Atughra (Ottoman Turkish:طغرا,romanized: ṭuġrā;Turkish:tuğra) is acalligraphicmonogram,seal orsignature of a sultan that was affixed to all official documents and correspondence. Inspired by thetamgha, it was also carved on his seal and stamped on the coins minted during his reign. Very elaborate decorated versions were created for important documents that were also works of art in the tradition ofOttoman illumination, such as the example ofSuleiman the Magnificent in the gallery below.
The tughra was designed at the beginning of the sultan's reign and drawn by the courtcalligrapher ornişancı on written documents. The first tughra examples are from the 14th century.[1]
Tughras served a purpose similar to thecartouche in ancient Egypt or theRoyal Cypher of British monarchs. Every Ottoman sultan had his own individual tughra.
There are two main schools of thought on the origins of the word tughra. The first sees it derived from aTurkic secretarial emblem calledtughragh, and the second as an effort by Persian scribes to shape the name of the ruler into a bow-like element calledturgha/turghay, subsequently mispronounced as tughra.[2]
The tughra ofSultanMahmud II of theOttoman Empire. It reads inArabic "MahmudKhanson ofAbdülhamid,forevervictorious". Written out:محمودخانبنعبد الحميدمظفردائماً (MahmūdḪānbinAbdulhamīdmuẓafferdāʾimā).
The tughra has a characteristic form, two loops on the left side, three vertical lines in the middle, stacked writing on the bottom and two extensions to the right. Each of these elements has a specific meaning, and together they make up the form that is easily recognizable as a tughra.
Visual Elements of a Tughra
The name of the sultan is written out in the bottom section, called asere. Depending on the period, this name can be as simple asOrhan, son ofOsman, in the first tughra in 1326. In later periods honorifics and prayers are also added to the name of the tughra holder and his father.
The loops to the left of the tughra are calledbeyze, from Arabic meaningegg. Some interpretations of tughra design claim that the beyzes are supposed to symbolize the two seas the sultans held sway over: the outer larger loop signifying the Mediterranean and the inner, smaller loop signifying the Black Sea.
The vertical lines on the top of the tughra are calledtuğ, or flagstaff. The three tugs signify independence. The S-shaped lines crossing the tugs are calledzülfe and they, together with the tops of the tugs that also look to the right, signify that the winds blow from the east to the west, the traditional movement of the Ottomans.
The lines to the right of the tughra are calledhançer and signify a sword, symbol of power and might.
1404 AD datedakçe minted bySüleyman Çelebi. The first Ottoman coin bearing a tughra (on the obverse reading as follows: "Emir Süleyman son of Bayezid")
Afghan currency notes from 1919 to 1936 had the tughra present as well. Pakistan had the tughra on its coins from 1947 till 1974; both of these are present in the State Bank Museum in Karachi. The nawab of Bahawalpur and the Nizam of Hyderabad had tughras on their coinage as well.