Mystic Oud - Eau de Parfum
Secret de l'Histoire
N° 344

The Perfume of the 1001 Nights

par
Anthonin de la Bigne
Historian

At the end of the seventeenth century, the Ottoman Empire excited a real fascination. Orientalist tastes spread and Turkish fashions became established in the French court and in society more broadly. Translations of literary works such as the ‘One Thousand and One Nights’ thus proliferated; turbaned characters began to appear in paintings, in t...

At the end of the seventeenth century, the Ottoman Empire excited a real fascination. Orientalist tastes spread and Turkish fashions became established in the French court and in society more broadly. Translations of literary works such as the ‘One Thousand and One Nights’ thus proliferated; turbaned characters began to appear in paintings, in the theatre, in domestic decorations.

Commerce with the East developed with the creation of the French East India Company, established in 1664 by Colbert (controller general of Louis XIV’s finances), to stymie the commercial power of the English and the Dutch.

Vessels set off from the port of Lorient stocked with wines, spirits and precious product of French manufacture. They arrived back eighteen to twenty-two months later, heavily stocked with wood for tinting, porcelain, coffee sacks, cases of tea, cotton fabrics, floral indiennes, silks, spices, medicinal plants and perfumes.

The French East India Company thus contributed to the development of specific markets, such as the perfume market, which began to receive rare essences such as musk, amber, saffron, benzoin resin, patchouli, myrrh, vetiver, sandalwood and agarwood, directly from France, without having to pay the excess charges resulting from purchasing them from Dutch merchants.



The Emissary of the 1001 Nights

In 1669, the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire sent an emissary, Soliman Aga, to deliver an message to King Louis XIV. The King made the emissary wait several months. In 1669, relations between France and the Ottoman Empire are in crisis. The Great Turk, Mehmed IV, sultan of the Ottoman Empire, had imprisoned and dismissed the French ambassador, thus breaking diplomatic relations.

It was thus a relief for the King when he learned of the future arrival of Soliman Aga in 1669, who he believed to be the Sultan’s ambassador. This event is of great significance, because it is the first time that an ambassador from the Sublime Porte came to Europe to pay a visit to an Emperor. Louis XIV intended to take advantage of it and demonstrate the power of his Kingdom.

In waiting to be received by the King, Soliman Aga held salon in Paris and organised luxurious receptions, during which he showcased his culture and the one thousand and one products of his country, of which perfumes were afforded a place of prestige. At this time, in the East, perfumes were accorded sacred values and played a major role in the French way of life. Palaces, wall hangings and carpets were all soaked with scents, perfume vapourizers emitting intoxicating clouds of amber and agarwood. All of Parisian aristocracy, greedy for exoticism and blown away by anything that had ‘Oriental features’, thronged at the Emissary’s door, who dominated all of Paris with the refinement of his receptions, worthy of the Thousand and One Nights.


Sensory Essences of the 1001 Nights

Seduced by the oneiric universe displayed with skill and jubilation by Soliman Aga, Parisian society became drunk on the new scents of his distant world.

Among these scents, the heart and flasks of French perfumery were conquered by agarwood essence, considered from the ninth century in the East as one of the most precious essences in perfumery.

Its power to seduce lay in its singular difference to the perfumes used in the court of Louis XIV. But above all, it fascinated with its mythic origins and mystical character.

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Bibliography

LE GUERER Annick, Le parfum des origines à nos jours, Odile Jacob, 2005
CHAUVIERE André, Parfums et senteurs du grand siècle, Favre, 1999
DONZEL Catherine, Le Parfum, Editions du CHENE, Hachette Livre, 2000
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