
Neslishah: The Last Ottoman Princess
Tom Verde
Murat Bardakçı. Meyzi Baran, tr.
2017, AUC Press, 9-789-77416-837-6, $39.95 hb.
This biography of Neslishah Sultan, born in Constantinople in 1921 and who died in that same city—renamed Istanbul—at age 91 after decades in exile, is a royal roller coaster through Middle Eastern and European 20th-century history. The granddaughter of the last Ottoman sultan, Mehmed VI (1861–1926), and the last Ottoman caliph, Abdülmecid II (1868–1944), Princess Neslishah was as purebred as they come. She and her family fled for France when she was three, when Turkey became a republic. Raised in Nice, she married at 16 into the Egyptian royal family, only to face exile once more after Egypt’s monarchy was overthrown in 1952. Neslishah “often faced financial problems, political turmoil” and a painful longing for home. Yet, as the last surviving member of the Ottoman dynasty born during Ottoman times, she “never relinquished” her sense of identity as a royal, writes Bardakçı. This translation of the 2011 Turkish biography features lengthy excerpts from interviews with the princess, as well as numerous family photographs.
You may also be interested in...
Family Trek Across Lebanon Inspires 70 Years Later
Tag along with a Beirut-based British family on a 483-kilometer trek along Lebanon’s mountainous backbone in an updated release first published in 1959.Dissolved Monopoly’s Legacy Hinges on How India Honors Its Political Architecture
From the first fortified trading post in northeastern India, historian Rosie Llewellyn-Jones tracks the physical changes wrought by the English East India Company.Ancient Egyptians Still Have Things to Teach Us
Socrates and other Greek thinkers admired Egypt for its philosophical tradition. This new translation of a manuscript as old as the pyramids shows us why.