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Sultan (سلطان) is a word of Arabic origin, originally meaning "authority" or "dominion". By the beginning of the 16th century, the title of sultan, carried by both men and women of the Ottoman dynasty, was replacing other titles by which prominent members of the imperial family had been known (notably hatun for women and bey for men), with imperial women carrying the title of "Sultan ...
Helen Gloag (29 January 1750 – c. 1790) was a Scottish woman who was taken into slavery. She was an influential favourite slave consort of Mohammed ben Abdallah the Sultan of Morocco, and as such has been famously referred to in Scottish history as the "Empress of Morocco".
Most of the consorts of the Ottoman sultans were slave concubines rather than legal wives. The phrase "consort" includes all consorts, both legal wives and concubines. Concubines was by Islamic law by definition slaves, with different rights from wives. The consorts can be placed in the subcategories wives or concubines.
Female descendants of a sovereign in the male line. Hatun (خاتون). Lady. Used before 16th century and also used for sultan's mothers and consorts. In the 16th century, title sultan carried by prominent members of the imperial family and hatun carried by lesser female member. Format style: "(given name) Hatun", i.e. Lady (given name)
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Sultan of Morocco: Marinid: Muhammad II ibn Faris: 1338 – 1366: 1362: 1366: Sultan of Morocco: Marinid: Abu Faris Abd al-Aziz I: 1349 – 1372: 1366: 1372: Sultan of Morocco: Marinid: Muhammad III ibn Abd al-Aziz: 1368 – 1374: 1372: 1374: Son of Abu Faris Abd al-Aziz I of Morocco: Marinid: Abu al-Abbas Ahmad al-Mustansir: Died 1393: 1374: ...
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 ...
Sayyida al Hurra was born in Chefchaouen around 1491 and 1495 or precisely in 1491, [5] [2] to a prominent Muslim family of Andalusian nobles, who were expelled to Morocco after the fall of Granada, at the end of the Reconquista and settled in Chefchaouen. [10]