First Saudi state
Template:Short description Template:Pp Template:Expand language Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Template:Main other Template:History of Saudi Arabia The first Saudi state (Template:Langx), officially the Emirate of Diriyah (Template:Langx),[1] was established in 1744,[2][3][4] when the emir of a Najdi town called Diriyah, Muhammad I, and the religious leader Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab signed a pact to found a socio-religious reform movement to propagate the Wahhabi religious doctrine under the political leadership of the House of Saud.[5][6]
History
Early establishment
The House of Saud and its allies quickly rose to become the dominant power in Arabia by first conquering Najd, and then expanding their influence over the eastern coast from Kuwait down to the northern borders of Oman. Saud's forces also captured the highlands of Asir, while Muhammad ibn Abd Al Wahhab wrote letters to people and scholars to join jihad. After many military campaigns, Muhammad bin Saud died in 1765, leaving the leadership to his son, Abdul-Aziz bin Muhammad. Saud's forces went so far as to gain command of the Shia holy city of Karbala in 1801. Here they destroyed the shrine of the saints and monuments and killed over 5,000 civilians.[7] In retribution, Abdulaziz was assassinated by a young Shia in 1803, having followed him back to Najd.
Muhammad bin Abd Al Wahhab died in 1792. In 1803, eleven years after his death, the son of Abdulaziz bin Muhammad, Saud bin Abdulaziz, sent out forces to bring the region of Hejaz under his rule.[8] Taif was the first city to be captured, and later the two holy cities of Mecca and Medina. This was seen as a major challenge to the authority of the Ottoman Empire, which had exercised its rule over the holy cities since 1517.
Decline of sovereignty
The task of weakening the grip of the House of Saud was given to the powerful viceroy of Egypt, Muhammad Ali Pasha, by the Ottomans. This initiated the Ottoman–Saudi War, in which Muhammad Ali sent his troops to the Hejaz region by sea. His son, Ibrahim Pasha, then led Ottoman forces into the heart of Najd, capturing town after town. Saud's successor, his son Abdullah I, was unable to prevent the recapture of the region.[9] Finally, Ibrahim reached the Saudi capital at Diriyah. He placed it under siege for several months until it surrendered in the winter of 1818. Ibrahim then shipped off many members of the House of Saud to Egypt and the Ottoman capital, Constantinople (modern day Istanbul). Abdullah I was later executed in the Ottoman capital, with his severed head later thrown into the waters of the Bosporus, marking the end of what was known as the first Saudi state.[9] However, both the followers of the Wahhabi movement and the remaining members of the House of Saud stayed committed. They founded the Second Saudi State that lasted until 1891. Before the unification of modern Saudi Arabia, several emirates and kingdoms were established in the region, eventually paving the way for the formation of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.[9]
List of rulers
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- Emir Muhammad bin Saud 1727–1765 (1139–1179 H)
- Emir Abdulaziz bin Muhammad 1765–1803 (1179–1218 H)
- Emir Saud bin Abdulaziz 1803–1814 (1218–1229 H)
- Emir Abdullah bin Saud 1814–1818 (1229–1233 H)
See also
References
Further reading
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Template:Authority controlTemplate:Coord Template:Saudi Arabia topics
- ↑ James Norman Dalrymple Anderson. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Stacey International, 1983. p. 77.
- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Template:Cite thesis
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- ↑ Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
- ↑ Metz 1992
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- ↑ Sauds's campaign for Hejaz and the two holy cities Template:Webarchive, Islam Life online magazine
- ↑ a b c Abdullah bin Saud's capture Template:Webarchive, King Abdullah Ibn Saud Information Resource
- Pages with script errors
- 18th-century establishments in the Arabian Peninsula
- 19th century in the Arabian Peninsula
- 1744 establishments in Asia
- 1818 disestablishments in Asia
- Anti-Ottomanism
- Diriyah
- Former Arab states
- Former countries in West Asia
- Former emirates
- Former monarchies of West Asia
- History of Saudi Arabia
- History of the Arabian Peninsula
- House of Saud
- Ottoman Arabia
- States and territories established in 1744
- States and territories disestablished in 1818