Soap
Sapo Annae
100 g
Natural mineral salts soap with shea butter and castor oils. In a handmade box.
13€
Soap
100 g
Natural mineral salts soap with shea butter and castor oils. In a handmade box.
13€
This mineral soap works wonders: massages, gently exfoliates, nourishes the skin. The soap is packaged in silk paper lined handmade cardboard box, which makes it a wonderful gift choice.
The lower flat part and the rough spherical surface perfectly reach all the reliefs of the body. Together it acts as a massage tool.
Anna Dei gratia ducissa Lithuaniae, domina Trocensis, Luczensis, etc. ( lot. Anna, by the grace of God, Duchess of Lithuania, Duchess of Tracis, Lutsk, etc. Lady.) Anna" dry mineral waterTM is named after the wife of Grand Duke Vytautas of Lithuania, Ona Vytautienė. She is believed to have grown up in Dzūkija, in Eišiškės Castle. She married Vytautas around 1370 and lived in Trakai, where their only daughter Sofija was born. Here she had the opportunity to meet and get to know people of different nations, races and religions. Duchess Ona is mentioned in history in 1382 when Vytautas was imprisoned in Krėva Castle after the death of Kęstutis. It was only thanks to Ona's skill, determination and courage that Vytautas escaped from prison. This is evidenced by the incident described in Vytautas' order: "After consulting his wife and with her approval, he put on his wife's clothes and, before the guards could notice, he escaped and came to his sister Danuta". When Vytautas reconciled with Jogaila, he returned to Lithuania and lived in Grodno Castle. Here again, the Duchess saved Vytautas's life when the fire broke out. History records that Duchess Ona was so influential in the affairs of the State that she sometimes signed contracts for her husband, ensuring that he would keep them. When Vytautas was proclaimed King of Lithuania by the Lithuanian nobility, his wife Ona was given that title. Unfortunately, the crown was snatched and the coronation never took place. The power and wealth of the Lithuanian rulers astonished all their neighbours, and Princess Ona was universally hailed as the most splendid woman in Eastern Europe. Historical sources suggest that Ona's baptismal name may have been Oprassia (Oprassia uxor nra charissima).