Keep it according to history . Even if she leaves replace with a Malhun character….

Keep it according to history . Even if she leaves replace with a Malhun character.

As Kurulus Osman takes a different turn shortly and a second wife to exit , it would Be great to know the real history behind the story , while some maybe fact some are still are fiction:
Who was Malhun Hatun;

Malhun Hatun (other names include Mal Hatun, Mala Hatun, Kameriye Sultana) (died November 1323) was the first wife of Osman I, the leader of the Ottoman Turks and the founder of the dynasty that established and ruled the Ottoman Empire.

It has been recognized by many historians that she was the daughter of the Anatolian Turkish Bey, Ömer Bey, although there had been many speculations that she was the daughter of Sheikh Edebali. Other sources say that she was the daughter of Ömer Abdülaziz Bey, Seljuk Vizier of Anatolia.

The 1324 endowment deed for a Dervish Monastery built by Sultan Orhan suggests that his mother was not, as popular historical tradition maintains, Edebali’s daughter but rather Mal Hatun, the daughter of one “Umar Bey or Ömer Bey”. The title “Bey”, used by the princely dynasties of Anatolia, suggests that Mal Hatun’s father was a person of some status and authority. One possibility is that he was the eponymous ruler of an “Amouri” (Umeri) Principality, which was located northeast of the emerging Ottoman State and disappeared in the late 13th or the early 14th century. The Amouri are described by the Byzantine historian George Pachymeres, who says that a son of Umar fought with Osman in one of his first raids against local Byzantine lords (the victory of Baphaion). The Ottomans, according to Pachymeres, went on to assume the role played by Amouri until their demise as the principal aggressor against the Byzantines in the northwest Anatolia. If Pachymeres’s report is correct, the timing and the political context are appropriate for a marriage between Osman and ‘Umar Bey’s daughter.

Mal Hatun has a central role in the legendary Osman’s Dream, depicting Osman’s great love for her and the long struggle he had to undergo before being able to gain her hand. The account is, however, considered to have been composed centuries later, reflecting later generations’ perception of her rather than the historical reality. She died in 1323.

Spouses of Osman : to be note according to history:

Osman Ghazi’s first marriage supposedly took place in 1280 CE when he married to Malhun Hatun, the daughter of a powerful Anatolian Seljuk Vizier Ömer Abdülaziz Bey. It has also been recorded that same Malhun Hatun was the mother of Osman’s successor, Orhan Ghazi. Osman Ghazi’s second marriage took place in 1289 CE when he married Rabia Bala Hatun, the daughter of famous spiritual person of that era Sheikh Edebali. She became the mother of Alaeddin Pasha of the Ottoman Empire. Her name is “Rabia Bala Hatun” in the history of “Uruc” and “Malhun Bala Hatun” in the other three important historians Aşıkpaşazade, Kemalpaşazâde and Neşri.

After noticing this, confusion has been created that what was the name of the daughter of Sheikh Edebali either Malhun Bala Hatun or Rabia Bala Hatun? The most competent Ottoman historian of today, Prof. Dr. A. Şimşirgil votes towards the latter stance. But either it was Malhun or Rabia but surely it was having Bala Hatun with it and because of the same reason, her name has been used as Bala Hatun in Kurulus Osman Season.

Bala Hatun was the second wife of Osman Ghazi, the first great Sultan of the Ottoman Empire. Her date of birth is yet unknown but it is supposed that she was born in Anatolia. She was the daughter of Sheikh Edebali who arranged her marriage to Osman Ghazi in 1289 CE. Sheikh Edebali agreed for her marriage to Osman Ghazi after knowing about his dream of the establishment of the new Muslim State. After marrying Osman Ghazi, Bala Hatun was awarded the village of Kozağaç in the district of Bilecik.

Bala Hatun reportedly died in January 1324 CE and preceded her husband Osman Ghazi. Bala Hatun was buried in the tomb of her father Sheikh Edebali in Bilecik. Her Grandchildren names were Yıldırım Bayezid, Yakub Çelebi, Nefise Hatun, Sultan Hatun, Halil Bey, İbrahim Bey, Murad I, Süleyman Paşa, Şehzade Halil, and Fatma Hatun. And ALLAH knows the best.