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Vallée des Rois Parfum

8.4 / 10 77 Ratings
A popular perfume by Mira Takla for women. The release year is unknown. The scent is floral-oriental. Projection and longevity are above-average. The production was apparently discontinued.
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Main accords

Floral
Oriental
Spicy
Animal
Sweet
Ratings
Scent
8.477 Ratings
Longevity
9.159 Ratings
Sillage
8.356 Ratings
Bottle
7.779 Ratings
Submitted by DonVanVliet · last update on 07/21/2024.
Source-backed & verified
Variant of the fragrance concentration
This is a variant of the perfume Vallée des Rois (Eau de Toilette) by Mira Takla, which differs in concentration.

Smells similar

What the fragrance is similar to
Vallée des Rois (Eau de Toilette) by Mira Takla
Vallée des Rois Eau de Toilette
Vallée des Rois (Eau de Parfum) by Mira Takla
Vallée des Rois Eau de Parfum
Parfum Couture - Denis Durand for M. Micallef by M. Micallef
Parfum Couture - Denis Durand for M. Micallef
Black & Gold by Lomani
Black & Gold
The Black / Al Hajar Al Aswad (Eau de Toilette) by Abdul Samad Al Qurashi
The Black Eau de Toilette
Ubar (2009) by Amouage
Ubar (2009)

Reviews

7 in-depth fragrance descriptions
MissPiggy

57 Reviews
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MissPiggy
MissPiggy
Top Review 35  
Desert Dust versus Floral Abundance - or What a Good Story Can Do
The praises, the hymns, and the admittedly fantastic story “behind” the fragrance softened me: I wanted it too… The cherry on top was the generous donation from Turandot, which incidentally led me to some (!!) fragrances that I would hardly have considered otherwise.
So this month, I'm living on Aldi spaghetti, more or less, as other funds went into acquiring exquisite fragrances. What can you do…

Finally, the 30 ml Extrait bottle I bid on and eagerly awaited arrived. Hooray. Nothing spilled or leaked. Beautiful! Just the matte paper packaging with embossed stylized lotus flowers and golden lettering brought me joy, even more so the bottle in dark turquoise blue (my favorite color next to emerald green…) with the golden “necklace.”

I have solemnly applied this fragrance multiple times in the last few days; the Extrait, which rests heavily and almost oily in the bottle, is a dark liquid that already hints at its richness and high content of dissolved resins.

I can't add much to the scent analyses of my predecessors; most of it seems to have been said and described.
The initial notes seem modern: I smell the juicy, freshly squeezed lemon, bitter and sour. Green tones and fruity juiciness that I can't define more closely.

Only a short time later, these first chords fade away, and a powerful jasmine “strike” resounds, from the finest. Not the piercing, headache-inducing jasmine often found, but a noble, aged jasmine. Jasmine oil becomes more refined, milder, and velvety with aging. In India, wealthy parents gift their daughter a bottle of the finest jasmine oil at birth, which she is then supposed to use as perfume oil on her wedding night…. THEN it has gained in quality!

This jasmine thus dominates together with primal feminine ylang-ylang, night-velvety, sweet tuberoses, and a spicy fruity note reminiscent of candied fruits in the middle tones.
This fragrance still appears to me as a “modern” perfume; the mystique only sets in upon reaching the base.

An orchestra of resins sounds creamy, soothing, balsamic. Vanilla-almond tones of benzoin and heliotrope mix with noble woods --- an aura of nobility, wealth, and pleasant scent --- and then the wild animals emerge!

Not listed in the fragrance pyramid, I believe I can smell civet and castoreum. And what else - a distinctly earthy-animalistic odor spreads across my skin, sexual, offensive, and unmistakable, but lightly masked by finely pleated veils of resins and woods as well as flowers and oils. Elegant, yet with “intent.”

Bastet, the cat goddess of the Egyptians, would likely accept this fragrance as an offering, so much animalistic grace is revealed in this elixir of precious ingredients.
But would the magic from the bottle still work if this fragrance didn't come dressed in the garb and story of ancient Egypt? If it were called “Wonderflower” or “Mystic Resins,” lacking packaging and story, it would be just one among many, albeit one of the better ones!

Since I enjoy being seduced and enchanted here, this fragrance is for me a nose-readable story of the high aesthetic art of the Egyptians. They were truly masters at using cosmetics and perfume to present the body in the most seductive light.
The application of the finest oils, bathing in precious floral liquids was as normal (for the upper classes) as applying eyeshadow with crushed lapis lazuli. To perfume oneself was a normal preparation for the day or the night. The best was just good enough, frankincense from the land of Punt (likely: Somalia), resins and essential oils from afar…. - and this is how this perfume smells
A very long-lasting effect is ensured by the abundant resins, so that the fragrance with its complex balsamic note still lingers on skin and bed linen the next morning.

As a teenager, I read everything, but really everything, that was somehow available in book form about Egypt and the excavations, with red cheeks from excitement. Picture books were still in black and white back then, which was rather boring compared to HD images of today. However, this allowed the imagination to add something to the texts of descriptions and novels, something that is no longer possible today, as everything is overly clear.
So I read that when Howard Carter uncovered the sarcophagus lid of Tutankhamun, a lovingly and artistically woven flower wreath lay on all the gold and lapis of the mask, made of long-dried flowers, small resin beads, and other fragrant embellishments.
I was deeply moved back then that someone had placed this rather simple, final love greeting on all that splendor for the young pharaoh who had died so young.
For me, this fragrance has captured that love greeting, made it tangible.
A piece of Egypt, a hint of this wonderful culture seems to be trapped in the bottle.
And even if it’s just a good story…

The effect of this perfume is… to put it mildly, stunning! I get approached when I wear it - and my husband, well… let’s not talk about that in public ;-)
16 Comments
Chanelle

752 Reviews
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Chanelle
Chanelle
Top Review 33  
The Secret of the Pharaohess
The fragrance Vallee des Rois is said to have been blended according to Cleopatra's signature scent recipe. I believe that without hesitation. It is also said that it was not her enchanting nose (a rumor spread by Asterix), but rather this fragrance that ensured she had an incredible effect on the male gender, even though she was not a "perfect 10." And since men have learned nothing since the days of Cleo, Obelix, and the Romans, and think not with the organ between their ears, but with one that lies much deeper, it should still work today....

I knew and adored Vallee des Rois by Mira Takla back in 1990. With some initial difficulties, and without knowing anything about the fragrance at the time...
Mira Takla, female, residing in London and Egypt, is one of the chairpersons of the British Egyptian Society, and in a joint venture, this British-Egyptian fragrance was created in the late 80s based on the aforementioned templates.
Harrods, which was then still owned by Dodi's father, Mr. Al-Fayed, an Egyptian businessman, initially carried the fragrance exclusively. Later, it was made available through the distribution of Perma-Jeune, again under the direction of an Egyptian, to a few other houses in Europe, which could be counted on one hand. Harrods, which still has an Egyptian Hall today, even after Mr. Al-Fayed is no longer the owner, was then even more tailored to the wealthiest customers in the world, and already offered a large selection of unaffordable Arabic and oriental fragrances for ordinary mortals. Amouage in the £50,000 version (now about 60,000 euros), Vallee des Rois also in the more affordable 500ml Extrait variant, for 2500.
I wandered among all the splendor with wide eyes and a small wallet, watching the golden credit cards heat up. I had one - green - but only for emergencies! The extremely friendly saleswoman at the stand offering Vallee des Rois approached me. I looked around, as she couldn’t possibly mean me... But yes, she meant me. She briefly explained the special features of this fragrance and sprayed it onto a pyramid-shaped scent card. However, when she told me the prices, I took the card and said goodbye rather hastily. I tucked the card away and only brought it out again in Düsseldorf to place it in a desk drawer at work. It stayed there for months, and I made it a habit to pull the drawer open several times a day to sniff the wonderful scent. The desire to own it grew stronger with each passing day. One day, I returned to London. At Harrods, I marched straight to the counter and bought the fragrance I had been dreaming of for months.
For a long time, it was my fragrance for special occasions, as it hadn’t been cheap, and I purchased it two more times, once in Düsseldorf and once in Wiesbaden, as these two fragrance specialists were the only ones in Germany who had it by then. Unfortunately, with the dawn of the new millennium, my bliss came to an end. Vallee des Rois was no longer sold in Europe, even at Harrods. Allegedly, it is still available in Egypt, but that has yet to be confirmed.

About the fragrance:
Imagine Habanita and Les Souveraines d'Egypte being so brilliantly merged by a perfumery master that a new, independent fragrance emerges. It contains all the strongly scented floral oils, woods, resins, and grasses of the Near East, has a dark, slightly oily consistency, a room-filling sillage, and a longevity of up to 48 hours. The top note is woody, unsweet, and heavy with flowers, the heart note is incredibly balsamic, erotic, and dark, with creamy sweetness and tons of sandalwood. The base likely includes some animal products and oak moss, as it is both velvety and animalistic.

Long before I had heard of Oud, Parfumo, and niche fragrances, this scent was my nirvana. Not a mere fragrance, but a statement, an affirmation of my femininity, a bow to the knowledge and art of ancient, bygone empires.

With Vallee des Rois, one feels grounded, divinely feminine, and full of mysteries. I handle my last few milliliters of Vallee des Rois very carefully, as they must last until it returns to the unworthy.
19 Comments
10Scent
LanaL

1 Review
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LanaL
LanaL
Top Review 18  
the 1st
Actually, I just wanted to submit some information about this amazing fragrance. Since this didn't work out due to the lack of a valid internet address that would "prove" this information, I am now coming to my first comment...

I have come across information regarding the fragrance pyramid:

Top notes:
citrusy, green (Galbanum) fruity notes

Heart notes:
floral bouquet - Rose, Jasmine, Ylang-Ylang, Tuberose, Orange Blossom

Base notes:
woody - Sandalwood, Patchouli, Vetiver
resinous - Frankincense, Labdanum, Benzoin, Styrax
powdery - Heliotrope, Vanilla, Tonka Bean

This information is printed on a tester bottle label, as seen in the picture that I am also including.
1 Comment
Louce

138 Reviews
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Louce
Louce
Top Review 3  
Royally Feminine
A huge charge of history, myth, and perfume legend! Not only the whole Cleopatra story, but also the fame of a unique, incomparable fragrance that is not, or at least not easily, obtainable and has only been smelled by a few initiated ones. What a screenplay material!
When I had the opportunity to acquire Vallee des Rois through Rosenrouge, who offered the bottle here, I of course jumped at the chance immediately.
I thought to myself: “It's worth it. Even if the scent is nothing, I’m buying a good story!”

I have learned to love myths, but I don’t attribute any truth substance to them, so I was correspondingly critical during the first sniff. I did not expect a shocking, life-changing epiphany.
But that’s exactly what I had!
VdR is incredible! Fabulous, beautiful, and unique! All the raving, poetry, and praise have their reason!

It is difficult to hunt for notes without a fragrance pyramid, almost completely blind. The pyramid often helps me: I can confirm a suspicion with a concrete word, or conversely, clearly say “No” to a listed note. But here such a framework is missing.
I am sure about myrrh, which is well detectable in the top note and later in the heart. There are some floral notes, a beautiful floral blend that is very radiant before the oriental-darkness. Here I think I can discern jasmine; rose is, I believe, only very slightly present. Perhaps a bit of hyacinth as well. A decent whiff of incense wafts in from the middle, and there is also another deep, slightly sweet resin note (styrax?) included. Additionally, beeswax (benzoin?). I smell not honey, but the solid, waxy, not directly honey-sweet scent of honeycombs. And very clearly: A significant animalistic kick! In the dark and heavy base, there is a whole scoop of dirt embedded. Very beautiful, very alluring, very sexy. I believe there is patchouli with something animalistic in it... civet? I consider moss likely, and the huge amount of sandalwood that makes Chanelle is not present, but a distinct, clear sandalwood note does emerge from the late middle.

VdR is clearly categorized as a floriental.
There are similarities in the scent impression with Memoir Woman by Amouage.
The phenomenal longevity is no exaggeration: From one shower to the next, the scent remains equally strong and does not fade. And it has a truly magical sillage: It is powerful, almost drastically perceptible, but not over long distances. From about 1 meter away, it captivates the smelling neighborhood with a very personal, very individual scent that develops over a long time. The development is astonishing overall: With the enormous duration that VdR shows, it evolves throughout the entire time. I constantly notice a delicate bit of change, constantly a new fine facet emerges.

Profoundly dark, shimmering, warm, precious, erotic, powerful.
Royal.
Feminine.
10 Comments
Medusa00

846 Reviews
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Medusa00
Medusa00
Helpful Review 18  
A fragrance... not of this world!
A rather large group of people is firmly convinced that aliens have been on our Earth at least once. If not more often. Others claim they are among us, and when I look at some of my fellow humans, I think: Bingo, the Men in Black need to come, and quickly.
Well, anyway, and if they were ever here, whether 50,000 years ago, 20,000 years ago (the first barley was cultivated 20,000 years ago!), or 30 years ago. They left something truly wonderful behind: This fragrance!
Vallee des Rois is not of this world, and the ingredients are not either. Such things no longer grow on Earth today. They have been destroyed during the last deforestation of valuable rainforests and are irretrievably lost. Well, the Valley of the Kings has been leveled to the ground. Generations will have to pay for that!
A precious and dark fragrance! It starts off somewhat aldehydic and with a juicy hesperidic note. It could also be that the fruits are from the Gamma 24 planetary system in the 5th sector of the Milky Way and were the favorite dish of the visitors back then!
With a proper punch, a sumptuous, dark, dramatic sea of flowers follows! Complex, mysterious, erotic, drastic, and a bit decadent! It reminds me a lot of my Habanita Vintage, but that one is more demanding and exhibitionistic!
In the base lurks a creamy, beautiful cat, which rather gives the impression of a saber-toothed tiger sharpening its claws on an olive tree. Olive wood smells noble and is very oily.
The longevity is brilliant and easily lasts 24 hours. I’ll just call ET to see if he can bring me the fragrance, but if they only come back in 50,000 years, it will be too late...
8 Comments
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Statements

10 short views on the fragrance
1
Wonderful interplay of white flowers of almost honey sweetness, fine "spiced" with little background smokiness and benzoin.
0 Comments
21
15
In the valley of the king cats
flowers with paws
sweetly and thickly watch
over glowing honey wood
which has forever
melted happiness into fragrance
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15 Comments
17
5
Even without the story, it's a dreamy scent. As beautiful as Liz Taylor as Cleopatra, erotic, elegant, mystical, mysterious, voluminous.
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5 Comments
9 years ago
12
3
If you were to smell this fragrance without any context, the opinions would be sobering. Outdated and overly heavy.
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3 Comments
10 years ago
10
A scent from times gone by, like a good old vintage. Reminds me of the old boudoir, but heavier, darker, and sandalwood-heavy.
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0 Comments
9
3
A rich bath of white blossoms, enlivened by citrus aromas and fruits, separated by a curtain of smoky resins from the everyday.
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3 Comments
8
2
She is authentic. She is assertive. She is passionate. She is a long-lasting oriental seductress!
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2 Comments
6
2
A classic, heavy vintage women's fragrance that has aged but remains timeless. Perfect for special occasions.
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2 Comments
5
2
I bought it as a student at Harrods and was shocked by my courage. Wore it with mixed feelings. Too much. Back then.
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2 Comments
5
A resinous desert soul.
Playfully animalistic, oriental.
Strong phases of orange blossoms.
Elegant and perfect for the truly great characters!
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