Suleiman Aga

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Suleiman Aga to the left meeting with Hugues de Lionne, to the right[1]
Louis XIV of France[1]

Müteferrika Süleyman Ağa, known as Suleiman Aga and Soleiman Agha in France, was an Ottoman ambassador to the French king Louis XIV in 1669. Suleiman visited Versailles, but only wore a simple wool coat and refused to bow to Louis XIV,[2] who immediately banished him to Paris, away from Versailles.[2]

In Paris, Suleiman set up a beautiful house where he was credited for introducing coffee drinking to the Parisian society, with waiters dressed in Ottoman style, triggering enthusiastic responses thereby starting the fashion for coffee-drinking.[2][3] Suleiman invited Parisian society women to his home for extravagant "coffee ceremonies", which were imitated throughout Parisian high society.[3]

Suleiman's activities in Paris were a trigger for the popularity of

caftans and decorations such as carpets and cushions became highly popular.[4]

The first French coffee shop, the Café Procope, opened in 1689, just 17 years after Suleiman's famed visit.

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