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SULTAN MUHAMMAD II AND ICH OGHLANS
Prof
Dr. Ahmed Akgündüz
1- It is alleged through the
exploitation of the term Ich Oghlan, Court Page, that some Ottoman
Sultans were indulged in perverted relationship. It is even alleged that Sultan
the Conqueror did not act chastely in this regard. In fact, there happened to
occur allegations of some Anatolian-Greek historians on this matter. What is
really the essence and truth of this matter?
Some Western historians and authors of books of our day have
alleged that the Ottoman Sultans indulged in perverted relationships and have
repeatedly brought up the subject of the court pages, which has been studied at
length by Ottoman historians. The term Ich Oghlan refers to the
boy servants who had been recruited according to the Dawsihmah System,
and who worked in the Andarun, that is, Inner Palace, one of the three
parts of Topkapı Palace. In other words, they were the Inner Palace servants, or
in the language of today, the staff serving in the head of state’s residence.
The same term was used for certain members of the Janissaries. Those interested
may consult İsmail Uzunçarşılı’s book Kapıkulu Ocakları.
It is necessary at this point to reply briefly to those who
attach disgraceful meanings to the term court page, and offer the readers an
example of their distortions.
Certain writers have shamelessly asserted that the Sultans kept
beautiful youths in the Inner Palace, called içoğlan, with whom they had illicit
relations, even making some of the veil their faces due to their jealousy, and
that some of the Sultans had a passion for men only. The things they claim about
the Qabusnamah are complete nonsense like this.
Here, as evidence for this, I want to quote some lines from a
letter written by the daughter of Sultan Selim the Excellent, Fatimah
Sultan, to her father to complain about her husband Mustafa Pasha,
which is taken from the Qabusnamah, thus showing to readers how
those who make the above claims distort them, and that they make other
distortions similar to these.
They state that in addition to all the warped relationships in
the Ottoman Harem, the Sultans and people of the Inner Palace had deviant
relationships with both men and the boy pages known as Ich Oghlan,
and that Murad IV was one of these. Since “illustrating falsehood leads
simple minds astray, rather than reiterating their assertions”, I want to
reply to them. One of the principal proofs they put forward to support what they
claim is this:
It is a sentence taken from the work entitled the Qabusnamah,
which was written in the style of the Nasihatnamah, which was written by
Emir Qaiqawus of the Ziyarids in 475/1082 for his son. They claim that
one of the pieces of advice in the book, which was accepted as authoritative by
the Ottoman Sultans, is the following, which is in fact about sexual relations
with women: “In summer incline to women, and in winter to boys, then health
and well-being will be found. For the bodies of boys are hot, and if two hot
bodies come together in the summer it is detrimental to the health. And womens’
bodies are cold, and if two cold bodies come together in the winter, it dries up
the body.” They state that it is recorded that foremost Murad IV and some
other Sultans resorted with women in the summer and boys in the winter. They
accept, however, that the Qabusnamah was translated by Marjimak Ahmed
during the time of Murad II, Mehmed the Conqueror’s father, and that the idioms
of that period are used.
They go even further, saying that it is known that these
activities were practised also by the sons-in-law of the Sultans and that
Yavuz’s daughter Fatimah Sultan made complaints about this in connection with
her first husband, the Bey of the Antalya Sanjaq, Mustafa Pasha. They try to
prove these claims with a sentence they quote from a letter written by Fatimah
Sultan, to according to them an unknown correspondent. The sentence is this:
“My Illustrious Father. I have no peace of mind. I have ended up with a person
who does not regard me even as a dog. He wrongfully seizes youths (Oghlan)
from their parents, and immediately sets about them.” They claim that these
sentences refer to the Ottoman Beys and prove their relations with males.
However, they agree that this letter was written in the 15th century, and we
know from dictionaries that at that time the word oğlan referred to both boys
and girls.
Here I have to state that it is very meaningful that at the
beginning of the relevant distorted passage, one writer quotes the Qur’anic
verse, “For you practise your lusts on men in preference to women.”
Now, to explain the matter:
Firstly, a further matter should be explained: the Qur’anic
verse quoted above is part of what Lot said about his own people, who practised
sodomy. The whole passage is: “He also [sent] Lut. He said to his people: ‘Do
you commit lewdness such as no people in creation [ever] committed before? For
you practise your lusts on men in preference to women; you are indeed a people
transgressing beyond bounds.’” Following this the Qur’an states that Lot’s
people made moves to drive him out of the country and that God Almighty meted
out a terrible chastisement on them for their excesses in committing the sin of
sodomy. It may be seen clearly that there is no connection between these verses
and the matter under discussion.
To come to the second matter: it is well-known that every era
has its own idiom and way of speaking. That is to say, words bear different
meanings in different ages. People from different regions also use the same
words to express different meanings.
In this way, the word Oghlan (youth), which is
used both in the Qabusnamah and in Fatma Sultan’s letter, is given
the wrong meaning. Its meaning in Turkish texts of the 14th and 15th centuries
is significantly different to its meaning today. From the sources we understand
that in those centuries the word Oghlan had two basic meanings. Firstly
it referred to children, both male and female; and secondly it referred to the
youth, again both male and female. That it referred to male gender only occurred
in later times.
There are numerous instances proving this, but the best
evidence is the following passage from a Turkish translation of One Hundred
Hadiths by Mustafa Darir of Erzurum, which was written in the 14th century, the
century the Qabusnamah was translated into Turkish. It says: “The
young girl (oğlan) should be fertile so that my community may be numerous. For I
take pride in the great numbers of my community.” Those who distort this
matter cannot claim that at the time of the Prophet (PBUH) young boys gave birth
too!
A further point that corroborates what I say is that the
translators of both the Qabusnamah and the One Hundred Hadiths lived in
the same century, that is, at the time of Murad II, the father of Sultan Mehmed
the Conqueror. In any event, chiefly the ‘Taramah’ lexicon and other
philological sources confirm what I have said. However, I do not have much else
to say to those who want to slander history and Islam using word games. What
really makes me unhappy is a scholar like Uluçay attaching any importance to the
same baseless gossip and in his work Harem Hayatının İç Yüzü (The True
Face of Harem Life), which he contradicted in his book Harem II,
agreeing with it or quoting from it.
Another piece that further clarifies the matter is the
following: “If the child (oghlan) is a girl, they have it suckled by a
woman (avrat) who has given birth to a girl; or if it (oghlan) is
a boy, they have it suckled by a woman who has [previously] given birth to a
boy. Thus, in the 14th and 15th centuries, the word oghlan was used for
both boys and girls; and the word (avrat) for older women. So too in the Persian
original of the Qabusnamah the word Ghulam, the equivalent
of Oghlan, means “a child and young; the period from birth to youth.”
Having seen these explanations, the expressions in the
Qabusnamah and Fatma Sultan’s letter are more readily understood:
As was stated above, the Qabusnamah is a sort of
Nasihatnamah; it consists of a ruler’s advice to his sons, illustrated with
Qur’anic verses and Hadiths of the Prophet (PBUH) or the moral dicta of former
notable persons. The Fifteenth Book of the Qabusnamah consists of
recommendations about marital relations. One of these recommends the following
to his son, who has more than one wife as well as female slaves: “In summer,
incline to ‘avret and in winter, to oğlan so that you may find health. For
oğlans’ bodies are hot, and if two hot bodies come together in summer, it is
detrimental to the body. And ‘avrets’ bodies are cold; if two cold bodies come
together, it dries the body. Wassalam.”
That is to say, if you have more than one woman, be together
with the older ones in the summer and with the young ones in the winter, so you
will find health and well-being. For the bodies of young women are warm, and if
two warm bodies come together in the heat of summer it is harmful. And the
bodies of older women are cool, and if two cool bodies come together in winter,
it dries the bodies.
To distort this as meaning that he is advising his sons to have
relations with men points only to lack of scholarship and knowledge of language.
As for Fatimah Sultan, she was writing that her husband
favoured the young female slaves rather than herself. “My Illustrious Sultan
Father, I have no peace of mind. My lot is a person who counts me not even as a
dog. He forcibly seizes the young girls from their parents, and immediately
expends all his energy on them.” How can her complaining thus to her father the
Sultan be explained as her husband having relations with other males?
The writers who make these claims also know that it was
actually forbidden for sons-in-law of the Sultan to take wives other than the
Sultan’s daughter while married to them, let alone having deviant relations with
men. This subject is discussed at greater length in the section on the Sultans’
marriages. But those who have not grasped the meaning of the above letter have
tried to explain it as they understand it48.
2. Would you then give us
brief information about the institution of Ich Oghlan in the Ottoman State
organization?
Firstly, it is necessary to define the term Ich
Oghlan. The palace servants who were carefully chosen to work in the Inner
Palace were called Ich Oghlan. In Ottoman history, it describes the
Dawshirmahs (conscripts) who were trained in the palaces of Topkapı, Galata,
‹brahim Pasha, and Edirne and in the course of time were employed in various
official duties. They were also called saray Ajemi Ognlanları or Jalab.
There were also Janissary recruits who even if they were originally called
Ich Oghlan, were later called Shadi in order to differentiate them
from those in the Palace.
Thus, Ich
Oghlan is merely a term. Oghlan does not necessarily mean a young boy
chosen with evil intent. It denotes the recruits selected to work in the Inner
Palace. The ‘Ich’ that is, ‘Inner,’ refers to their place of work. These
recruits were also trained in the Palace School (Andarun Maqtabi), which
at the same time fulfilled the function of training state officials. Numerous
high-ranking officials were produced there, among whom were pashas,
beylerbeys, and sanjaqbeys.
Secondly,
the fact that some of the court pages who were trained to work in the Inner
Palace were good looking was not in order to gratify the Sultan’s lusts, as some
foreign travellers and historians inimical to Islam have suggested. It was
rather a question of the careful choice of the staff who would work in the Inner
Palace, that is, in the centre of government of the Ottoman Empire, which
stretched at the time of its greatest extent over an area measuring twenty-four
million square kilometres. Those who write these things know perfectly well that
today even the staff chosen to work in a prime minister’s office or president’s
palace possess attributes different to those of employees in ordinary government
offices. Certainly, those employed in the Inner Palace had to be discreet, of
presentable appearance, honest, and not inclined to treachery. In the Ottoman
period there were various sciences like physiognomy to ascertain the characters
of the candidates for the court pageship, just as today there are criminology
and similar sciences. They could ascertain accurately a person’s moral character
according to his physical characteristics. The court pages were chosen by people
who were experts in this field. Another reason they were called Gilman or
Ich Oghlan was that no female staff were employed in this position, like
today. This is discussed in greater detail in the relevant section.
Thirdly,
it may have been the case that since the court pages in the Inner Palace were
handsome youths, any striking ones among them were commanded to veil their
faces, not for the Sultan, but to forestall any illicit situations arising among
themselves. This was not because the Sultan was jealous, but was the application
of a ruling of the Shari‘ah concerning this matter. For there is a ruling in
Islamic law which says: “A young teacher or tutor should not remain too long
alone with young boys, for man’s instinctual soul prompts him to evil. Such
youths may veil their faces and are called shabb al-amrad (beardless
youths).” Some of the Ottoman Sultans conformed to this injunction with its
extreme courtesy, ordering some of the court pages to veil their faces. So is
there any way this scrupulous adherence to a Qur’anic command can be correlated
with those totally discourteous distortions, which conform only to the calumnies
of Christian historians like Hammer?
Fourthly,
I want to draw attention to another matter. As is described a little later, the
court pages performed various duties, some of which were the duties of the Privy
Chamber (Has Oda). This was not somewhere the Sultan could have indulged
in any illicit relations with the court pages. On learning what the Privy
Chamber consists of, it is not possible not to tremble at such a suggestion.
Originally, the Privy Chamber
complex had been the most esteemed place in the Inner Palace, and had been built
by Mehmed the Conqueror. Thirty of his pages lived here. The complex, which was
not in the Harem but in the Inner Palace, was subsequently enlarged by other
Sultans. The Mantle of the Prophet PBUH (Hırqah al-Sharif) and other
sacred relics were later housed there. The duties of the Privy Chamber pages
were cleaning the rooms where the Mantle and other relics were kept, sprinkling
them with rose-water and sweet scents on special occasions, reciting the Qur’an,
and attending to the needs of the Sultan; that is, they were the Sultan’s
personal servants inside the Palace.
Özellikle Fâtih Sultân Mehmed ile
alakalı olarak Notaras’ın ve Franzes’in oğlu ve Erico’nun kızı ile ilgili
isnatlar ise, Bizans tarihçilerinden bazılarının, İstanbul’u fethetmesinden
dolayı duydukları kızgınlığın yalancı bir sonucu olmaktan öteye gitmemektedir ve
hiç bir delile dayanmamaktadır.
Bütün bu
bilimsel açıklamalara rağmen, hâlâ İslâmcı Gay’ler diye haber yapanların
durumunu ilimden anlayanlar daha iyi takdir edebileceklerdir. Bunlar, Gelibolulu
Mustafa Âlî’nin tıpkı Kâbusnâme’de olduğu gibi, erkek ve kadın hizmetkârlar ve
câriyelerle ilgili verdiği bilgileri ve özellikle de genç kız ve erkek manasında
kullanılan gulâm ve bunun çoğulu olan gılmân kelimesini dillerine dolayarak,
Osmanlı devlet adamlarını ve hatta Şeyhülislâm ve kazaskerlerini bile, gay’likle
itham etmektedirler. Halbuki aynı yazar, tıpkı Kabusnâmenin yaptığı gibi,
hizmetkârlar hakkında bilgi verdikten sonra, toplumdaki ahlaksızlar hakkında da
bazı açıklamalarda bulunmaktadır. Zaten, Osmanlı toplumunda tümüyle bu
ahlaksızlıklar yok idi denilemez. Karşı çıkılan, bu ahlaksızlıkların Padişahlara
ve âlimlere de isnad edilmesidir. Büyük Osmanlı Tarihçisi Âlî, bu
rezillere ayırdığı kısa bahiste, gay tabir edilen cinsî sapıkların
dinimize göre suçlular olduğunu, haram helal demeden kadınlarla beraber
olanların ise, nefislerine mağlup olan reziller grubunu teşkil ettiğini;
lezbiyenlerin ve homoseksüellerin de bunlar gibi reziller grubunda yer aldığını,
toplumdaki grupları sayarken gayet açık beyan eylemektedir. Aynı eserde,
meyhânelere ayrılan bir bölüm de vardır. Acaba böyle bir bölümde gayr-i
müslimlerin meyhaneleri anlatıldığı ortada olduğu halde, bu başlığı okudukdan
sonra, Osmanlı Devleti’nde herkes meyhâneye giderdi mi diyeceğiz?
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