@alaaezze.2: #ابن_الصعيد #اوجاع_الماضي🥹 #اوجاع_الماضي🥀💔 #ابن_الصعيد🌹🌹 #اوجاع

✧᭡أبن الصعيد᭡✧
✧᭡أبن الصعيد᭡✧
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Saturday 06 June 2026 20:34:55 GMT
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hwdoa
هدوء اليالي :
إنسان غريب بتجرح أكثير وبتزعل من بعدى احترت
2026-06-07 07:52:13
0
ghaz1421
ghaz :
لا يستحق الحب إلا الله
2026-06-06 21:30:23
1
ro.ro7533
ريم 🤍🍂 :
كل السعاده لقلبك وحياتك يارب 💕💕💕
2026-06-06 22:28:16
0
saleh.mosalm
Saleh Mosalm :
اه والله كله كدب في كدب الحاله دي أنا عايشها والله ربنا يطلعنا منها علي خير
2026-06-07 00:12:53
0
samar_20201
Mandala2020 :
أنا عايشه الحاله دي حاليا
2026-06-06 23:50:47
0
ghadaali470
💙ghada ali 💙 :
😭😭😭
2026-06-06 23:00:23
0
ro.ro7533
ريم 🤍🍂 :
🌷🌸🌷🌸
2026-06-06 22:28:21
0
ro.ro7533
ريم 🤍🍂 :
💕💕💕
2026-06-06 22:28:00
0
ro.ro7533
ريم 🤍🍂 :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-06 22:27:58
0
user9542522545185
user9542522545185 :
🤔🤔🤔
2026-06-06 20:41:10
0
mimi.kamr
M💝N :
😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-06 20:39:36
0
lina.1vip
𝐋𝐈𝐍𝐀ᥫ᭡ :
🤐
2026-06-07 10:26:28
0
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Pierre Picaud was a humble French shoemaker in the early 19th century whose tragic real-life story directly inspired Alexandre Dumas’s legendary novel The Count of Monte Cristo ✨. His tale was first documented by Jacques Peuchet, a former police archivist, in 1838 📜. Picaud had been engaged to a wealthy heiress, but jealousy poisoned his future — three of his acquaintances, Loupian, Solari, and Chaubart, falsely accused him of being a British spy 🇬🇧. A fourth man, Allut, knew the accusation was false, but chose to remain silent 🤐. Without a trial, Picaud was imprisoned in the grim Fenestrelle fortress for seven years behind stone walls that swallowed hope 🏰. During his confinement, he met an Italian priest who, before dying, revealed the location of a vast hidden treasure buried in Milan 💎. After the fall of Napoleon, Picaud was released, recovered the treasure, and returned to Paris under a new identity — carrying with him only one purpose: revenge 🎭. His former fiancée had, in the meantime, married his betrayer Loupian 💔. One by one, Picaud dismantled the lives of those who had wronged him: Chaubart was killed, Solari was poisoned, and Loupian’s world was slowly destroyed from within 🕯️. Using forged credentials and his newfound wealth, Picaud orchestrated a marriage between Loupian’s daughter and a known criminal, whom he disguised as a respectable man 💍. After the wedding, the man was swiftly arrested — and Loupian’s daughter died from the shock 🥀. Picaud then framed Loupian’s son for theft, leading to his arrest and imprisonment behind cold bars 🔐. Finally, Picaud murdered Loupian himself, completing the chain of vengeance that had consumed his life 🔪. But justice, or fate, had one final twist ⚖️. The fourth man, Allut — wracked by guilt and grief over the deaths of his former friends — abducted and killed Picaud in a final act of torment 🕳️. Before his own death, Allut confessed the entire truth to the police, revealing everything that had passed in the shadows 🗣️. That confession was later transcribed by Peuchet — and became the true-life foundation of The Count of Monte Cristo, written by Alexandre Dumas in 1844 📖. #historytok  #truecrimetiktok  #alexandredumas  #countofmontecristo  #frenchhistory  #education  #EduTok
Pierre Picaud was a humble French shoemaker in the early 19th century whose tragic real-life story directly inspired Alexandre Dumas’s legendary novel The Count of Monte Cristo ✨. His tale was first documented by Jacques Peuchet, a former police archivist, in 1838 📜. Picaud had been engaged to a wealthy heiress, but jealousy poisoned his future — three of his acquaintances, Loupian, Solari, and Chaubart, falsely accused him of being a British spy 🇬🇧. A fourth man, Allut, knew the accusation was false, but chose to remain silent 🤐. Without a trial, Picaud was imprisoned in the grim Fenestrelle fortress for seven years behind stone walls that swallowed hope 🏰. During his confinement, he met an Italian priest who, before dying, revealed the location of a vast hidden treasure buried in Milan 💎. After the fall of Napoleon, Picaud was released, recovered the treasure, and returned to Paris under a new identity — carrying with him only one purpose: revenge 🎭. His former fiancée had, in the meantime, married his betrayer Loupian 💔. One by one, Picaud dismantled the lives of those who had wronged him: Chaubart was killed, Solari was poisoned, and Loupian’s world was slowly destroyed from within 🕯️. Using forged credentials and his newfound wealth, Picaud orchestrated a marriage between Loupian’s daughter and a known criminal, whom he disguised as a respectable man 💍. After the wedding, the man was swiftly arrested — and Loupian’s daughter died from the shock 🥀. Picaud then framed Loupian’s son for theft, leading to his arrest and imprisonment behind cold bars 🔐. Finally, Picaud murdered Loupian himself, completing the chain of vengeance that had consumed his life 🔪. But justice, or fate, had one final twist ⚖️. The fourth man, Allut — wracked by guilt and grief over the deaths of his former friends — abducted and killed Picaud in a final act of torment 🕳️. Before his own death, Allut confessed the entire truth to the police, revealing everything that had passed in the shadows 🗣️. That confession was later transcribed by Peuchet — and became the true-life foundation of The Count of Monte Cristo, written by Alexandre Dumas in 1844 📖. #historytok #truecrimetiktok #alexandredumas #countofmontecristo #frenchhistory #education #EduTok

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