Esther Handali
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (May 2020) |
Esther Handali (died 18 or 19 December 1588
Life
Early life
Esther Handali was reportedly a Sephardic Jew from Jerez de la Frontera in Spain.[2]
She was married to the Jewish merchant Eliya Handali, who traded in luxuries such as
Due to the fact that they were several kiras working in the Imperial Harem in parallel, and that they are seldom documented by name (the different kiras are normally referred to only as kira, kyra, or Kyra Jewess), it is difficult to identify individual kira's and separate them from each other. Esther Handali, in particular, has often been confused with
Kira of Nurbanu Sultan
What is clearly confirmed is that Esther Handali was the kira of Nurbanu Sultan from at least 1566 onward, when Nurbanu became the favoured consort of the reigning sultan. As was common for a kira, she became her the trusted confidant of her client, and her tasks soon expanded from acting as intermediary for merchant goods to acting as intermediary for other money transactions, and from there to further tasks between her client and the outside world.
When Nurbanu became the valide sultan, mother and adviser of the reigning sultan (1574-1583), Handali's own influence reached its peak, and she was entrusted with political and diplomatic correspondence between Nurbanu and foreign powers. She acted as the intermediary between Nurbanu and Catherine de' Medici.
Nurbanu Sultan was particularly sympathetic toward a pro-Venetian policy, and Esther Handali acted as the intermediary in the contact between the Republic of Venice and Nurbanu Sultan, which was conducted between the Venetian ambassador and Nurbanu with Handali as messenger from 1578 onward. She continued as the intermediary between Venice and the Imperial Harem from 1578 until 1588, after the death of Nurbanu in 1583, and her connection to Venice appears to have been used also by Nurbanu's successor,
Due to her position, Esther Handali earned an enormous fortune. She became known as the benefactor of the Jewish community in Istanbul, especially for widows and orphans, and became particularly remembered for her relief help to the victims and homeless after the great fire of 1569.
References
- ^ a b Pedani, Maria Pia. “Safiye's Household and Venetian Diplomacy”. Turcica 32 (2000).
- ^ Lucienne Thys-Senocak: Ottoman Women Builders: The Architectural Patronage of Hadice Turhan Sultan
- History of the Turkish Jews and Sephardim: Memories of a Past Golden Age
- Lamdan, Ruth (2007). "Jewish Women as Providers in the Generations Following the Expulsion from Spain". Nashim: a Journal of Jewish Women's Studies and Gender Issues 13: 49-67.
- Emily Taitz, Sondra Henry & Cheryl Tallan, The JPS Guide to Jewish Women: 600 B.C.E.to 1900 C.E., 2003
- http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/esther-handali
- Minna Rozen: A History of the Jewish Community in Istanbul, The Formative Years, 1453 – 1566 (2002).