ABSTRACT

An outbreak of plague in late sixteenth-century Istanbul was described in vivid detail 1600). After plague struck the city in 1597, Mehmed III (1595–1603) ordered a com-Afrom its outset by the contemporary historian Selaniki Mustafa Efendi (d. after munal prayer for the lifting of the plague. Prayers for the deceased followed for three weeks, during which time victims included one of the sultan’s favourite concubines, a son of the vezir Halil Paşa, and sixteen of the daughters of Murad III (1574–95). More than 128 people died in the Old Palace alone. Although the outbreak seems to have continued into the following year, it must have abated considerably in early autumn, as the sultan returned to the New Palace from his Bosphorus retreat in Küçüksu in October 1598. 1