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Peyveste Hanımefendi : ウィキペディア英語版
Peyveste Hanımefendi

Peyveste Hanımefendi (born Rabia Emuhvari; 10 May 1873 - 1943; ) was the tenth wife of Sultan Abdul Hamid II of the Ottoman Empire.
==Biography==
Peyveste Hanımefendi was born on 10 May 1873 in Pitsunda, Georgia and was a member of the Abkhazian dynasty, ''Emuhvari''. Born as Rabia Emukhvari, she was the youngest daughter of Prince Osman Bey Emuhvari and his wife Princess Hesna Hanım Çaabalurhva, an Abkhazian. She had an elder brother Ahmed Bey Emukhmari and three elder sisters, Eda Hanım, Nurhayat Hanım and Mahşeref Hanım (of Prince Mehmed Refik Bey Achba and the mother of Leyla Achba ). She had green eyes, and long brunette hair for much of her life.
In 1877, during the Russo-Turkish War (1877–78), her family emigrated from the Caucasus to Istanbul, where she was delivered at the court of the Ottoman Sultan. First, she was given to serve Nazikedâ Kadınefendi (wife of Sultan Abdul Hamid II and mother of Ulviye Sultan ) and was renamed ''Peyveste''. She was then given the position of the Head Treasurer of Abdul Hamid's harem. However, soon the Sultan Abdul Hamid II took notice of Peyveste, and they married on 24 January 1893 in the Yıldız Palace, the Sultan's residence at the time.
One year later, upon the birth of their son, Şehzade Abdurrahim Hayri Efendi Abdul Hamid II ordered the building of a small palace for his young wife. However, Peyveste had not succeeded in binding the sultan to her, and already in 1896, Abdul Hamid II had moved to another young lady. Soon, he made his new favorite Fatma Pesend Hanım Efendi his 11th wife. Peyveste, disappointed in her husband, retreated from the court life and dedicated herself to the upbringing of her son. Among Abdul Hamid's wife she was closest to Sazkar Hanımefendi.
During the 1908 Young Turk Revolution that overthrew her husband's autocratic rule and restored constitutional monarchy, Peyveste, who already was raised to a rank of a great duchess, followed her husband in exile. One year later, she returned to Istanbul with her son and bought a mansion in Şişli and took Sazkar Hanım along. In 1924, she went into a second exile and lived with her son first in Naples and Rome, and later in Paris, where she died in 1943. The great duchess Peyveste was buried in the Muslim cemetery at Bobigny in Paris.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The Royal Ark – Royal and Ruling Houses of Africa, Asia, Oceania and the Americas )〕〔The Concubine, the Princess, and the Teacher: Voices from the Ottoman Harem - Page 286〕

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