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

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Mihrimah Sultan (1522, Topkapı Palace, Istanbul – 25 January 1578, buried in Suleiman I Mausoleum, Süleymaniye Mosque). Hürrem's only daughter. She was married to Rüstem Pasha, later Ottoman Grand Vizier, on 26 November 1539, and had a daughter and at least a son. Our research showed that the UAE had one of the highest viewership numbers of the show in the Arab world, so we’ve been wanting to bring it here ever since we launched the exhibition in Istanbul in 2014,” she says. “Also because of our common culture, there is a lot of history to learn about the Ottoman Empire and that particular time in history.” Controversial figure [ edit ] 16th century Latin oil painting of Hürrem Sultan titled Rosa Solymanni Vxor (Rosa, Süleyman's Wife) Prymak, Thomas M. (15 May 2021). Ukraine, the Middle East, and the West. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press. p.30. doi: 10.2307/j.ctv1m0khf0. ISBN 978-0-2280-0771-5. S2CID 242150028. European ambassadors of that period called her la Rossa, la Rosa, and Roxelana, meaning "Ruthenian woman" [13] or "the Ruthenian one" for her alleged Ruthenian origins. [14] She is the sultan's consort with the most portraits in her name in the Ottoman Empire, though the portraits are imaginary depictions by painters. [15] Relationship with Suleiman [ edit ] Suleiman the Magnificent

Mehmed (1521, Topkapı Palace, Istanbul – 7 November 1543, Manisa Palace, Manisa, buried in Şehzade Mosque, Istanbul). Hürrem's firstborn. He became the sanjak-bey of Manisa and presumptive heir to the throne from 1541 until his death. She built mosque complexes in Adrianopole and Ankara. She commissioned a bath, the Hurrem Sultan Bathhouse, to serve the community of worshippers in the nearby Hagia Sophia. [36] In Jerusalem she established the Haseki Sultan Imaret in 1552, a public soup kitchen to feed the poor, [37] which was said to have fed at least 500 people twice a day. [38] She built a public soup kitchen in Makkah. [11]Suleiman's mother, Hafsa Sultan, partially suppressed the rivalry between the two women. [18] According to Bernardo Navagero's report, as a result of the bitter rivalry a fight between the two women broke out, with Mahidevran beating Hürrem, which angered Suleiman. [19] According to Necdet Sakaoğlu, a Turkish historian, these accusations were not truthful. After the death of Suleiman's mother Hafsa Sultan in 1534, Hürrem's influence in the palace increased, and she took over the ruling of the Harem. [20] Hürrem became the only partner of the ruler and received the title of Haseki, which means the favorite. When Suleiman freed and married her, or in the years before, she became the Haseki Sultan (adding the word sultan to a woman's name or title indicated that she was a part of the dynasty). [21] 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.

Aside from her political concerns, Hürrem engaged in several major works of public buildings, from Makkah to Jerusalem (Al-Quds), perhaps modelling her charitable foundations in part after the caliph Harun al-Rashid's consort Zubaida. Among her first foundations were a mosque, two Quranic schools ( madrassa), a fountain, and a women's hospital near the women's slave market ( Avret Pazary) in Istanbul ( Haseki Sultan Complex). It was the first complex constructed in Istanbul by Mimar Sinan in his new position as the chief imperial architect. [36]There have been novels written in other languages: in French, a fictionalized biography by Willy Sperco (1972); in German, a novel by Johannes Tralow (1944, reprinted many times); a very detailed novel in Serbo-Croatian by Radovan Samardzic (1987); one in Turkish by Ulku Cahit (2001). Her joyful spirit and playful temperament earned her a new name, Hürrem, from Persian Khorram, "the cheerful one". In the Istanbul harem, Hürrem became a rival to Mahidevran and her influence over the sultan soon became legendary. Selim II (28 May 1524, Topkapı Palace, Istanbul – 15 December 1574, Topkapı Palace, Istanbul, buried in Selim II Mausoleum, Hagia Sophia Mosque). He was sanjak-bey of Manisa after Mehmed's death and later governor of Konya and Karaman. Suleiman's only son that survived after him, he ascended to the throne on 7 September 1566 as Selim II.

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