Fatma Sultan (daughter of Ahmed III)

[citation needed] In 1709, at the age of five, Ahmed betrothed her to Silahdar (Şehid) Ali Pasha.

[4][11] In 1717, when Fatma was thirteen, Ahmed arranged her marriage to Nevşehirli Ibrahim Pasha.

For the wedding, Ibrahim received a sable fur coat from the sultan on February 22, 1717.

Ibrahim Pasha was fifty years old at that time, older than her father, and had divorced his first wife in order to marry the princess.

Ibrahim was very much in love with his wife and was happy to grant her every request, while Fatma was famous for being incredibly jealous of her husband and constantly asked her father to tell her if he was faithful to her or not.

Following their marriage in 1717, the one across from the Kiosk of Processions on the landwalls of the Topkapı Palace, which had long housed many grand vezirs, grew into a monumental complex as Ibrahim Pasha and Fatma continued to annex nearby palaces, and busied themselves with restoring and rebuilding them.

She obtained the release of an imprisoned French consul, who in exchange gave her three diamond buttons.

The couple spent several happy and affluent years during the notorious for its splendidness and lavishness Tulip Age (Lâle Devri) which became the symbol of the reign of Sultan Ahmed III.

[16][17] After the revolt and the ascension to the throne of her nephew Mahmud I, son of Mustafa II, her possessions and wealth were seized and she was exiled to the Çırağan Palace, because the government feared that she might act to put her father back on the throne.

During her lifetime she founded waqfs in the capital bequeathing mülk properties she had received from her father.