Hürrem Sultan; Her Imperial Majesty The Empress consort Hürrem Sultan of the Ottoman Empire or Karima, known to Europeans informally as simply Roxelana (c. 1510 - April 18, 1558) was a legal wife of Süleyman the Magnificent of the Ottoman Empire. Hürrem, Sultan well-known both in modern Turkey and in the West, and is the subject of many artistic works. She has inspired paintings, musical works (including Joseph Haydn's Symphony No. 63), an opera by Denys Sichynsky, a ballet, plays, and several novels written mainly in Ukrainian, but also in English, French, and German. According to late-16th-century and early-17th-century sources, such as the Polish poet Samuel Twardowski, who researched the subject in Turkey, Hürrem was seemingly born to a father who was a Ukrainian. In 2007, Muslims in Mariupol, a port city in Ukraine, opened a mosque to honor Roxelana Turkish Composer Can Atilla was born in Ankara in 1969. In 1980, he started to attend the violin class of Hacettepe University, Ankara State Conservatory, and graduated with BA degree in 1990. In Turkey, he participated in numerous competition, festival and music organizations as composer, arranger and conductor. His debut solo album, "Bilinçaltı" was released in 1992 and his second solo album, "Waves of Wheels" was released in 1994 in Turkey, and in United Kingdom and Europe by Midas Records Ltd. In 1995, his third solo album, "Efsaneler", and in 1996, the symphonic album version of the play score, "Kuvayi Milliye ...
Keywords: Roxelana, Ukraine, Suleyman the magnificent, Imperial Majesty the Empress, Karima, Kanuni, Hurrem, Sultan, Ottoman, Empire, Osmanli, Imparatorlugu
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