Melahat Ruacan


Melahat Senger-Ruacan was a female Turkish high court judge and the first woman elected to any supreme court in the world.

Early life

The first child of Col. Nuri and his wife Güzide, she attended Erenköy Girls High School, an exclusive lycée in Istanbul, and later studied philosophy at Istanbul University. Following Mustafa Kemal Atatürk’s establishment of Ankara as the capital of the Turkish Republic, a new university was founded in the city. Melahat Senger moved to the new capital to attend the Faculty of Law at Ankara University from 1925–1929 and finished her studies as the first female graduate of this new school with high honors. In 1938, she married Asım Ruacan, a colleague in law, and had one son with him.

Career and later life

She worked as a judge throughout Turkey, and in 1945, she was appointed to the Turkish Supreme Court of Appeals as its first female member. She decided many crucial cases. During the politically turbulent years of the Democrat Party administration in Turkey, she was forced to retire from her post because of her steadfast refusal to bend the principles of law to serve the political party in power. She successfully challenged her forced retirement in court, and was reinstated to the appellant bench in 1963 with full honors and compensation.
Judge Ruacan was a fearless advocate of the principles of the law and was also an untiring defender of women’s rights, following Atatürk’s Kemalist ideology throughout her life.
She died of a heart attack in Ankara, Turkey, in 1974.