousand beyits. Her style of writing poetry was not feminine, and she wrote just like her male colleagues. She was praised in tezkires for her poetic skills. The poetic persona (mahlas) "Hubbi", with which Hubbi Hatun signed her gazels in the last hemistich, can also be found at the end of a risale (message or letter), a short work on religious warfare entitled "ðmaduâÂÂl-Cihad".
The following poetry was written by Hubbi Hatun.
<blockquote> Being feminine is no shame to the name of the sun...<br/> Being masculine is no glory to the crescent moon. </blockquote>
Another set of poetry written by Hubbi Hatun included, "Der RaÃÂbet-i Dua": <blockquote> Dua temsili Yusuf gibi her dem<br>Kim ana müà Âteridir halkñ alem
Verir her kià Âi makdurunca gevher<br>Anñn ta müà Âterisinden olalar
Sen oldun à Âimdi hem ol zen misali<br>Kaçan arz eyledi Yusuf cemali
Geturüp nice rià Âte anda bir zen<br>Hñridar oldu ana canu dilden </blockquote>