Thousands of years ago, in the East, there was a noble athlete and warrior—the Chaugan, whose history in Persia was written probably during the reign of King Darius (522-486 BC). The man became a popular entertainment and sports king admired by all and interest in him has not faded over the centuries. The myth of the Chaugan traveled to Arabia and Tibet, China and Japan, Egypt and India in the fourteenth century, and arrived in England after 1850. The Chaugan leads by his nobility to a legendary past, a notable East of extreme delicacy where princes set the tone for a refined art of living. The palaces' architecture, chiseled like jewels, are scented with delicate scents, their curtains swaying to the rhythm of a hot wind while one lounges on a luxurious silk carpet. The women are beautiful, awaiting the return of their warriors; they adorn their bodies with silks and precious bjoux, wrapping themselves in incense sails ...