Selma Hanımsultan

Selma Hanımsultan (سلمه خانم سلطان, "peace"; 13 April 1916 – 13 January 1942) was an Ottoman princess, the daughter of Damat Rauf Hayri Bey and Hatice Sultan.

Early life
Selma Hanımsultan was born on 13 April 1916 in her mother's villa in Ortaköy. Her father was Damat Rauf Hayri Bey (1871 – 1936), son of Hayri Bey and Belkis Hanım, and her mother was Hatice Sultan (1870 – 1938), daughter of Sultan Murad V and Şayan Kadın. At the exile of the imperial family in March 1924, Selma and her family settled in Beirut, Lebanon. Her parents had divorced in 1918, and in exile, they lived on the alimony sent by her father. However, when he was mixed up in a smuggling plot, dismissed from his job and put in prison, they were left with no money. Despite the family's limited means, she blossomed into a fashionable young woman.

Marriage
In 1932, a double match was made for two princesses of the Ottoman family living in France, the princesses Dürrüşehvar Sultan and Nilüfer Hanımsultan. The Nizam of Hyderabad, at the time considered the richest man in the world, had won their hand in marriage for his two sons. After a simple wedding in the South of France, the two brides went off to live in India. In her straitened circumstances, Hatice was under a lot of pressure to get her daughter married, the sooner the better. But it had become very hard to find suitable marriage partners for impoverished Turkish royalty. About five years later, a husband for Selma was found in India. Selma traveled to India to marry Syed Sajid Husain Ali, Raja of Kotwara, in 1937. In India, Selma take the title of Princess Selma, Rani of Kotwara and Princess of Ottoman Empire.

However, after growing up first in the splendor of imperial Istanbul and then in cosmopolitan Beirut, Selma had great trouble adjusting to her new environment. The marriage was not a happy one. In the summer of 1939, pregnant with her first child, Selma traveled to Paris, under the pretext of the upcoming royal delivery. She was accompanied only by a faithful retainer of her birth family, a eunuch named Zeynel Agha, who had come to India with her. With the Second World War fast approaching, she ran out of money. Her daughter Kenizé was born on 11 November of that year. Selma did not inform her husband, leading her in-laws to believe the child was stillborn.

Death
In 1942, a world war was raging. Cut off from all resources, Selma lived in dire poverty. That winter, she became very ill and finally succumbed to sepsis on 13 January 1942. She was buried in Bobigny cemetery, Paris.