Sneha Girap (Editor)

Lütfi Pasha

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Monarch
  
Ethnicity
  
Albanian

Religion
  
Islam

Spouse
  
Sah Sultan (m. 1523–1541)


Nationality
  
Ottoman

Role
  
Statesman

Preceded by
  
Name
  
Lutfi Pasha

Grandchildren
  
Humasah Sultan

Lutfi Pasha Nasib Tragis Lutfi PasaSinopsis Abad Kejayaan Episode

Died
  
March 27, 1564, Didymoteicho, Greece

Children
  
Esmehan Baharnaz Sultan, Neslihan Sultan

Similar People
  
Sah Sultan, Esmehan Baharnaz Sultan, Ayas Mehmed Pasha, Sehzade Mehmed, Rustem Pasha

Succeeded by
  
Hadim Suleiman Pasha

kłótnia Sah Huban i Lutfi Paszy / Horrible Argue of Sah Huban and Lutfi Pasha


Groovy Historian : Podcast on History of Lütfi Pasha (grand Vizer) (Ottoman Empire)


Lütfi Pasha (Ottoman Turkish: لطفى پاشا‎, Luṭfī Paşa; Modern Turkish: Lütfi Paşa, more fully Damat Çelebi Lütfi Paşa; c. 1488 – 27 March 1564, Didymoteicho) was an Ottoman statesman and grand vizier of the Ottoman Empire under Suleiman the Magnificent from 1539 to 1541.

Contents

Life

Lütfi was an Albanian from Vlora. As a devshirme youth, he entered Bayazid II's harem-i hass, where he received a thorough education in the Islamic sciences.

Lütfi Pasha ktnia Sah Huban i Lutfi Paszy Horrible Argue of Sah Huban and

His first appointment to service outside the palace was as sanjakbey of Kastamuni, and he subsequently became beylerbey of Karaman. Lütfi Pasha himself gave these details of his life in the introduction to his Asafname. However, he does not give the dates of his appointments and omits all details of his life before entering the Palace. He may also have served as sanjakbey first of Aydin and then of Yanya (Ioannina), since Feridun Bey mentions a Lütfi Bey who served at the siege of Rhodes in 1522 as sanjakbey of Aydin (Feridun Bey, Münşe'at al-selâtin, İstanbul 1274 AH/1857) and a Lütfi Bey who served at the siege of Vienna in 1529 as sanjakbey of Yanya (ibid. I, 573). These references may well be to Lütfi Pasha, the future Grand Vizier, since the latter himself stated to have participated in both these campaigns (Lütfi Pasha, Tevârih-i 'Al-i Osman, ed. Ali, İstanbul 1341/1922–3, 3). In his book he laid stress on the question of whether the Ottoman sultans who were non-Arab could assume the title of caliph or not.

Lütfi Pasha Lutfi Pasha Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

In 941/1534–5 he became Third Vizier. By this time, he had, by his own account, served in Selim I's wars against the Safawids in Eastern Anatolia and against the Mamelukes in Syria and Egypt. Under Suleiman I, he took part in the campaigns of Belgrade in 1521 and Rhodes in 1522.

Lütfi Pasha Lutfi Pasha Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

He became Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire in 1539 after the death of Ayas Mehmed Pasha (who held his position for three years following the execution of Pargalı Ibrahim Pasha). In 1541 he beat his wife, Sah-ı Huban Sultan, a sister of Suleiman, following her complaint of the pasha's overly harsh punishment of an adulteress. The princess divorced him with Suleiman's permission, and the sultan deposed him, naming Hadım Suleiman Pasha the new Grand Vizier.

Works

He wrote 21 works mainly on religious topics but also on history, 13 of them written in Arabic and 8 in Turkish. Two of his works are the Asafname, a kind of mirror for ministers, and the Tevâriḫ-i Âl-i ‘Os̱mân, dealing with the Ottoman history and including his own experiences in the reign of the sultans Bayezid II, Selim I and Suleyman I.

In the TV series Muhteşem Yüzyıl, Lütfi Pasha is played by Turkish actor Mehmet Özgür.

References

Lütfi Pasha Wikipedia