Actually it was very common for early sultans to have foreign princesses as consorts and to live in their harem. But of course, they had to be legal wives. Which Farya eventually became so it wasn’t against the rules of the harem.
@20PINKluvr4 ай бұрын
Valide Ayşe Hafsa was a crimean princess when she went on to marry Selim and enter his harem
@BlueSwampyCraft4 ай бұрын
@@20PINKluvr that’s actually not confirmed but so they say. But it was most common with Byzantine and Serbian princesses
@novaauliatulfitrifitri17134 ай бұрын
Noveeeaa@..🗯️
@sadiachy87949 ай бұрын
1:34 Mehmed pasha himself looks like a Sultan here! He is so handsome "
@CadwallonMawr6 ай бұрын
Yep he is a great character. Very regal.
@ГалинаКитаева-ш5г5 ай бұрын
Только Мураду лук поддался!
@ГалинаКитаева-ш5г5 ай бұрын
Приятно смотреть на Мурада и Фарью.
@magorzatapiskozub65562 ай бұрын
The plot of Faria and Murad is great, it adds color to the film and the actors. Thanks to this, we can see the different faces of Murad, brilliantly played by the actor and a great creation of the beautiful Faria. I believe that without this plot, the film would not be so interesting, colorful, and the bland concubine Murad Aische bored every viewer.
@mariakelly90210 Жыл бұрын
4:17 It's Turkish George Clooney!
@AstarteAnthro Жыл бұрын
thank you for validating what I've been saying to myself. jajajajjajaja
@mjbelle23 Жыл бұрын
Who Silatar ? Yes I think he’s sexier tbh
@jodiuhron19799 күн бұрын
The more I look at him, he’s like a combination of George Clooney and Henry Cavill (early seasons of “The Tudors”).
@CadwallonMawr6 ай бұрын
Two bad mistakes by Farya here - going to the Sultan’s havlet by herself at 5:38 to tell him off (that was never going to turn out well) & not fighting more fiercely to leave with her mother - around 14:00. Madame & Farya’s mother both failed her miserably there.
@BlueSwampyCraft5 ай бұрын
She didn’t fight because she also loved him and secretly wanted to stay. She knew he’d come for her.
@CadwallonMawr5 ай бұрын
@@BlueSwampyCraft Thanks, all good points & certainly agree that she loves him. Although, I don't know if she wanted to go back with him as she was still very angry with him for giving away her throne, & as a European princess she expected marriage & monogamy & not to be in a harem, plus she didn't want to get between Murad & his family with Ayse. But if she had refused to go back, Murad had told her he'd take her back by force which she says she knows she couldn't stop. So I think this links back to Murad saying multiple times that she can't leave & he even said once she is his captive & she has to do what he says. Perhaps the writers didn't want another slave & owner type relationship like Suleiman & Hurrem or Kosem & Ahmed but they didn't want to depart from it completely either. It's also astounding that her mother & Madame didn't discourage her from going with Murad. And this could have been a missed opportunity by the writers to dispel the false impression that some viewers had that Farya might be a homewrecker or that she might be weak because she went back with him so readily.t th
@blackcats179Ай бұрын
All Kosem does is scream and order her sun around. She is devious too.
@hendabendhaou10228 күн бұрын
Metin akdülger great actor ❤❤❤❤❤
@evaupadhye5116 ай бұрын
What do they mean by free woman?
@CadwallonMawr6 ай бұрын
Yes. Great question. Confused me as well. What about something like “excludes slaves, but does not exclude someone who is deprived of her liberty, free will, freedom of choice, freedom of movement and/or kept locked up in a mansion or palace”?
@evaupadhye5116 ай бұрын
@@CadwallonMawr I still didn't get it..
@CadwallonMawr6 ай бұрын
@@evaupadhye511 Sorry, I was trying to say that even though Farya isn't a slave she doesn't seem to have much freedom or choice & she is never allowed to leave. E.g, Murad refuses several requests to leave, then he gives away her throne without asking her, then he makes her go back with him here whether she wanted to or not, & then he keeps her locked up in a mansion. He even told her once that she was his captive. That said Murad basically treats her as a sultana when they go back. But I don't think its ever really clear how much freedom she actually has.
@evaupadhye5116 ай бұрын
@@CadwallonMawr ohk..
@dienadzn9 ай бұрын
Why does a Hungarian king speak German?
@margaretanne15172 ай бұрын
Because they were all of Germanic background then.
@ΔημΣΚ Жыл бұрын
Another wrong decision for murad.
@novaauliatulfitrifitri17134 ай бұрын
01:02
@ΔημΣΚ Жыл бұрын
The audacity to talk like that to valide sultan, wow
@suesmith83729 ай бұрын
She regularly forgets that she is not the sultan, but that her son is the sultan. He regularly has to remind her of this. He put her duties as regent to an end, but she thinks she can go behind his back and run his empire with a few loyal henchman, who turned their backs on him also. Kemankes fell in love with her, so that was a given. When you watch the rest of the series, you will understand how evil she became.
@ΔημΣΚ9 ай бұрын
She outranks him
@ΔημΣΚ9 ай бұрын
@@suesmith8372and he forgets she outranks him
@suesmith83729 ай бұрын
@@ΔημΣΚ She only outranked all the other women in the harem. She only held her power while she was the regent. This was obvious when he told her to step aside when he was ready to take the reins. She had to obey him in this, even though she didn't like it. At that point he made it clear that she would run the harem, her traditional role, but that he would run the empire. The sultan outranks everyone else. Other proof of this were the several times he banished her and Ayse from the palace, or decided where Farya would stay, or chose to marry Farya. She had to obey, even though she didn't like it. That she tried to organize rebellions against him, get Farya and Silahtar killed, and even poison him, just meant that she was evil enough to kill her own son by isolation or death, in order to try to regain the throne. Because he had it. And she knew it. She turned out to be a disgusting creature and deserved her horrific end. She was not the sweet Anastasia we all loved in the beginning.