Mouna Ayoub
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Mouna Ayoub (Template:Langx) (born 27 February 1957 in Kuwait)[1] is a French socialite and businesswoman of Lebanese origin. Frequently in the media, she is often a guest of the Cannes film festival and makes headlines in French gossip magazines.[2]Template:RS
Biography
She was born into a Maronite Christian family. At the age of 20 she converted to Islam to marry Nasser Al-Rashid, a 40-year-old businessman and adviser to King Fahd. She has five children with Nasser Al-Rashid.[3] After eighteen years of marriage, and according to her divorce agreements, she left Saudi Arabia and built a fortune by investing in real estate and stocks.[4] She wrote about her marriage in her 2000 book La Vérité: autobiographie.[5][6][7]
Ayoub stated she wrote the book to explain her situation, and to address allegations published by a Lebanese magazine that she was a modern-day Madame Bovary.[7] As Scott MacLeod of Time wrote: "But if her tale provides a rare look at the extravagance often wrought by unimagined wealth, it also serves as a disturbing manifesto against the extreme restrictions imposed on women by some ultraconservative Arab societies."[7] Her former husband filed suit in an attempt to stop publication of the autobiography.[4] The book became a best seller in France.[7]
In 1997, she bought a boat from Bernard Tapie, the Phocéa (the largest sailing yacht in the world before 2004), for €5.56 million to which was added €18.25 million worth of work.[8][9] To pay for the work she sold a number of her jewels including "The Mouna diamond", one of the largest yellow diamonds of the world (Script error: No such module "convert".) for a price of €2.52 million (16.5 million francs) a Bulgari necklace for 15.3 million francs, and a collection of jewels by Tabbah.[10][9][11] After getting rid of the yacht, she sold the contents in a well publicized auction.[8]
The Associated Press estimated her net worth at over $300 million.[4][6] In 2006, The New York Times offered a figure of about $500 million.[12]
She has the largest private collection of haute couture in the world, encompassing more than 10,000 items.[2][6] She never wears the same item of couture twice, and all of the major couture houses maintain an Ayoub mannequin for a proper fit in her absence.[6][13] The Associated Press claimed: She's also a couture philanthropist. "One of the richest women in the world will this week disclose how a disastrous marriage to a Saudi Royal family adviser drove her to depression and attempted suicide."[4]
In late 2023, she partnered with Maurice Auctions and Kerry Taylor to auction 252 lots of Chanel haute couture, ranging from belts and bangles to full runway looks.[14] A coat embroidered by Lesage with chinoiserie-inspired motifs, identical to one featured in multiple Metropolitan Museum Costume Institute exhibits, held the highest estimate of €150,000-200,000.[15] It sold for €312,000 before buyers premiums. [16]
Published works
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References
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External links
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- 1957 births
- Living people
- Naturalized citizens of France
- Converts to Sunni Islam from Christianity
- Lebanese Sunni Muslims
- French Muslims
- French former Christians
- Lebanese socialites
- Lebanese businesspeople
- Former Maronite Christians
- Lebanese women in business
- Lebanese emigrants to France
- Lebanese emigrants to Saudi Arabia
- Lebanese emigrants to Kuwait
- 20th-century Lebanese businesswomen
- 21st-century Lebanese businesswomen
- 20th-century Lebanese businesspeople
- 21st-century Lebanese businesspeople