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Aliye_CD_Ankara👠

Aliye_CD_Ankara👠

@AliyeCd

Kadın ruhlu CD'yim. Tek gecelik ilişki aramıyorum. Gizlilik ve güven önemli. Lütfen yüz fotoğrafı göndermeden ve kendinizi tanıtmadan yazmayın #queerarchaeology

Çankaya, Ankara, Türkiye Katılım Nisan 2019
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Aliye_CD_Ankara👠
Aliye_CD_Ankara👠@AliyeCd·
Profilimdeki tüm fotoğraflar %100 bana aittir. Sadece peruk ve makyaj farklidir. Duyurulur 😘📌
Aliye_CD_Ankara👠 tweet mediaAliye_CD_Ankara👠 tweet mediaAliye_CD_Ankara👠 tweet media
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Aliye_CD_Ankara👠@AliyeCd·
X'e ne zaman katıldığını hatırlıyor musun? Ben hatırlıyorum! #XYıldönümüm
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Aliye_CD_Ankara👠
Aliye_CD_Ankara👠@AliyeCd·
Ankara'da kar yağıyor ❄️❄️❄️😱
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Aliye_CD_Ankara👠@AliyeCd·
@archpng One of the world's first universities was founded in Harran in the 8th century.
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Architecture Hub
Architecture Hub@archpng·
Harran, Turkey — famous for its conical beehive houses, a vernacular mud-brick building form that helps keep interiors cooler in summer and warmer in winter.
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Earth Paradise
Earth Paradise@96317Abbas·
Venice, Italy 🇮🇹
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Mostafa
Mostafa@steve_197·
Guys report him he is pretending to be me by stoling my pictures and asking people for gifts . Ps: I would never ask for gifts so report him and block him please
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Aliye_CD_Ankara👠
Aliye_CD_Ankara👠@AliyeCd·
Kazıklı Voyvoda'nın oğlu ve Fatih Sultan aşkı 💜 #queerarchaeology
Dr. M.F. Khan@Dr_TheHistories

The Story of Radu the Handsome, the Younger Brother of Vlad the Impaler Who Lived in the Ottoman Court and Participated in the Fall of Constantinople - Without a doubt, the most famous prince of Wallachia was Vlad III, popularly known as Țepeș (“the Impaler”) or Drăculea (a diminutive of Dracul, “Dragon,” the nickname of his father, Vlad II), and the historical seed for the vampire count in Bram Stoker’s novel Dracula. However, this character—the real one—was not the only member of his lineage to rule that territory; his aforementioned father and his three brothers also did, with the most intriguing story belonging to the youngest, Radu cel Frumos (Radu the Handsome). The first, the future Impaler, was born between 1429 and 1431. His mother was Cneajna Bathory, daughter of a Transylvanian boyar, more commonly known as Eupraxia; this distinguished him from Radu, who was a few years younger and the son of his father’s third wife, the Moldavian Vasilisa Mușata (Eupraxia was the second; nothing is known about the first). It is worth noting that Dracul also had a daughter, Alexandra, whom he married off to the Wallachian boyar Vintilă Florescu, as well as several illegitimate sons, one of whom, Vlad the Monk, would also briefly rule in the future. The two young Drăculești, a dynastic title their father adopted after joining the Ordinul Dragonului or Order of the Dragon in 1431, were educated under the Ottomans—it is said that Vlad learned the method of impalement from them—at the fortress of Egrigoz (now Doğrugöz, in the interior of Anatolia, present-day Turkey). As was customary since antiquity, their status as hostages did not necessarily mean mistreatment; obviously, their treatment depended on their father’s adherence to the agreed loyalty, the violation of which could lead to severe punishment—as happened in 1441 to the sons of the Serbian despot Durad Brankovic, who were blinded when he attempted to escape. However, Vlad and Radu avoided experiencing such a horrific fate. On the contrary, they learned Turkish and Persian, as well as logic and literature, while refining their horsemanship and military skills, which had already been taught by their tutors in Europe. They were also instructed in the knowledge of the Qur’an, though conversion was not mandatory; in fact, Vlad remained faithful to Christianity, but Radu, being younger and more impressionable, may have embraced Islam. This opened the doors of the Ottoman court for him and, as we shall see, led him to move to the Topkapi Palace in Constantinople after its conquest. Therefore, he did not return to Wallachia when the sultan decided to release his brother. Thus, he did not directly witness the tragedy that befell his family: in 1447, Dracul and Mircea were assassinated by the boyars, while Janos Hunyadi proclaimed a cousin of the former, Vladislav II, as voivode (prince) of Wallachia. The Hungarians and Wallachians launched an attack against the Ottoman Empire the following year but were ultimately defeated. Meanwhile, Vlad Țepeș, leading a Turkish army, seized his father’s throne. However, he could not hold it for long, as Vladislav returned and reclaimed it until 1456, when Vlad invaded the principality with the help of the Hungarians, who now saw him as a bulwark against Ottoman expansion after the fall of Constantinople. Vladislav was not the only one who perished in that event; numerous boyars also lost their lives in a bloody purge that Vlad carried out to avenge his father’s and Mircea’s murders, as well as to preempt any conspiracies against him. Meanwhile, Radu remained in Constantinople, where he had chosen to stay, captivated by his new lifestyle and, according to some sources, also by Sultan Mehmed II. This is described by Laonikos Chalkokondyles, a contemporary Greek chronicler who was an ambassador—and hostage—before Mehmed’s father, Murad II, in his work Historical Expositions.... © Article written by Jorge Álvarez #drthehistories

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