Women in the Ottoman Empire seemed to live much better lives than people would have imagined for that time period. Women had rights regarding inheritance, marriage, divorce, and the like which they had not had prior to the introduction of Islam. Although men had authority over women, the women, however, were allowed to go to court to challenge actions that deviated from religious prescriptions and women often won these cases. The situation in the Ottoman Empire was no different. There were the less wealthy people who could not afford more than one wife and who usually lived as a family group, sometimes all in one home, - parents, married couple, children and possibly other dependents such as foster children, and in some instances, servants who were considered part of the family. With limited means, it was impossible to have a harem and more than one wife. In …show more content…
It traverses the long history of the Ottoman Empire, from the fourteenth to the mid twentieth hundreds of years, and incorporates adverse land and social range including ladies of Anatolia, Greece, the Balkan Peninsula, North Africa, and West Asia legitimate, and additionally Christian, Jewish, and Muslim ladies. The investigation of Ottoman ladies is generally new. Before the late 1970s, little had been composed. Amid the last a quarter century, be that as it may, maybe no subject in Middle Eastern investigations has pulled in more insightful attention. Much of this work has tested the customary perspective of Ottoman and Muslim ladies based on normative religious and political writing as minimized and feeble. Drawing on a variety of various sources-including court records, political archives, and monetary records-researchers have shown that Ottoman ladies had accessible to them what Madeline Zilfi has named "a wide field of activity… in spite of an acquired sexual orientation framework that endorsed ladies' subordination to