Mahmud Namık
Mahmud Namık | |
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H.I.H. Prince Mahmud Namık | |
Born | 23 December 1913 Dolmabahçe Palace, İstanbul, Ottoman Empire |
Died | 13 November 1963 Cairo, Egypt | (aged 49)
Issue | H.I.H. Prince Ömer Abdülmecid Osmanoğlu |
House | Imperial House of Osman |
Father | Colonel H.I.H. Prince (Şehzade) Ömer Hilmi Efendi |
Mother | H.H. Hadice Firdevs Gülnev Başhanımefendi |
Religion | Islam |
H.I.H. Prince (Şehzade) Mahmud Namık Efendi b. Dolmabahçe Palace, 23rd December 1913, the only son of Colonel H.I.H. Prince (Şehzade) Ömer Hilmi Efendi, and his wife H.H. Hadice Firdevs Gülnev Başhanımefendi, and grand-son of H.I.M. Sultan Mehmed V Reşad Han Gazi , 35th Sovereign of the House of Osman. Rcvd: the Collar of the Hanedan-ı-Ali-Osman,
Imperial Ottoman Dynasty | |
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Country | Ottoman Empire |
Founded | 1299 |
Founder | Osman I |
Dissolution | 1922 |
Life
H.I.H. Prince (Şehzade) Mahmud Namık Efendi[1][2][3][4][5][6] was born in Dolmabahçe Palace and lived there until the death of his grandfather, H.I.M. Sultan Mehmed V Reşad, just before the end of World War I on 4th July 1918. He then moved with his family to a Konak at Nişantaşı for the winter months and to one in Bağlarbaşı, above Beylerbeyi, for the summer. Following the establishment of the Turkish Republic and the aboliton of the Ottoman Sultanate and the Ottoman Caliphate, the entire Imperial Ottoman family were forced into exile in March 1924. H.I.H. Prince (Şehzade) Mahmud Namık Efendi left his homeland aged 10, never to return to Turkey, since he died before the decree of exile was lifted. He was initially sent to boarding school in Lebanon, but then soon came to live with his family in Nice, France once they had settled there to be close to the former Ottoman Sultan, H.I.M. Sultan Mehmed VI Vahideddin, who had rented a villa in San Remo, and to their cousin the last Caliph of Islam H.I.H. Prince (Şehzade) Abdul Mecid II, who lived in Nice. In 1934 he moved to Alexandria, Egypt with his father, H.I.H. Prince (Şehzade) Ömer Hilmi Efendi, and grandmother, and was later joined in January by his sister, H.I.H. Princess Emine Mükbile Sultan, and his brother-in-law, H.I.H. Prince (Şehzade) Ali Vâsib Efendi. He worked until the end of World War II for the Alexandria tramline company. In the late 1940’s he established himself as a successful businessman and settled in Geneva, Switzerland where he developed his business interests in places as far apart as Pakistan and the USA. In 1958 he was asked to help negotiate the marriage of his cousin H.R.H Princess Sabiha Fazila Hanimsultan, the only daughter of Damad H.R.H Prince Muhammad 'Ali Ibrahim Beyefendi of Egypt and H.I.H Princess Zahra Hanzade Sultan, to King Faisal II of Iraq. The engagement was brutally brought to an end by the murder of King Faisal II, following a military coup on 14th July 1958. H.I.H. Prince (Şehzade) Mahmud Namık Efendi had a passion for music and in particular very much enjoyed playing the Spanish guitar.
d. aged 49 from a stroke, at Cairo, Egypt 13th November 1963. (bur. Khedive Tawfik Maus, Cairo, transferred to Sultan Mahmud II Maus. Istanbul, in 1987)
Marriage and Issue
m. August 1939 (div. at Alexandria, 1947) H.H. Şaharazade Hanımefendi (b. at Alexandria, 1922; d. 1993), only daughter of Ismail Ratib Bey, by his wife H.R.H. Princess Emine Bihruz, younger daughter of H.R.H. Prince Ibrahim Raşid Fazıl Paşa, of Egypt. They had issue, an only son:
i) H.I.H. Prince (Şehzade) Ömer Abdülmecid Osmanoğlu b. at Alexandria, 4th June 941, educ. Stowe school, Buckinghamshire, England, and degree in Business Administration from London Univ. not m. Beulah Hanımefendi (b. 8th April 1943), née Banbury. He has issue, an only son:
a) H.I.H. Prince (Şehzade) Mahmud Namık Osmanoğlu (Francis Mahmud Namouk) b. in London, 27 April 1975, educ. MFA in Design and Technology from Parsons The New School for Design, New York City, USA. He is a co-founder and director at Streaming Well an online health video channel), he lives in London, England.
References
- ^ Almanach de Gotha (184th ed.). Almanach de Gotha. 2000. p. 365, 912-915.
- ^ "Hayatta Olan Şehzadeler". Foundation of the Ottoman Dynasty. Retrieved 15 April 2011.
- ^ Burke's Royal Families of the World (2 ed.). Burke's Peerage. 1980. p. 247.
- ^ "Current Living Şehzades". Official Ottoman Family Website. Retrieved 15 April 2011.
- ^ İbrahim Pazan (15 September 2009). "Osmanoğullarının yeni reisi Osman Bayezid Efendi". Netgazete. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
- ^ "Osmanlı Hanedanı vakıf çatısı altında toplanıyor". Sabah. 13 September 2010. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
Bibliography
- Osmanoğlu, Osman Selaheddin (2003). Bir Şehzadenin Hâtırâtı. Turkey: Yapı Kredi Yayınları. ISBN 9750808789. OCLC 469568294. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
External links
- "Ottoman Family". Official website of the immediate living descendants of the Ottoman Dynasty. Retrieved 14 February 2010.
- "Genealogy of the Ottoman Family". Retrieved 19 August 2008.
- Family Tree, descendants of Sultan Mahmud II. Retrieved 2011-02-28.