Sexy Harem Girl

Sexy Harem Girl




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Sexy Harem Girl
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НЕТ войне в Украине! У вас это не показывают в СМИ, смотрите правдивые фотографии о том, что происходит в Украине. Не молчите, выходите на протесты! Правда о войне ►
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Magnificent Century is a Turkish-made history-fiction television series produced by Tims Productions. The series is basically based on the life of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent and Hurrem Sultan. The series shows Hurrem Sultan's throne fights for her children and their palace life.

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 Tuzun, Dogan Turan, Gokhan Celebi, Yuksel Unal.

Production: TIMS Production
Director: Yağmur Taylan, Durul Taylan
Screenplay: Meral Okay

Magnificent Century Official Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/magnificentcenturyy/

Mustafa And Aybige Got Engaged | Magnificent Century
Ibrahim Pasha's Dream | Magnificent Century
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Unquestionably written after considerable background research into
Middle East harems and quite possibly from first hand experience of
harems. It is hard to tell which. Perhaps a combination of the two.
Without question it is an engaging and excellent example of the art of
writing literotica.

The following extract is from the introduction, (although a little long
and boring, do not be put off by it, the rest of the book is far from
boring), shows how thorough her research was and sets the background
for a fine literotica story. If you a looking for erotic stories, do
not miss this one! It sizzles.

HISTORY OF HAREMS — from the introduction to the book Harem Girl

Inspiration to write this novel came from three sources: history,
a tour to the Moorish Alhambra palace in Spain, and the imagined memoirs
of a harem girl. It is kept as
true as possible to the historical setting and overlaid and embellished
with the memoirs of Sapphira the harem girl.
To write that journal, that later inspired the book Harem Girl ,
a young Arab woman masqueraded her way into a sheik's harem. She managed
this by a deceitful ruse involving a friend of her husband, who agreed
to present her as one of his slaves and send her to a harem in exchange
for another girl. Four months later the sheik would reverse the exchange.
Slavery was widely practiced at the turn of the century, and I quote
from two letters sent by Spanish priests to the Cardinal of Madrid
giving account of pirate raids in the Philippines:
Abdulla then gave the town of Ilo-Ilo over to organized loot.
Detachments of Moros looted the churches and rounded up the fleeing
women and children. Krismen passed from house to house down narrow
streets, ferreting out the frightened women.
In the plaza of the ruined town, the plunder was collected in a great
pile. White-skinned Spanish women mingled with brown Visayan girls
in the long line assembled for the inspection of Abdulla. The fairest
of the women were selected for the harems of Sulu — the male
survivors of the conflict were put to the “kris” (sword).
Again, in a later letter describing another incident:
When Tagal wearied of the slaughter and raised his hand to turn
the prows of the pirate vessels to the south again, 650 captives
lay trussed like chickens in the hold.
One hundred miles from Jolo, a Spanish fleet, operating from the base
at Zamboanga, intercepted the victorious Tagal as he rounded the treacherous
angle of rough water at Puenta Flecha. Hampered by the hundreds of
captives in the holds, the garays of Tagal were slow and unwieldy,
and in the naval engagement that followed the Moros suffered a crushing
defeat. Three hundred Moros, including Tagal, were killed and 120 captives
were set free. Tagal jettisoned many of the captives as the tide of
battle turned against him, and the sharks at Puenta Flecha fed well
on the bound bodies of Christian slave girls bound for the harems of
Jolo.
At the time of the journal, Western nations had for many years abolished
slavery and declared it illegal, but in the Middle East, it was a long
held practice that continued well after prohibition laws were passed.
This was due largely to the remote location, sparse population, the
inhospitable terrain where the practice flourished, and the conflict
in ideology between East and West. Additionally, Western governments
were in no mood to upset the delicate commercial arrangements between
the owners of the newfound oil of the Middle East, and their own commercial
oil interests. It was not until 1935 that Somalia officially outlawed
slavery, followed by Saudi Arabia in 1962—at the urging of President
J.F. Kennedy—one hundred years later than the United States of
America.
Our word “harem” is derived from the Arabic word “harim”—“sacred,
forbidden place”, which in turn comes from the Arabic word “harama”—“he
prohibited”. Now as then, it is a section of a house reserved
for the women and children of the household, a quiet sanctum for the
free—a gilded prison for the enslaved. Her narrative of course
documents the latter.
The last officially sanctioned harem of record that I could find was
that of King Abdul Aziz Ibn-Saud (1880 - 1953), the supreme ruler of
Saudi Arabia. He had seventeen wives, four concubines and four slaves
to satisfy his desire. He fathered forty-four sons and a similar number
of daughters.
In her journal, which she called her ”Journaux Intimes”,
she mentions many historical characters such as the Bey of Aqaba, Ibn-Saud
and Sharif Hussein of Jeddah, and the towns and countries referred
to all exist. And the hotel she stayed in, in 1925, the Maison Dorée
on rue de Hollande in Tunis, is still open for business today, though
mature and tired, eclipsed by the Hiltons and Holiday Inns of our time,
but no doubt grand accommodation in her day. These are just some of
the facts that lend credence to the authenticity of her account.

In what period is the novel set? When was her journal supposedly written?
Many clues are scattered throughout the text: Reference to Burton’s
translation, Tales of the Arabian Nights, 1001 Nights, places
the journal start after 1888, mention of the Suez Canal, officially opened
in 1876, and the use of the telegraph to send messages, would support
this. But later in the book, mention of La Grippe , the worldwide
Spanish Flu epidemic, clearly places the start of her journal in the
year 1900 when she is fourteen years old, and ends in 1926 when she is
forty
On the Erotic Art and Orientalist Picture Gallery page on this site
you will find thumbnails linking to some orientalist and
erotic harem and slavery pictures that inspired the book.
If you are looking for a book about the romance and customs of harems
and life as harem girls in Middle East Arabian harems, then Harem
Girl is a must read. It is not to be missed if your literotica interest
is romantic and erotic stories with well told story lines or if you
have read and enjoyed any of The Claiming of Sleeping
Beauty, Beauty's Punishment, and Beauty's Release by A. N.
Roquelaure ( Anne Rice).
New
Books Review
Harem Girl eBook and paperback
A sexy
adult book by M. Saalih
Harem Girl - a romantic story told through the eyes
of a young slave girl about her life and experiences as a harem girl
in an Arabian sheik's harem. Revealingly written, no wonder this style
of literotica was once banned..
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