Suleiman Takes Ferhat Pasha's Head Off | Magnificent Century

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024
  • Suleiman Takes Ferhat Pasha's Head Off "NO ROOM FOR MISTAKE!"
    Click for full episodes playlist 👉 • Magnificent Century Fu...
    Victoria gets caught blindsided and can't avoid the coitus with the Sultan. Victoria will see İbrahim as she's walking out of Suleiman's suit messily.
    Meanwhile, Sultana tells Hürrem that Suleiman will stay at İbrahim's palace and she gets worried that he will stay there for Victoria.
    Hürrem wants to see what's going on in the palace and goes there to visit Hatice. She secretly goes in Suleiman's suit to find a proof for the night. Hürrem finds Victoria's shawl in the suit and gets sure that Suleiman was with a woman last night.
    In the mean time, Leo starts to work at the miniature atelier in the palace with Sultan's order. The people in the atelier don't like that Leo is close with the Sultan and İbrahim. On the other hand, Leo feels humiliated because of a pouch of golden coins Hürrem's sent to him and gives it to Nigar to take it back Hürrem.
    Gülşah gets attacked by Nigar in the hamam but she can't tell that to Mahidevran. However she warns her to be careful about Nigar.
    Ayas Pasha gets lots of complaints that Ferhat Pasha has built his own regime in Semendere and informs Suleiman about that. Suleiman wants İbrahim to gather the council and do what's necessary. They call a villager from Semender to speak in council. Ferhat Pasha levies taxes unjustly and accepts bribe.
    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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Комментарии • 194

  • @juliewills8034
    @juliewills8034 Год назад +142

    Ibrahim Pasha watched Ferhat Pasha being strangled, not realising, at the time, that he would suffer the same fate.

    • @mozaidazli2806
      @mozaidazli2806 5 месяцев назад +12

      A year later after he executed Iskender Celebi

    • @mohammadibrahim3828
      @mohammadibrahim3828 4 месяца назад +8

      Inrahim pasha was lot better for caliphate then ferget pasha

  • @maryanngonzales22
    @maryanngonzales22 Месяц назад +63

    What is surprising to me is that it appears Beyhan and Hatice did not seek to understand what caused such a punishment for their husands but expected the Sultan to overlook the grave corruption becase he was their sibling. Execution is extreme punishment, but lavish, entitled living at the misery of those you are supposed to be helping is extereme suffering for them. The decsion of the Sultan who was being misrepresented to these people, meant to assure them he had no part in the bad behavior of his Pasha there and of his immediate remedy to relieve that suffering along with the message of the sincerity of his disapproval of that bad behavior. I guess we could all do well to reflect on how our behavior affects those around us and seek to remedy our attitudes and avoid entitled over reach and God's intervention.

    • @elinchristensen4854
      @elinchristensen4854 Месяц назад +5

      Omgoodness YES!!

    • @MemineAussi
      @MemineAussi Месяц назад +8

      Beyhan did not ask why her husband was executed. She witnessed his corruption, so she already knew why and did not need to ask.

    • @roys8870
      @roys8870 16 дней назад +1

      @@MemineAussi It seems Ferhat Pasha over pampered her. Giving in to her every whim which required a lot of money, hence the necessary corruption. Noble ladies at that time were totally sheltered from the outside world. Everything was provided to them and they never questioned or wondered where it all came from.

    • @annakoshi3823
      @annakoshi3823 12 дней назад

      Absolutely true!

  • @miroslavtomic7038
    @miroslavtomic7038 2 месяца назад +61

    In reality, members of Ottoman dynasty were not executed by simple strangulation as it is shown in this series. They were actually executing through process called garroting, which involved the person being tied to a wooden post with a rope being tied to a metal pole which was behind the post. The person was strangled by turning the metal pole around thus tightening the rope around person's neck. This is how Bayezid and his sons were executed. The way it is shown here is actually the way it was done during military campaigns or while being away from capital and palace when it needed to be done quickly. This is the way Mustafa and others were strangled to death.

    • @jeannerogers7085
      @jeannerogers7085 Месяц назад +6

      Rather get the ax, personally.

    • @julianneheindorf5757
      @julianneheindorf5757 Месяц назад +1

      Garroting was still used in Spain under Franco as late as the 1970s. It’s a horrible way to die.

    • @throttlegalsmagazineaustra7361
      @throttlegalsmagazineaustra7361 29 дней назад +2

      If you don't wear a lampshade on your head you have to wear a pumpkin, apparently.

    • @Tigs2
      @Tigs2 23 дня назад +4

      @@throttlegalsmagazineaustra7361 throughout history mans ability to design ridiculous headwear for its leaders has outshone most other skills.

    • @joefirma2242
      @joefirma2242 16 дней назад +1

      The garrote was historically used in Spain and her colonies. Was it because of Spain's Moorish heritage?

  • @princess7jasmine
    @princess7jasmine Год назад +85

    I don't understand people like Ferhat Pasha, like, you were spared once and given a chance to repent, but would rather do the same crime again then beg when you get caught again, knowing full well there won't be a second chance anymore because you squandered the first one.

    • @Redluna32
      @Redluna32 Год назад +21

      It feels like a display of arrogance (ironically, rather similar to how Ibrahim got in the show...) alongside of a dash of foolishness. Because, yeah, a sensible person would get that there wouldn't be a second chance, but it seems almost as if he took getting spared as a sign that such leniency was always assured to him out of being married to Beyhan.

    • @dhm7815
      @dhm7815 Месяц назад +6

      That's the definition of the overused word "narcissist". Narcissists are usually charming, attractive people who early in life became conditioned to feel their charm is a bottomless well. The ones I've met did not believe they deserved everything -- they just thought a fair deal wasn't 50--50 but 95--5. They believe that so much that they think you believe it. The ones I've met are so sincere that they explained it to slowly on the assumption that I would see the light like solving a math problem, that I would say, "Oh yes, I see it now. I do 50% of the work and get 5%! Of course."

    • @boydgrandy5769
      @boydgrandy5769 Месяц назад +3

      His social position imparted a sense of unwarranted arrogance to Ferhat Pasha, who was at his core a thief and a coward. His wife's relationship to Suleiman gave him what he thought was invincibility, and the earlier tolerance of his behaviors only reinforced the feeling that he was above the law and untouchable.
      He forgot the cardinal rule of brothers in law to the monarch. Never embarrass the king from whom all your fortune flows. That is especially true right after the king's special troops tried to kill him.

    • @lincolnyaco5626
      @lincolnyaco5626 13 дней назад

      @@Redluna32___People of that distant time didn't haver TV or newspapers. Many of the aristocracy never even learned to read (they had scribes to do that). They didn't learn to foresee the consequences of their actions. That is one reason why a sultan stood out as a leader because he learned these skills.

    • @lincolnyaco5626
      @lincolnyaco5626 13 дней назад

      @@dhm7815 ___WELL SAID!

  • @bharathiramesh5878
    @bharathiramesh5878 5 месяцев назад +73

    The actress who played Beyhan had done a tremendous job here...initially a shock..just cant believe and then bursting out crying..then leaving the palace...she nailed it.

    • @robertstewart1223
      @robertstewart1223 Месяц назад +1

      I'm gonna tell you I find this series as good as anything produced in Hollywood. All of the actors in this show, except for the children of course, are EXCEPTIONAL in their rolls. This guy that plays the Sultan Suleiman fits this part so well and acts it out with amazing skill! The scenes where his son was going through the stretching of his bones?? The anguish on his face hearing his child cry out in pain took my breath. This has become my most recent binge.

  • @suewiseley2724
    @suewiseley2724 Год назад +143

    the fact she got all her clothes and jewels from the people they were suppose to care for means nothing. her husband was a con and robber. that's what you can tell your kids!

    • @CrimsonAngelWinges
      @CrimsonAngelWinges Год назад +31

      Suleiman should have had Beyhan watch his trial. I don't blame her for being upset and not wanting to stay in the capital or with Hatice. But her anger shouldn't be solely on Suleiman her husband was spared death once and he still continued.

    • @celticprincess2002
      @celticprincess2002 10 месяцев назад +22

      @@CrimsonAngelWingesI doubt it occurred to him as back them women in the Ottoman Royal Family were often kept away from such matters. There were strict rules for who could and could not have access to the women in the Sultans family and his haram. But yes it would of helped her she was educated much more than most women of the time.

    • @Roseily-k1s
      @Roseily-k1s 3 месяца назад

      *You taunt and ridicule the sufferings of others. The family of the criminal are also Human beings, don't blame her.*

    • @Roseily-k1s
      @Roseily-k1s 3 месяца назад

      *How heartless are you? She lost her husband, whatever he was. The family of criminals are also Human beings, You can't understand her pain.*

    • @user-zo4ei1ip2i
      @user-zo4ei1ip2i 3 месяца назад +7

      ​@@Roseily-k1sNobody blames Beyhan, but she can't expect Süleyman to treat Ferhad as if he wasn't a criminal.

  • @maksa.v4
    @maksa.v4 Месяц назад +10

    To my astonishment I have realised that the Semendire Sancağ that Ferhat Pasha ruled is actually in my country. It is called Smederevo and has a formidable fortress to this day.

    • @terrarozza1
      @terrarozza1 Месяц назад

      History goes as long as humanity exists. Who knows what would happen to your Smederevo fortress for the next hundreds of years.

    • @maksa.v4
      @maksa.v4 Месяц назад

      @@terrarozza1 Next 100 are more or less predictable (50 at least), next 200 far less so.

    • @WildernessGirl21
      @WildernessGirl21 14 дней назад

      That was the province at the time that Bali Bey's father governed.

  • @lisakayser8234
    @lisakayser8234 Год назад +36

    This is not the first execution that His Majesty orders

    • @travisfriedland9346
      @travisfriedland9346 20 дней назад +1

      I don't think sulaman liked or enjoyed executing people I do not believe in good faith he was bloodthirsty he ordered people strangled when he felt the laws of the empire he himself for being threatened

  • @annakoshi3823
    @annakoshi3823 4 месяца назад +18

    Sad but i understand where Suleiman was coming from! As a king he had to keep the well being of his subjects as his highest priority and he had to dispense justice swiftly and firmly. Otherwise his administration would be weakened. Of course i understand Beyhans feelings too. She lost her husband and father of her children. Nothing could be worse for her than that.

    • @20PINKluvr
      @20PINKluvr 3 месяца назад

      That's probably why sultan ahmed was laughable

    • @WildernessGirl21
      @WildernessGirl21 14 дней назад

      Sulieman was never a king. He was a Sultan. Which is higher than a king. He MADE men kings.

    • @lincolnyaco5626
      @lincolnyaco5626 13 дней назад

      ​@@WildernessGirl21 ___It depends on what cultural lens you use. "King" is a Western term. Depending how you translate it, "sultan" means "king of kings" and "king" means GOVERNOR.

  • @brustar5152
    @brustar5152 Месяц назад +23

    Gotta be tough shopping for just the right lamp shade to wear at Lighting Unlimited.

    • @nevillehoward8736
      @nevillehoward8736 8 дней назад

      We "westerners" wear some pretty outlandish stuff too.

  • @little_misscrafty
    @little_misscrafty Месяц назад +6

    I think Suleiman sparing their feelings by not revealing the extents of their crimes and treachery fed in to their hate and delusions that the punishments were unjust. He graciously spared their lives and their children. Usually if you were judged to be a traitor, your whole family was punished, not only the culprit

  • @TametheShame
    @TametheShame Год назад +47

    Ok but what about dear old hubby torturing all those subjects? Plus he did it before. Is she so surprised?

    • @CrimsonAngelWinges
      @CrimsonAngelWinges Год назад +16

      Suleiman should have had Beyhan watch his trial. I don't blame her for being upset and not wanting to stay in the capital or with Hatice. But her anger shouldn't be solely on Suleiman her husband was spared death once and he still continued.

  • @TinyBlitz8
    @TinyBlitz8 2 месяца назад +8

    Ahhh Sumbul the only person who survived the whole ordeal without being stressed.

  • @Redluna32
    @Redluna32 Год назад +49

    This is actually one of those moments that's pretty dang close to the "real historical". That Hafsa actually spoke to convince Suleiman to spare the pasha in the first place, plays a big role in why some historians consider her to be Beyhan's mother to begin with (the record of Selim I's daughters is difficult to decipher).
    About the only thing that isn't real is the foreshadowing this serves for Hatice as it's now been proven she never actually married Ibrahim. Works well within the show, though! (Also that bit exchange around 1:09 is very telling of how Ibrahim's own poor actions will eventually be handled.)

    • @nesiacha3659
      @nesiacha3659 Год назад +9

      In fact Hatice husband was executed by her father Selim Yavuz ( despite that he play a big role
      in his ascension to the throne just like a lot of Sultans in fact , it seems that being Vizier or Pasha was dangerous). Would have been a better write than show script I think.
      Yes there has been a lot of (false) speculation that Hatice was Ibrahim's wife. Maybe due to the fact that Ibrahim died strangled like a member of the dynasty (because their blood should not flow), I don't know.
      A yes the daughters of Selim Yavuz. One of the reasons why he won against his half brother Ahmed and his father Bayezid II (especially with the role of Hatice's husband). That's why I don't buy into the belief that Mahidevran was relieved gave birth to a daughter, she was Suleiman's concubine when he was sehzade so of course she knows how very useful a Sultana was (and I think the historic Hurrem was relieved too, Mihrimah as the Sultan's daughter would live without worrying about being strangled).
      Going back to the Sultan's daughters, it seems that he was very fond of Hatice daughter of his favorite Hafsa (but he was horrible when he had her husband executed no matter how much I like Selim Yavuz, he could be a terrible person even if he was one of the greatest Sultans), but also Sah daughter of the Crimean princess Ayse.
      But it seems he had a complicated relationship with Fatma Sultan who constantly complained to him about her husband (and since he didn't grant a divorce, I don't think they got along well).
      Hafsa was a good Valide (historically) and did many good things for the Ottoman Empire and neutral towards Hurrem and Mahidevran.
      But it would seem that when it came to her family she would put her family first like the case of Beyhan husband (understandable I would have done the same) or when it would seem that she didn't object to Suleiman taking the irresponsible decision to break the rule one concubine one son, when she should have opposed a little more (even if it would not have changed anything)

    • @drfhgs428
      @drfhgs428 Год назад +2

      @@nesiacha3659 Yes,i also like Selim I more because he really expanded the empire for 8 years.
      Compared to Selim II,Mehmed III,Ibrahim I and Mustafa II whose reign was also 8 years,he was strong and powerful padishah,even though he was cruel at some point.
      I think that he was better than his son Suleiman I.
      I've seen some historians are giving the first place to Suleiman I,and the second to Selim I,but idk really.
      Agree about Hatice's husband,but he also executed the husbands of his other daughetrs and sisters too.
      Yes i agree about grand vizier position.
      The confusion about Ibrahim and Hatice being married was that Ibrahim married Muhsine Hatun(whose first name was Hatice)and her mother was called Hafsa Hatun(she was sister of Mihrishah Hatun-the woman who raised Ibrahim).
      Shah was neither daughter of Ayse Hatun(Crimean princess)or Hafsa Sultan.
      The mother of Shah was anonymous concubine(who lived until 1556 and died in Old Palace).
      It is probably that Selim married Ayse Hatun(daughter of Crimean khan)who previously was wife of his brother Sehzade Mehmed(who was governour of Kefe province).
      Ayse Hatun with Sehzade Mehmed had 2 children:son(also named Mehmed after his father,he was posthumus) who died as child and a daughter- Fatma Sultan.
      The marriage between Selim I and Ayse Hatun was political,to gain the support of Crimean khan when he rebeled against his father(something similar as Osman II with Akile Hatun and the granddaughter of Pertev Pasa,or as Mehmed II with Mukrime Hatun and Hatice Hatun).
      There are also some who said that this marriage didn't happened.
      But probably it happened.
      But what is sure,is that Ayse Hatun and Selim I didn't have children.
      Agree about Hafsa Sultan.

    • @nesiacha3659
      @nesiacha3659 Год назад +1

      @@drfhgs428 Yes I think that Selim was one the best Sultans. I would really like to see what would happen if Selim Yavuz , Shah Abbas, Queen Elizabeth I, Louis XI of France , Friederich II of Prussia, Kings Catholics ( Isabel and Fernando) and Tsar Peter I or Catherine II would have do if they ruled in the same era. Probably a big fight. But still epic XD ( or epic alliance)
      And imagine the argue between Tsar Peter I and Selim Yavuz
      Tsar Peter I: My son is rebellious, a traitor and He ran away and probably will try to dethrone me.
      Selim I: Whats wrong with that? I dethrone my father and killed his heir. But I would do worse if my son even try to contradict myself
      More seriously, we have to be fair with Selim II he was too busy to repaired all the mistakes of his father. I think that Selim II was a better ruler than his father.
      I think that Suleiman was overrated , he made many mistakes and was one of the craftsmen of the Ottoman Empire so no he wasn't the best Sultan and he didn't choose well his viziers. I mean Ibrahim was a good diplomat but made too many mistakes, he voluntarily chose a vizier Kara Ahmed knowing that he would not be fit to take the job for Rustem to come back except that the people had to put up with it for a period, Suleiman was not able to manage an imperial treasury compared to Kosem and Murad who had to manage the state coffers in an empty way and in the end Murad filled the treasury in a spectacular way (or Turhan, reason why I consider Turhan and Kosem to be better leaders than Suleiman).
      He made a lot of reforms but not enough. Selim not only made strategic conquests, he was a true visionary because he knew the problems that the Ottoman Empire was going to see and did everything to overcome them, it could have worked , and he was as demanding of others as himself, and much more dutiful than his son ( Suleiman was selfish for broke all the rules of concubines which could have brought disastrous results when Selim no matter he like Hafsa refuse to do that) even if I know he could be very terrible ( but was also capable of great cruelty, just like his father he beheaded messengers and in his case it was even worse because the message was not as insulting as the one sent by the Shah to Selim if it hadn't been for Hurrem it would surely have been even worse )
      I think it's because Selim Yavuz had to fight a lot more for the throne and his survival compared to his son his victory was brought to him on a silver platter (another worst example is Murad III in the easy win matter).
      In short I find that the three Selim are quite underestimated (Selim I, Selim II and Selim III even if the last one had a tragic end because of the Jannissaries)

    • @drfhgs428
      @drfhgs428 Год назад

      @@nesiacha3659 Hahaha,true about Peter I and Selim I.
      Yes i agree about Selim II.
      It was mainly geopolitical situation-which was Suleiman's fault,and that's why some said Selim bring the downfall of the empire.
      While in reality,it wasn't like that.
      I agree about Suleiman I.
      I think he is overrated because of his reforms(which weren't enough,yes) and that he went on campaigns.
      Very true about Suleiman I and Murad III,they didn't have to fought for the throne,mainly because of their mothers(who were favourities),also they were only sons for a long time,and yes everything was brought for them on silver platter.
      Yes I agree about all Selims.
      Especially I feel sorry for Selim III.He was kind and good ruler,he wanted to end the janissaries also(before Mahmud II).
      But he was betrayed too by his cousins-Mustafa IV and Esma Sultan and their mother Sineperver Sultan.
      While he didn't have children, he still considered Mustafa and Mahmud(his little cousins)as his heirs, and even counted them as his children. Also 2 of his concubines throw themselves when the executioners had arrived, so yea it was mess.
      And he wasn't even strangled, he was pierced with a sword(which was the first and only case a sultan died that way).
      At least Mihrisah Sultan(his mother)wasn't alive that time,because after Murad and Nurbanu, it is said that Selim and Mihrishah had the second clouse mother and son bond.
      So yes, it sad.
      But in the end Mustafa IV didn't rule long(only a year),and he was executed too.
      Sineperver and Esma reminds me of Halime and Dilruba(show version somehow),and Esma of Mihrimah at some point.

    • @nesiacha3659
      @nesiacha3659 Год назад

      @@drfhgs428 It seems that Mustafa IV was the most hated Sultan with Ibrahim I ( and to right tittle)
      Yes sad for Selim III , got a lot of good idea and then die horribly ( understand better why Peter I did that with Streltsy even if the repression was horrible and maybe got too far).
      Agreed about Sinepver and Esma.
      Too bad that Peter I and Selim never meet each other it would be something.
      They have a lot in common, as demanding of themselves as the others, go to war for strategic reasons, visionaries, angry, hardworking, have worked hard to ensure their thrones, have definitely brought their different countries to the apogee (even if Peter I has made many more reforms , including treating blacks and whites equally and was more eccentric than Selim for a ruler).
      In fact Peter I is a mix between Selim Yavuz Murad IV and Mahmud II.

  • @jodiuhron1979
    @jodiuhron1979 5 месяцев назад +23

    At 33:40, many of us already know that Hatice will feel that pain someday.

  • @noeraldinkabam
    @noeraldinkabam Год назад +22

    There have been sisters and daughters of sultans that were married of to pasha’s and/or vizirs over and over. One got beheaded, on to the next. The women were used to tie capable people to their sultanate. People that think Hürrem married Mirimah to Rüstem are delusional. The bad rap those two have is thanks to the fact that complaining about a Sultan at the hight of his power was a sure way to get your life shortened: It can’t be the one god send to care for us (sultan) is bad. He must be influenced by bad people. They don’t see duplicity in it: only a weak man can be influenced to do dumb stuff. But what is the sultanate, popedom and any kingdom ruled by an autocrat: one big gaslighting party. Where everybody is supposed to love and honor that one person and explain away all their misdeeds and mistakes.

  • @stevenleslie8557
    @stevenleslie8557 Месяц назад +32

    I can't take those hats seriously

    • @Jim.Thunda
      @Jim.Thunda 16 дней назад

      Hat's through history are a symbolic icon of intimidation and status.
      It seems the more height and splendour the more intimidating to the people.
      It's all about power over the many by the few.
      This is why the many must remain disarmed.
      Look to those that have the most to lose to find the most wicked.

    • @phoenix15_
      @phoenix15_ 14 дней назад

      Dumpling

    • @lincolnyaco5626
      @lincolnyaco5626 13 дней назад

      NO KIDDING! Those hats are riotous!

    • @random_thoughts5343
      @random_thoughts5343 11 дней назад +1

      I always think of marshmallows 😂

  • @brucemacmillan9581
    @brucemacmillan9581 Месяц назад +5

    He had to answer for Santino. 😆

  • @igameasapx
    @igameasapx 3 месяца назад +8

    9:06 "I wouldn't."
    Sure.

  • @JimNobles-gv4ky
    @JimNobles-gv4ky Месяц назад +5

    HATICE is stunningly gorgeous…

    • @lincolnyaco5626
      @lincolnyaco5626 13 дней назад

      To my Western eyes, she is quite plain.

  • @shellbythesea12
    @shellbythesea12 Месяц назад +6

    Those hats are hilarious. They look like odd marshmallows 😅

    • @jeannerogers7085
      @jeannerogers7085 Месяц назад +2

      They are marvelous creations; I have been trying to figure out their construction.

    • @terrib627
      @terrib627 Месяц назад +2

      They look like styrofoam coolers to me.

    • @shellbythesea12
      @shellbythesea12 Месяц назад

      ​@@terrib627true 😂

    • @carlyjmc
      @carlyjmc Месяц назад +2

      They remind me of huge Teeth 😂

    • @antred11
      @antred11 Месяц назад +2

      To me they look like lampshades. :D

  • @christianchatel8387
    @christianchatel8387 Месяц назад +3

    Very interesting. Good actors. Well played. Helps me better understand this culture.

  • @carolynthornton8017
    @carolynthornton8017 7 месяцев назад +20

    IN MY VIEW
    I guess Ferhat Pasha's wife was either blind, dumb or left out about how her husband was cruel to his subjects and even murdered.

    • @micheleford4282
      @micheleford4282 3 месяца назад +2

      well yes at that home she would have been kept out of public things she probably never knew he was doing those things

    • @Caramelpop86
      @Caramelpop86 3 месяца назад +3

      She probably didn't know

    • @johnstuartsmith
      @johnstuartsmith 13 дней назад

      As long as Pauly and Ralphy kept giving Tony enough cash to give Carmela Soprano some serious pocket money, she didn't get too curious about where it was coming from, either....

  • @jencuster1543
    @jencuster1543 3 месяца назад +4

    I’m just thinking of how painful and heartbreaking this is for his wife Beyhan

    • @user-fz4ts6fv6o
      @user-fz4ts6fv6o 3 месяца назад +4

      Strange how there isn't a twinge of conscience while draping herself with silks and jewels stolen by her corrupt husband. She knew what he was. He'd already be pardoned once before.The price has to be paid.

  • @justjoe942
    @justjoe942 Месяц назад +2

    Where can I see all of this; good stuff, great acting.

  • @svetlankam8223
    @svetlankam8223 3 месяца назад +5

    23:26 - how could Ibrahim see Suley behind that thick grid? 🤔

    • @florjanbrudar692
      @florjanbrudar692 3 месяца назад

      Suley???

    • @onurerkan7463
      @onurerkan7463 23 дня назад

      He did not see. He knew he was watching the execution and that tower is the royal place to see the courtyard. The tower's name is "Justice Tower" in Topkapı Palace, where Sultan watches the cabinet meetings from. Historically that window is called "Hünkar penceresi - Majesty's Window". In case there would be a decision which Sultan oppose, Sultan would knock the metal bars twice or close the red curtains as a sign, which also means "finish the meeting now".

  • @user-cr5yy4te3i
    @user-cr5yy4te3i 29 дней назад +1

    I am an American; i have made an effort to study the different civilizations of the world through history.....The ancient Tu Chueh peoples who formed a mighty empire (Celestial or Blue Turk) north of China and then spread westwards across the Eurasian steppe. This story resonates; On the Supreme Court of the United States is a motto: "Equal Justice Under the Law"

  • @ultimate_bohemian3867
    @ultimate_bohemian3867 6 дней назад

    I had to look up The Story of Deli Dumrul, as mentioned in the video. Fascinating read!

  • @Anomic-mo9ji
    @Anomic-mo9ji 7 дней назад

    I stayed watching the whole thing fully convinced that James T. Kirk and Mr. Spock would arrive at any moment to help them see the error of their ways.

  • @Esparsero
    @Esparsero 6 месяцев назад +5

    9:04 he had done

  • @TametheShame
    @TametheShame Год назад +7

    The bigger the hat, the closer to god. We do that too but with hair.

  • @richanigam2097
    @richanigam2097 2 месяца назад +2

    Such a short sighted women ! And all those claiming that criminals also have a family ...pain is understandable but the inability to see the facts , blame and lash out at people trying to help and support is not understandable.
    She continues to be bitter towards her brother , all her life .
    Maybe momentarily pain overwhelms but once it subsides one can see reason and facts ...

  • @vaibhavsingh4200
    @vaibhavsingh4200 Месяц назад +1

    Ah,
    The good old times,
    When one family ruled and enjoyed all the luxurious titles and pleasure,
    Rest all were there to serve them, have almost no rights and their only purpose was to serve thier master.

  • @robertstewart1223
    @robertstewart1223 Месяц назад +2

    I have a question for Muslims or for people familiar with the Ottoman dynasty. Was Suleiman's father, Mehmet the Sultan that threw down Vlad the impailer's rebellion or am I way off on time line. If I am when does that story play out in Ottoman History? Please and Thank you.

    • @terrib627
      @terrib627 Месяц назад

      If I'm reading the family tree correctly, it was Mehmed II, Suleiman the Magnificent's great-grandfather, who caused that conflict.

    • @__Man__
      @__Man__ Месяц назад +1

      ​@@terrib627Mehmet II was the one who conquered Constantinople.

    • @christopherblanchard2099
      @christopherblanchard2099 29 дней назад +1

      Suleiman's father was Selim the Grim who expanded the Ottoman empire into Egypt and the Levant

  • @michaeltaylor8835
    @michaeltaylor8835 Месяц назад

    Beautiful series Amazing costumes and sets.Quality

  • @user-iz9vd4gf6r
    @user-iz9vd4gf6r Месяц назад

    15:46 that is so not going to go the way any of them expected it to😂

  • @JimNobles-gv4ky
    @JimNobles-gv4ky Месяц назад +1

    It’s tough to be a King

  • @suegornik-bx4pw
    @suegornik-bx4pw 11 месяцев назад +8

    Why did they strangle Ferat instead of beheading him? I mean he was already kneeling in front of a block made for beheading.

    • @xperformxperformance8039
      @xperformxperformance8039 11 месяцев назад +37

      Royal family members all are strangled beacause their blood is not allowed to be spilled.

    • @suegornik-bx4pw
      @suegornik-bx4pw 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@xperformxperformance8039 thanks I was wondering why. So different from royal executions in Europe at that time.

    • @markward3981
      @markward3981 8 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@suegornik-bx4pw
      Turkic people are more Asian than European with similar customs to Mongolians.

    • @flitsertheo
      @flitsertheo 5 дней назад

      @@suegornik-bx4pw In Europe it was the opposite. Nobility was allowed to die by the sword or axe while the common people were being hanged (and usually left to swing for a while). There were of course cases where an extra-cruel way of execution was used such as boiling in hot water, being drawn and quartered or burning at the stakes (more for heretics).

  • @jfk720
    @jfk720 Месяц назад

    I’ve never seen this. It’s great.

  • @spoonunit1
    @spoonunit1 11 дней назад

    Magnificent indeed....especially those hats😂

  • @seletarroots3258
    @seletarroots3258 Месяц назад +1

    Perhaps Suleiman made few mistakes but the one´s he did make led to the demise of the Ottoman empire. Time is like a rushing spring stream, coming down from the mountains. You must flow and transform with it or snap like a twig to eventually sink to the bottom.

    • @user-go4vz2ir6r
      @user-go4vz2ir6r Месяц назад +1

      TBH, the end of the Ottomans was certain to end. Historic forces were closing in too strongly for them to adjust.

    • @myowngenesis
      @myowngenesis 7 дней назад

      ​@@user-go4vz2ir6rtowards the end yes. The death knell came when sultan Abdulhamid was deposed, the last of the great leaders of that Empire. After that, it was a matter of time. The time period this show is depicting was the golden age of the Ottoman Empire. Even western sources have nothing but begrudging admiration for Sultan Suleyman, nicknamed Kanuni (Kanun means law, borrowed from Arabs who in turned borrowed it from the Greek Canon), the reason for this nickname is because he reformed the legal system of the empire.

  • @little_misscrafty
    @little_misscrafty Месяц назад +1

    Valide Sultan should have schooled her daughters that failty to their brother and sultan comes first, and that being sultan carries the heavy burden to make difficult and painful decisions.

  • @samedmundson6470
    @samedmundson6470 Месяц назад +1

    These hats....

  • @roys8870
    @roys8870 16 дней назад

    What happened to Ferhat Pasha's sons? Were they also silently terminated like their father?

  • @user-iz9vd4gf6r
    @user-iz9vd4gf6r Месяц назад

    20:14 Doesn't Selim say something like this in one of the future episodes ?.... I think.....?

  • @JohnSmiths2570
    @JohnSmiths2570 11 месяцев назад +16

    The bloodline of Ottoman imperial family are European descent.

    • @Elifffff726
      @Elifffff726 10 месяцев назад +18

      Sure,because a lot of the Sultans' consorts were European captives and also,Turkey is in Europe too (3% of it)

    • @bozok6360
      @bozok6360 5 месяцев назад +8

      Their background does not matter. In islam ethnicity is not important.

    • @Kjai537
      @Kjai537 4 месяца назад +7

      I don't see why that matters. Like the person above me said ethnicity does not matter in islam.

    • @Bangjoe19801
      @Bangjoe19801 Месяц назад +1

      They are mix. Central Asia + north Europe + east Europe + balkan9

    • @__Man__
      @__Man__ Месяц назад +2

      ​@@bozok6360pretty much all over Europe, ethnicity didn't matter, what matter were loyalty to the religion and to the dynasty. This world didn't reach the age of nation-state until 20th century. We can see French was formed by Gauls who were Romanised and Germans who were Romanised, the unifier were the Catholic Church and the dynasty. So does for Ottoman, the unifier were Islam and the Ottoman dynasty.

  • @user-wo2ot4fu2l
    @user-wo2ot4fu2l Месяц назад

    What do the hats signify that the men are wearing in the council?

  • @gushutchinson8758
    @gushutchinson8758 17 часов назад

    Regardless of it's merit as drama. The sets and costumes are lush ,possibly more elegant and stylish than the west's ruling elites ?
    I'd be happy to wear some of their clobber .

  • @jeannerogers7085
    @jeannerogers7085 Месяц назад

    I recall a similar scene from "the Godfather."

  • @user-qz1fy7kx1n
    @user-qz1fy7kx1n 5 месяцев назад +1

    Perhaps it would have been better if the Sultan transferred Ferhat to Istanbul in a different position

    • @Oguztogrul
      @Oguztogrul 5 месяцев назад +8

      It was empire, not democratic republic :D

  • @ganondorfdragmire9855
    @ganondorfdragmire9855 Месяц назад +1

    Beyhan has HUGE 👀

  • @mafiaonline7132
    @mafiaonline7132 Месяц назад +2

    33:59 Hatice didn't know that was her future

  • @user-wo2ot4fu2l
    @user-wo2ot4fu2l Месяц назад

    What do the hats mean? Are they given when these men move up on status

  • @Redfour5
    @Redfour5 5 дней назад

    Nice hats

  • @Rpedunix
    @Rpedunix Месяц назад +1

    Is there anything else yes why have you a lampshade on your head

  • @igorrromanov
    @igorrromanov 20 дней назад

    An abyss between arbitrary and european court system.

  • @pinoyRN67
    @pinoyRN67 Месяц назад +1

    what language they speak?

  • @user-qz1fy7kx1n
    @user-qz1fy7kx1n 3 месяца назад +2

    I feel badly for Beyhan.

  • @svetlankam8223
    @svetlankam8223 3 месяца назад +4

    5:20 - that man`s complaints sounds very much like capital*stic habits :))

    • @jonhayes6673
      @jonhayes6673 Месяц назад +1

      The C*ommunists do the same thing, but to whole nations, not just villages.

    • @samueladams1775
      @samueladams1775 Месяц назад

      That isn't capitalism. That is a rule of a tyrant.

  • @lisakayser8234
    @lisakayser8234 Год назад +1

    How sad.

  • @HERNANDEZGARAY11
    @HERNANDEZGARAY11 9 месяцев назад +1

    😮😮😮

  • @Perparim-gp1ef
    @Perparim-gp1ef 21 день назад

    Feraht pasha. Origin
    ,

  • @ramansrinivasan8580
    @ramansrinivasan8580 Месяц назад +2

    what exactly is magnificent about the violent gruesome depraved historical acts portrayed in this production. It is a work of art or a reflection of how naturally sadistic these people were back then😮

    • @xtradi
      @xtradi Месяц назад +1

      As opposed to today where the ruler can make mistakes without consequences, and people just suffer in silence and drugs

  • @timothybrady2749
    @timothybrady2749 24 дня назад +1

    These comments are superb entertainment by themselves. This is just a TV show folks!! Settle down!!
    Great series! Really excellent acting, casting, screen writing, soundtrack, and sets. Likely only generally accurate with the history and personalities, but I sure am motivated to learn more about the Ottomans. 👍👍
    Still, just a TV show, folks!!

  • @roberthuff3122
    @roberthuff3122 Месяц назад

    The globe is an anachronism.

    • @youteacher78
      @youteacher78 Месяц назад +2

      The oldest surviving globe dates back to about 1492, so no.

    • @roberthuff3122
      @roberthuff3122 Месяц назад

      @@youteacher78 The map details, Teacher.

  • @GabrielaGARAYREYES
    @GabrielaGARAYREYES Месяц назад

    😮😮😢

  • @johnfisher247
    @johnfisher247 Месяц назад

    Islam!

  • @user-vr1lw4or6i
    @user-vr1lw4or6i Год назад +1

    Ugh

  • @raveneye12
    @raveneye12 12 дней назад

    Is this the supposed to perfect Muslim civilization that I just wanted to bring about? No thanks.

    • @myowngenesis
      @myowngenesis 7 дней назад +1

      What you said doesn't make any grammatical sense

  • @TNM001
    @TNM001 13 дней назад

    Fake drama lol. Do you notice how they never tell why something happened? Unwatchable

  • @mateiantoneta7743
    @mateiantoneta7743 2 месяца назад

    Aș dori să fie trraduse in limba romînă ,seriialele Suleiman .agnificu
    l .Vă mulțumesc

  • @glennbaker106
    @glennbaker106 29 дней назад

    WAY too much family drama for me! No Thank You!

  • @Nidge2013
    @Nidge2013 2 месяца назад +27

    It shows history for what it was. The largest, longest Islamic empire in history, the sultans were the caliphs of Islam. No burqas, no veils, no niqabs. Where did the course of Islam turn from the enlightened ottoman empire, which led the world in medicinal and scientific advances, turn in to an oppressive, violent and hateful ideology? This form of Islam was respected and honourable

    • @mahirrahman7
      @mahirrahman7 Месяц назад

      Revisionist movements that's what led to niqab

    • @GOLDESCAFLOWNE
      @GOLDESCAFLOWNE Месяц назад +2

      Indeed! What happened?

    • @jeannerogers7085
      @jeannerogers7085 Месяц назад +2

      Advent of fundamentalism in the 19th century, I think.

    • @__Man__
      @__Man__ Месяц назад

      Since 19th to 20th century that gave birth to Wahhabism. Don't forget the Brits took part in it in order to make the Arabs rebelled the Ottoman, so don't blame only Muslim.

    • @islamicsenpai
      @islamicsenpai Месяц назад

      You jahil, they don't wear niqab because they're inside Harem😂not because their version of Islam says niqab isn't a part of Islam. Islam is Islam, it has no version, you either follow the book or you don't.

  • @erwcik3760
    @erwcik3760 12 дней назад

    Women ... always exagerating.

  • @amindforall442
    @amindforall442 Месяц назад

    OMG if they actually dubbed it in English there would be people that appreciate the culture more in US and other English speaking places

    • @myowngenesis
      @myowngenesis 7 дней назад

      Isn't it? I just watched it and there are English subs here.

    • @myowngenesis
      @myowngenesis 7 дней назад

      Aahhj sorry, you said dubbed. Of course hah.

  • @seanautilis
    @seanautilis Месяц назад

    it takes a WHOLE LOT longer than that

  • @velocity1238
    @velocity1238 29 дней назад

    Their is always a point in which taxation and whatever else you take from your people becomes so heavy a toll that their boat sinks before it can reach the next harbor.
    Before long the news of unjust waters would spread and bring about the decline of even the most powerful of nations. As sailors leave for calmer waters those at the top who once relied on a thriving ecosystem would discover that much like parasites they had drained that ecosystem to a point that it was no longer self sustained.

    • @myowngenesis
      @myowngenesis 7 дней назад

      Very true. The ottoman system wasn't heavily centralised and as such it came down to trust more than anything else when the sultan gave you a province or whatever to rule in his name. Hence the very understandable reaction from the sultan. Especially after he pardoned the guy once before for more or less identical crimes.