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Necla Sultan
View on WikipediaNecla Hibetullah Sultan (Ottoman Turkish: نجله هبت الله سلطان; also Necla Osmanoğlu, 16 May 1926 – 6 October 2006) was an Ottoman princess, the daughter Şehzade Ömer Faruk, the son of the last caliph, Abdulmejid II, and Şehsuvar Hanım. Her mother was Sabiha Sultan, daughter of Sultan Mehmed VI and Nazikeda Kadın.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Necla Sultan was born on 16 May 1926 in Nice, France.[1][2][3] Her father was Şehzade Ömer Faruk, son of Abdulmejid II and Şehsuvar Hanım, and her mother was Sabiha Sultan, daughter of Mehmed VI and Nazikeda Kadın. She was the youngest child of her parents.[4] She had two sisters, Neslişah Sultan, five years older than her and Zehra Hanzade Sultan, three years older than her.[2]
Upon the news of her birth, her paternal grandfather Abdulmejid, named her Hibetullah, whereas her maternal grandfather Mehmed, send a telegram from Sanremo, Italy conveying his blessings and naming her Necla. Hence her name was 'Necla Hibetullah'.[5][6] However, some hours later another telegram arrived from San Remo, which turned the joyous day to unbearable suffering, Sultan Mehmed died after some hours after the birth of Necla, hence the day turned sorrowful.[6]
Necla spend her childhood in France, Behzade Kalfa took care of Necla when she was young. As Behzade had cold relations with her grandfather, she did her competence to set her against her grandmother Şehsuvar, but despite this negative side she took care of Necla splendidly.[7]
For their early education, she and her sisters were enrolled in the public school where she and they received their early education from, there they were taught English, French and German. The princesses received their religious education at home and were taught the Ottoman alphabet by Kamil Bey Kiligil, the second husband of Naciye Sultan, who taught the three princesses alongside his own stepchildren Mahpeyker Hanımsultan, Türkan Hanımsultan and Sultanzade Ali Bey, every Sunday.[8][9]
In 1938, Necla, her parents and sisters moved to Egypt, whereas their grandfather moved to Paris.[6][8]
Marriage
[edit]In 1940, due to World War II Necla and her family was impoverished, as Abdulmejid wasn't able to send them money.[10] The same year, her sisters married Egyptian princes, Neslişah married Prince Muhammad Abdel Moneim,[11] and Hanzade married Prince Muhammad Ali, respectively.[12]
In 1943, Necla married Egyptian prince, Amr Ibrahim in Cairo, Egypt, hence the three sisters were all married into the same dynasty, and were styled as "princesses of Egypt and princesses of Ottoman Empire".[2][6] The couple's only child, a son Prince Osman Rifat was born on 20 May 1951 in Cairo.[2] In 1953, Necla, her husband and son settled in Switzerland, after the proclamation of Egypt as a republic in 1952.[13]
Necla's father, Ömer Faruk developed an increased interest in his cousin Mihrişah Sultan, the daughter of crown prince Şehzade Yusuf Izzeddin. It was also a public knowledge that things were not going well between Faruk and her mother Sabiha.[14] She and her sisters sided with their mother. Faruk accused Sabiha of turning their daughters against him. But he was already in love with Mihrişah and the issue of the council was just an excuse.[15] In 1948, after twenty-eight years of marriage, Faruk divorced Sabiha, and married Mihrişah,[16] After the revocation of the law of exile for princesses in 1952, her mother moved to Istanbul.[17] Necla was widowed by the death of Amr Ibrahim in 1977.[2]
Death
[edit]Necla Sultan died on 6 October 2006, at the age of eighty in Madrid, Spain.[6][13] On 16 October her body was taken to Istanbul. The funeral took place in Bebek Mosque, and was attended by her eldest sister Neslişah, her son Osman Rifat, and other members of Ottoman dynasty. She was buried beside her mother and elder sister Hanzade in Aşiyan Asri Cemetery, Istanbul.[6][13][18]
Issue
[edit]By her marriage, Necla Sultan had a son:
Honour
[edit]- Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the Eagle of Georgia[20]
Ancestry
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See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Bardakçı 2017, p. xiv.
- ^ a b c d e Adra, Jamil (2005). Genealogy of the Imperial Ottoman Family 2005. pp. 36–37.
- ^ Bardakçı 2017, p. 85.
- ^ Bardakçı 2017, pp. 85–86.
- ^ Bardakçı 2017, p. 86.
- ^ a b c d e f "Mustafa Kemal, önceki gün vefat eden Neclá Sultan'ın annesiyle evlenmek istemişti". Hürriyet. 8 October 2006. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
- ^ Bardakçı 2017, p. 131.
- ^ a b "Hanedanın en güzel sultanı 101 yaşında!". ayseosmanoglu.com. 19 September 2024. Retrieved 11 January 2026.
- ^ Bardakçı 2017, p. 132.
- ^ Bardakçı 2017, p. 166.
- ^ Bardakçı 2017, p. 167.
- ^ Bardakçı 2017, p. 168.
- ^ a b c "İstanbul: Necla Hibetullah Sultan, Madrid'de Vefat Etti". Haberler. 7 October 2006. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
- ^ Bardakçı 2017, p. 205.
- ^ Bardakçı 2017, p. 208.
- ^ Bardakçı 2017, p. 171.
- ^ Bardakçı 2017, p. 266.
- ^ "Necla Sultan yurtdışında öldü, İstanbul'da gömüldü". Gazetevatan. 17 October 2006. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
- ^ a b "Osman Rifat Ibrahim, grandson of last Ottoman Sultan, passes away". TürkiyeToday. 1 February 2025. Retrieved 8 April 2025.
- ^ "Elenco De Caballeros Y Damas De La Orden Del Águila De Georgia Y La". studylib.es (in Spanish). 2016-11-16. Retrieved 2022-01-17.
Sources
[edit]- Bardakçı, Murat (2017). Neslishah: The Last Ottoman Princess. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-9-774-16837-6.
Necla Sultan
View on GrokipediaFamily Background
Parents and Origins
Necla Sultan's father, Şehzade Ömer Faruk Efendi, was the only son of Caliph Abdülmecid II. Born on 27 February 1898 at Feriye Palace in Ortaköy, Istanbul, he received a comprehensive education typical of Ottoman princes, attending Galatasaray High School, the Theresianum Academy in Vienna, and the Prussian Potsdam Military Academy.[3] He served as a lieutenant in the Prussian Guard and participated in World War I battles at Galicia and Verdun.[3] Her mother, Sabiha Sultan (full name Rukiye Sabiha Osmanoğlu), was the youngest daughter of Sultan Mehmed VI. Born on March 19, 1894, at Feriye Palace in Ortaköy, she was raised initially in Çengelköy Mansion following a fire at Feriye Palace in 1898–1899, where she received education in French, German, Arabic, and Latin.[1] After her father's ascension to the throne in 1918, she resided at Yıldız Palace. She married Ömer Faruk Efendi on April 29, 1920, in a ceremony at Yıldız Palace, and the couple lived in a Nişantaşı mansion during winters and the Tophane Müşiri Zeki Pasha Mansion in Rumelihisarı during summers.[1] The family's circumstances were profoundly shaped by the Ottoman Empire's collapse following its defeat in World War I and the subsequent Turkish War of Independence, culminating in the abolition of the sultanate on November 1, 1922, by the Grand National Assembly of Turkey.[4] The caliphate was abolished on March 3, 1924, under the 1924 Law of Banishment, which stripped the imperial family of Turkish citizenship and mandated their exile, allowing only three days for departure and requiring property liquidation within a year.[4] Ömer Faruk, Sabiha, and their young daughters initially relocated to Territet, Switzerland, before settling in Nice, France, in 1924, where they endured modest living conditions due to the loss of imperial wealth, restricted access to funds, and the sale of assets at undervalued prices; each prince received only 1,000 Turkish lira upon departure, leading many family members to face financial hardship and improvised livelihoods abroad.[4][5]Siblings
Necla Hibetullah Sultan was the youngest of three daughters born to Şehzade Ömer Faruk Efendi and Rukiye Sabiha Sultan. Her eldest sister, Fatma Neslişah Sultan, was born on 4 February 1921 in Istanbul and was recognized as the last princess of the Ottoman dynasty by birth, the final member registered in the Ottoman family ledger before its abolition.[6] In 1940, Neslişah married Prince Muhammad Abdel Moneim, heir presumptive to the Egyptian throne and son of the last Khedive Abbas II, in a union that symbolized the Ottoman-Egyptian royal ties amid exile; the couple had two children before separating in 1962, and Neslişah died on 2 April 2012 in Istanbul at age 91.[7][8] The middle sister, Zehra Hanzade Sultan, was born on 12 September 1923 at Dolmabahçe Palace in Istanbul.[9] Like Neslişah, she married into Egyptian royalty, wedding Prince Mehmed Ali Ibrahim—nephew of King Fuad I—in Cairo on 30 May 1940 at age 16; the marriage produced two children, a daughter named Fazile and a son named Ahmed Rifat Neslişah, though it ended in divorce.[1] Hanzade later lived between Cairo, Paris, and Istanbul, dying on 19 March 1998 in Paris at age 74, after which her remains were interred in Istanbul's Aşiyan Cemetery alongside her mother and sisters.[10] Born on 15 May 1926 in Nice, France, Necla was the only sibling delivered in exile, nearly two years after the 1924 expulsion of the Ottoman dynasty from Turkey under the Law for the Banishment of the Ottoman Dynasty.[11] The three sisters endured shared hardships of displacement and poverty following the abolition of the caliphate, initially settling in southern France before relocating to Egypt in the late 1930s to escape financial strain, where arranged marriages to Egyptian princes offered relative security.[10] Neslişah's prominent union provided a measure of stability for the family during their peripatetic life across Europe and the Middle East, while the sisters maintained close bonds, later reuniting in Istanbul after Turkey lifted the banishment decree in 1952; their mutual support was evident in their collective burial site, reflecting enduring familial ties forged in adversity.[12][1]Early Life
Birth
Necla Hibetullah Sultan was born on 15 May 1926 in Nice, France, amid the Ottoman imperial family's exile following the establishment of the Turkish Republic.[1] She was the third and youngest daughter of Şehzade Ömer Faruk Efendi, son of the last caliph Abdulmejid II, and his cousin Rukiye Sabiha Sultan, daughter of the deposed Sultan Mehmed VI.[1] Her elder sisters were Fatma Neslişah Sultan, born in 1921, and Zehra Hanzade Sultan, born in 1923.[1] Necla's birth occurred the day before the death of her maternal grandfather, Sultan Mehmed VI, who passed away on 16 May 1926 in San Remo, Italy, at the age of 65.[13] This temporal alignment underscored the poignant timing of her entry into a dynasty already scattered by political upheaval, as the family had been forced from Turkey two years earlier under the 1924 Law of Banishment, which prohibited Ottoman descendants from residing in the country and stripped them of their imperial privileges.[14] Necla's arrival symbolized both continuity and closure for the 600-year-old Ottoman lineage amid its enforced diaspora.[1] Her full name, Necla Hibetullah Sultan, reflected familial honors: "Necla" was bestowed by her grandfather Mehmed VI, and "Hibetullah"—an Ottoman Turkish compound meaning "gift of God"—was given by her paternal grandfather Abdulmejid II.[1]Childhood and Initial Exile
Necla Hibetullah Sultan was born on 15 May 1926 in Nice, France, where her family had settled following the Ottoman dynasty's exile in 1924.[1] As the youngest daughter of Şehzade Ömer Faruk Efendi and Sabiha Sultan, she grew up in a modest villa on the French Riviera alongside her sisters Neslişah and Hanzade, experiencing a relatively secluded childhood marked by the family's financial hardships after the empire's collapse. The Ottoman exiles faced significant poverty, relying on limited pensions and occasionally selling personal jewelry to cover basic expenses, including medical and funeral costs for relatives.[15] Due to these constraints, Necla received her education at home, with a curriculum emphasizing French language and literature, alongside Turkish and elements of Ottoman cultural traditions to preserve their heritage. This private tutoring, often provided by governesses, exposed her to European influences while instilling a sense of dynastic identity, though details of her specific studies remain limited beyond the focus on languages and history typical for princesses in exile. Her early years in Nice thus blended adaptation to Western society—through local interactions and the cosmopolitan environment—with the ongoing challenges of displacement shared by her siblings. In 1938, at the age of 12, Necla's family relocated to Egypt at the invitation of King Farouk I, who offered hospitality to the Ottoman royals amid rising tensions in Europe ahead of World War II. Settling initially in Alexandria and later in Cairo, they transitioned to a more stable but still adjusted existence within Egyptian high society. Necla adapted to this new setting through continued private tutoring, which maintained her multilingual education, while the family navigated cultural differences in a Muslim-majority context reminiscent of their Ottoman roots.[16]Marriage and Family Life
Wedding to Amr Ibrahim
Necla Hibetullah Sultan's courtship with Prince Amr Ibrahim was arranged through connections in the Egyptian royal family, mirroring the marriages of her elder sisters Neslişah and Hanzade to other members of the Muhammad Ali Dynasty. Prince Amr Ibrahim (1903–1977) was an Egyptian prince descended from the Muhammad Ali lineage, son of Prince Muhammad Wahid ud-din Ibrahim and grandson of Prince Ibrahim Fahmi Pasha.[17] The wedding occurred in February 1943 in Cairo, Egypt, during the height of World War II, when Necla was 17 years old. It featured both civil and religious ceremonies attended by members of the Egyptian royal family, underscoring the event's significance in linking the exiled Ottoman imperial house with Egypt's ruling dynasty.[17] In the immediate aftermath, the couple honeymooned briefly before settling in Cairo, where the union provided the Ottoman family with relative stability and support amid wartime disruptions and their ongoing exile from Turkey. The ceremony's lavishness, including traditional Ottoman and Egyptian elements, contrasted sharply with the family's modest circumstances in Europe prior to their relocation to Egypt in 1938, and it was supported financially by their Egyptian hosts.[1]Children
Necla Sultan and her husband, Prince Amr Ibrahim, had one child: their son, Sultanzade Osman Rifat Ibrahim Bey, born on 20 May 1951 in Cairo, Egypt. His birth occurred amid the final years of the Egyptian monarchy under King Farouk, just prior to the 23 July 1952 revolution that abolished the throne and prompted the exile of the Muhammad Ali Dynasty, including the family of his father.[18] In the wake of the revolution, Necla Sultan, her husband, and their infant son relocated to Switzerland in 1953, where Osman Rifat grew up in exile, experiencing the dislocations of post-imperial life across Europe.[19] The family later moved to Spain, where Osman Rifat spent much of his adult life based in Madrid. As a third-generation descendant of Sultan Mehmed VI Vahideddin—the last Ottoman sultan—he embodied the intertwined legacies of the Ottoman and Egyptian royal houses; Necla played a central role in preserving these dynastic ties during their nomadic years, guiding her son through cultural and familial traditions amid ongoing displacement.[18] Osman Rifat Ibrahim Bey pursued a career focused on historical preservation, founding the Royal Institute Mohammed Ali in 1991 and serving as its president to document and protect the heritage of Egypt's Muhammad Ali Dynasty.[18] He never married and had no children, making him the final male-line descendant in the branch stemming from his maternal grandfather, Şehzade Ömer Faruk Efendi; his life thus symbolized the conclusion of certain Ottoman collateral lines in exile.[18] He died on 1 February 2025 in Madrid at the age of 73, succumbing to a heart attack while traveling by bus, shortly after a cancer diagnosis.[18] His body was interred in Pully, Lausanne, Switzerland, beside his father.[18]Later Life in Exile
Life in Switzerland
Following the Egyptian Revolution of 1952, which overthrew King Farouk and abolished the monarchy, Necla Sultan and her family were forced into exile along with other members of the Muhammad Ali dynasty. In 1953, Necla, her husband Prince Amr Ibrahim, and their son Osman Rifat Ibrahim relocated to Switzerland, drawn by the country's political neutrality and economic stability.[20][21] The family established their new life in Lausanne, where they resided for more than two decades. Necla devoted much of her time to raising her young son, Osman Rifat, born in 1951, while Amr Ibrahim pursued business ventures to sustain the household amid the upheaval of displacement. Their existence was marked by modesty, a stark contrast to their former privileges in Egypt.[22][18] This Swiss interlude, spanning from 1953 until Amr Ibrahim's death in 1977, presented significant challenges, including financial difficulties stemming from the sequestration of their Egyptian properties and assets by the revolutionary government. Despite these hardships, the period allowed the family a measure of privacy and security in a neutral haven, enabling them to preserve elements of their Ottoman-Egyptian heritage while adapting to European exile.[21]Settlement in Spain
Following the death of her husband, Amr Ibrahim, in 1977, Necla Sultan relocated from Switzerland to Madrid, Spain, where she spent her final decades in a relatively low-profile exile. She resided in the city until her passing, fostering connections within the European Ottoman diaspora community while maintaining a private life amid the dynasty's scattered remnants.[10] Necla's son, Sultanzade Osman Rifat Ibrahim, born in 1951, joined her in Spain, pursuing business opportunities and education there as part of the family's adaptation to post-exile circumstances. He lived much of his adult life in Madrid, remaining unmarried and childless, and continued the family's ties to the region until his sudden death from a heart attack on a bus in Madrid on February 1, 2025, at the age of 73.[23][24] In her later years in Spain, Necla experienced a gradual decline in health, consistent with advanced age, though she avoided public attention and focused on family matters during occasional travels to dynasty gatherings. Her settlement in Madrid marked a stable phase contrasting earlier displacements, allowing proximity to her son and a quieter existence among fellow exiles.[19]Death and Legacy
Final Years and Death
In the early 2000s, Necla Sultan, residing in Madrid, had been in declining health for some time due to her advanced age.[25] She passed away peacefully on 6 October 2006, at the age of 80, in a hospital in Madrid, Spain, succumbing to natural causes associated with longevity.[25][26] The news of her death was publicly announced the following day, prompting expressions of sorrow from surviving Ottoman descendants who regarded her as a cherished link to the imperial past.[25] As a daughter of Şehzade Ömer Faruk Efendi and Rukiye Sabiha Sultan, her passing marked the end of a generation of direct descendants from Sultan Mehmed VI, evoking reflections on the enduring resilience of the exiled Ottoman family amid 20th-century upheavals.[27] Her son and other relatives promptly organized arrangements to honor her wishes, including the repatriation of her remains to Istanbul for a dignified farewell, with Ottoman kin offering tributes that highlighted her quiet dignity and devotion to family traditions.[27]Burial and Commemoration
Necla Sultan died in Madrid, Spain, on 6 October 2006, at the age of 80. Her remains were transported to Istanbul, Turkey, aboard a Turkish Airlines flight, arriving at Atatürk Airport on 16 October 2006.[28] The funeral prayer was performed that day at Bebek Mosque in a ceremony attended by approximately 50 people, including her elder sister Neslişah Sultan, son Osman Rifat Ibrahim, grandchildren, and other descendants of the Ottoman dynasty such as Neslişah's son-in-law Mürsel Kotanca.[29][30] This event symbolized her long-awaited return to the Ottoman ancestral homeland, permitted only after the 1952 repeal of the exile decree that had banished the imperial family since 1924.[31] The funeral followed traditional Islamic rites associated with Ottoman heritage, with the coffin placed on the musalla stone and covered in a ceremonial cloth.[32] Following the prayer, Necla Sultan was interred in Aşiyan Asri Cemetery in Istanbul's Beşiktaş district, beside her mother Rukiye Sabiha Sultan and sister Zehra Hanzade Sultan.[27][33] Turkish media outlets provided significant coverage of the funeral, portraying it as a poignant gathering of the Ottoman hanedan (dynasty) and underscoring Necla Sultan's role in maintaining family traditions amid historical exile.[31][29] While no dedicated monuments or public memorials were established, her burial in Aşiyan Cemetery— a site also holding other Ottoman royals—contributes to the preservation of dynasty memory, and she is recorded in official Ottoman genealogical archives.[27]Titles and Honours
Imperial Titles
Necla Hibetullah Sultan, rendered in Ottoman Turkish as نجله هبت الله سلطان, held the formal title of Her Imperial Highness as a princess of the Ottoman dynasty.[17] This designation reflected her status as the daughter of Şehzade Ömer Faruk Efendi, entitling her to the suffix "Sultan," a standard honorific for female members of the imperial family born to sons of sultans.[17] In Ottoman naming conventions, princesses received given names often augmented with pious Arabic elements; "Hibetullah," signifying "gift of God," exemplified this tradition, emphasizing divine favor in imperial nomenclature.[34] The full style, including "Devletlû" or state-bestowed prefixes in formal address, underscored her rank within the dynasty's hierarchical structure.[34] Following the 1924 abolition of the sultanate and caliphate, Necla Sultan's titles persisted during the family's enforced exile under Turkish banishment laws, which prohibited return until the 1952 amnesty for female members.[35] These imperial designations remained in ceremonial use among family circles abroad, preserving dynastic identity amid displacement.[36]Post-Ottoman Recognitions
Following the abolition of the Ottoman monarchy in 1924 and the subsequent exile of the imperial family, Necla Sultan benefited from the Turkish government's amnesty law of 1952, enacted under Prime Minister Adnan Menderes, which restored citizenship rights and permitted female members of the dynasty to return to Turkey after nearly three decades in exile.[36] This recognition enabled her to reclaim the Osmanoğlu surname, formally associated with Ottoman descendants, and facilitated occasional visits to her homeland, though she did not resettle there permanently.[10] Prior to the 1952 Egyptian revolution, which overthrew the Muhammad Ali dynasty and prompted her family's departure from Cairo, Necla Sultan held an esteemed position within Egyptian royal circles as the wife of Prince Amr Ibrahim, nephew of Sultan Hussein Kamel and King Fuad I, and first cousin to the deposed King Farouk. Her marriage in 1943 integrated her into the Egyptian court, where she participated in social and ceremonial events alongside Ottoman-Egyptian intermarried elites, preserving cross-dynastic ties until the monarchy's fall.[20] In exile communities, Necla Sultan received informal acknowledgments through family-endowed titles, maintaining her status as "Her Imperial Highness Princess Necla Hibetullah Osmanoğlu" among Ottoman descendants scattered across Europe. She was noted in genealogical records, such as those compiled by European royal registries, which documented her lineage and contributions to dynasty continuity without formal awards. No major state honors were bestowed upon her post-1952, reflecting the diminished political influence of the exiled Ottoman house. Post-1970s, Necla Sultan appeared in occasional media profiles highlighting her as one of the last surviving Ottoman princesses, emphasizing her role in bridging imperial legacies amid modernization. These portrayals, often in European and Turkish publications, underscored her quiet preservation of Ottoman cultural elements through private family archives and oral histories shared within the diaspora, though she did not publish memoirs. Her participation in informal dynasty reunions further affirmed her enduring symbolic recognition within the Osmanoğlu extended family.[37]Ancestry
Paternal Lineage
Necla Sultan's paternal lineage traces directly through the imperial House of Osman, connecting her to the final phases of the Ottoman dynasty. Her father, Şehzade Ömer Faruk (1898–1969), was the only son of the last Ottoman caliph and played a significant role in the exiled imperial family after the abolition of the caliphate. Born in Istanbul's Ortaköy Palace, Ömer Faruk married Rukiye Sabiha Sultan in 1920, and their union represented a union of the two final branches of the Ottoman ruling house.[17] Ömer Faruk's father, and Necla Sultan's paternal grandfather, was Abdülmecid II (1868–1944), who served as the 101st and last caliph of Islam from 1922 to 1924 following the deposition of Sultan Mehmed VI. Born in Dolmabahçe Palace, Istanbul, Abdülmecid II was the 37th head of the House of Osman after the sultanate's end and focused on artistic pursuits, including painting and calligraphy, during his exile in Paris where he died. As the son of Sultan Abdulaziz and Şehsuvar Hanım, he symbolized the dynasty's transition from imperial rule to a ceremonial caliphate amid the Republic of Turkey's formation. This paternal line through Abdülmecid II marked the Ottoman caliphate's concluding chapter, with the title abolished in 1924, forcing the family into exile.[17] Necla Sultan's great-grandfather was Sultan Abdulaziz (1830–1876), the 32nd Ottoman sultan who reigned from 1861 to 1876 and held the caliphate during that period. Ascending the throne after his brother Abdülmecid I, Abdulaziz pursued extensive modernization efforts, including naval reforms that expanded the Ottoman fleet through European ship acquisitions and shipyard developments, as well as infrastructure projects like railways and telegraphs to bolster the empire's military and economic capabilities. Born in Istanbul, he was the son of Sultan Mahmud II and Hayranidil Kadın; his rule ended amid financial crises and a coup, leading to his deposition and death. Abdulaziz's initiatives continued the Tanzimat era's reforms but strained the empire's resources, contributing to later instability.[17][38] The lineage extends further to Sultan Mahmud II (1785–1839), Abdulaziz's father and Necla Sultan's great-great-grandfather, who ruled as the 30th Ottoman sultan from 1808 to 1839 and was the 94th caliph. Known as the "Peter the Great of Turkey" for his sweeping reforms, Mahmud II centralized authority, abolished the Janissary corps in 1826, and initiated modern administrative and military structures that laid the groundwork for later Tanzimat changes. Born in Istanbul, he fathered numerous children, including Abdulaziz, and his reign navigated wars and internal rebellions to preserve the empire's integrity. This paternal ancestry highlights the House of Osman's continuity through key reformist sultans and the caliphal endpoint, with Necla Sultan as a direct descendant of the dynasty's modernizing phase.Concise Paternal Family Tree
[Mahmud II](/page/Mahmud_II) (1785–1839, Sultan 1808–1839)
└── [Abdulaziz](/page/Abdulaziz) (1830–1876, Sultan 1861–1876)
└── Abdülmecid II (1868–1944, Caliph 1922–1924)
└── Şehzade Ömer Faruk (1898–1969)
└── Necla Sultan (1926–2006)
[Mahmud II](/page/Mahmud_II) (1785–1839, Sultan 1808–1839)
└── [Abdulaziz](/page/Abdulaziz) (1830–1876, Sultan 1861–1876)
└── Abdülmecid II (1868–1944, Caliph 1922–1924)
└── Şehzade Ömer Faruk (1898–1969)
└── Necla Sultan (1926–2006)
Maternal Lineage
Necla Sultan's maternal lineage traces directly to the final rulers of the Ottoman Empire, emphasizing the dynasty's terminal branch through her mother, Rukiye Sabiha Sultan. Born on 2 April 1894 in the Ortaköy Palace in Istanbul, Sabiha Sultan was the youngest daughter of Sultan Mehmed VI and his senior consort, Emine Nazikeda Kadın (1866–1944), an Abkhazian noblewoman from the Marshania family. Sabiha married Şehzade Ömer Faruk Efendi on 29 April 1920 in a union arranged to strengthen ties between the imperial branches; their marriage produced three daughters, including Necla Sultan, before ending in annulment in 1948. Sabiha outlived the empire's collapse, dying on 26 August 1971 in Istanbul after years in exile and relative obscurity in Turkey.[17] Sabiha's father, Mehmed VI Vahideddin (1861–1926), served as the 36th and last Ottoman sultan from 3 July 1918 until the sultanate's abolition on 1 November 1922, marking the end of over six centuries of dynastic rule. Born on 14 January 1861 in Dolmabahçe Palace, Mehmed VI was the only surviving son of Sultan Abdulmejid I and his Circassian consort, Gülistu Kadın.[40] Ascending the throne amid World War I's turmoil and the empire's defeat, his reign was dominated by Allied occupation and internal reforms that ultimately led to the Turkish Republic's founding under Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. Following the sultanate's dissolution, Mehmed VI fled Istanbul on 17 November 1922 aboard the British warship HMS Malaya, entering permanent exile in Malta and later Italy; he died impoverished on 16 May 1926 in Sanremo from a coronary thrombosis, never acknowledging his deposition. His burial occurred in Damascus at the Sultan Selim Mosque, arranged by family remnants, underscoring the maternal line's poignant connection to the empire's 1922 demise.[17][41] Mehmed VI's father, Sultan Abdulmejid I (1823–1861), was the 31st Ottoman sultan, reigning from 2 July 1839 until his death and initiating the Tanzimat era of modernization to counter European pressures and internal decay. Born on 25 April 1823 in Istanbul as the son of Sultan Mahmud II and his consort Bezmiâlem Sultan, Abdulmejid issued the pivotal Edict of Gülhane in 1839, promising legal equality, tax reforms, and military conscription for all subjects regardless of religion, followed by the 1856 Imperial Reform Edict expanding civil rights. These measures aimed to centralize administration and foster Ottomanism but strained finances and sparked resistance, contributing to the dynasty's later vulnerabilities. Abdulmejid died on 25 June 1861 in Istanbul, succeeded by his brother Abdulaziz.[42][17] The maternal lineage extends further through Abdulmejid I's paternal ancestors, linking to earlier reformist sultans and the dynasty's 18th-century roots. Abdulmejid I was the son of Mahmud II (1785–1839), who preceded him and began preliminary modernizations like abolishing the Janissary corps in 1826. Mahmud II, in turn, was the son of Abdul Hamid I (1725–1789), and Abdul Hamid I was the son of Mustafa III (1717–1774), whose reign (1757–1774) saw attempts at military and fiscal reforms amid Russo-Turkish wars. Mustafa III was the brother of Abdul Hamid I and the father of Selim III (1761–1808), the latter known for his Nizam-ı Cedid military innovations and cultural patronage before his 1807 deposition. This branch thus represents a direct descent from Mustafa III, highlighting the maternal line's ties to the Ottoman dynasty's late reformist phase. To illustrate the key maternal connections:| Relation to Necla Sultan | Name | Birth–Death | Key Role/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mother | Rukiye Sabiha Sultan | 1894–1971 | Daughter of last sultan; married Ömer Faruk Efendi. |
| Maternal Grandfather | Mehmed VI Vahideddin | 1861–1926 | Last Ottoman sultan (1918–1922); died in exile. |
| Maternal Great-Grandfather | Abdulmejid I | 1823–1861 | Sultan (1839–1861); initiated Tanzimat reforms. |
| Maternal Great-Great-Grandfather | Mahmud II | 1785–1839 | Sultan (1808–1839); precursor to Tanzimat. |
| Maternal Great-Great-Great-Grandfather | Abdul Hamid I | 1725–1789 | Sultan (1774–1789); son of Mustafa III. |
| Maternal Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather | Mustafa III | 1717–1774 | Sultan (1757–1774); father of Selim III. |
