Sultana Mihrimah's Unresolved Disease | Magnificent Century
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- čas přidán 16. 01. 2024
- Sultana Mihrimah's Unresolved Disease "THE FLIRTATIOUS DOCTOR'S REMEDY"
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The war between Hurrem and Nurbanu begins!
Hurrem's answer devastates Suleiman. Gazanfer saves Nurbanu from drawning at the last moment. Nurbanu escapes the death and blames Hurrem. The war between Hurrem and Nurbanu begins. Defne becomes successful on winning Bayezid's heart and tells Selim a secret that she has found out. The trap that Selim has set for Bayezid drives him crazy. Mihrimah gets lesions on her body. Doctor Pedro who comes to cure Mihrimah's lesions enamours her. Fatma puts Hurrem in a grat danger. Suleiman gets shocked because of what he sees as he comes to save Hurrem. Suleiman banishes Fatma from the capital. Hurrem gets terrified because of what the fortune teller has told her. Suleiman throws his heart into the flames within Mustafa's letter.
At the age of 26, when he ascended to the throne, Sultan Suleiman aimed to build an empire more powerful than Alexander the Great and to render the Ottomans invincible. Throughout his 46-year reign, he became the greatest warrior and ruler of both East and West.
The young Suleiman received news of his succession to the throne during a hunting party in 1520. Unaware that he would be ruling a reign beyond his dreams, he left behind his wife son and took to the road with his close friend and companion Pargali Ibrahim to reach the Topkapi Palace in Istanbul. As they started their journey overland, an Ottoman ship set sail from Crimea in the Black Sea, bringing female slaves as gifts for the Ottoman palace… On this ship was Alexandra La Rossa, the daughter of a Ukrainian Orthodox minister, taken away from her family and sold to the Crimean palace. She had no idea that she would become Hurrem, wife of Sultan Suleiman and mother of princes, ruling the empire with him through bloodshed and intrigue.
As Sultan Suleiman conquered the world, his great passion for Hurrem would clash with his love for and trust in his closest friend and advisor, Grand Vizier Pargali Ibrahim, all set against the backdrop of the tension between Christian Europe and the Ottoman Empire in the 16th century.
Cast: Halit Ergenç, Nebahat Çehre, Meryem Uzerli, Okan Yalabık, Nur Aysan, Selma Ergeç, Sema Keçik, Filiz Ahmet, Selim Bayraktar, Selen Öztürk, Nihan Büyükağaç, Burcu Tuna, Merve Oflaz, Arif Erkin, Ali Uyandıran, Alp Öyken, Murat Tüzün, Doğan Turan, Gökhan Çelebi, Yüksel Ünal.
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That doctor must be working for the NHS!
Pedro will live in Rustem's head forever lmao. What an insecure man.
I can't get how the screenwriters butchered one of the best characters in the whole show - Rustem. He had an incredible charisma, intelligence and a specific "charm" in the season 3, now they made him an obsessed sad man supporting Bayezid from the start for completely NO reason. :(
Rüstem, ironically, gets butchered as a character in the same way that Mustafa does where it's obvious that the writers can't set their bias aside and wind up reducing both to reflection of propaganda. I don't think the rationale behind his support of Bayezid is all that well reflected in the show, but it's actually grounded in historical truth and seems to be because Mihrimah and even, to a point, Hürrem, favored him, so he was kind of following the political faction he was apart of. Still, like I said, it isn't super well illustrated and, given what a careful statesman Rüstem was, I'd imagine Bayezid's reckless moves made him feel insane sometimes.
@@leoswiftie This might be an unpopular opinion, but imo Mihrimah is one of the most spoiled, irritating characters in the whole show, and as she humiliated Rustem all the time during their marriage, she fully deserved what he did to her. Bayezid also treated him awfully, and from the start of the season I wanted to cry to Rustem: Guy, leave him and support Selim!
@@Redluna32 Yep, I fully agree with you. Great analysis.
@@leoswiftie That’s exactly what I think. Mihri was a terrible person even as a kid, and I also disliked her in the seasons 2 and 3. E.g. what she did to Esmahan, she seemed to like hurting her (she noticed she fell in love with Mehmet and then humiliated her by suggesting something like “who are you to dream about my brother”) while, in that time, Esmahan didn’t do anything wrong to her. 😕 Maybe a different actress would make her more likable, but Pelin Karahan lacks some charm that would be needed for that.
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Lol come on what are we watching..
No way the daughter of a Sultan would behave in that way. Neither would Rustem. They went a bit far to show Mihrimah like a lusty immature woman.
@@QuantumGamingUploads yes
@@QuantumGamingUploadsI mean, not Mihrimah, sure, but there absolutely _were_ daughters of sultans who created a scandal through similar behavior. The affair that Hatice, a daughter of Murad V, had with the husband of her cousin stands out immediately (gossip swirled that the two also planned to murder his wife) but lesser versions are Hundi Fatma, who as a daughter of Bayezid I's had a secret marriage to Emir Buhari, a favorite of her father's, and how the painter, Anton Ignaz Melling, was a part of the intimate circle of another Hatice (a daughter of Mustafa III), who allowed him to enter the palace harem for inspiration for his drawings.
@@QuantumGamingUploads never ever an imperial sultana acted like that, never. Dont believe the person above