Monastir Urbis Parfums
Fragrance Story
Monastir by URBIS PARFUMS is a Woody Aquatic fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Monastir was launched in 2023. Top notes are Pink Pepper, Jasmine and Mandarin Orange; middle notes are Lavender, Rosemary, Soap and Water Notes; base notes are Sandalwood, Vetiver, Musk and Cedarwood.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Unknown Perfumer
Fragrance Notes
Monastir Urbis Parfums by URBIS PARFUMS offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.
Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.
Monastir Urbis Parfums embodies the distinctive style of URBIS PARFUMS while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Monastir Urbis Parfums
Essence
This person is most closely aligned with the Sage-a seeker of truth, wisdom, and depth. The Sage thrives on knowledge, introspection, and the pursuit of meaning, often standing apart from the crowd to observe, analyze, and synthesize. Monastir Urbis, with its enigmatic, layered composition-perhaps woody, resinous, or subtly smoky-resonates with their contemplative nature. It is not a fragrance that shouts; it murmurs, inviting those who notice to lean in closer.
Style & Aesthetic
Their wardrobe is deliberate, favoring timeless, understated elegance-linen, wool, muted tones, perhaps a single striking accessory that hints at hidden depths. They appreciate craftsmanship, preferring well-worn leather notebooks, handmade ceramics, or vintage watches. Their home is a sanctuary of order and meaning: shelves lined with well-loved books, a single incense holder, a carefully curated selection of art that rewards long contemplation.
But their refined taste can tip into aesthetic elitism. They may scoff at trends, dismissing them as vulgar, yet secretly fear being out of touch. Their disdain for the mainstream can become its own kind of conformity-an intellectual posturing that masks insecurity.
They thrive in quiet intensity-morning rituals of black coffee and journaling, long walks through cities or forests, evenings spent reading by lamplight. They may be drawn to solitary pursuits: writing, meditation, or studying obscure philosophies. Travel is not about escapism but pilgrimage-seeking places that resonate with history, mystery, or spiritual weight.
But their love of solitude can become self-imposed exile. They may romanticize isolation, forgetting that wisdom untested by human connection is merely theory. Their shadow warns: To know everything and no one is to live half a life.
Philosophy & Values
For them, life is an intellectual and sensory exploration. They value clarity, authenticity, and depth, often dismissing superficiality as a kind of existential poverty. Their philosophy is not dogmatic but fluid-they see wisdom in paradox, beauty in imperfection, and truth in contradiction. They may be drawn to Stoicism, Zen Buddhism, or existentialism, not as rigid doctrines but as lenses through which to interpret experience.
Yet, their reverence for wisdom can sometimes harden into intellectual pride. They may disdain those who do not share their depth of thought, mistaking simplicity for stupidity. Their shadow whispers that they alone possess true understanding, isolating them in a self-constructed ivory tower.
Relationships
They are selective in their connections, valuing a few profound bonds over many shallow ones. Their conversations are deep, often circling existential questions, art, or the hidden currents of history. They are the friend who remembers the exact passage from a novel that speaks to your soul, or who gifts you a book they know will change your perspective.
Yet their selectivity can curdle into emotional detachment. They may rationalize loneliness as solitude, mistaking withdrawal for wisdom. Their shadow fears vulnerability, hiding behind intellect to avoid the messy, irrational demands of the heart.
Conclusion
They are both luminous and elusive, a mind sharp as a blade yet hesitant to cut through the illusions of daily life. Their strength is their depth; their flaw, their reluctance to dirty their hands in the chaos of living. Monastir Urbis suits them-a fragrance for those who dwell in thought, who seek meaning in scent, who understand that the most profound truths are often whispered, not shouted.
Yet the question lingers: Will they descend from the tower, or remain forever above the fray?