Sultan (Ottoman Turkish:óÃÂ֍ÃÂ) and Hatun (Mongolian: ᠬᠠᠲᠤᠨ àðÃÂðý; Old Turkic: ð°´ð°Âð°£, <small>romanized:</small> katun; Ottoman Turkish: îçêÃÂÃÂ, <small>romanized:</small> hatun or ÃÂçïÃÂàromanized: kadñn; Persian: îçêÃÂàkhÃÂtà «n; Chinese: å¯æÂ¦; Hindi: à ¤Âà ¤¼à ¤¾à ¤¤à ¥Âà ¤¨ <small>romanized:</small> khÃÂtà «n) are the two imperial female titles that were given to Ottoman Princesses, daughters of Ottoman Sultans.
For the daughters of a sovereign Sultan or a daughter of a son of a sultan the titles that were used are:
For the sons and daughters of sultana the titles that were used are:
For a son:
For a daughter:
Before the 16th century, Ottoman imperial princesses and consorts of the Sultan held the same title after their given name, hatun, the Turkish form of the Mongolian title khatun (the feminine equivalent of khan). By the beginning of the 16th century, Bayezid II (1481-1512), once ascended to the throne, granted his daughters and granddaughters in the male line the title of "Sultan" and his granddaughters in the female line that of "Hanñmsultan", which replaced the simple honorific "Hatun" in use until then. His grandsons in female line obtained instead the title of "Sultanzade". Bayezid's reform of female titles remains in effect today among the surviving members of the Ottoman dynasty. So ottoman princesses held the title of sultan after their given name. This usage underlines the Ottoman conception of sovereign power as family prerogative.
The formal way of addressing an Ottoman princess is Devletlû ðsmetlu (given name) Sultân Aliyyetü'à Â-à Âân Hazretleri, i.e., Sultana (given name). The title of sons of princesses are sultanzade and daughters of princesses are hanimsultan. The title of the consorts of princesses are called damat, the princess also had the right never to consummate the marriage this is because they were often married even very young and sometimes even with older men. Sultana, a title which usually referred to female sultans relative to Westerners, does not exist in the Ottoman language. Nevertheless, westerners often translated their official title, sultan, to sultana, possibly to distinguish them from the Ottoman sovereign.
This is a list of Ottoman princesses, the daughters of the monarchs of the Ottoman Empire who ruled over the transcontinental empire from its inception in 1299 to its dissolution in 1922.
When a prince (Ã Âehzade)'s concubine gave birth to a girl, she took the title of sultana (sultan). These little girls, unlike the sons of a prince who succeeded in ascending the throne, were not killed when their father did not become sultan, this is because they could never aspire to the throne.
When a sultana gave birth to a daughter, she received the title of hanimsultan (Sultana madam).