She was of town of Rohatyń in the Kingdom of Poland. Neither Hungary, nor Russia, nor Ukraine (no such state even existed before the 20th century). Allegedly she was of Ruthenian ethnicity and Orthodox Christian, although her father's name "Lisowski" contradicts this hypothesis and very much so, as Ruthenian (nowadays Ukranian) names typically end with -uk or -lo, or -ko e.g. Havryluk or Mykhailo, Sevchenko. "ski" (and "cki") is a typical suffix of Polish surnames to this very day, and more specifically, of those decended from Polish nobility (so neither from peasants nor burghers), e.g. Zbigniew Brzeziński. This is why, BTW, Suleyman never attempted to invade Poland and generally both states had good relations with each other during his reign.
@ Roxolana was the daughter of an Orthodox priest, as it is known, Poles are Catholics, so she was not Polish! Roksolana (Hurrem) was supposedly born in the Carpathian region, on the territory of the present-day Ukrainian city of Rohatyn. For a long time, the entire territory of Transcarpathia belonged to the Hungarian rulers, but in 1541, the Turks captured central Hungary, after which it was divided, Transcarpathia was divided into two parts. Subsequently, the central and eastern regions of the region became part of the Turkish Empire, and the western part fell under the rule of the Habsburgs. After 160 years of Turkish rule, at the end of the 17th century, the entire territory of Hungary, including Transcarpathia, came under the rule of the Habsburgs. The Galicia-Volyn Principality is a southwestern Russian principality of the Rurik dynasty, created in 1199 by Roman Mstislavich as a result of the unification of the Volyn and Galician principalities.
@@RegiRo777 Poles are not (and hadn't been) a monolith. Even nowadays there are people in the east of the country with purely Polish names (not of Belarussian or Ukrainian heritage) who are Orthodox. We even had our own branch of Protestantism called _Polish Brethren_ (a.k.a. Unitarians or Arians). So her religion in itself is not an ultimate proof.
@@TatraScrambler According to the expert scientific community in modern scientific discussions, Hurrem is called Russian, Ukrainian, or Polish, since there are no reliable sources about her place of birth and origin. Hurrem's contemporaries, in particular Pietro Bragadin and Bernardo Navagero, called her Russian. The Lithuanian ambassador to Crimea, Michalon Litvin, claimed that Hurrem was kidnapped from the territory of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in her youth. And the Polish diplomat of the 17th century, Samuel Twardowski, sixty years after Hurrem's death, called her the daughter of a priest from Galician Rohatyn. The versions are mutually exclusive, since Galicia was never under Lithuanian rule. The first person to call Hurrem by the name Roxolana was the ambassador of the Holy Roman Empire, Ogier Ghislain de Busbecq, who pointed out that she came from Roxolania: this is how most of the lands inhabited by the East Slavic peoples were called in medieval Europe. In the 19th century, thanks to the light hand of the Polish poet Mauritius Goslawski, a version was spread according to which Hurrem was supposedly born in the town of Chemeritsy in Podolia. Later, Goslawski's poems were covered and passed off as old Ukrainian folk songs, which misled some Ukrainian researchers of the 20th century. Also, thanks to the writers, the Poles began to call Hurrem Alexandra, and the Ukrainians - Anastasia Lisovskaya, although there is no scientific evidence for either of these versions. Moreover, the famous Ukrainian historian Vladimir Grabovetsky found out that no mention of the Lisovsky family, who lived in Galicia in the 15th or 16th centuries, has been preserved in the archives. Modern Ukrainian nationalists, calling Roksolana "Ukrainian", are also mistaken. In the 16th-17th centuries, when European diplomats wrote about Hurrem, a separate Ukrainian people did not yet exist.
Evil ugly Hurrem is nothing compared to Kosem Sultan the most powerful woman in the history of the Ottoman Empire and she was merciful just like her husband the Kind Sultan Ahmed ❤. God bless them May the both Rest in Peace ✌️ ❤❤ Sultan Ahmed and Sultan Kosem ❤❤ Sultan Ahmed was an amazing King 👑 unfortunately he passed away at a young age. Otherwise he would have made many great memories and a successful leader ✨
Existio de verdad.😢😊
Si
...ordinary girl in Hungary? - yeah, right. :)))
dream on! :))
She was of town of Rohatyń in the Kingdom of Poland. Neither Hungary, nor Russia, nor Ukraine (no such state even existed before the 20th century). Allegedly she was of Ruthenian ethnicity and Orthodox Christian, although her father's name "Lisowski" contradicts this hypothesis and very much so, as Ruthenian (nowadays Ukranian) names typically end with -uk or -lo, or -ko e.g. Havryluk or Mykhailo, Sevchenko. "ski" (and "cki") is a typical suffix of Polish surnames to this very day, and more specifically, of those decended from Polish nobility (so neither from peasants nor burghers), e.g. Zbigniew Brzeziński.
This is why, BTW, Suleyman never attempted to invade Poland and generally both states had good relations with each other during his reign.
She was Russian . In the Middle Ages, Rus' was often called Ruthenia in Latin, and Russians were called Rusens.
@@RegiRo777 Her name was Lisowska, not Lisovskaya and she considered herself a subject of the Kingdom of Poland, which was factually true.
@ Roxolana was the daughter of an Orthodox priest, as it is known, Poles are Catholics, so she was not Polish! Roksolana (Hurrem) was supposedly born in the Carpathian region, on the territory of the present-day Ukrainian city of Rohatyn. For a long time, the entire territory of Transcarpathia belonged to the Hungarian rulers, but in 1541, the Turks captured central Hungary, after which it was divided, Transcarpathia was divided into two parts. Subsequently, the central and eastern regions of the region became part of the Turkish Empire, and the western part fell under the rule of the Habsburgs. After 160 years of Turkish rule, at the end of the 17th century, the entire territory of Hungary, including Transcarpathia, came under the rule of the Habsburgs.
The Galicia-Volyn Principality is a southwestern Russian principality of the Rurik dynasty, created in 1199 by Roman Mstislavich as a result of the unification of the Volyn and Galician principalities.
@@RegiRo777 Poles are not (and hadn't been) a monolith. Even nowadays there are people in the east of the country with purely Polish names (not of Belarussian or Ukrainian heritage) who are Orthodox. We even had our own branch of Protestantism called _Polish Brethren_ (a.k.a. Unitarians or Arians). So her religion in itself is not an ultimate proof.
@@TatraScrambler According to the expert scientific community in modern scientific discussions, Hurrem is called Russian, Ukrainian, or Polish, since there are no reliable sources about her place of birth and origin.
Hurrem's contemporaries, in particular Pietro Bragadin and Bernardo Navagero, called her Russian.
The Lithuanian ambassador to Crimea, Michalon Litvin, claimed that Hurrem was kidnapped from the territory of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in her youth. And the Polish diplomat of the 17th century, Samuel Twardowski, sixty years after Hurrem's death, called her the daughter of a priest from Galician Rohatyn. The versions are mutually exclusive, since Galicia was never under Lithuanian rule.
The first person to call Hurrem by the name Roxolana was the ambassador of the Holy Roman Empire, Ogier Ghislain de Busbecq, who pointed out that she came from Roxolania: this is how most of the lands inhabited by the East Slavic peoples were called in medieval Europe.
In the 19th century, thanks to the light hand of the Polish poet Mauritius Goslawski, a version was spread according to which Hurrem was supposedly born in the town of Chemeritsy in Podolia. Later, Goslawski's poems were covered and passed off as old Ukrainian folk songs, which misled some Ukrainian researchers of the 20th century.
Also, thanks to the writers, the Poles began to call Hurrem Alexandra, and the Ukrainians - Anastasia Lisovskaya, although there is no scientific evidence for either of these versions. Moreover, the famous Ukrainian historian Vladimir Grabovetsky found out that no mention of the Lisovsky family, who lived in Galicia in the 15th or 16th centuries, has been preserved in the archives.
Modern Ukrainian nationalists, calling Roksolana "Ukrainian", are also mistaken. In the 16th-17th centuries, when European diplomats wrote about Hurrem, a separate Ukrainian people did not yet exist.
En español por favor. Gracias
Coloque em português
Português por favor😢
Poderia ser legendado em português
Se recebermos um pedido, podemos fazer a tradução..
Hurrem sultana was from Ukraine or Russia definitely not from Hungary
Wrong, she was from Poland. Have you even checked wikipedia?
Evil ugly Hurrem is nothing compared to Kosem Sultan the most powerful woman in the history of the Ottoman Empire and she was merciful just like her husband the Kind Sultan Ahmed ❤. God bless them May the both Rest in Peace ✌️ ❤❤ Sultan Ahmed and Sultan Kosem ❤❤
Sultan Ahmed was an amazing King 👑 unfortunately he passed away at a young age. Otherwise he would have made many great memories and a successful leader ✨
При чём здесь Венгрия??Она была с русских земель.