The influence of the Dulkadir dynasty, centered…
1516 CE
The influence of the Dulkadir dynasty, centered around Elbistan (now in the Maras-Elbistan region of Turkey), had in the early fifteenth century extended from Kırşehir to Mosul, but with the rise of the Ottomans, they had become a buffer state between the Ottomans and the Mamluks of Egypt and Syria.
The dynasty has also supplied many brides to the Ottoman dynasty.
Emine Hatun, the daughter of Nasreddin Mehmed Bey, the fifth ruler of Dulkadiroğulları State, was Mehmed I's third consort, and thus the mother of Ottoman Sultan Murad II, the ancestor of all succeeding Sultans.
Their marriage had served as an alliance between the Ottomans and this buffer state.
Similarly, Mükrime Hatun, the daughter of Süleyman Bey, the sixth ruler of the Dulkadiroğulları beylik, was the third wife of Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II.
Moreover, Ayşe Hatun, the daughter of Alaüddevle Bozkurt, the eleventh ruler of the Dulkadir State, was the wife of Ottoman Sultan Bayezid II, and consequently the stepmother Selim's subjugation of the Dulkadir (Dhu al-Qadr) beylik in 1515 brings the Ottomans into direct conflict with the Mamluks, who regard the Dulkadirs as their protégés.
Ali Bey, nephew of the Emirate of Dulkadir bey Alaüddevle Bozkurt, is appointed governor of the new province by Selim I, and Alaüddevle's head is delivered to the city of Cairo, the Mamluk capital.