- published: 30 Apr 2013
- views: 275
(D.Bugatti - F. Musker)
Blackwood Music Inc. BMI
Here I am upon the stage and it's very weird
It's not myself it's someone else but standing here
And the girls look strange, as they call my name.
Someone slipped a substance in me lemonade
My head is blown,
I think I'll phone the farm brigade
Can you see those rainbows,
In the first three rows
On the milk train at four A.M.
I'll be feeling strange
On the milk train at four A.M.
I'm goona be out of my brain
(guitar solo)
Some joker threw a firework from the gallery
I can hear him scream,
I wonder what he wants from me
But it won't be long now,
to the final song.
On the milk train at four A.M.
I'll be feeling strange
But on the milk train at four A.M.
Melek Tourhan | |
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Sultana Melek in 1938 (photo by Riad Shehata) | |
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Tenure | 19 December 1914 – 9 October 1917 |
Spouse | Hussein Kamel (m. 1887; dec. 1917) |
Issue | |
Princess Kadria Princess Samiha Princess Badiha |
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House | House of Muhammad Ali (by marriage) |
Father | Hasan Tourhan Pasha |
Mother | Djechme Affet (adoptive) |
Born | (1869-10-27)27 October 1869 Istanbul, Ottoman Empire |
Died | 4 February 1956(1956-02-04) (aged 86) Heliopolis, Cairo, Egypt |
Burial | Al-Rifa'i Mosque, Cairo, Egypt |
Religion | Sunni Islam |
Melek Hassan Tourhan (Arabic: ملك حسن طوران)[1] (27 October 1869 – 4 February 1956) was the second wife of Sultan Hussein Kamel of Egypt. After her husband ascended the throne in 1914, she became known as Sultana Melek (Arabic: السلطانة ملك).
Contents |
Monarchical styles of Sultana Melek |
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Reference style | Sa Hautesse |
Spoken style | Votre Hautesse |
Alternative style | Hanem |
Born in Istanbul in 1869,[1] Melek was a Circassian. However, unlike many Circassians in the Ottoman era, she was not a slave.[2] Emine Foat Tugay, whose mother Princess Nimet Mouhtar was a friend of Melek, described her as "a pocket Venus, tiny but perfectly proportioned, a pretty, lively brunette, with great charm."[3] Tugay states in her family memoirs that "as a child [Melek] was delicate and was often sent to spend a fortnight with Neşedil Kadinefendi [wife of Khedive Isma'il and mother of Princess Nimet] in the salubrious air of Zaaferan."[4]
Melek's father Hasan Pasha was a captain in the Ottoman Navy. When Melek was still an infant, he offered her for adoption in order to improve her lot in life.[5] Melek was adopted by Djechme Affet,[6] the third wife of Khedive Isma'il Pasha of Egypt.[7] In 1887, she married Hussein Kamel, the khedive's favorite son.[8] She bore him three daughters: Kadria, Samiha and Badiha.[9] Hussein Kamel was not expected to ascend the throne when Melek married him. When his eldest brother Khedive Tewfik died in 1892, he was succeeded by his son Abbas Hilmi II, who fathered two sons of his own during his reign. However, events took an unexpected turn with the outbreak of World War I. The United Kingdom, which was occupying Egypt at the time, deposed Abbas and installed his uncle Hussein Kamel as Egypt's new ruler. Hussein Kamel was given the title of Sultan of Egypt by the British in order to emphasize the end of Egypt's status as a vassal of the Ottoman Sultan. As a result, Melek received the title of Sultana.[10] Hussein Kamel invented for himself and his wife the style of Hautesse (Arabic: عظمة; Azama), which can be translated into English as Gloriness.[11]
Hussein Kamel was a family man who treated Melek with respect and devotion.[8] During his reign, Melek kept a low profile. In keeping with the other royal consorts who preceded her, she attended performances at the Khedivial Opera House, although she was seated in a box separated from the rest of the audience by a Mashrabiya.[12] When Hussein Kamel died in 1917, his only surviving son Prince Kamal el Dine Hussein (born of a previous marriage) renounced his succession rights, and so the throne went to Hussein Kamel's brother Fuad. On 11 October 1917, only two days after his ascension to the throne, Fuad issued a rescript allowing Melek to keep her sultanic title. When a formal order of precedence was established for the Kingdom of Egypt in 1932, he issued another rescript whereby Melek was placed second only to Queen Nazli in the order of precedence, and before all the other princesses of the Royal Family.By then, Melek was considered the Sultana, while Nazli was considered the Queen.[13] As a widow, Melek was no longer secluded but was visible at official occasions and photographs, such at the wedding between King Farouk in 1938. In 1923, along with Crown Prince Leopold and Queen Elisabeth of Belgium, Melek visited the newly discovered tomb of Tutankhamun in Luxor. The Western press of the time often referred to her as the Dowager Sultana,[14] a title that carried no legal standing in Egypt.
Melek never remarried and spent her four decades of widowhood travelling with her slaves to Europe, Lebanon and Luxor.Her title stayed as Sultana even after the coronation of King Farouk I. Her principal residence was her palace in the Cairo suburb of Heliopolis, opposite the famous Villa Baron Empain. Historian Samir Raafat describes the widowed Melek as an "aging Sultana [who] held an outdated a-la-Turca court in her zany Heliopolis palace."[12] Melek died in Cairo on 4 February 1956,[1] having witnessed the 1952 Revolution and the ensuing abolition of the monarchy.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Melek Tourhan |
Egyptian royalty | ||
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New title Sultanate of Egypt established
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Sultana of Egypt 1914–1917 |
Vacant
Title next held by
Nazli Sabri |
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Persondata | |
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Name | Melek Tourhan |
Alternative names | Sultana Melek |
Short description | Sultana of Egypt |
Date of birth | 27 October 1869 |
Place of birth | Istanbul, Ottoman Empire |
Date of death | 4 February 1956 |
Place of death | Cairo, Egypt |
This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (December 2009) |
Melek (Hungarian: Mellek) is a municipality and village in the Nitra District of the south-west of Slovakia, in the Nitra Region.
Coordinates: 48°12′N 18°20′E / 48.2°N 18.333°E / 48.2; 18.333
This Nitra Region geography article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |