Ahmed Nihad


Ahmed Nihad, 38th Head of the Imperial House of Osman from 1944 to 1954, was the 38th and second post-imperial head of the Imperial House of Osman.
He was born in Çırağan Palace, Ortaköy, on 5 July 1883, as the eldest son of Şehzade Mehmed Selaheddin Efendi, by his wife Naziknaz Hanım, and grandson of Sultan Murad V. He was educated privately. He was promoted to the rank of colonel of infantry of the Ottoman Army.
Ahmed Nihad Efendi received the honors of the Collar of the Hanedan-ı-Ali-Osman and the Nişan-ı-Ali-Imtiyaz. He succeeded on the death of his cousin, Prince Abdulmecid Efendi, the last Ottoman Caliph, as Head of the Imperial House of Osman on 23 August 1944, to become the first head of the Ottoman family not to hold the office of Ottoman Caliph since his ancestor Sultan Selim I was granted this title in 1517. Had he been the reigning Sultan he would have been Sultan Ahmed IV.

Life

Şehzade Ahmed Nihad, spent his entire childhood and early adulthood confined in Çırağan Palace, Ortaköy, in Constantinople. The Palace served as an enforced residence to his grandfather Sultan Murad V, who had been deposed in 1876, and replaced by his brother, Sultan Abdul Hamid II. The restrictions imposed on the former Sultan extended to his entire family, and were not lifted until his death in 1904. On the death of his grandfather, Ahmed Nihad left his enforced confinement at Çırağan Palace and lived for a few years in the properties rented by his father in the Feneryolu, Kuruçeşme and Ortaköy districts of Istanbul. From 1911 until his exile he lived in the mansion which he had designed himself and had built on Serencebey hill overlooking Beşiktaş and from 1915 he would spend the summer months at the Muradiye Pavilion in Kurbağalıdere. However, he would only enjoy 20 years of freedom in his homeland, as following the establishment of the Republic of Turkey, and the abolition of the Ottoman Sultanate and the Caliphate, the entire Imperial Ottoman family were forced into exile in March 1924.
Aged 41, Ahmed Nihad, left Turkey never to return, since he died before the decree of exile was lifted. He went into exile with both his wives, first to Budapest for a few months, then to Nice in France for 12 years. As the former Ottoman Sultan Mehmed VI had settled in San Remo, many members of the family had congregated to the South of France. In 1937 he moved to Beirut, Lebanon where he lived for the rest of his life. Life in exile was always very difficult since members of the Imperial Ottoman family had no financial means, and all yearned to return to their homeland but for Ahmed Nihad life was made harder after he suffered a stroke which left him handicapped. Ahmed Nihad became the head of the exiled Imperial family in August 1944, but was the first head of the Ottoman family since the early 16th century who did not hold the title of Caliph of Islam. Since many members of the family had settled in the Middle East following their exile, they frequently visited him in Beirut to pay homage, as was the custom of the family. Ahmed Nihad was a pious and dutiful man, who had a talent for architectural design and carpentry. He was also a talented composer and an accomplished musician and painter.

Personal life

Ahmed Nihad's first wife was Safiru Hanım. She was born in 1885. They married in the Çırağan Palace, during the confinement Sulltan Murad's family. She gave birth to the couple's only son Şehzade Ali Vâsib on 3 October 1903, one year before their ordeal in the Çırağan came to an end in 1904.
Ahmed Nihad's second wife was Nezihe Hanım. She was born in 1890 in Circassia. Her mother was Fatma Şazende Hanım, who was the head kalfa in the harem of Sultan Murad. They divoced in 1916, after Nihad married Nevrestan, her stepsister. She then married Ali Fehmi Doğrusöz, an Ottoman officer, and had a son Feridun Doğrusöz. She died in 1972.
Ahmed Nihad's third wife was Nevrestan Hanım. She was born in 1893 in Adapazarı. Her father was Tahir Bey Atzamba, an Abkhazian officer in the Ottoman army, and her mother was Fatma Şazende Hanım. Şazende had married twice, and Tahir was her second husband, making Nevrestan Nezihe's stepsister. They married on 10 April 1915. The couple resided in the Beylerbeyi Palace. At the exile of the imperial family in March 1924, they settled in Beirut. When the female members of the Ottoman dynasty were allowed to return to Turkey in 1952, Nevrestan then moved to Serecebey, Istanbul where she died in 1983.

Ancestry