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Wahhabi War

The Ottoman-Saudi War[2][3][4][5][6] (Arabic: الحرب العثمانية-السعودية, romanizedal-ḥarb al-ʿUthmānīyah-al-Saʿūdīyah, Ottoman Turkish: Osmanlı-Vehhabî Savaşları) also known as the Ottoman/Egyptian-Saudi War[7] (1811–1818) was fought from early 1811 to 1818, between the Ottoman Empire and the Emirate of Diriyah, the First Saudi State, resulting in the destruction of the latter.

Ottoman-Saudi War

Sites of major battles during the war.
Date1811 – 15 September 1818
Location
Result

Ottoman victory

Belligerents

Emirate of Diriyah

Ottoman Empire

Commanders and leaders
Saud I
Abdallah I 
Ghassab al-Utaybi 
Ghaliyya al-Badry 
Sheikh Sulayman 
Bakhrosh ibn Allas Al-Zahrani  
Mahmud II
Tusun Pasha 
Muhammad Ali
Ibrahim Pasha
Ibrahim Agha 
Strength
20,000 men 50,000+ men
Casualties and losses
14,000 killed
6,000 wounded[1]
unknown

Background

Although Muhammad Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab, the leader of the Wahhabi movement,[8] had indirectly expressed anti-Ottoman sentiments in his letters, he had decided not to publicly challenge the legitimacy of the empire as a precautionary measure. He also had not publicly acknowledged the Caliphate claim of the Ottomans, an assertion which they proclaimed after they suffered territorial losses at the hands of the Russian Empire in the 1770s. In the movement's first decades, the Wahhabis were ambiguous in offering a clear political view on the Ottomans. However, Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab had theologically repudiated the Ottomans, criticising the religious conditions of Ottoman provinces and he also asserted that Shari'ah (Islamic law) was unenforced by the authorities. The Wahhabis offered an alternative religious and political model to that of the Ottomans and they also claimed Islamic leadership on a different basis.[9]

Political hostilities and distrust would eventually lead the Wahhabis and the Ottomans to declare mutual exchanges of Takfir (excommunication), many years after Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab's death.[10] By the 1790s, the Muwahhidun had consolidated their rule over most regions of Central Arabia. The growing Wahhabi influence alarmed Ghaleb, the Sharif of Mecca, who responded by initiating warfare with the Saudis in 1793; until his surrender in 1803. Intending to form an armed coalition to defeat the Muwahhidun, he corresponded with the Ottoman authorities in Istanbul and sought to turn them hostile against his rivals by portraying them as disbelievers. Similar overtures were also made by the Pasha of Baghdad. Such reports eventually succeeded in turning the Ottoman bureaucratic opinion significantly hostile against the Wahhabis. In 1797, Sulayman Pasha, the Ottoman governor of Iraq, invaded Diriyah with around 15,000 troops in co-ordination with Sharif Ghalib and laid a one-month siege to Al-Ahsa. However, re-inforcements led by Saud ibn 'Abd al-Azeez would force the Ottomans to retreat. After three days of skirmish, Sulayman Pasha and the Saudis came to a peace settlement which was to last for six years. However, the peace would be broken in 1801, when a caravan of pilgrims protected by a Saudi convoy was plundered near Hail; upon orders from the Ottoman administration in Baghdad. This attack would completely break down the already deteriorating Saudi-Ottoman diplomatic relations, and the Emirate of Dirʿiyya sent a large-scale expedition towards Iraq.[11]

In 1802, 12,000 Wahhabis sacked Karbala in Iraq killing up to 5,000 people and plundering the Imam Husayn Shrine.[12] Saudi forces led by 'Abd al Aziz entered Mecca in 1803 after defeating Ghalib ibn Musa'id, the Sharif of Mecca. The assassination in November 1803 of Saudi Emir ‘Abd al-‘Aziz during prayers in al-Dir‘iyya by an Iraqi; was suspected of being orchestrated by the Ottoman governor of Baghdad, which greatly deteriorated the Saudi-Ottoman relations. Sharif Ghalib had worked hard to dampen the prospects of reconciliation between the Emirate of Diriyah and Ottoman Empire.[13] In the ensuing conflict, the Wahhabis had controlled Mecca and Medina by 1805.[12] The Wahhabis also attacked Ottoman trade caravans which interrupted the Ottoman finances.[14]

After a phony war which lasted years, an all-out war erupted between the Ottomans and the Saudis; initiated by the invasion of the Hijaz by the Ottoman Governor of Egypt Muhammad ‘Ali (d.1849), at the orders of the Ottoman Sultan Mahmud II in 1811. This would herald the beginning of the Wahhabi wars (1811–1818) which resulted in the destruction of the Emirate of Diriyah.[15] The Saudi amir denounced the Ottoman sultan and called into question the validity of his claim to be caliph and guardian of the sanctuaries of the Hejaz.[16] In response, the Ottoman Empire ordered their ambitious vassal, Muhammad Ali of Egypt, to attack the Wahhabi state. Ali had embarked on an extensive modernisation program that included a significant expansion of Egypt's military forces. The Ottomans had grown increasingly wary of Ali's reign; ordering him to go to war with the Wahhabi state would serve their interests regardless as the destruction of either would be beneficial to them.[14] Tensions between Muhammad Ali and his troops also prompted him to send them to Arabia and fight against the Wahhabi movement where many died.[17]

Campaigns

Muhammad Ali was ordered to crush the Saudi state as early as December 1807 by Sultan Mustafa IV, however internal strife within Egypt prevented him from giving his full attention to the Wahhabis. The Ottoman troops were not able to recapture the holy cities until 1811.[16]

In 1815, one of the main rebels, Bakhroush bin Alass of Zahran tribe, was killed and beheaded by Muhammad Ali forces in Al Qunfudhah.[18] In the spring of 1815, Ottoman forces inflicted large-scale defeat upon the Saudis, forcing them to conclude a peace treaty. Under the terms of treaty, the Saudis had to let go of Hijaz. Abdullah ibn Saud was forced to acknowledge himself as the vassal of the Ottoman Empire and obey the Turkish Sultan unquestionably. However, neither Muhammad Ali nor the Ottoman Sultan had confirmed the treaty.[19]

 
A route-map of Ibrahim Pasha's Campaign into Dir'iyya

Suspicious of Abdullah, the Wahhabi Emir, the Ottomans resumed the war in 1816, with the assistance of French military instructors. The Egyptian troops were led by Muhammad Ali's elder son, Ibrahim Pasha, and penetrated into the heart of Central Arabia, besieging the chief centres of Qasim and Najd. Waging a war of extermination between 1816 and 1818, the invading armies pillaged various towns and villages, forcing the inhabitants to flee and seek refuge in remote regions and oases. By 1817, the armies had overrun Rass, Buraida and Unayza.[19] Saudi armies put up a fierce resistance at Al-Rass where they withstood a siege of 3 months. Faced with the advance of Egyptian Ottomans, Abdullah, the Saudi Emir retreated to Diriya.[20][21]

En route to Dariyya, the Ottoman armies executed everyone over ten years age in Dhurma. Ibrahim's forces would march towards Diriyya during the early months of 1818, easily routing Saudi resistances and arrive at the capital by April 1818. The Siege would last until September 1818, with the Ottoman forces waiting for Saudi supplies to run out.[20] On 11 September 1818, Abdullah Ibn Saud would sue for peace, offering his surrender, in exchange for sparing Diriyya. However, Al Diriyya would be razed to ground under orders of Ibrahim Pasha.[22][23]

It was not until September 1818 that the Wahhabi state ended with the surrendering of its leaders and the head of the Wahhabi state, Abdullah bin Saud, who was sent to Istanbul to be executed.[16] Thus, the Emirate of Diriyah formally ended with the surrendering of its leaders and the head of the Wahhabi state, Abdullah bin Saud, was taken captive and sent to Istanbul. In December, Emir Abdullah ibn Saud was executed with the public display of his corpse, upon the orders of the Ottoman Sultan.[22][20]

The British empire welcomed Ibrahim Pasha's siege of Dariyya with the goal of promoting trade interests in the region. Captain George Forster Sadleir, an officer of the British Army in India was dispatched from Bombay to consult with Ibrahim Pasha in Dariyya.[24]

Aftermath

George Forster Sadleir left a record on the aftermath of the former capital of the First Saudi state:

"The site of Deriah is in a deep ravine north-west of Munfooah, about ten miles distant. It is now in ruins, and the inhabitants who were spared, or escaped from the slaughter, have principally sought shelter here ... Munfooah ... was surrounded with a wall and ditch which the Pacha ordered to be razed .... Riad is not so well peopled .... The inhabitants were at that time in a more wretched state than at any prior period since the establishment of the power of the Wahabees. Their walls, the chief security for their property, had been razed ... The year's crop had been consumed by the Turkish force"[25]


 
Painting of Abdullah bin Saud, convicted and executed after losing the war.

Saudi ruler 'Abdullah ibn Saud was transported first to Cairo and then to Istanbul, wherein he was beheaded alongside several other Wahhabi Imams.[26] Other than 'Abdullah, most of the political leaders were treated well but the Ottomans were far harsher with the religious leaders that inspired the Wahhabi movement, executing Sūlayman ibn 'Abd Allah Aal-Shaykh and other religious notables, as they were thought to be uncompromising in their beliefs and therefore a much bigger threat than political leaders. The executions were also motivated by Ottoman resentment of Wahhabist views.[16]

After the Destruction of Diriyya, Ibrahim Pasha rounded up the prominent survivors of the Saudi family and the scholarly Al ash-Sheikh many of whom were deported to Egypt. As per Ottoman estimates, over 250 members related to the Saudi family and 32 members related to the Al ash-Sheikh were exiled. Ottomans were far harsher with the religious leaders that inspired the Wahhabi movement, than with the members of the Saudi family. Prominent scholars such as the Qadi of Dir'iyya, Sulayman ibn 'Abd Allah (the grandson of Muhammad ibn Abdul-Wahhaab) were tortured, forced to listen to guitar (knowing the Najdi prescriptions and customs that prohibited music) and executed by a firing-squad. Other ulema such as Abd Allah ibn Muhammad Aal Al-Shaikh and his nephew Abd al Rahman ibn Hasan Aal Al-Shaikh would be exiled to Egypt. (the latter would return to Najd in 1825, to revive and lead the Wahhabi movement). Some other Qadis and scholars were hunted down and executed. Abd al Aziz ibn Hamad al Mu'ammar managed to settle in Bahrain, where the ruler welcomed him. Few scholars managed to escape to the remote Southern corners of Arabia. The executions reflected the deep Ottoman resentment of Wahhabi movement and also how seriously they viewed its threat. Altogether, the Najdis lost about two dozen scholars and men from the ulema families in the aftermath of the invasion. However, the suppression of Wahhabites in Central Arabia ultimately proved to be a failed campaign.[27][16]

Later, Ibrahim Pasha and his troops went on to conquer Qatif and el-Hasa. Remnants of Saudi fortifications were demolished across Najd. Emir's relatives and important Wahhabi leaders were made captives and sent to Egypt. In December 1819, Ibrahim Pasha returned to Egypt after formally incorporating Hejaz into the Ottoman Empire. However, they were unable to totally subdue the opposition forces and Central Arabia became a region of permanent Wahhabi uprisings.[19] In the 1820s, Prince Turki ibn 'Abd Allah ibn Muhammed ibn Saud , gathering growing support from tribes and groups that opposed the Turkish occupation, would lay Siege to Riyadh in 1823. By August 1824, Saudi forces would capture Riyadh in a Second Siege, thus establishing the Second Saudi State with Riyadh as its capital.[28]

Following the fall of Emirate of Dirʿiyya, the British empire launched their Persian Gulf campaign of 1819. A formidable force consisting of 2,800 British soldiers and 3 warships fought the Qasimi tribesmen allied to Dir'iyya. Their city Ras al Khaimah was demolished in 1819. The General Maritime treaty was concluded in 1820 with the local chieftains, which would eventually transform them into a protectorate of Trucial States; heralding a century of British supremacy in the Gulf.[29]

This war had formed the basic hatred of the Wahhabi movement amongst the Ottomans, and continues to influence modern Turkey where – in many Turkish Islamic preachers consider Wahhabism to be un-Islamic. The Saudis, who would form the nation a century later, considered it as the first struggle for independence from the Ottoman Empire, and continued to view Turkey with suspicion. The current state of Saudi-Turkey relations are still influenced by this hostile past. To the present day, both Saudi and Turkish nationalist writers accuse each other of engaging in systematic campaigns to rewrite history.[30][31][32][33][34]

See also

References

  1. ^ Vasiliev, Alexei (2000). The History of Saudi Arabia. NYU Press. ISBN 978-0814788097. Retrieved 21 February 2017.
  2. ^ Emine Ö. Evered (2012). Empire and Education under the Ottomans: Politics, Reform and Resistance from the Tanzimat to the Young Turks. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 5. ISBN 978-0857732606.
  3. ^ Meredith Reid Sarkees; Frank Wayman (2010). Resort to War: 1816 - 2007. Sage. p. 198. ISBN 978-0872894341.
  4. ^ Richard Engel (2016). And Then All Hell Broke Loose: Two Decades in the Middle East. Simon and Schuster. p. 40. ISBN 978-1451635126. The Ottomans pushed back with the 1811–18 Ottoman Wahhabi War, led by the Ottoman's viceroy in Egypt.
  5. ^ Valerie Anishchenkova (2020). Modern Saudi Arabia. ABC-CLIO. p. 42. ISBN 978-1440857058. Although the Ottomans were able to defeat the First Saudi State in the Ottoman-Wahhabi War (1811–1818), the House of Al Saud was able to restore its rule in Central and Eastern Arabia in a short time.
  6. ^ James Wynbrandt (2010). A Brief History of Saudi Arabia. Infobase Publishing. p. 352. ISBN 978-0816078769. Egyptian-Wahhabi war
  7. ^ John Victor Tolan, Gilles Veinstein, Henry Laurens (2013). Europe and the Islamic World: A History. Princeton University Press. p. 454. ISBN 978-0691147055. Egyptian Saudi War (1811–1818) (also known as the Ottoman-Saudi War){{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  8. ^ "Wahhabism". Oxford Bibliographies. Oxford University Press. from the original on 19 November 2012. Wahhabism properly refers to the 18th-century revival and reform movement begun in the region of Najd, in what is today Saudi Arabia, by Islamic religious and legal scholar Muhammad Ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhab.
  9. ^ Crawford, Michael (2014). "Chapter 8: Wahhabism, Saudi States, and Foreign Powers; Wahhabi View of the Ottomans". Makers of the Muslim World: Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab. London: One World Publishers. pp. 94–96. ISBN 978-1780745893.
  10. ^ Crawford, Michael (2014). "Chapter 8: Wahhabism, Saudi States, and Foreign Powers; Wahhabi View of the Ottomans". Makers of the Muslim World: Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab. London: One World Publishers. p. 96. ISBN 978-1780745893.
  11. ^ Lewis Burckhardt, John (1831). "Materials for a History of the Wahabys". Notes on the Bedouins and Wahabys Vol.II. London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley. pp. 180–186.
  12. ^ a b Bowen, Wayne H. (2008). The History of Saudi Arabia. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. p. 153. ISBN 978-0313340123. OCLC 166388162.
  13. ^ Crawford, Michael (2014). "Chapter 8: Wahhabism, Saudi states, and Foreign Powers". Makers of the Muslim World: Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab. London: One World Publishers. pp. 90–92. ISBN 978-1780745893.
  14. ^ a b Afaf Lutfi al-Sayyid-Marsot. A History of Egypt From the Islamic Conquest to the Present. New York: Cambridge UP, 2007.
  15. ^ Crawford, Michael (2014). "Chapter 8: Wahhabism, Saudi States, and Foreign Powers". Makers of the Muslim World: Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab. London: One World Publishers. pp. 92, 96. ISBN 978-1780745893.
  16. ^ a b c d e Elizabeth Sirriyeh, Salafies, "Unbelievers and the Problems of Exclusivism". Bulletin (British Society for Middle Eastern Studies), Vol. 16, No. 2. (1989), pp. 123–132. (Text online at JSTOR)
  17. ^ Fahmy, K. (2012). Mehmed Ali: From Ottoman Governor to Ruler of Egypt. Oneworld Publications. p. 30. ISBN 978-1780742113.
  18. ^ Giovanni Finati (1830). Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Giovanni Finati, Native of Ferrara: Who, Under the Assumed Name of Mahomet, Made the Campaigns Against the Wahabees for the Recovery of Mecca and Medina; and Since Acted as Interpreter to European Travellers in Some Parts Least Visited of Asia and Africa. J. Murray.
  19. ^ a b c Borisovich Lutsky, Vladimir (1969). "Chapter VI. The Egyptian Conquest of Arabia". Modern History of the Arab Countries. Moscow: Progress Publishers, USSR Academy of Sciences, Institute of the Peoples of Asia. ISBN 0714701106.
  20. ^ a b c Commins, David (2006). The Wahhabi Mission and Saudi Arabia. London: I.B Tauris. p. 37. ISBN 1845110803.
  21. ^ Simons, Geoff (1998). Saudi Arabia: The Shape of a Client Feudalism. London: MacMillan Press Ltd. p. 153. ISBN 978-1349267286.
  22. ^ a b M Zarabazo, Jamal Al-Din (2005). The Life, Teachings and Influence of Muhammad ibn Abul-Wahhaab. Riyadh: The Ministry of Islamic Affairs, Endowments, Dawah and Guidance, The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. pp. 54–55. ISBN 9960295001.
  23. ^ Commins, David (2006). The Wahhabi Mission and Saudi Arabia. London: I.B Tauris. pp. 37–39. ISBN 1845110803.
  24. ^ Simons, Geoff (1998). Saudi Arabia : The Shape of a Client Feudalism. London: MacMillian Press. p. 153. ISBN 978-1349267286. The British in India had welcomed Ibrahim Pasha's siege of Diriyah: if the 'predatory habits' of the Wahhabists could be extirpated from the Arabian peninsula, so much the better for British trade in the region. It was for this reason that Captain George Forster Sadleir, an officer of the British Army in India (HM 47th regiment), was sent from Bombay to consult Ibrahim Pasha in Diriyah.
  25. ^ Simons, Geoff (1998). Saudi Arabia: The Shape of a Client Feudalism. London: MacMillian Press. pp. 153–154. ISBN 978-1349267286.
  26. ^ Al-Rasheed, Kersten, Shterin, Madawi, Carol, Marat; Al-Rasheed, Madawi (2015). "5: The Wahhabis and the Ottoman Caliphate: The Memory of Historical Antagonism". Demystifying the Caliphate: Historical Memory and Contemporary Contexts. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 122. ISBN 978-0199327959. The Wahhabi leader, Abdullah Ibn Sa'ud, was defeated and transported first to Cairo then to Istanbul, where together with several Wahhabi imams he was beheaded{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  27. ^ Commins, David (2006). The Wahhabi Mission and Saudi Arabia. London: I.B Tauris. pp. 37–38, 40, 42–43. ISBN 1845110803.
  28. ^ Simons, Geoff (1998). Saudi Arabia : The Shape of a Client Feudalism. London: MacMillian Press. p. 157. ISBN 978-1349267286.
  29. ^ Parry, Jonathan (2022). "3: The Wahhabi, the Qawasim, and British Sea Power in the Gulf". Promised Lands: The British and the Ottoman Middle East. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 100–101. ISBN 978-0691181899.
  30. ^ "Turkophobia is behind the Saudi-washing of Ottoman history". TRT World. 5 September 2019.
  31. ^ "Saudi's MBC launching new drama series 'exposing Ottoman tyranny'". Ahval.
  32. ^ AL-TORIFI, TALAL (23 July 2020). "Turks defrauding history with Ottoman monuments narrative". Arab News. from the original on 23 July 2020.
  33. ^ Al-Torifi, Talal (21 July 2020). "Turkey repeating Ottoman Empire's crimes against Arabs". Arab News. from the original on 5 January 2021.
  34. ^ Al-Sulami, Mohammed (24 March 2021). "Book by Saudi author unravels Ottoman atrocities in Madinah". Arab News. from the original on 23 April 2021.

wahhabi, ottoman, saudi, arabic, الحرب, العثمانية, السعودية, romanized, ḥarb, ʿuthmānīyah, saʿūdīyah, ottoman, turkish, osmanlı, vehhabî, savaşları, also, known, ottoman, egyptian, saudi, 1811, 1818, fought, from, early, 1811, 1818, between, ottoman, empire, e. The Ottoman Saudi War 2 3 4 5 6 Arabic الحرب العثمانية السعودية romanized al ḥarb al ʿUthmaniyah al Saʿudiyah Ottoman Turkish Osmanli Vehhabi Savaslari also known as the Ottoman Egyptian Saudi War 7 1811 1818 was fought from early 1811 to 1818 between the Ottoman Empire and the Emirate of Diriyah the First Saudi State resulting in the destruction of the latter Ottoman Saudi WarYanbuAl SafraMedinaJeddahMeccaDiriyahSites of major battles during the war Date1811 15 September 1818LocationArabian PeninsulaResultOttoman victory Destruction of the Emirate of DiriyahBelligerentsEmirate of Diriyah Al QasimOttoman Empire Egypt EyaletCommanders and leadersSaud I Abdallah I Ghassab al Utaybi Ghaliyya al Badry Sheikh Sulayman Bakhrosh ibn Allas Al Zahrani Mahmud II Tusun Pasha Muhammad Ali Ibrahim Pasha Ibrahim Agha Strength20 000 men50 000 menCasualties and losses14 000 killed6 000 wounded 1 unknown Contents 1 Background 2 Campaigns 3 Aftermath 4 See also 5 ReferencesBackground EditAlthough Muhammad Ibn Abd al Wahhab the leader of the Wahhabi movement 8 had indirectly expressed anti Ottoman sentiments in his letters he had decided not to publicly challenge the legitimacy of the empire as a precautionary measure He also had not publicly acknowledged the Caliphate claim of the Ottomans an assertion which they proclaimed after they suffered territorial losses at the hands of the Russian Empire in the 1770s In the movement s first decades the Wahhabis were ambiguous in offering a clear political view on the Ottomans However Ibn Abd al Wahhab had theologically repudiated the Ottomans criticising the religious conditions of Ottoman provinces and he also asserted that Shari ah Islamic law was unenforced by the authorities The Wahhabis offered an alternative religious and political model to that of the Ottomans and they also claimed Islamic leadership on a different basis 9 Political hostilities and distrust would eventually lead the Wahhabis and the Ottomans to declare mutual exchanges of Takfir excommunication many years after Ibn Abd al Wahhab s death 10 By the 1790s the Muwahhidun had consolidated their rule over most regions of Central Arabia The growing Wahhabi influence alarmed Ghaleb the Sharif of Mecca who responded by initiating warfare with the Saudis in 1793 until his surrender in 1803 Intending to form an armed coalition to defeat the Muwahhidun he corresponded with the Ottoman authorities in Istanbul and sought to turn them hostile against his rivals by portraying them as disbelievers Similar overtures were also made by the Pasha of Baghdad Such reports eventually succeeded in turning the Ottoman bureaucratic opinion significantly hostile against the Wahhabis In 1797 Sulayman Pasha the Ottoman governor of Iraq invaded Diriyah with around 15 000 troops in co ordination with Sharif Ghalib and laid a one month siege to Al Ahsa However re inforcements led by Saud ibn Abd al Azeez would force the Ottomans to retreat After three days of skirmish Sulayman Pasha and the Saudis came to a peace settlement which was to last for six years However the peace would be broken in 1801 when a caravan of pilgrims protected by a Saudi convoy was plundered near Hail upon orders from the Ottoman administration in Baghdad This attack would completely break down the already deteriorating Saudi Ottoman diplomatic relations and the Emirate of Dirʿiyya sent a large scale expedition towards Iraq 11 In 1802 12 000 Wahhabis sacked Karbala in Iraq killing up to 5 000 people and plundering the Imam Husayn Shrine 12 Saudi forces led by Abd al Aziz entered Mecca in 1803 after defeating Ghalib ibn Musa id the Sharif of Mecca The assassination in November 1803 of Saudi Emir Abd al Aziz during prayers in al Dir iyya by an Iraqi was suspected of being orchestrated by the Ottoman governor of Baghdad which greatly deteriorated the Saudi Ottoman relations Sharif Ghalib had worked hard to dampen the prospects of reconciliation between the Emirate of Diriyah and Ottoman Empire 13 In the ensuing conflict the Wahhabis had controlled Mecca and Medina by 1805 12 The Wahhabis also attacked Ottoman trade caravans which interrupted the Ottoman finances 14 After a phony war which lasted years an all out war erupted between the Ottomans and the Saudis initiated by the invasion of the Hijaz by the Ottoman Governor of Egypt Muhammad Ali d 1849 at the orders of the Ottoman Sultan Mahmud II in 1811 This would herald the beginning of the Wahhabi wars 1811 1818 which resulted in the destruction of the Emirate of Diriyah 15 The Saudi amir denounced the Ottoman sultan and called into question the validity of his claim to be caliph and guardian of the sanctuaries of the Hejaz 16 In response the Ottoman Empire ordered their ambitious vassal Muhammad Ali of Egypt to attack the Wahhabi state Ali had embarked on an extensive modernisation program that included a significant expansion of Egypt s military forces The Ottomans had grown increasingly wary of Ali s reign ordering him to go to war with the Wahhabi state would serve their interests regardless as the destruction of either would be beneficial to them 14 Tensions between Muhammad Ali and his troops also prompted him to send them to Arabia and fight against the Wahhabi movement where many died 17 Campaigns EditMuhammad Ali was ordered to crush the Saudi state as early as December 1807 by Sultan Mustafa IV however internal strife within Egypt prevented him from giving his full attention to the Wahhabis The Ottoman troops were not able to recapture the holy cities until 1811 16 In 1815 one of the main rebels Bakhroush bin Alass of Zahran tribe was killed and beheaded by Muhammad Ali forces in Al Qunfudhah 18 In the spring of 1815 Ottoman forces inflicted large scale defeat upon the Saudis forcing them to conclude a peace treaty Under the terms of treaty the Saudis had to let go of Hijaz Abdullah ibn Saud was forced to acknowledge himself as the vassal of the Ottoman Empire and obey the Turkish Sultan unquestionably However neither Muhammad Ali nor the Ottoman Sultan had confirmed the treaty 19 A route map of Ibrahim Pasha s Campaign into Dir iyya Suspicious of Abdullah the Wahhabi Emir the Ottomans resumed the war in 1816 with the assistance of French military instructors The Egyptian troops were led by Muhammad Ali s elder son Ibrahim Pasha and penetrated into the heart of Central Arabia besieging the chief centres of Qasim and Najd Waging a war of extermination between 1816 and 1818 the invading armies pillaged various towns and villages forcing the inhabitants to flee and seek refuge in remote regions and oases By 1817 the armies had overrun Rass Buraida and Unayza 19 Saudi armies put up a fierce resistance at Al Rass where they withstood a siege of 3 months Faced with the advance of Egyptian Ottomans Abdullah the Saudi Emir retreated to Diriya 20 21 En route to Dariyya the Ottoman armies executed everyone over ten years age in Dhurma Ibrahim s forces would march towards Diriyya during the early months of 1818 easily routing Saudi resistances and arrive at the capital by April 1818 The Siege would last until September 1818 with the Ottoman forces waiting for Saudi supplies to run out 20 On 11 September 1818 Abdullah Ibn Saud would sue for peace offering his surrender in exchange for sparing Diriyya However Al Diriyya would be razed to ground under orders of Ibrahim Pasha 22 23 It was not until September 1818 that the Wahhabi state ended with the surrendering of its leaders and the head of the Wahhabi state Abdullah bin Saud who was sent to Istanbul to be executed 16 Thus the Emirate of Diriyah formally ended with the surrendering of its leaders and the head of the Wahhabi state Abdullah bin Saud was taken captive and sent to Istanbul In December Emir Abdullah ibn Saud was executed with the public display of his corpse upon the orders of the Ottoman Sultan 22 20 The British empire welcomed Ibrahim Pasha s siege of Dariyya with the goal of promoting trade interests in the region Captain George Forster Sadleir an officer of the British Army in India was dispatched from Bombay to consult with Ibrahim Pasha in Dariyya 24 Aftermath EditGeorge Forster Sadleir left a record on the aftermath of the former capital of the First Saudi state The site of Deriah is in a deep ravine north west of Munfooah about ten miles distant It is now in ruins and the inhabitants who were spared or escaped from the slaughter have principally sought shelter here Munfooah was surrounded with a wall and ditch which the Pacha ordered to be razed Riad is not so well peopled The inhabitants were at that time in a more wretched state than at any prior period since the establishment of the power of the Wahabees Their walls the chief security for their property had been razed The year s crop had been consumed by the Turkish force 25 Painting of Abdullah bin Saud convicted and executed after losing the war Saudi ruler Abdullah ibn Saud was transported first to Cairo and then to Istanbul wherein he was beheaded alongside several other Wahhabi Imams 26 Other than Abdullah most of the political leaders were treated well but the Ottomans were far harsher with the religious leaders that inspired the Wahhabi movement executing Sulayman ibn Abd Allah Aal Shaykh and other religious notables as they were thought to be uncompromising in their beliefs and therefore a much bigger threat than political leaders The executions were also motivated by Ottoman resentment of Wahhabist views 16 After the Destruction of Diriyya Ibrahim Pasha rounded up the prominent survivors of the Saudi family and the scholarly Al ash Sheikh many of whom were deported to Egypt As per Ottoman estimates over 250 members related to the Saudi family and 32 members related to the Al ash Sheikh were exiled Ottomans were far harsher with the religious leaders that inspired the Wahhabi movement than with the members of the Saudi family Prominent scholars such as the Qadi of Dir iyya Sulayman ibn Abd Allah the grandson of Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhaab were tortured forced to listen to guitar knowing the Najdi prescriptions and customs that prohibited music and executed by a firing squad Other ulema such as Abd Allah ibn Muhammad Aal Al Shaikh and his nephew Abd al Rahman ibn Hasan Aal Al Shaikh would be exiled to Egypt the latter would return to Najd in 1825 to revive and lead the Wahhabi movement Some other Qadis and scholars were hunted down and executed Abd al Aziz ibn Hamad al Mu ammar managed to settle in Bahrain where the ruler welcomed him Few scholars managed to escape to the remote Southern corners of Arabia The executions reflected the deep Ottoman resentment of Wahhabi movement and also how seriously they viewed its threat Altogether the Najdis lost about two dozen scholars and men from the ulema families in the aftermath of the invasion However the suppression of Wahhabites in Central Arabia ultimately proved to be a failed campaign 27 16 Later Ibrahim Pasha and his troops went on to conquer Qatif and el Hasa Remnants of Saudi fortifications were demolished across Najd Emir s relatives and important Wahhabi leaders were made captives and sent to Egypt In December 1819 Ibrahim Pasha returned to Egypt after formally incorporating Hejaz into the Ottoman Empire However they were unable to totally subdue the opposition forces and Central Arabia became a region of permanent Wahhabi uprisings 19 In the 1820s Prince Turki ibn Abd Allah ibn Muhammed ibn Saud gathering growing support from tribes and groups that opposed the Turkish occupation would lay Siege to Riyadh in 1823 By August 1824 Saudi forces would capture Riyadh in a Second Siege thus establishing the Second Saudi State with Riyadh as its capital 28 Following the fall of Emirate of Dirʿiyya the British empire launched their Persian Gulf campaign of 1819 A formidable force consisting of 2 800 British soldiers and 3 warships fought the Qasimi tribesmen allied to Dir iyya Their city Ras al Khaimah was demolished in 1819 The General Maritime treaty was concluded in 1820 with the local chieftains which would eventually transform them into a protectorate of Trucial States heralding a century of British supremacy in the Gulf 29 This war had formed the basic hatred of the Wahhabi movement amongst the Ottomans and continues to influence modern Turkey where in many Turkish Islamic preachers consider Wahhabism to be un Islamic The Saudis who would form the nation a century later considered it as the first struggle for independence from the Ottoman Empire and continued to view Turkey with suspicion The current state of Saudi Turkey relations are still influenced by this hostile past To the present day both Saudi and Turkish nationalist writers accuse each other of engaging in systematic campaigns to rewrite history 30 31 32 33 34 See also EditFitnat al Wahhabiyya Nejd Expedition Hadith of Najd Saudi Arabia Turkey relationsReferences Edit Vasiliev Alexei 2000 The History of Saudi Arabia NYU Press ISBN 978 0814788097 Retrieved 21 February 2017 Emine O Evered 2012 Empire and Education under the Ottomans Politics Reform and Resistance from the Tanzimat to the Young Turks Bloomsbury Publishing p 5 ISBN 978 0857732606 Meredith Reid Sarkees Frank Wayman 2010 Resort to War 1816 2007 Sage p 198 ISBN 978 0872894341 Richard Engel 2016 And Then All Hell Broke Loose Two Decades in the Middle East Simon and Schuster p 40 ISBN 978 1451635126 The Ottomans pushed back with the 1811 18 Ottoman Wahhabi War led by the Ottoman s viceroy in Egypt Valerie Anishchenkova 2020 Modern Saudi Arabia ABC CLIO p 42 ISBN 978 1440857058 Although the Ottomans were able to defeat the First Saudi State in the Ottoman Wahhabi War 1811 1818 the House of Al Saud was able to restore its rule in Central and Eastern Arabia in a short time James Wynbrandt 2010 A Brief History of Saudi Arabia Infobase Publishing p 352 ISBN 978 0816078769 Egyptian Wahhabi war John Victor Tolan Gilles Veinstein Henry Laurens 2013 Europe and the Islamic World A History Princeton University Press p 454 ISBN 978 0691147055 Egyptian Saudi War 1811 1818 also known as the Ottoman Saudi War a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Wahhabism Oxford Bibliographies Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 19 November 2012 Wahhabism properly refers to the 18th century revival and reform movement begun in the region of Najd in what is today Saudi Arabia by Islamic religious and legal scholar Muhammad Ibn ʿAbd al Wahhab Crawford Michael 2014 Chapter 8 Wahhabism Saudi States and Foreign Powers Wahhabi View of the Ottomans Makers of the Muslim World Ibn Abd al Wahhab London One World Publishers pp 94 96 ISBN 978 1780745893 Crawford Michael 2014 Chapter 8 Wahhabism Saudi States and Foreign Powers Wahhabi View of the Ottomans Makers of the Muslim World Ibn Abd al Wahhab London One World Publishers p 96 ISBN 978 1780745893 Lewis Burckhardt John 1831 Materials for a History of the Wahabys Notes on the Bedouins and Wahabys Vol II London Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley pp 180 186 a b Bowen Wayne H 2008 The History of Saudi Arabia Westport CT Greenwood Press p 153 ISBN 978 0313340123 OCLC 166388162 Crawford Michael 2014 Chapter 8 Wahhabism Saudi states and Foreign Powers Makers of the Muslim World Ibn Abd al Wahhab London One World Publishers pp 90 92 ISBN 978 1780745893 a b Afaf Lutfi al Sayyid Marsot A History of Egypt From the Islamic Conquest to the Present New York Cambridge UP 2007 Crawford Michael 2014 Chapter 8 Wahhabism Saudi States and Foreign Powers Makers of the Muslim World Ibn Abd al Wahhab London One World Publishers pp 92 96 ISBN 978 1780745893 a b c d e Elizabeth Sirriyeh Salafies Unbelievers and the Problems of Exclusivism Bulletin British Society for Middle Eastern Studies Vol 16 No 2 1989 pp 123 132 Text online at JSTOR Fahmy K 2012 Mehmed Ali From Ottoman Governor to Ruler of Egypt Oneworld Publications p 30 ISBN 978 1780742113 Giovanni Finati 1830 Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Giovanni Finati Native of Ferrara Who Under the Assumed Name of Mahomet Made the Campaigns Against the Wahabees for the Recovery of Mecca and Medina and Since Acted as Interpreter to European Travellers in Some Parts Least Visited of Asia and Africa J Murray a b c Borisovich Lutsky Vladimir 1969 Chapter VI The Egyptian Conquest of Arabia Modern History of the Arab Countries Moscow Progress Publishers USSR Academy of Sciences Institute of the Peoples of Asia ISBN 0714701106 a b c Commins David 2006 The Wahhabi Mission and Saudi Arabia London I B Tauris p 37 ISBN 1845110803 Simons Geoff 1998 Saudi Arabia The Shape of a Client Feudalism London MacMillan Press Ltd p 153 ISBN 978 1349267286 a b M Zarabazo Jamal Al Din 2005 The Life Teachings and Influence of Muhammad ibn Abul Wahhaab Riyadh The Ministry of Islamic Affairs Endowments Dawah and Guidance The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia pp 54 55 ISBN 9960295001 Commins David 2006 The Wahhabi Mission and Saudi Arabia London I B Tauris pp 37 39 ISBN 1845110803 Simons Geoff 1998 Saudi Arabia The Shape of a Client Feudalism London MacMillian Press p 153 ISBN 978 1349267286 The British in India had welcomed Ibrahim Pasha s siege of Diriyah if the predatory habits of the Wahhabists could be extirpated from the Arabian peninsula so much the better for British trade in the region It was for this reason that Captain George Forster Sadleir an officer of the British Army in India HM 47th regiment was sent from Bombay to consult Ibrahim Pasha in Diriyah Simons Geoff 1998 Saudi Arabia The Shape of a Client Feudalism London MacMillian Press pp 153 154 ISBN 978 1349267286 Al Rasheed Kersten Shterin Madawi Carol Marat Al Rasheed Madawi 2015 5 The Wahhabis and the Ottoman Caliphate The Memory of Historical Antagonism Demystifying the Caliphate Historical Memory and Contemporary Contexts New York Oxford University Press p 122 ISBN 978 0199327959 The Wahhabi leader Abdullah Ibn Sa ud was defeated and transported first to Cairo then to Istanbul where together with several Wahhabi imams he was beheaded a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Commins David 2006 The Wahhabi Mission and Saudi Arabia London I B Tauris pp 37 38 40 42 43 ISBN 1845110803 Simons Geoff 1998 Saudi Arabia The Shape of a Client Feudalism London MacMillian Press p 157 ISBN 978 1349267286 Parry Jonathan 2022 3 The Wahhabi the Qawasim and British Sea Power in the Gulf Promised Lands The British and the Ottoman Middle East Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 100 101 ISBN 978 0691181899 Turkophobia is behind the Saudi washing of Ottoman history TRT World 5 September 2019 Saudi s MBC launching new drama series exposing Ottoman tyranny Ahval AL TORIFI TALAL 23 July 2020 Turks defrauding history with Ottoman monuments narrative Arab News Archived from the original on 23 July 2020 Al Torifi Talal 21 July 2020 Turkey repeating Ottoman Empire s crimes against Arabs Arab News Archived from the original on 5 January 2021 Al Sulami Mohammed 24 March 2021 Book by Saudi author unravels Ottoman atrocities in Madinah Arab News Archived from the original on 23 April 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wahhabi War amp oldid 1131954660, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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