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Abdulaziz bin Muhammad Al Saud

Abdulaziz bin Muhammad Al Saud (Arabic: عبد العزيز بن محمد آل سعود ʿAbd al ʿAzīz bin Muḥammad Āl Suʿūd; 1720–1803)[1] was the second ruler of the Emirate of Diriyah. He was the eldest son of Muhammad bin Saud[2] and the son-in-law of Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab. Abdulaziz ruled the Emirate from 1765 until 1803.[3][4] He was nicknamed by his people as the savior of his time (mahdi zamanihi in Arabic) due to his fearless activities.[5]

Abdulaziz bin Muhammad Al Saud
Emir and Imam of Diriyah
Reign1765 – 1803
PredecessorMuhammad bin Saud (as Emir)
SuccessorSaud bin Abdulaziz bin Muhammad
Born1720
Died12 November 1803 (aged 82–83)
Issue
List
  • Saud
    Abdul Rahman
    Abdullah
    Umar
Names
Abdulaziz bin Muhammad bin Saud bin Muhammad bin Muqrin Al Maridi Al Adui
HouseAl Saud
FatherMuhammad bin Saud

Early life Edit

Abdulaziz was born in 1720[6][7] and was the eldest son of Muhammad bin Saud.[8][9] He was educated by Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab and became a Wahhabi scholar.[10]

Long before the death of his father Abdulaziz was announced the next ruler of the state at the request of Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab.[2] From 1750 Abdulaziz was the chief military commander of the Emirate due to his father's old age.[11] In 1763 he led a military campaign of the Emirate attacking the regions under the rule of the Bani Khalid Emirate.[12] It was the first military attack of the Emirate outside the Nejd.[12] These attacks were followed by those against the Sudair and Jalajil tribes who did not join the religious movement of Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab.[12] Next Abdulaziz raided the Ajman tribe who were the natives of the Najran region.[12] In the latter attack the forces of Abdulaziz were defeated losing nearly one thousand men.[12]

Reign Edit

The reign of Abdulaziz bin Muhammad began in 1765 when his father died.[12] Abdulaziz's Bay'ah (Arabic: Pledge of allegiance) ceremony was supervised by Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab.[13] Although his father was titled as Emir, Abdulaziz was given the titles of both Emir and Imam.[2] However, the latter title was not granted immediately after his succession to the throne, but it was given later.[13] Imam as a title was a reflection of Abdulaziz's religious education by Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab[2] and his deeply religious personality.[14] His younger brother, Abdullah, unsuccessfully challenged the rule of Abdulaziz.[15]

Abdulaziz's father, Muhammad bin Saud, initiated attacks against the ruler of Riyadh, Dahham bin Dawwas, in 1747.[16] However, following the battles for nearly 25 years only in 1773 Riyadh was captured by Abdulaziz and became part of the Emirate.[4][16][17] Their military success and orthodox approach to religion won them great support in the area. Their standing was also boosted by Abdulaziz's practice of holding open meetings where tribal elders could meet with him, allowing access to their ruler. During his reign Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab was his major advisor and dealt with all major activities, including treasury.[2] However, following the capture of Riyadh Abdulaziz bin Muhammad himself began to control the budget of the state due to the significant increase in revenues.[2][9] From 1789 Abdulaziz's supremacy was recognised by all Najdi people.[18] As early as 1790 Abdulaziz's forces started their attacks in the region near the Euphrates in southern Iraq.[19] The region was the settlement of the Shammar tribe, originally from Najd, and they were defeated two times in 1791.[19] Muslat bin Mutlaq Al Jarba, son of the tribal leader Mutlaq bin Muhammad, killed in the battle which led to the migration of the tribe to southern Mesopotamia.[19]

The expansion continued with the capture of Qatif in 1794[20] and Hasa in 1795[21] where Shiites were dominant.[22] Abdulaziz's attacks against Hasa which had been under the rule of Banu Khalid began in 1792.[16] From 1797 the relations between Abdulaziz and the Ottoman authorities both in Baghdad and in Mecca became tense.[16]

In 1802 Hejaz, namely Taif and Khurma, was captured,[14] and the people, particularly men, living there were slaughtered.[21][22] In Taif Abdulaziz's forces took women and children as slaves.[23] They also demolished the heterodox texts and innovative household equipment such as mirrors and window frames and robbed the wealth of the local people.[24] Zubayr and other settlements in the region witnessed similar violence, too.[24]

In 1802 Bahrain was invaded and captured by the ruler of Muscat.[25] Abdulaziz bin Muhammad recaptured it in addition to Qatar and appointed there a governor, Abdullah bin Ufaysan, there.[25] The rulers of Bahrain, Abdullah and Salman, together with their families were sent to Diriyah where they were all detained.[25] Therefore, the Wahhabi influence also extended to Qatar and Bahrain.[26] However, due to the Ottoman attacks in Hejaz Abdulaziz bin Muhammad did not manage to fully consolidate his power in Bahrain and had to reduce his forces there which allowed the Al Khalifa to reestablish their rule.[25] Abdulaziz's governor, Abdullah bin Ufaysan, was detained by the Al Khalifa.[25] In 1803 Mecca was taken by Abdulaziz's forces, and the religious figures in the city declared their alliance to Wahhabis.[22] The attacks of the Saudi forces reached Syria, Iraq and Yemen where Abdulaziz managed to establish his authority.[26]

Sack of Karbala Edit

In 1802 Abdulaziz bin Muhammad's forces led by his heir and son Saud attacked Karbala and Najaf in Iraq.[27] Unlike other attacks the goal of Saudi forces was not to rule or control the region.[27] They massacred thousands of the Shia population, stole enough precious loot to load 4,000 camels, and destroyed the dome over the shrine of Imam Hussain.[28][29] They also stole the gold, jewels, and rare minerals in the shrine.[29] This incident also had another and much more significant effect: it added a sectarian nuance to the Sunni-Shia divide in the Muslim world.[29]

The observations of Lieutenant Francis Warden, a British military official, about the attack are as follows:[30]

They pillaged the whole of it [Karbala], and plundered the Tomb of Hussein...slaying in the course of the day, with circumstances of peculiar cruelty, above five thousand of the inhabitants...

Personal life and death Edit

Abdulaziz married to the daughter of Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab and the daughter of Uthman bin Mu'ammar, the ruler of Uyayna.[4][31] He had four sons: Saud, Abdul Rahman, Abdullah and Umar.[11] Of them Saud was born through Abdulaziz's marriage to the daughter of Uthman bin Mu'ammar.[32]

Abdulaziz was much more adhered to the Wahhabi cause and more aggressive than his father.[33] However, like his father he dressed in a plain way, and his armaments were not decorated unlike those of the Mamluk and Ottoman rulers.[34]

Shortly after his capture of Mecca Abdulaziz returned to Diriyah where he was assassinated by a Persian man who was a darwish when Abdulaziz was leading Asr Salat in the mosque of Turaif in November 1803.[4][22][35] The motive of the assassin was to take revenge against him due to the killing of his sons in the Karbala attack.[27] The British newspaper London Times dated 12 March 1804 reported the following about the assassination:[33]

Abdulaziz ibn Muhammad was assassinated by Ibadgi Osman, a Mussulman of the sect of Ali. He had profaned the tomb of Ali, and thus excited the fury of the disciples of that prophet. Ibadgi Osman resolved to avenge the ashes of Ali. He crossed the desert of Arabia on a dromedary, entered the tent of Abdulaziz while he was at prayers, and plunged a cangiar into his breast crying, "Let this avenge the tomb of Ali, for thy profanations." The brother of Abdulaziz, hearing the noise, ran into the tent, where he found his brother bathed in his blood, and the assassin, who squatted himself down, saying his prayers, and calmly awaiting death. He attacked him; but Ibadgi Osman, who was the strongest of the two, got up and killed his assailant with the same cangiar which was still stained with the blood of his brother. The soldiers then entered, and cut the assassin in pieces with their sabers.

Abdulaziz was succeeded by his eldest son, Saud.[3][8]

Writings Edit

A student of his father-in-law, Abdul Wahab, Abdulaziz followed his footsteps in writing on tawhid and the avoidance of grave-worshiping and other such related matters, his epistles being praised by Al-Shawkani, a scholar.[36]

References Edit

  1. ^ Martin Sicker (2001). The Islamic World in Decline: From the Treaty of Karlowitz to the Disintegration of the Ottoman Empire. Westport, CT; London: Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-96891-5.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Alejandra Galindo Marines (2001). The relationship between the ulama and the government in the contemporary Saudi Arabian Kingdom: an interdependent relationship? (PhD thesis). Durham University. p. 88.
  3. ^ a b J. E. Peterson (2003). Historical Dictionary of Saudi Arabia (2nd ed.). Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press. p. 16. ISBN 9780810827806.
  4. ^ a b c d Parvaiz Ahmad Khanday (2009). (PDF) (PhD thesis). Aligarh Muslim University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 November 2018.
  5. ^ Peter C. Valenti (2015). State-Building in Central Arabia: Empires and Regional Actors at the Crossroads of al Qasim (PhD thesis). New York University. p. 83. ISBN 978-1-321-62492-2. ProQuest 1666383783.
  6. ^ Khalid Abdullah Krairi (October 2016). John Philby and his political roles in the Arabian Peninsula, 1917-1953 (PhD thesis). University of Birmingham. p. 383.
  7. ^ Sabra Naji Alshahrani (2015). Saudi Women's Role in Development of Society (MA thesis). Charles University in Prague. p. 36. hdl:20.500.11956/75139.
  8. ^ a b Charles F. Balka (December 2008). The Fate of Saudi Arabia: Regime Evolution in the Saudi Monarchy (MA thesis). Naval Postgraduate School. p. 16. hdl:10945/3805.
  9. ^ a b Bilal Ahmad Kutty (1997). Saudi Arabia under King Faisal (PDF) (PhD thesis). Aligarh Muslim University. p. 27.
  10. ^ Cameron Zargar (2017). "Origins of Wahhabism from Hanbali Fiqh". Journal of Islamic and Near Eastern Law. 16 (1): 100. doi:10.5070/N4161038736.
  11. ^ a b Gary Samuel Samore (1984). Royal Family Politics in Saudi Arabia (1953-1982) (PhD thesis). Harvard University. pp. 18–19. ISBN 9798641924397. ProQuest 303295482.
  12. ^ a b c d e f Saeed 'Amr M. Al-'Amr Al-Beeshi (1994). The Social and Political History of the Western Coast of the Gulf, 1207-1256/1793-1840 (PhD thesis). University of Manchester. pp. 50–54. ISBN 978-1-392-10160-5. ProQuest 2217103618.
  13. ^ a b Cole M. Bunzel (2023). Wahhābism: The History of a Militant Islamic Movement. Princeton, NJ; Oxford: Princeton University Press. pp. 208–209. doi:10.1515/9780691241609. ISBN 9780691241609.
  14. ^ a b Nawaf bin Ayyaf Almogren. Diriyah Narrated by Its Built Environment: The Story of the First Saudi State (1744-1818) (MS thesis). MIT. hdl:1721.1/127856.
  15. ^ Abdullah Hazaa Othman; Oleg Evgenievich Grishin; Bakil Hasan Nasser Ali (2020). "The Conflict Wings in the Saudi Political System". Journal of Politics and Law. 13 (3): 65. doi:10.5539/jpl.v13n3p64. S2CID 225480634.
  16. ^ a b c d Muinuddin Ahmad Khan; Harford Jones (March 1968). "A Diplomat's Report on Wahhabism of Arabia". Islamic Studies. 7 (1): 38–39. JSTOR 20832903.
  17. ^ Turki bin Khalid bin Saad bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (2015). Saudi Arabia-Iran relations 1929-2013 (PhD thesis). King's College London. OCLC 1085141810.
  18. ^ Muhammad S.M. El Shaafy (May 1967). The First Saudi States in Arabia (With Special Reference to its Administrative, Military and Economic Features) in the light of Unpublished Materials from Arabic and European Sources (PhD thesis). University of Leeds. p. 33.
  19. ^ a b c John Frederick Williamson (1974). A political history of the Shammar Jarba tribe of al-Jazīrah, 1800-1958 (PhD thesis). Indiana University. pp. 30–31. ISBN 9798659836040. OCLC 4481937. ProQuest 302745090. The source calls him Ibn Saud
  20. ^ Abdulaziz Mohamed Hasan Ali Al Khalifa (April 2013). Relentless Warrior and Shrewd Tactician: Shaikh Abdullah bin Ahmad of Bahrain 1795-1849 A Case Study of Shaikhly Statecraft in the Nineteenth Century Gulf (PhD thesis). University of Exeter. p. 73. hdl:10871/12461.
  21. ^ a b Jacob Goldberg (1986). The Foreign Policy of Saudi Arabia. The Formative Years. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 9–11. doi:10.4159/harvard.9780674281844.c1. ISBN 9780674281844.
  22. ^ a b c d Nadav Safran (2018). Saudi Arabia: The Ceaseless Quest for Security. Ithaca, NY; London: Cornell University Press. pp. 10, 12. ISBN 9780674789852.
  23. ^ Adil Rasheed (2018). "Wahhabism and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: An Evolving Symbiosis" (PDF). In Sanjay Singh (ed.). West Asia in Transition. Vol. 2. New Delhi: Pentagon Press. p. 92. ISBN 978-93-86618-17-7.
  24. ^ a b Ben L.T.V. Rich (November 2015). The State as an Identity Racketeer: The Case of Saudi Arabia (PhD thesis). Monash University. p. 81.
  25. ^ a b c d e Abdul Wahap Saleh Babeair (1985). Ottoman Penetration of the Eastern Region of the Arabian Peninsula, 1814-1841 (PhD thesis). Indiana University. pp. 17–18, 24. ProQuest 303386071.
  26. ^ a b Mohamed Zayyan Aljazairi (1968). Diplomatic history of Saudi Arabia, 1903-1960's (MA thesis). The University of Arizona. pp. 2–3. hdl:10150/318068.
  27. ^ a b c Hassan S. Abedin (2002). Abdul Aziz Al Saud and the Great Game in Arabia, 1896-1946 (PhD thesis). King's College London.
  28. ^ Sayed Khatab (2011). Understanding Islamic Fundamentalism: The Theological and Ideological Basis of Al-Qa'ida's Political Tactics. Cairo; New York: The American University in Cairo Press. p. 74. ISBN 9789774164996.
  29. ^ a b c Aidan Parkes (Spring–Summer 2019). "Power Shifts in the Saudi–Iranian Strategic Competition". Global Security and Intelligence Studies. 4 (1). doi:10.18278/gsis.4.1.3. hdl:1885/163729. S2CID 182451007.
  30. ^ Alastair Crooke (30 March 2017). "You Can't Understand ISIS If You Don't Know the History of Wahhabism in Saudi Arabia". HuffPost. Retrieved 7 March 2021.
  31. ^ Adham Saouli (2009). Dilemmas of Late Formation. International System and State Survival in the Middle East. Case Studies: Saudi Arabia and Iraq (PhD thesis). University of St Andrews. p. 126. hdl:10023/752.
  32. ^ James Wynbrandt (2010). (PDF). New York: Infobase Publishing. p. 120. ISBN 978-0-8160-7876-9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 May 2021.
  33. ^ a b Emine Ö. Evered (2012). "Rereading Ottoman Accounts of Wahhabism as Alternative Narratives: Ahmed Cevdet Paşa's Historical Survey of the Movement". Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 32 (3): 622–632. doi:10.1215/1089201X-1891615. S2CID 144063808.
  34. ^ Mohamed Mohamed El Amrousi (2001). Beyond Muslim space: Jeddah, Muscat, Aden and Port Said (PhD thesis). UCLA. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-493-48568-3. ProQuest 304688724.
  35. ^ Jerald L. Thompson (December 1981). H. St. John Philby, Ibn Saud and Palestine (MA thesis). University of Kansas.
  36. ^ Jamal al-Din Zarabozo (2003). The Life, Teachings and Influence of Muhammad ibn Abdul-Wahhab. Saudi Ministry of Islamic Affairs, Dawah and Guidance. p. 155. ISBN 978-9960295008.

External links Edit

Preceded by Imam of First Saudi State
1765–1803
Succeeded by

abdulaziz, muhammad, saud, arabic, عبد, العزيز, بن, محمد, آل, سعود, ʿabd, ʿazīz, muḥammad, suʿūd, 1720, 1803, second, ruler, emirate, diriyah, eldest, muhammad, saud, muhammad, abdul, wahhab, abdulaziz, ruled, emirate, from, 1765, until, 1803, nicknamed, peopl. Abdulaziz bin Muhammad Al Saud Arabic عبد العزيز بن محمد آل سعود ʿAbd al ʿAziz bin Muḥammad Al Suʿud 1720 1803 1 was the second ruler of the Emirate of Diriyah He was the eldest son of Muhammad bin Saud 2 and the son in law of Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab Abdulaziz ruled the Emirate from 1765 until 1803 3 4 He was nicknamed by his people as the savior of his time mahdi zamanihi in Arabic due to his fearless activities 5 Abdulaziz bin Muhammad Al SaudEmir and Imam of DiriyahReign1765 1803PredecessorMuhammad bin Saud as Emir SuccessorSaud bin Abdulaziz bin MuhammadBorn1720Died12 November 1803 aged 82 83 IssueList Saud Abdul Rahman Abdullah UmarNamesAbdulaziz bin Muhammad bin Saud bin Muhammad bin Muqrin Al Maridi Al AduiHouseAl SaudFatherMuhammad bin Saud Contents 1 Early life 2 Reign 3 Sack of Karbala 4 Personal life and death 5 Writings 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditAbdulaziz was born in 1720 6 7 and was the eldest son of Muhammad bin Saud 8 9 He was educated by Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab and became a Wahhabi scholar 10 Long before the death of his father Abdulaziz was announced the next ruler of the state at the request of Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab 2 From 1750 Abdulaziz was the chief military commander of the Emirate due to his father s old age 11 In 1763 he led a military campaign of the Emirate attacking the regions under the rule of the Bani Khalid Emirate 12 It was the first military attack of the Emirate outside the Nejd 12 These attacks were followed by those against the Sudair and Jalajil tribes who did not join the religious movement of Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab 12 Next Abdulaziz raided the Ajman tribe who were the natives of the Najran region 12 In the latter attack the forces of Abdulaziz were defeated losing nearly one thousand men 12 Reign EditThe reign of Abdulaziz bin Muhammad began in 1765 when his father died 12 Abdulaziz s Bay ah Arabic Pledge of allegiance ceremony was supervised by Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab 13 Although his father was titled as Emir Abdulaziz was given the titles of both Emir and Imam 2 However the latter title was not granted immediately after his succession to the throne but it was given later 13 Imam as a title was a reflection of Abdulaziz s religious education by Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab 2 and his deeply religious personality 14 His younger brother Abdullah unsuccessfully challenged the rule of Abdulaziz 15 Abdulaziz s father Muhammad bin Saud initiated attacks against the ruler of Riyadh Dahham bin Dawwas in 1747 16 However following the battles for nearly 25 years only in 1773 Riyadh was captured by Abdulaziz and became part of the Emirate 4 16 17 Their military success and orthodox approach to religion won them great support in the area Their standing was also boosted by Abdulaziz s practice of holding open meetings where tribal elders could meet with him allowing access to their ruler During his reign Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab was his major advisor and dealt with all major activities including treasury 2 However following the capture of Riyadh Abdulaziz bin Muhammad himself began to control the budget of the state due to the significant increase in revenues 2 9 From 1789 Abdulaziz s supremacy was recognised by all Najdi people 18 As early as 1790 Abdulaziz s forces started their attacks in the region near the Euphrates in southern Iraq 19 The region was the settlement of the Shammar tribe originally from Najd and they were defeated two times in 1791 19 Muslat bin Mutlaq Al Jarba son of the tribal leader Mutlaq bin Muhammad killed in the battle which led to the migration of the tribe to southern Mesopotamia 19 The expansion continued with the capture of Qatif in 1794 20 and Hasa in 1795 21 where Shiites were dominant 22 Abdulaziz s attacks against Hasa which had been under the rule of Banu Khalid began in 1792 16 From 1797 the relations between Abdulaziz and the Ottoman authorities both in Baghdad and in Mecca became tense 16 In 1802 Hejaz namely Taif and Khurma was captured 14 and the people particularly men living there were slaughtered 21 22 In Taif Abdulaziz s forces took women and children as slaves 23 They also demolished the heterodox texts and innovative household equipment such as mirrors and window frames and robbed the wealth of the local people 24 Zubayr and other settlements in the region witnessed similar violence too 24 In 1802 Bahrain was invaded and captured by the ruler of Muscat 25 Abdulaziz bin Muhammad recaptured it in addition to Qatar and appointed there a governor Abdullah bin Ufaysan there 25 The rulers of Bahrain Abdullah and Salman together with their families were sent to Diriyah where they were all detained 25 Therefore the Wahhabi influence also extended to Qatar and Bahrain 26 However due to the Ottoman attacks in Hejaz Abdulaziz bin Muhammad did not manage to fully consolidate his power in Bahrain and had to reduce his forces there which allowed the Al Khalifa to reestablish their rule 25 Abdulaziz s governor Abdullah bin Ufaysan was detained by the Al Khalifa 25 In 1803 Mecca was taken by Abdulaziz s forces and the religious figures in the city declared their alliance to Wahhabis 22 The attacks of the Saudi forces reached Syria Iraq and Yemen where Abdulaziz managed to establish his authority 26 Sack of Karbala EditMain article Wahhabi sack of Karbala In 1802 Abdulaziz bin Muhammad s forces led by his heir and son Saud attacked Karbala and Najaf in Iraq 27 Unlike other attacks the goal of Saudi forces was not to rule or control the region 27 They massacred thousands of the Shia population stole enough precious loot to load 4 000 camels and destroyed the dome over the shrine of Imam Hussain 28 29 They also stole the gold jewels and rare minerals in the shrine 29 This incident also had another and much more significant effect it added a sectarian nuance to the Sunni Shia divide in the Muslim world 29 The observations of Lieutenant Francis Warden a British military official about the attack are as follows 30 They pillaged the whole of it Karbala and plundered the Tomb of Hussein slaying in the course of the day with circumstances of peculiar cruelty above five thousand of the inhabitants Personal life and death EditAbdulaziz married to the daughter of Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab and the daughter of Uthman bin Mu ammar the ruler of Uyayna 4 31 He had four sons Saud Abdul Rahman Abdullah and Umar 11 Of them Saud was born through Abdulaziz s marriage to the daughter of Uthman bin Mu ammar 32 Abdulaziz was much more adhered to the Wahhabi cause and more aggressive than his father 33 However like his father he dressed in a plain way and his armaments were not decorated unlike those of the Mamluk and Ottoman rulers 34 Shortly after his capture of Mecca Abdulaziz returned to Diriyah where he was assassinated by a Persian man who was a darwish when Abdulaziz was leading Asr Salat in the mosque of Turaif in November 1803 4 22 35 The motive of the assassin was to take revenge against him due to the killing of his sons in the Karbala attack 27 The British newspaper London Times dated 12 March 1804 reported the following about the assassination 33 Abdulaziz ibn Muhammad was assassinated by Ibadgi Osman a Mussulman of the sect of Ali He had profaned the tomb of Ali and thus excited the fury of the disciples of that prophet Ibadgi Osman resolved to avenge the ashes of Ali He crossed the desert of Arabia on a dromedary entered the tent of Abdulaziz while he was at prayers and plunged a cangiar into his breast crying Let this avenge the tomb of Ali for thy profanations The brother of Abdulaziz hearing the noise ran into the tent where he found his brother bathed in his blood and the assassin who squatted himself down saying his prayers and calmly awaiting death He attacked him but Ibadgi Osman who was the strongest of the two got up and killed his assailant with the same cangiar which was still stained with the blood of his brother The soldiers then entered and cut the assassin in pieces with their sabers Abdulaziz was succeeded by his eldest son Saud 3 8 Writings EditA student of his father in law Abdul Wahab Abdulaziz followed his footsteps in writing on tawhid and the avoidance of grave worshiping and other such related matters his epistles being praised by Al Shawkani a scholar 36 References Edit Martin Sicker 2001 The Islamic World in Decline From the Treaty of Karlowitz to the Disintegration of the Ottoman Empire Westport CT London Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 96891 5 a b c d e f Alejandra Galindo Marines 2001 The relationship between the ulama and the government in the contemporary Saudi Arabian Kingdom an interdependent relationship PhD thesis Durham University p 88 a b J E Peterson 2003 Historical Dictionary of Saudi Arabia 2nd ed Lanham MD Scarecrow Press p 16 ISBN 9780810827806 a b c d Parvaiz Ahmad Khanday 2009 A Critical Analysis of the Religio Political Conditions of Modern Saudi Arabia PDF PhD thesis Aligarh Muslim University Archived from the original PDF on 2 November 2018 Peter C Valenti 2015 State Building in Central Arabia Empires and Regional Actors at the Crossroads of al Qasim PhD thesis New York University p 83 ISBN 978 1 321 62492 2 ProQuest 1666383783 Khalid Abdullah Krairi October 2016 John Philby and his political roles in the Arabian Peninsula 1917 1953 PhD thesis University of Birmingham p 383 Sabra Naji Alshahrani 2015 Saudi Women s Role in Development of Society MA thesis Charles University in Prague p 36 hdl 20 500 11956 75139 a b Charles F Balka December 2008 The Fate of Saudi Arabia Regime Evolution in the Saudi Monarchy MA thesis Naval Postgraduate School p 16 hdl 10945 3805 a b Bilal Ahmad Kutty 1997 Saudi Arabia under King Faisal PDF PhD thesis Aligarh Muslim University p 27 Cameron Zargar 2017 Origins of Wahhabism from Hanbali Fiqh Journal of Islamic and Near Eastern Law 16 1 100 doi 10 5070 N4161038736 a b Gary Samuel Samore 1984 Royal Family Politics in Saudi Arabia 1953 1982 PhD thesis Harvard University pp 18 19 ISBN 9798641924397 ProQuest 303295482 a b c d e f Saeed Amr M Al Amr Al Beeshi 1994 The Social and Political History of the Western Coast of the Gulf 1207 1256 1793 1840 PhD thesis University of Manchester pp 50 54 ISBN 978 1 392 10160 5 ProQuest 2217103618 a b Cole M Bunzel 2023 Wahhabism The History of a Militant Islamic Movement Princeton NJ Oxford Princeton University Press pp 208 209 doi 10 1515 9780691241609 ISBN 9780691241609 a b Nawaf bin Ayyaf Almogren Diriyah Narrated by Its Built Environment The Story of the First Saudi State 1744 1818 MS thesis MIT hdl 1721 1 127856 Abdullah Hazaa Othman Oleg Evgenievich Grishin Bakil Hasan Nasser Ali 2020 The Conflict Wings in the Saudi Political System Journal of Politics and Law 13 3 65 doi 10 5539 jpl v13n3p64 S2CID 225480634 a b c d Muinuddin Ahmad Khan Harford Jones March 1968 A Diplomat s Report on Wahhabism of Arabia Islamic Studies 7 1 38 39 JSTOR 20832903 Turki bin Khalid bin Saad bin Abdulaziz Al Saud 2015 Saudi Arabia Iran relations 1929 2013 PhD thesis King s College London OCLC 1085141810 Muhammad S M El Shaafy May 1967 The First Saudi States in Arabia With Special Reference to its Administrative Military and Economic Features in the light of Unpublished Materials from Arabic and European Sources PhD thesis University of Leeds p 33 a b c John Frederick Williamson 1974 A political history of the Shammar Jarba tribe of al Jazirah 1800 1958 PhD thesis Indiana University pp 30 31 ISBN 9798659836040 OCLC 4481937 ProQuest 302745090 The source calls him Ibn Saud Abdulaziz Mohamed Hasan Ali Al Khalifa April 2013 Relentless Warrior and Shrewd Tactician Shaikh Abdullah bin Ahmad of Bahrain 1795 1849 A Case Study of Shaikhly Statecraft in the Nineteenth Century Gulf PhD thesis University of Exeter p 73 hdl 10871 12461 a b Jacob Goldberg 1986 The Foreign Policy of Saudi Arabia The Formative Years Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 9 11 doi 10 4159 harvard 9780674281844 c1 ISBN 9780674281844 a b c d Nadav Safran 2018 Saudi Arabia The Ceaseless Quest for Security Ithaca NY London Cornell University Press pp 10 12 ISBN 9780674789852 Adil Rasheed 2018 Wahhabism and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia An Evolving Symbiosis PDF In Sanjay Singh ed West Asia in Transition Vol 2 New Delhi Pentagon Press p 92 ISBN 978 93 86618 17 7 a b Ben L T V Rich November 2015 The State as an Identity Racketeer The Case of Saudi Arabia PhD thesis Monash University p 81 a b c d e Abdul Wahap Saleh Babeair 1985 Ottoman Penetration of the Eastern Region of the Arabian Peninsula 1814 1841 PhD thesis Indiana University pp 17 18 24 ProQuest 303386071 a b Mohamed Zayyan Aljazairi 1968 Diplomatic history of Saudi Arabia 1903 1960 s MA thesis The University of Arizona pp 2 3 hdl 10150 318068 a b c Hassan S Abedin 2002 Abdul Aziz Al Saud and the Great Game in Arabia 1896 1946 PhD thesis King s College London Sayed Khatab 2011 Understanding Islamic Fundamentalism The Theological and Ideological Basis of Al Qa ida s Political Tactics Cairo New York The American University in Cairo Press p 74 ISBN 9789774164996 a b c Aidan Parkes Spring Summer 2019 Power Shifts in the Saudi Iranian Strategic Competition Global Security and Intelligence Studies 4 1 doi 10 18278 gsis 4 1 3 hdl 1885 163729 S2CID 182451007 Alastair Crooke 30 March 2017 You Can t Understand ISIS If You Don t Know the History of Wahhabism in Saudi Arabia HuffPost Retrieved 7 March 2021 Adham Saouli 2009 Dilemmas of Late Formation International System and State Survival in the Middle East Case Studies Saudi Arabia and Iraq PhD thesis University of St Andrews p 126 hdl 10023 752 James Wynbrandt 2010 A Brief History of Saudi Arabia PDF New York Infobase Publishing p 120 ISBN 978 0 8160 7876 9 Archived from the original PDF on 26 May 2021 a b Emine O Evered 2012 Rereading Ottoman Accounts of Wahhabism as Alternative Narratives Ahmed Cevdet Pasa s Historical Survey of the Movement Comparative Studies of South Asia Africa and the Middle East 32 3 622 632 doi 10 1215 1089201X 1891615 S2CID 144063808 Mohamed Mohamed El Amrousi 2001 Beyond Muslim space Jeddah Muscat Aden and Port Said PhD thesis UCLA p 24 ISBN 978 0 493 48568 3 ProQuest 304688724 Jerald L Thompson December 1981 H St John Philby Ibn Saud and Palestine MA thesis University of Kansas Jamal al Din Zarabozo 2003 The Life Teachings and Influence of Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab Saudi Ministry of Islamic Affairs Dawah and Guidance p 155 ISBN 978 9960295008 External links EditPreceded byMuhammad bin Saud Imam of First Saudi State1765 1803 Succeeded bySaud bin Abdulaziz Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abdulaziz bin Muhammad Al Saud amp oldid 1179300273, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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