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pp 106-107: Peirce talks about Osman II and Akile and two time mentions Edebali

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The domestic politics of Osman’s reign did not lack drama, however. The young sultan made the most radical alliance of this period by contracting a legal marriage with Akile, the daughter of the müfti Esad Efendi.62 Esad Efendi was the son of the esteemed Sadeddin Efendi, royal tutor, müfti, historian, and founder of a veritable dynasty of prominent religious officials (two of his four sons and three of his grandsons held the post of müfti, while his other two sons held the post of chief justice). This marriage appears to have taken place only a few months before Osman’s death in 1622. Acting as the sultan’s proxy in the marriage was the prominent Jelveti sheikh Üsküdarî Mahmud, among whose followers figured Esad Efendi.63 Nevizade Atai, compiler of a seventeenth-century ulema biography, described Esad Efendi as “a second Edebali” because he was “honored by the tie of marriage to the dynasty and foremost among the Ottoman ulema. 64 This comparison may tell us less about popular reception of the marriage than it does about the degree to which the memory of Edebali and the marriage of his daughter to the first sultan (and the first Osman) remained alive. In fact, Esad Efendi’s relations with the sultan cooled, in part at least because of the marriage.65 Osman’s marriage was a sharp break with the dynasty’s tradition of avoiding legal alliances, especially with highborn Muslim women, and it contributed to the popular discontent that culminated in his deposition.66 Privy purse accounts suggest that Akile never entered the harem of the imperial palace. Certainly, this freeborn Muslim woman of great status would ... — Preceding unsigned comment added by Удивленный1 (talkcontribs) 17:40, 27 August 2017 (UTC) [reply]


Semi-protected edit request on 26 May 2021

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Bala hatun was the first wife of Osman I. 2A02:908:C36:99A0:848C:988D:8145:9A9E (talk) 18:52, 26 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]

 Not done Sources on this article and on Malhun Hatun indicate otherwise. I assume you are basing this assertion on Kuruluş: Osman, which is historically inaccurate as a historical fiction TV series. IronManCap (talk) 18:55, 26 May 2021 (UTC)[reply]