Gülfem Hatun


Gülfem Hatun was a lady-in-waiting in the harem of Ottoman sultan Suleiman the Magnificent.

Biography

Gülfem is listed as a member of Suleiman's princely staff of Manisa, where she does not appear as a slave concubine member. Since she appears in her own name, it is inferred that she was the stewardess of the harem or some other high-ranking administrative official instead. After Suleiman's accession to the throne in 1520, she came to reside in the Old Palace in Constantinople along with others of his princely entourage.
Earlier it was presumed without any evidence that she was allegedly the mother of Mahmud or Murad, however if she had been, she would have been referred to as such i.e., as “mother of the deceased Sultan X or ”valide-i merhum Sultan X in official documents but in the 1552 harem register Gülfem is simply listed as “Gülfem Khatun.” Besides, she is also referred to as “Gülfem Khatun bint Abdullah” on her tombstone, and as “Gülfem Khatun” in an account register of the endowment she established for her Üsküdar mosque.
Throughout Suleiman's reign, she enjoyed a considerable status within the imperial harem, and received a high stipend of 150 aspers a day according to the 1552 register. The special title of the group to which Gülfem belonged was Dar üs-Saade. She was Hürrem Sultan's closest companion, and often made appearances as sending greetings to Suleiman in Hürrem's letters.
Gulfem was clearly helpful and supportive of a young Hürrem and it appears that Suleiman entrusted his beloved favourite to Gülfem when he would be away during his several imperial military expeditions. In a letter dating to 1526, Gülfem had appended a note explaining to the Sultan how she had solved a budget problem for his favorite. Suleiman apparently had some concern about Roxelana’s ability to manage the finances of her growing household especially since they already had four children by 1526. Gülfem recounted that when she had approached Hürrem directly for an account of her monies— keeping her
vow to the sultan— she met with silence. She then consulted a certain Enver and learned that the concubine had “five hundred gold pieces remaining,” presumably from the funds Suleiman had
allocated to her before setting off for Hungary. Gülfem also wanted him to be aware that Hürrem knew nothing of her conversation with Enver.
Furthermore, the letter began with a humorous anecdote. Suleiman had sent —among many souvenir gifts from the road— 60 florins and a box of sweets containing a mild intoxicant to Hürrem and Gülfem. Gülfem unintentionally consumed the entire box and became lethargic. Despite efforts to revive her, she slept throughout most of the day. Playfully teasing Suleiman for turning her into a laughing stock, she mentions they will discuss more upon his return.

“I drank the cologne right away, you should have seen the
state I was in! There were guests, I have no idea what I said, I dozed off for the whole long day… You made a complete buffoon out of me! God-willing, when we see each other again, we can talk about it.”

In 1559, a rebellion against Suleiman was led by Şehzade Bayezid, his son with Hürrem. Gülfem became involved by sending a letter to Bayezid, advising the rebellious prince to comply with his father's wishes.

Charities

In September 1542, she commissioned a soup kitchen in Üsküdar. In March 1543 she established the financial ground work to build a "timber frame mosque" now known as the "Gülfem Hatun Mosque", located near the soup kitchen. According to a local tradition, the mosque was intended for the use of women and opened to men only in recent times. The complex also consisted of a maktab, a madrasa and a caravanserai. Only the mosque has survived to the present day.

Death

She died between October and November 1561, and was buried in the courtyard of her own mosque.

In popular culture