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The funeral of Murat
'Murad III' (
Ottoman Turkish: مراد ثالث ''Murād-i sālis'',
Turkish:''III.Murat'')
(July 4, 1546 – January 15, 1595) was the
Sultan of the
Ottoman Empire from
1574 until his death.
Murad III was the eldest son of sultan
Selim II (1566–74) and ''
valide sultan''
Nur-Banu (born ''Cecilia Venier-Baffo'') and succeeded his father in 1574. His authority was undermined by the
harem influences, more specifically, those of his mother and later of his favorite wife
Safiye Sultan. The power had only been maintained under
Selim II by the genius of the all-powerful
grand vizier Mehmed Sokollu who remained in office until his assassination in October
1579. The reign of Murad III was marked by wars with
Iran and
Austria and Ottoman economic decline and institutional decay.
He had two large
alabaster urns transported from
Pergamon and placed on two sides of the nave in the
Hagia Sophia in Istanbul.
He was also a renowned
womanizer, obtaining more than 1200 of the most beautiful girls available at slave markets for his enjoyment; among the largest and most prestigious harems in the world. He enjoyed watching the girls frolic naked as they bathed, sometimes inventing games for them to play. As his empire was deteriorating, he could usually be found comfortably ensconced in the harem. This lifestyle led him to sire 103 children.