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Hafiz Wahba

Hafiz Wahba (15 July 1889 – 1967) was an Egyptian diplomat who was then naturalised in Saudi Arabia. Fuad Hamza and he were the first ambassadors of Saudi Arabia, the former in France and the latter in the United Kingdom.[1] In addition, they were among the advisers whom King Abdulaziz employed to improve the decision-making process of the state.[2]

Hafiz Wahba
Personal details
Born15 July 1889
Cairo, Khedivate of Egypt
Died1967 (aged 77–78)
Rome, Italy
NationalitySaudi Arabian
Alma materAl Azhar University

Early life and education edit

Wahba was born in Cairo in 1889.[3][4][5] He was a graduate of Al Azhar University.[4][6] He also attended Muslim Jurisprudence College where he obtained a degree in Islamic law.[7]

During the British occupation of Egypt Wahba was sent to exile in Malta due to his alleged involvement in the 1919 revolt against British forces.[8] Then he joined the pan-Islamic Khilafat movement in India.[6] He worked as a school principal in Kuwait.[9]

Career edit

Wahba's first official task in Saudi Arabia was that of being a tutor to Prince Faisal bin Abdulaziz in 1916.[10] He also taught Prince Saud, another son of Abdulaziz.[11] In 1923 Wahba was appointed by Abdulaziz as his representative in Egypt.[7][12] However, Wahba's attempts in Egypt failed.[12] He was part of the Abdulaziz Al Saud's Hejaz campaign against Hussein bin Ali, King of Hejaz.[12] When Mecca was captured in 1924 Abdulaziz sent him there together with his two other advisors, Abdullah Suleiman and Abdullah Al Damluji, before he himself entered the region.[13] The same year Wahba was appointed civil governor of Mecca which he held until 1926.[10] At the same time he was part of the eight-member political committee at the Saudi royal court.[14]

In 1928 Wahba was made the head of education directorate which was responsible for educational activities in Hejaz.[8] During his term the directorate sent fourteen Saudi students to Al Azhar in Cairo for higher education.[15] The same year Wahba suggested King Abdulaziz to establish a body to control and eliminate the violent attacks of the Ikhwan to pilgrims which had negative effects on the income of the country.[16] This body laid the basis of the Committee for the Promotion of Commanding Right and Forbidding Wrong.[16] Wahba accompanied King Abdulaziz in his meeting with Amir Faisal, King of Iraq, in February 1930.[17]

Wahba was made Saudi envoy to Vatican City.[8] He was assigned for the mission of ambassador of Saudi Arabia to the United Kingdom on 10 November 1930[18] and held the post until 1956.[19] In 1955 King Saud asked Wahba to return to Riyadh when the relations between Saudi Arabia and Britain became very tense because of the Buraimi dispute.[20] The reason for the end of his term was the diplomatic crisis between Saudi Arabia and Britain following the Suez crisis.[21]

On 7 November 1933 the Saudi-American Treaty was signed by Robert W. Bingham, the American ambassador to Great Britain, on behalf of the United States and Hafiz Wahba on behalf of Saudi Arabia.[22] Wahba accompanied King Abdulaziz in his meeting with Franklin D. Roosevelt on 14 February 1945.[23] The same year Wahba was part of the Saudi Arabia's delegation at the San Francisco meeting of the United Nations.[7] He represented Saudi Arabia at the Palestine Conference held in London in October 1947.[24] Wahba was named one of two representatives of the Saudi government as directors of the Arabian American Oil Company in May 1959.[25][26] The other one was Abdullah Tariki.[25] They were the first Saudi directors of the company.[25]

Wahba served as the Saudi ambassador to the United Kingdom for a second term from 15 November 1962 to 13 July 1966.[21] It was his last office, and he retired from public posts.[5]

Personal life and death edit

Wahba married several times, including a Kuwaiti woman.[27] One of his children with his Kuwaiti wife was Mustafa Wahba who was the long-term secretary general of the Communist Party in Saudi Arabia (CPSA).[27][28] Hafiz Wahba also had two daughters from this marriage and another son, Ali, from his other marriage.[27]

Wahba settled in Rome following his retirement in 1966.[5] He died there in 1967.[29][30] He published various books, including Fifty Years in Arabia (1962) and Arabian Days (1964) both of which were published in London.[10]

References edit

  1. ^ Bernard Lewis; Buntzie Ellis Churchill (2012). Notes on a Century: Reflections of a Middle East Historian. New York: Penguin Publishing Group. p. 58. ISBN 978-1-101-57523-9.
  2. ^ Joseph Kostiner (July 1985). "On Instruments and Their Designers: The Ikhwan of Najd and the Emergence of the Saudi State". Middle Eastern Studies. 21 (3): 315. doi:10.1080/00263208508700631.
  3. ^ Jorg Matthias Determann (2012). Globalization, the state, and narrative plurality: historiography in Saudi Arabia (PhD thesis). SOAS, University of London.
  4. ^ a b Khalid Abdullah Krairi (October 2016). John Philby and his political roles in the Arabian Peninsula, 1917-1953 (PhD thesis). University of Birmingham. p. 355.
  5. ^ a b c "وَهْبَة.. نَفَتْهُ بريطانيا من مصر فعاد إلى لندن سفيراً". Okaz (in Arabic). 13 October 2017. Retrieved 7 August 2022.
  6. ^ a b Michael Farquhar (November 2013). Expanding the Wahhabi Mission: Saudi Arabia, the Islamic University of Medina and the Transnational Religious Economy (PhD thesis). London School of Economics.
  7. ^ a b c "Aramco Announces New Board Chairman, President, Directors" (PDF). Sun and Flare. Dhahran: Arabian American Oil Company. XV (21): 1. 27 May 1959.
  8. ^ a b c Alexei Vassiliev (2013). The History of Saudi Arabia. London: Saqi. pp. 15, 299. ISBN 978-0-86356-779-7.
  9. ^ D. van der Meulen (2018). Wells of Ibn Saud. Abingdon; New York: Routledge. p. 195. ISBN 978-1-317-84766-3.
  10. ^ a b c C.H.H. Owen (2020). "On royal duty: HMS Aurora's report of proceedings 1945". In Michael Duffy (ed.). The Naval Miscellany. Vol. VI. Abingdon; London: Routledge. p. 433. ISBN 978-1-00-034082-2.
  11. ^ "File 11/44 Leading Personalities in Iraq, Iran & Saudi Arabia". Qatar Digital Library. 13 January 1948. Retrieved 18 August 2023. Citing from the British India Office Records and Private Papers
  12. ^ a b c Mohamed Zayyan Aljazairi (1968). Diplomatic history of Saudi Arabia, 1903-1960's (MA thesis). University of Arizona. p. 45. hdl:10150/318068.
  13. ^ Mansour Alsharidah (July 2020). Merchants without Borders: Qusman Traders in the Arabian Gulf and Indian Ocean, c. 1850-1950 (PhD thesis). University of Arkansas. p. 230.
  14. ^ Madawi Al Rasheed (2010). A History of Saudi Arabia (2nd ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 83. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511993510. ISBN 978-0-5217-4754-7.
  15. ^ Ahmed Ibrahim Shukri (1972). Education, manpower needs and socio-economic development in Saudi Arabia (PhD thesis). University of London.
  16. ^ a b Madawi Al Rasheed (2013). A Most Masculine State: Gender, Politics and Religion in Saudi Arabia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-521-76104-8.
  17. ^ "Meeting of Arab Kings". The Times. No. 45415. Baghdad. 20 January 1930. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  18. ^ "Freedom of Information Act Request". Foreign and Commonwealth Office. 28 February 2014. Retrieved 25 November 2020.
  19. ^ "Hafiz Wahba". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
  20. ^ Haya Saleh Alhargan (2015). Anglo-Saudi Cultural Relations: Challenges and Opportunities in the Context of Bilateral Ties, 1950-2010 (PhD thesis). King’s College, University of London. p. 125.
  21. ^ a b Roderick Parkes (1966). "Notes on the Main Characters". Bloomsbury Collections. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  22. ^ Fahd M. Al Nafjan (1989). The Origins of Saudi-American Relations: From recognition to diplomatic representation (1931-1943) (PhD thesis). University of Kansas. p. 118. ProQuest 303791009.
  23. ^ "Charles Claftin sees History in the making". Acton Beacon. 17 August 1945. p. 7. Retrieved 3 January 2021.
  24. ^ "Palestine Talks in London". The Times. No. 50668. 25 January 1947. Retrieved 19 September 2023.
  25. ^ a b c "Two Sheiks Join Aramco Board; Named to Represent the Government of Saudi Arabia". The New York Times. 22 May 1959.
  26. ^ William E. Mulligan (May–June 1984). "A Kingdom and a Company". Aramco World. 25 (3).
  27. ^ a b c "عاش مع الطريقي طفولة الكويت، السيد مصطفى حافظ وهبة لـ"إيلاف" : لم يكن الطريقي متعالياً ولا مغروراً، وعلى طاشكندي أن يراجع كلامه!!". Elaph (in Arabic). 24 June 2003. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  28. ^ Mohammed Turki A. Al Sudairi (2019). "Marx's Arabian Apostles: The Rise and Fall of the Saudi Communist Movement". The Middle East Journal. 73 (3): 455–456. doi:10.3751/73.3.15. S2CID 210378439.
  29. ^ "نفته بريطانيا من مصر فعاد إلى لندن سفيرًا للسعودية". Al Ayam (in Arabic). 13 October 2017. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  30. ^ Nabil Mouline (2014). The Clerics of Islam. Religious Authority and Political Power in Saudi Arabia. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 110. doi:10.12987/yale/9780300178906.001.0001. ISBN 9780300178906.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Hafiz Wahba at Wikimedia Commons

hafiz, wahba, july, 1889, 1967, egyptian, diplomat, then, naturalised, saudi, arabia, fuad, hamza, were, first, ambassadors, saudi, arabia, former, france, latter, united, kingdom, addition, they, were, among, advisers, whom, king, abdulaziz, employed, improve. Hafiz Wahba 15 July 1889 1967 was an Egyptian diplomat who was then naturalised in Saudi Arabia Fuad Hamza and he were the first ambassadors of Saudi Arabia the former in France and the latter in the United Kingdom 1 In addition they were among the advisers whom King Abdulaziz employed to improve the decision making process of the state 2 Hafiz WahbaPersonal detailsBorn15 July 1889Cairo Khedivate of EgyptDied1967 aged 77 78 Rome ItalyNationalitySaudi ArabianAlma materAl Azhar University Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Personal life and death 4 References 5 External linksEarly life and education editWahba was born in Cairo in 1889 3 4 5 He was a graduate of Al Azhar University 4 6 He also attended Muslim Jurisprudence College where he obtained a degree in Islamic law 7 During the British occupation of Egypt Wahba was sent to exile in Malta due to his alleged involvement in the 1919 revolt against British forces 8 Then he joined the pan Islamic Khilafat movement in India 6 He worked as a school principal in Kuwait 9 Career editWahba s first official task in Saudi Arabia was that of being a tutor to Prince Faisal bin Abdulaziz in 1916 10 He also taught Prince Saud another son of Abdulaziz 11 In 1923 Wahba was appointed by Abdulaziz as his representative in Egypt 7 12 However Wahba s attempts in Egypt failed 12 He was part of the Abdulaziz Al Saud s Hejaz campaign against Hussein bin Ali King of Hejaz 12 When Mecca was captured in 1924 Abdulaziz sent him there together with his two other advisors Abdullah Suleiman and Abdullah Al Damluji before he himself entered the region 13 The same year Wahba was appointed civil governor of Mecca which he held until 1926 10 At the same time he was part of the eight member political committee at the Saudi royal court 14 In 1928 Wahba was made the head of education directorate which was responsible for educational activities in Hejaz 8 During his term the directorate sent fourteen Saudi students to Al Azhar in Cairo for higher education 15 The same year Wahba suggested King Abdulaziz to establish a body to control and eliminate the violent attacks of the Ikhwan to pilgrims which had negative effects on the income of the country 16 This body laid the basis of the Committee for the Promotion of Commanding Right and Forbidding Wrong 16 Wahba accompanied King Abdulaziz in his meeting with Amir Faisal King of Iraq in February 1930 17 Wahba was made Saudi envoy to Vatican City 8 He was assigned for the mission of ambassador of Saudi Arabia to the United Kingdom on 10 November 1930 18 and held the post until 1956 19 In 1955 King Saud asked Wahba to return to Riyadh when the relations between Saudi Arabia and Britain became very tense because of the Buraimi dispute 20 The reason for the end of his term was the diplomatic crisis between Saudi Arabia and Britain following the Suez crisis 21 On 7 November 1933 the Saudi American Treaty was signed by Robert W Bingham the American ambassador to Great Britain on behalf of the United States and Hafiz Wahba on behalf of Saudi Arabia 22 Wahba accompanied King Abdulaziz in his meeting with Franklin D Roosevelt on 14 February 1945 23 The same year Wahba was part of the Saudi Arabia s delegation at the San Francisco meeting of the United Nations 7 He represented Saudi Arabia at the Palestine Conference held in London in October 1947 24 Wahba was named one of two representatives of the Saudi government as directors of the Arabian American Oil Company in May 1959 25 26 The other one was Abdullah Tariki 25 They were the first Saudi directors of the company 25 Wahba served as the Saudi ambassador to the United Kingdom for a second term from 15 November 1962 to 13 July 1966 21 It was his last office and he retired from public posts 5 Personal life and death editWahba married several times including a Kuwaiti woman 27 One of his children with his Kuwaiti wife was Mustafa Wahba who was the long term secretary general of the Communist Party in Saudi Arabia CPSA 27 28 Hafiz Wahba also had two daughters from this marriage and another son Ali from his other marriage 27 Wahba settled in Rome following his retirement in 1966 5 He died there in 1967 29 30 He published various books including Fifty Years in Arabia 1962 and Arabian Days 1964 both of which were published in London 10 References edit Bernard Lewis Buntzie Ellis Churchill 2012 Notes on a Century Reflections of a Middle East Historian New York Penguin Publishing Group p 58 ISBN 978 1 101 57523 9 Joseph Kostiner July 1985 On Instruments and Their Designers The Ikhwan of Najd and the Emergence of the Saudi State Middle Eastern Studies 21 3 315 doi 10 1080 00263208508700631 Jorg Matthias Determann 2012 Globalization the state and narrative plurality historiography in Saudi Arabia PhD thesis SOAS University of London a b Khalid Abdullah Krairi October 2016 John Philby and his political roles in the Arabian Peninsula 1917 1953 PhD thesis University of Birmingham p 355 a b c و ه ب ة ن ف ت ه بريطانيا من مصر فعاد إلى لندن سفيرا Okaz in Arabic 13 October 2017 Retrieved 7 August 2022 a b Michael Farquhar November 2013 Expanding the Wahhabi Mission Saudi Arabia the Islamic University of Medina and the Transnational Religious Economy PhD thesis London School of Economics a b c Aramco Announces New Board Chairman President Directors PDF Sun and Flare Dhahran Arabian American Oil Company XV 21 1 27 May 1959 a b c Alexei Vassiliev 2013 The History of Saudi Arabia London Saqi pp 15 299 ISBN 978 0 86356 779 7 D van der Meulen 2018 Wells of Ibn Saud Abingdon New York Routledge p 195 ISBN 978 1 317 84766 3 a b c C H H Owen 2020 On royal duty HMS Aurora s report of proceedings 1945 In Michael Duffy ed The Naval Miscellany Vol VI Abingdon London Routledge p 433 ISBN 978 1 00 034082 2 File 11 44 Leading Personalities in Iraq Iran amp Saudi Arabia Qatar Digital Library 13 January 1948 Retrieved 18 August 2023 Citing from the British India Office Records and Private Papers a b c Mohamed Zayyan Aljazairi 1968 Diplomatic history of Saudi Arabia 1903 1960 s MA thesis University of Arizona p 45 hdl 10150 318068 Mansour Alsharidah July 2020 Merchants without Borders Qusman Traders in the Arabian Gulf and Indian Ocean c 1850 1950 PhD thesis University of Arkansas p 230 Madawi Al Rasheed 2010 A History of Saudi Arabia 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 83 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511993510 ISBN 978 0 5217 4754 7 Ahmed Ibrahim Shukri 1972 Education manpower needs and socio economic development in Saudi Arabia PhD thesis University of London a b Madawi Al Rasheed 2013 A Most Masculine State Gender Politics and Religion in Saudi Arabia Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 59 ISBN 978 0 521 76104 8 Meeting of Arab Kings The Times No 45415 Baghdad 20 January 1930 Retrieved 11 August 2023 Freedom of Information Act Request Foreign and Commonwealth Office 28 February 2014 Retrieved 25 November 2020 Hafiz Wahba National Portrait Gallery Retrieved 9 February 2020 Haya Saleh Alhargan 2015 Anglo Saudi Cultural Relations Challenges and Opportunities in the Context of Bilateral Ties 1950 2010 PhD thesis King s College University of London p 125 a b Roderick Parkes 1966 Notes on the Main Characters Bloomsbury Collections Retrieved 2 January 2021 Fahd M Al Nafjan 1989 The Origins of Saudi American Relations From recognition to diplomatic representation 1931 1943 PhD thesis University of Kansas p 118 ProQuest 303791009 Charles Claftin sees History in the making Acton Beacon 17 August 1945 p 7 Retrieved 3 January 2021 Palestine Talks in London The Times No 50668 25 January 1947 Retrieved 19 September 2023 a b c Two Sheiks Join Aramco Board Named to Represent the Government of Saudi Arabia The New York Times 22 May 1959 William E Mulligan May June 1984 A Kingdom and a Company Aramco World 25 3 a b c عاش مع الطريقي طفولة الكويت السيد مصطفى حافظ وهبة لـ إيلاف لم يكن الطريقي متعاليا ولا مغرورا وعلى طاشكندي أن يراجع كلامه Elaph in Arabic 24 June 2003 Retrieved 7 May 2021 Mohammed Turki A Al Sudairi 2019 Marx s Arabian Apostles The Rise and Fall of the Saudi Communist Movement The Middle East Journal 73 3 455 456 doi 10 3751 73 3 15 S2CID 210378439 نفته بريطانيا من مصر فعاد إلى لندن سفير ا للسعودية Al Ayam in Arabic 13 October 2017 Retrieved 7 May 2021 Nabil Mouline 2014 The Clerics of Islam Religious Authority and Political Power in Saudi Arabia New Haven CT Yale University Press p 110 doi 10 12987 yale 9780300178906 001 0001 ISBN 9780300178906 External links edit nbsp Media related to Hafiz Wahba at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hafiz Wahba amp oldid 1176118106, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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