The one behind looks like BARR in drag.
The Red ring we've noticed.
It's called aqeeq (carnelian or agate). Aqeeq rings were particularly favored for their supposed protective and spiritual powers in Islamic tradition.
Selim II (Suleiman’s son, the sultan in the portrait you shared): He was known for his love of aqeeq rings — carnelian/agate rings that blended art and religious symbolism.
The supposed spiritual powers of aqeeq (carnelian or agate) rings come from Islamic traditions (especially hadiths and narrations from the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ and the Imams), not from any single “official” myth.
Key Spiritual Powers & Benefits (from Popular Narrations)
Protection and safety: Wearing an aqeeq ring is said to guard the wearer from harm, afflictions, evil, loss, injury, and danger — especially while traveling. One narration from Imam Ja’far al-Sadiq states that it becomes a source of “aman” (safety/security) on journeys.
Blessings and good fortune: It brings barakah (divine blessings), removes poverty, and wards off hypocrisy or negative traits.
Emotional and physical well-being: It creates joy in the heart, improves eyesight, and helps relieve depression, sadness, or high tension/stress.
Spiritual reward in prayer: A well-known (though debated) narration says that praying while wearing an aqeeq ring is equivalent to 1,000 rak’ahs prayed without it.
Connection to Tawhid (oneness of God): This is the closest thing to a “myth” or foundational story. Several hadiths state that the aqeeq stone was the first mineral to acknowledge the Tawhid of Allah and to confess its submission to God. Because of this, it is seen as uniquely blessed and recommended for rings.
These ideas are often linked to the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ himself wearing a silver ring set with aqeeq (some narrations specify it was on his right hand, sometimes engraved with “Muhammad Rasul Allah”).
Ottoman rulers (including the ones we’ve been discussing) did wear aqeeq rings as part of imperial tradition and Sunnah. They symbolized authority, piety, and continuity with the Prophet’s practice. However, the sultans treated them more as symbolic jewelry and personal devotion than as magical talismans. The deeper spiritual claims (protection, poverty removal, etc.) come from the broader Islamic gemstone culture that influenced Ottoman court jewelry.
The “myth” is the story of the aqeeq stone being the first creation to submit to Allah’s >>24495411
I think it's Japanese.
Or "Lord High Executioner" from opera, light opera,
"MIKADO" ? I think it's "Jack Lumen Smith" ( still fail to believe that's his real name) who belongs in that role?