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Khadlaj Hareem Al Sultan Gold - Concentrated Perfume Oil (35ml)

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During the reign of Selim I, [10] which means some time between 1512 and 1520, Crimean Tatars kidnapped her during one of their Crimean–Nogai slave raids in Eastern Europe. The Tatars may have first taken her to the Crimean city of Kaffa, a major centre of the Ottoman slave trade, before she was taken to Istanbul. [6] [7] [8] In Istanbul, Valide Hafsa Sultan selected Hürrem as a gift for her son, Suleiman. Hürrem later managed to become the first Haseki Sultan of the Ottoman imperial harem. [5] Michalo Lituanus wrote in the 16th century that "the most beloved wife of the present Turkish emperor – mother of his first [son] who will govern after him, was kidnapped from our land". [i] [11] KHALIS ROSE GOLD ROYAL by KHALIS este alegerea potrivită în orice situație. Descoperiți un parfum ce vă va scoate mereu în evidență carisma unică. Parfumul surprinde totalitatea evazivă a tuberozei aride, ca și oaza deșertului, îmbinând căldura strălucitoare a amurgului deșertului cu flori surprinzător de dulci și mosc modern, pentru a picta un portret al unei locații ce se întinde pe regiuni, culturi și timpul însuși. ROSE GOLD ROYAL se deschide cu un buchet de flori de portocal și tuberoze, fructat și dulce, dar și surprinzător de uscat, impregnat de imponderabilitate suprarealistă. O potecă dintr-o pădure uscată, ușor netedă se întinde în fața noastră, iar luminile bântuitoare ale bazei cremoase și moscate strălucesc cu intensitate liniștită. Notele par să nu aibă sens împreună, și totuși impresia colectivă este incontestabil coerentă, un loc ce nu ar trebui să existe și totuși prosperă, înlocuind logica restului lumii cu ceva distinctiv, străin și neașteptat de frumos. Auster și nerușinat, îndrăzneț și subestimat, provocator și de-a dreptul încântător, ROSE GOLD ROYAL nu este menit să fie înțeles – cel puțin, nu până când nu te trezești adânc în inima lui și realizezi că nu vrei să pleci niciodată. Hürrem acted as Suleiman's advisor on matters of state, and seems to have had an influence upon foreign policy and on international politics. Two of her letters to King Sigismund II Augustus of Poland (reigned 1548–1572) have survived, and during her lifetime the Ottoman Empire generally had peaceful relations with the Polish state within a Polish–Ottoman alliance. Although the stories about Hürrem's role in executions of Ibrahim, Mustafa, and Kara Ahmed are very popular, actually none of them are based on first-hand sources. All other depictions of Hürrem, starting with comments by sixteenth and seventeenth-century Ottoman historians as well as by European diplomats, observers, and travellers, are highly derivative and speculative in nature. Because none of these people – neither Ottomans nor foreign visitors – were permitted into the inner circle of the imperial harem, which was surrounded by multiple walls, they largely relied on the testimony of the servants or courtiers or on the popular gossip circulating around Istanbul. [11] In the 2003 TV miniseries, Hürrem Sultan, she was played by Turkish actress and singer Gülben Ergen. In the 2011–2014 TV series Muhteşem Yüzyıl, Hürrem Sultan is portrayed by Turkish-German actress Meryem Uzerli from seasons one to three. For the series' last season, she is portrayed by Turkish actress Vahide Perçin. Hürrem is portrayed by Megan Gale in the 2022 movie Three Thousand Years of Longing.

We want the visitors to touch, feel, smell and taste the experience,” says Abudaqa. “So when you walk into [the] hammam, for instance, you can smell the perfumes and the soaps that they used.” Faroqhi, Suraiya (2019). The Ottoman and Mughal Empires: Social History in the Early Modern World. Bloomsbury Publishing. p.62-63. ISBN 9781788318723. a b Talhami, Ghada. Historical Dictionaries of Women in the World: Historical Dictionary of Women in the Middle East and North Africa. Scarecrow Press, 2012. p. 271 Peirce, Leslie P. The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty in the Ottoman Empire (Oxford University Press, 1993)

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Uzunçarşılı, İsmail Hakkı; Karal, Enver Ziya (1975). Osmanlı tarihi, Volume 2. Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi. p. 401. Chitchi, S. "Orientalist view on the Ottoman in the novel Roxalana (Hurrem Sultan) by Ukrainian author Pavlo Arhipovich Zahrebelniy". The Journal of International Social Research Vol. 7, Issue 33, p. 64 Moreover, remaining in Istanbul, she moved out of the harem located in the Old Palace ( Eski Saray) and permanently moved into the Topkapı Palace after a fire destroyed the old harem. Some sources say she moved to Topkapı, not because of the fire, but as a result of her marriage to Suleiman. Either way, this was another significant break from established customs, as Mehmed the Conqueror had specifically issued a decree to the effect that no women would be allowed to reside in the same building where government affairs were conducted. [16] :131 After Hürrem resided at Topkapı it became known as the New Palace ( saray-ı jedid). [28]

Hürrem is known to have been very generous to the poor. She built numerous mosques, madrasahs, hammams, and resting places for pilgrims travelling to the Islamic holy city of Makkah. Her greatest philanthropical work was the Great Waqf of AlQuds, a large soup kitchen in Jerusalem that fed the poor. [42] Some of the fans get so excited to see their favourite characters that we have to remind them not to touch the sculptures,” says Abudaqa. Later, Hürrem became the first woman to remain in the sultan's court for the duration of her life. In the Ottoman imperial family tradition, a sultan's consort was to remain in the harem only until her son came of age (around 16 or 17), after which he would be sent away from the capital to govern a faraway province, and his mother would follow him. This tradition was called Sancak Beyliği. The consorts were never to return to Istanbul unless their sons succeeded to the throne. [27] In defiance of this age-old custom, Hürrem stayed behind in the harem, even after her sons went to govern the empire's remote provinces. Peirce, Leslie (1993). Empress of the East: How a European Slave Girl Became Queen of the Ottoman Empire. New York Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-03251-8. . a b Madar, Heather (2011). "Before the Odalisque: Renaissance Representations of Elite Ottoman Women". Early Modern Women. 6: 11. doi: 10.1086/EMW23617325. JSTOR 23617325. S2CID 164805076– via JSTOR.

Descriere

a b c d e f Levin, Carole (2011). Extraordinary women of the Medieval and Renaissance world: a biographical dictionary. Westport, Conn. [u.a.: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-30659-4. For Ukrainian language novels, see Osyp Nazaruk (1930) (English translation is available), [2] Mykola Lazorsky (1965), Serhii Plachynda (1968), and Pavlo Zahrebelnyi (1980).

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