Murad was born in Istanbul on 21 September 1840. His father was Abdulmejid I. His mother, whom his father married in Constantinople on 1 August 1839, was ŞevkefzaValide Sultan, an ethnic Circassian from the Ubykh tribe, daughter of Mehmed Bey Zaurum and his wife Cemile Hanım. Beginning in late 1840, other princesses and princes of the young sultan were born. Attention was paid to the education and careful training of the great prince Murad. Among the teachers of the prince, his Quran teacher, Toprik Süleyman Efendi, Ferrik Efendi, Sheikh Hafız Efendi taught him Hadith, Monsieur Gardet, and Italian Lombardi. Murad also participated in the visits of Abdülaziz to Egypt in 1863 and to Europe in 1867. While he was appreciated by the European rulers with his kindness, his uncle, who was uncomfortable with this, had planned to send him back to Istanbul. Napoleon and Queen Victoria, showed interest in Murad more than Abdulaziz. Moreover, special invitations and excursions were organized for the crown prince. He spent most of his time at the farmhouse in Kurbağalıdere, Kadıköy, which Abdülaziz had allocated to him. He frequently spoke with Şinâsi, Nâmık Kemal and Ziyâ gentlemen about legitimacy, democracy and freedom. In Ziyâ Pasha and his special doctor, Kapoleon Efendi, he also communicated with Midhat Pasha, the leader of the opposition group, who was dissatisfied with Abdulaziz's rule. In this case, the Ottoman Empire faced various difficulties.
Reign
Accession
He succeeded to the throne after the deposition of uncle on 30 May 1876. He was highly influenced by French culture and was a liberal. He reigned for 93 days before being deposed on the grounds that he was mentally ill. As a result, he was unable to deliver the Constitution that his supporters had sought. The ensuing political instability caused by his ousting moved the empire closer to the disastrous war with Russia, then ruled by Alexander II. Murad V was the first and only Sultan member of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of Turkey. An important primary source about his life comes from the memoirs of one of his consorts, Filizten Kalfa, written in the 1930s.
Death
He died at Çırağan Palace, Ortaköy, Istanbul, and was buried in Istanbul on 30 August 1904. His brother, Abdul Hamid II, ascended the throne on 31 August 1876. While his wife Mevhibe and her son Selahaddin Efendi reported that Murad V was willing to be buried in Yahya Efendi Mausoleum, he did not approve of it. Abdulhamid removed his brother's funeral without announcement and ceremony. The prayer of the former sultan who was washed and shrouded in Topkapı Palace was performed in the Hidayet Mosque in Bahçekapı; After the funeral procession was held, he was buried next to his mother Şevkefza in the New Mosque, Istanbul.
Family
Murad married five times and had five children. His marriages were:
He married firstly at Istanbul, Beşiktaş, Beşiktaş Palace, on 2 January 1857 to GeorgianMevhibe Kadın, daughter of Ahmed Bey Tarkanişvili, without issue.
He married secondly at Istanbul, Beşiktaş, Beşiktaş Palace, on 4 February 1859 to Circassian Reftarıdil Kadın, daughter of Hatkoyuko Bey Hatko, and had:
He married thirdly at Istanbul, Beşiktaş, Beşiktaş Palace, on 5 February 1869 to Circassian Şayan Kadın, daughter of Batır Bey Zan, and had:
* Hatice Sultan, married firstly at Yıldız Palace, 3 September 1901 and divorced in Ortaköy on 20 September 1908 to Damat Ali Vasif Pasha, Vizier, married secondly at Ortaköy Palace, 1 May 1909 and divorced on 16 June 1918 to Damat Rauf Hayreddin Bey, Chief Secretary of Foreign Ministry, son of Hayri Bey; and had issue:
** Ayşe Hanımsultan, by Ali Vasıf Pasha, married in 1920 to İşkodralızâde Celal Bey, and had issue, who lives today in Turkey and Germany.
** Sultanzade Hayri Bey by Rauf Hayreddin Bey.
** Selma Hanımsultan Raouf, married in 1937 as his first wife, Sayed Sajid Hussain Zaidi, taluqdar of Kotwara in India. They had issue:
He married fourthly at Istanbul, Ortaköy, Ortaköy Palace, on 8 June 1874 to Circassian Meyliservet Kadın, and had:
* Fehime Sultan, married firstly at the Yıldız Palace, 12 September 1901 and divorced at Ortaköy on 4 November 1908 to Damat Ali Galib Pasha, Vizier 1904, married secondly at the Ortaköy Palace on 5 June 1910 morganatical and divorced in 1927 to Captain Mahmud Behçet Bey, late Imperial Ottoman Cavalry, and adopted his two children from his former marriage.
He married fifthly at Istanbul, Ortaköy, Ortaköy Palace, on 2 November 1877 to Georgian Resan Hanım, daughter of Ömer Bey by his wife Fatma Hanım, and had:
* Fatma Sultan, married at Ortaköy, 29 July 1907 to Damat Refik Iris Bey Efendi, diplomat, son of Senator Faik Bey, of Konya and had Issue:
** Ayşe Hatice Hanımsultan, unmarried, without issue