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Hussein bin Ali, King of Hejaz

Hussein bin Ali al-Hashimi (Arabic: ٱلْحُسَيْن بِن عَلِي ٱلْهَاشِمِي, romanizedal-Ḥusayn bin 'Alī al-Hāshimī; 1 May 1854 – 4 June 1931) was an Arab leader from the Banu Qatadah branch of the Banu Hashim clan who was the Sharif and Emir of Mecca from 1908 and, after proclaiming the Great Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire,[2] King of the Hejaz, even if he refused this title,[3] from 1916 to 1924. He proclaimed himself Caliph[4][5][6] after the abolition of the Ottoman Caliphate in 1924 and stayed in power until 1925 when Hejaz was invaded by the Saudis.[7] He is usually considered as the father of modern pan-Arabism.[8][9]

Hussein bin Ali
ٱلْحُسَيْن بِن عَلِي
King of the Arabs
Sharifian Caliph
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques
King Hussein in 1917
King of Hejaz
Reign10 June 1916 – 3 October 1924
PredecessorOffice established
SuccessorAli bin Hussein
Sharif and Emir of Mecca
Reign1 November 1908 – 3 October 1924
PredecessorAbdallah bin Muhammad
SuccessorAli bin Hussein
Caliph
Reign3 March 1924 – 19 December 1925/4 June 1931
PredecessorAbdulmejid II
SuccessorOffice abolished
Born1 May 1854
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire
Died (aged 77)
Amman, Transjordan
Burial
Spouse
  • Sharifa Abdiyah bint Abdullah
  • Madiha
  • Sharifa Khadija bint Abdullah
  • Adila Khanum
Issue
HouseBanu Qatadah
DynastyHashemite dynasty
FatherAli bin Muhammad
MotherSalah Bani-Shahar
ReligionSunni Islam[1]
Military career
AllegianceKingdom of Hejaz
Service/branchSharifian Army
Battles/wars

In 1908, in the aftermath of the Young Turk Revolution, Hussein was appointed Sharif of Mecca by the Ottoman sultan Abdul Hamid II. In 1916, with the promise of British support for Arab independence, he proclaimed the Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire, accusing the Committee of Union and Progress of violating tenets of Islam and limiting the power of the sultan-caliph.[10] While his armies, led by his sons, were engaged in fighting the Ottoman and German troops in the Middle East, Hussein supported the Armenians during the Armenian genocide and saved up to 4,000 of them. In the aftermath of World War I, Hussein refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles, in protest of the Balfour Declaration, a document supporting the Jewish settlers in Palestine, and the establishment of British and French mandates in Syria, Iraq, and Palestine. His sons Faisal and Abdullah were made rulers of Iraq and Transjordan respectively in 1921.

In March 1924, when the Ottoman Caliphate was abolished, Hussein proclaimed himself "Caliph of all Muslims". His Caliphate was opposed by the British Empire,[11] the Zionists[12] and the Wahhabis alike.[13] However, he received support from a large part of the Muslim population of that time[14][15][16][17] and from Mehmed VI.[18]

He later refused to sign the Anglo-Hashemite Treaty and thus was left alone, the British decided progressively to stop supporting him and start helping Ibn Saud, who promptly launched an invasion of the Kingdom of Hejaz. In October 1924, facing defeat by Ibn Saud, he abdicated and was succeeded as king by his eldest son Ali. After Hejaz was subsequently completely invaded by the Ibn Saud-Wahhabi armies of the Ikhwan, on 23 December 1925, King Hussein bin Ali surrendered to the Saudis, bringing the Kingdom of Hejaz, the Sharifate of Mecca and the Sharifian Caliphate to an end.[a][19]

Hussein went into exile to Cyprus, where the British kept him prisoner until his health deteriorated so much that they allowed him to go back to Amman, next to his son Abdullah I of Jordan.[20] He died in Amman in 1931 and was buried as a Caliph in the Al-Aqsa mosque compound.[21]

Biography edit

Ascendance and early life edit

Ascendance edit

Hussein bin Ali bin Muhammad bin Abd al-Mu'in bin Awn was born in Constantinople in 1853 or 1854. He was the eldest son of Sharif Ali bin Muhammad, who is the second son of Muhammad bin Abd al-Mu'in, the former Sharif of Mecca. As a member of the Hashemite dynasty, he was a descendant of Muhammad in the 37th generation[22] through his grandson Hasan bin Ali. His mother, Salah Bani-Shahar, the wife of Ali, would have been a Circassian.[23]

He belonged to the Dhawu Awn clan of the Abadilah, a branch of the Banu Qatadah tribe. The Banu Qatadah had ruled the Sharifate of Mecca since the accession of their ancestor Qatadah ibn Idris in 1201 and were the last of the four branches of Hashemite sharifs who, together, had governed Mecca since the 11th century.

Power struggles and birth edit

In 1827, Muhammad bin Abd al-Mu'in was appointed as the Sharif, becoming the first Sharif of the Dhawu Awn branch and ending the centuries-long dominance of the Dhawu Zayd.[24] He reigned until 1851, when he was replaced by Sharif Abd al-Muttalib ibn Ghalib of the Dhawu Zayd. After being deposed, he sent his family and sons to reside in the Ottoman capital of Constantinople.It was there that Hussein was born to Muhammad's son, Ali, in 1853–1854.

Muhammad was reinstated to power in 1856, and Hussein, then two or three years old, accompanied his father and grandfather to Mecca.[23] Muhammad quickly died in 1858 and was succeeded by his eldest son, Sharif Abdullah Pasha, Hussein's uncle. He returned to Mecca after his father's death, at a young age, when his uncle Sharif Abdullah called them back, with his mother in 1861-1862.[22]

Youth and education edit

Hussein was raised at home, unlike other Hashemite youth who were typically sent outside the city to grow up among Bedouin nomads. Apparently a diligent young man, he mastered the principles of the Arabic language and was also educated in Islamic law and doctrine. Among his teachers was Sheikh Muhammad Mahmud at-Turkizi ash-Shinqiti, with whom he studied the seven Mu'allaqat. With Sheikh Ahmad Zayni Dahlan, he studied the Quran, completing its memorization before the age of 20.[23][25][26]

During Abdullah's reign, Hussein became familiar with the politics and intrigue surrounding the Sharifian court. He also participated in numerous expeditions to the Najd and the eastern regions of Hejaz to meet the Arab tribes, over whom the Sharifate of Mecca then exerted a loose form of control. He learned the customs of the Bedouins, including the skills necessary to withstand the harsh desert environment. During his travels, he also gained a thorough knowledge of the desert's flora and fauna and composed poems in humayni verse, a type of vernacular poetry (malhun) of the Bedouins. He also practiced horseback riding and hunting.[23]

Exile to Constantinople edit

In 1875, he married Abdullah's daughter, Abdiyah, his cousin. In 1877, Abdullah died, and Hussein, along with his cousin Ali ibn Abdullah, received the rank of Pasha. After a series of political assassinations among his uncles vying for the position of Sharif, he gained attention for his independence of thought and was sent back to Constantinople by the reigning uncle at that time in 1892-1893.[27] He remained there for 15 years, until 1908, mainly focusing on raising his children, learning the politics of the Sublime Porte—where he aligned with the conservative faction—and hoping to return home.[27]

 
Mahmal of Hussein bin Ali – 1890s

As Emir edit

Following the removal of his predecessor in October and the sudden death of his successor shortly thereafter, Hussein was appointed grand sharif by official decree of the sultan Abdul Hamid II in November 1908.[28][29] However, the situation was peculiar for Hussein, who arrived in Mecca in the midst of the Young Turk Revolution, which brought the Young Turks (CUP) to power.[29] Upon his arrival, he met CUP representatives who greeted him as the "Constitutional Sharif," intending to gauge his response to such a designation. He replied: "Verily these are the lands of Allah in which nothing will ever stand except the Shariah of Allah [...] The constitution of the lands of Allah is the Shariah of Allah and the Sunnah of His Prophet."[29][30]

Religious stances edit

 
Hussein bin Ali (date unknown)

His main teacher was Ahmad Zayni Dahlan,with whom he became a hafiz.[31][32] He had a Shafi'i and Hanafi education,[33][34][35] but also allied with the Malikis and opposed the Wahhabis,[13] at a time when adherence to a madhhab was more fluid.[34]

Pan-Arabism and relationship with the Ottomans edit

 
The flag of the Arab Revolt was the flag of Hussein bin Ali. The flag consists of three horizontal stripes (black, white, and green) and a red triangle on the hoist side. Each color has a symbolic meaning : black represents the Abbasid dynasty or the Rashidun caliphs, white represents the Umayyad dynasty, and green represents Islam (or possibly, but it's not certain, the Fatimid dynasty). The red triangle represents the Hashemite dynasty, to which Hussein bin Ali belonged. The flag became a symbol of Arab nationalism and unity and is still used today in various forms in the flags of Egypt, Jordan, Iraq, Kuwait, Sudan, Syria, the United Arab Emirates, Yemen, Palestine, Somaliland, the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic, and Libya.

Although there is no formal evidence suggesting that Hussein bin Ali was inclined towards Arab nationalism before 1916, the rise of Turkish nationalism towards the end of the Ottoman Empire, culminating in the Young Turks Revolution of 1908, strongly displeased the Hashemites and Bedouins.[36] Additionally, the increasing centralization of the Ottoman Empire, the progressive prohibition of Arabic in teaching, Turkification policies, and the settlement of Turkish colonists in Arab areas worried and frightened Arabs throughout the empire.[37][38]

In 1908, the Hejaz Railway was completed, allowing the Turks to strengthen their control over the Hejaz and provide a rapid response capability to reinforce their garrisons in Mecca and Medina. It was built under constant threat of Arab raids, such as those from the Harb tribe, which demonstrated their hostility towards the project.[39][40] Furthermore, in April 1915, the Ottoman government began a policy of extermination of the minorities in the Ottoman Empire through various genocides. This frightened the Arabs,[9][41][42][43] who were the largest minority in the Empire, and was openly criticized by Hussein bin Ali.[44][45]

These oppositions with the Turks became so violent that they overshadowed those that existed in Arab society and Bedouin society; and many rival tribes to the Hashemites rallied behind their leadership.[38][46]

An independentist and anti-colonial Arab movement developed, mainly in Ottoman Syria, where Arab intellectuals and newspapers called for the restoration of the caliphate in the hands of a Quraysh, and especially for the acquisition of Arab independence from the Ottoman Empire.[47][48] The relationship between Hussein and the Committee of Union and Progress worsened even more after the discovery and foiling of a plot by Enver Pasha to assassinate Hussein.[49][50]

All of these points led to a violent rupture between Arab elites and the Ottoman political class,[51] and are reflected in Hussein's later proclamation of independence, where he presented his struggle as a religious and anti-colonial one.[37][5][52]

Twenty days after the start of the Armenian genocide in the Ottoman Empire, Hussein bin Ali's son, Faisal, met with the leaders of the revolutionary organization Al-Fatat in Damascus. They assured him of their support in case of revolt and recognized Hussein as the representative of the Arab nation.[5][53][54][55]

When Hussein took up the pan-Arab claims in 1916, after his proclamation of independence, he became the leading figure behind whom the pan-Arabs rallied, and is therefore frequently regarded as the father of pan-Arabism.[8][56][57]

During World War I, Hussein initially remained allied with the Ottomans but began secret negotiations with the British on the advice of his son, Abdullah, who had served in the Ottoman parliament up to 1914 and was convinced that it was necessary to separate from the increasingly nationalistic Ottoman administration.[51]

Relationship with the British edit

 
Proclamation of independence of Hussein, 27 June 1916. In it, Hussein only used religious reasons, and not nationalist ones,[58] to explain why he was revolting.[59]

Following deliberations at Ta'if between Hussein and his sons in June 1915, during which Faisal counselled caution, Ali argued against rebellion and Abdullah advocated action[60] and encouraged his father to enter into correspondence with Sir Henry McMahon; over the period 14 July 1915 to 10 March 1916, a total of ten letters, five from each side, were exchanged between Sir Henry McMahon and Sherif Hussein. McMahon was in contact with British Foreign Secretary Edward Grey throughout, and Grey was to authorise and be ultimately responsible for the correspondence.

The British Secretary of State for War, Field Marshal Lord Kitchener, appealed to him for assistance in the conflict on the side of the Triple Entente. Starting in 1915, as indicated by an exchange of letters with Lieutenant Colonel Sir Henry McMahon, the British High Commissioner in the Sultanate of Egypt, Hussein seized the opportunity and demanded recognition of an Arab nation that included the Hejaz and other adjacent territories as well as approval for the proclamation of an Arab Caliphate of Islam.[51] High Commissioner McMahon accepted and assured him that his assistance would be rewarded by an Arab empire encompassing the entire span between Egypt and Persia, with the exception of British possessions and interests in Kuwait, Aden, and the Syrian coast.[61] However, at that time, the British scarcely thought about the promises made; their primary concern was winning the war and dismantling the Ottoman Empire.[62][63] The fate of the Arab populations and the division of territory were left for a future date.[62]

 
Hussein with dignitaries

Arab Revolt edit

He decided to join the Allied camp immediately, because of information[64] that he would soon be deposed as Sharif of Mecca by the Ottoman government in favor of Sharif Ali Haidar, leader of the rival Zaʻid family.[65] The much-publicized executions of the Arab nationalist leaders in Damascus led Hussein to fear for his life if he were deposed in favour of Ali Haidar.[65]

 
Illustration from Le Petit Journal depicting the sons of Hussein bin Ali as they liberate Mecca, 16 July 1916

The revolt proper began on 10 June 1916, when Hussein proclaimed the independence of the Kingdom of Hejaz and ordered his supporters to attack the Ottoman garrison in Mecca.[66] In the Battle of Mecca, there ensued over a month of bloody street fighting between the out-numbered, but far better armed Ottoman troops and Hussein's tribesmen.[67] Indiscriminate Ottoman artillery fire, set fire to the veil covering the Kaaba and turned out to be a potent propaganda weapon for the Hashemites, who portrayed the Ottomans as desecrating Islam's most holy site.[67][68] Also on 10 June, another of Hussein's sons, the Emir Abdullah, attacked Ta'if, which after an initial repulse settled down into a siege.[67] With the British-Egyptian artillery support, Abdullah took Ta'if on 22 September 1916.[67]

 
Ageyl bodyguards of Faisal

After this, and for most of the war, Hussein's sons directed the fighting ; most notably Faisal, future Faisal I of Iraq, and Abdullah, future Abdullah I of Jordan.[49] Hussein mostly stayed in Mecca to direct the operations, while his sons were fighting.[49] The Arab revolt laid siege to Medina but wasn't able to take it for a year, thus impeding the operations.[49] During this battle, the Ottomans killed and deported the civilian Arabic population of Medina into the Syrian desert, an event hidden by the pretense of doing "Seferberlik", or mobilization.[69][70] On 30 October 1916, Emir Abdullah called a meeting of majlis where he read a letter in which "Husayn ibn Ali was recognized as sovereign of the Arab nation. Then all those present arose and proclaimed him Malik al-Arab, King of the Arabs."[71] During the whole duration of the war, Hussein's troops stayed underequipped and lacking artillery – which the Allies didn't want to give, seing that front as utopical and not as important as the fight was in the Western front, among others.[65] This lack of artillery and high mobility ; since most of the troops were mounted Bedouins, pushed them to use guerilla tactics in the desert ; for example by severing Ottoman supplies with the bombings of specific sections of the Hejaz railway.[65]

After the fall of Medina, the Arab troops were able to secure Aqaba quickly and this allowed them to project themselves farther;[65] they still ambushed Ottoman troops, such as during the battle of Wadi Musa, helping themselves with their superior knowledge of the Arabian and Syrian deserts.[65][72] This conflict was marked by widespread ethnic cleansing directed at non-Turkish populations in the areas affected. The troops of Hussein also committed war crimes, deciding to execute Turkish troops responsible of the Tafas massacre against Arabian civilians, instead of taking them prisoners.[73]

 
A flag bearer mounted on a camel leading the triumphal entry into Aqaba.

After the fall of Aqaba, the Arab forces, supplemented with British auxiliaries and with the design of joining forces with the British main armies, which were trying to break out of Egypt and Palestine, managed to join them.[65] During the Battle of Megiddo, in September 1918, Hussein's troops led by his son Faisal, joined the British forces and managed to utterly destroy the 4th, 7th and 8th Ottoman armies, and push into retreat the Yildirim Army Group, comprising the German Asian Corps and led at the time by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, thus leaving the Palestinian and Arabian front without defence, and finally breaking inside the Ottoman Empire.[65][74] The battle happened at the same time as the Vardar offensive in the Balkans, which managed to overrun Bulgarian defences, thus opening the Balkans and ultimately Austria-Hungary.[75] Since the war was seemingly won, and the Ottoman defences were crumbling, Faisal projected himself towards Damascus, which he took the 1st of October 1918.[65] After this, he engaged in the pursuit to Haritan, pursuing the remnants of the Yildirim Army Group and ultimately taking Aleppo on the 25 of October 1918, thus ending the war on that front.[65]

King of Hejaz edit

The US State Department quotes an aide-mémoire dated 24 October 1917 given by the Arab Bureau to the American Diplomatic Agency in Cairo confirming that "...Britain, France and Russia agreed to recognize the Sherif as lawful independent ruler of the Hejaz and to use the title of "King of the Hejaz" when addressing him, and a note to this effect was handed to him on December 10, 1916".[76]

 
Hussein in Amman, Transjordan, before he left for Aqaba, 1921

When Hussein declared himself King of the Hejaz, he also declared himself King of the Arab lands (malik bilad-al-Arab).[63] This only aggravated his conflict with Abdulaziz ibn Saud, which was already present because of their differences in religious beliefs and with whom he had fought before the First World War, siding with fellow anti-Saudis, the Ottomans in 1910.

Rule edit

Hussein initiated a series of reforms, including measures to avoid offending Muslims from French or British colonies who undertook the Hajj. He also addressed the issue of stray dogs, attempted to ensure the security of the Hajj routes, and sought to combat the prevalent slave markets in the Hejaz region.[77]

He undertook the last major restoration of the Masjid al-Haram in 1920[78] and a restoration of the mosques of Palestine and more specifically of al-Aqsa mosque.[79]

 
Drawing by Khalil Gibran, 1916

Armenian genocide edit

Starting from 1917, Hussein made decisions to protect the Armenian refugees and those residing in his lands from the Armenian genocide.[80] First, he condemned the genocide publicly as early as 1916, stating "We specifically bring to the world's condemnation the atrocities committed against the Greeks and Armenians, atrocities that our holy law can only disapprove of."[81] In this regard, he promulgated in 1917, in a decree: "In the name of Most Merciful Allah and our prophet Muhammad, we are addressing our Arab brothers (...) to take Armenian refugees in their families, to share with them their belongings – camels, food, shelter, blankets – and share everything that you have in excess, and everything that you can give to people."[80]

In April 1918, as part of his conquest of the Syrian territories in which the Armenian genocide took place, he issued a decree to protect Armenians from persecution and allow them to settle in peace, in which he ordered :[82][83][84][85]

"What is requested of you is to protect and to take good care of everyone from the Jacobite Armenian community living in your territories and frontiers and among your tribes; to help them in all of their affairs and defend them as you would defend yourselves, your properties and children, and provide everything they might need whether they are settled or moving from place to place, because they are the Protected People of the Muslims (Ahl Dimmat al-Muslimin) – about whom the Prophet Muhammad (may Allah grant him His blessings and peace) said: "Whosoever takes from them even a rope, I will be his adversary on the day of Judgment."[86] This is among the most important things we require of you to do and expect you to accomplish, in view of your noble character and determination."

The Armenian National Institute considers it to be the oldest declaration by a head of state to recognize the Armenian genocide.[87] Alongside this, he gave citizenship to his Armenian subjects.[88] According to survivors of the Armenian genocide, such as Levon Yotnakhparian, Hussein personally received him and was shocked by the news of what was happening.[89] He also supported Armenian survivors and provided men and protection for expeditions in the Syrian desert aimed at rescuing Armenian deportees.[90][91] According to testimonies, this method is said to have saved up to 4,000 people from the genocide, in collaboration with Hussein al-Attrache, a Druze chieftain who then disguised the refugees as Druzes.[90][91] His son, Faisal, provided free transportation to all Armenian refugees for their trip towards the British refugee camp in Damascus and free use of the Hejaz railway ; even if that meant impeding on the war effort.[92]

Following World War I edit

In the aftermath of the war, the Arabs found themselves freed from centuries of Ottoman rule. Hussein's son Faisal was made King of Syria, but this kingdom proved short-lived, as the Middle East came under mandate rule of France and the United Kingdom. The British Government subsequently made Faisal and his brother Abdullah kings of Iraq and Transjordan, respectively.

The issue of Palestine and deterioration in British relationship edit

Starting at the end of the war, Hussein found himself in severe conflict with Britain's views on the subject of Palestine.[12][93] In January and February 1918, Hussein received the Hogarth Message and Bassett Letter in response to his requests for an explanation of the Balfour Declaration and Sykes-Picot Agreement respectively.[94] Despite their explanations, he stated that Palestine should be included within the borders of the newly founded Arab Kingdom[95] and should refuse Zionist settlers, even if he was ready to accept Jewish people in Palestine,[93][95] notably those who already lived there and were not coming from foreign countries.[12] However, even after an assurance by McMahon, Hussein did not receive the lands promised by their British allies.[96] McMahon claimed that the proposed lands to be taken in by the new Arab State were not purely Arab. In actuality, McMahon refused to hand over the new lands as the areas in question had already been claimed by the new British ally, France.[97][98]

Having received a British subsidy totalling £6.5m between 1916 and April 1919, in May 1919, the subsidy was reduced to £100K monthly (from £200K), dropped to £75K from October, £50K in November, £25K in December until February 1920 after which no more payments were made.

The British were not disposed to fulfill their promises to Hussein, as Colonel Wilson stated in secret correspondence :[3]

"At one time, our Arabic copies of Sir H. MacMahon's letters to the Grand Sherif could not be found; if they are still unavailable it may be somewhat awkward when King Hussein produces the originals. (...) Failing a satisfactory solution King Hussein will have some grounds for considering that Great Britain has broken her pledged word."[3]

In 1919, King Hussein refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles. In August 1920, five days after the signing of the Treaty of Sèvres, Curzon asked Cairo to procure Hussein's signature to both treaties and agreed to make a payment of £30,000 conditional on signature. Hussein declined and in 1921, stated that he could not be expected to "affix his name to a document assigning Palestine to the Zionists and Syria to foreigners."[11] He refused again to accept the Balfour Declaration in 1923, and stated : "I look at the people of Palestine as I look at my own family, without distinction between Muslim, Christian, Jewish, or nationalist."[12]

In January 1924, Hussein received in Amman a Zionist delegation led by rabbi Yaakov Meir and a British colonel.[12] Despite having welcomed them with respect, he would not change his position. As his stance was seen by the United Kingdom as extremist, the British and the Zionist media engaged in press campaigns against Hussein, where his positions were misrepresented.[12] They also engaged heavily against his Caliphate, calling it illegitimate.[12] After him becoming Caliph, he continued on this path, stating: "I consider Zionism unjust towards Muslims, Christians and Orthodox Jews, and as a protector of justice, I will resist this unjust Zionism."[12] This contributed to aggravate his relationship with the Zionists towards a breaking point.[12]

Caliphate edit

After the Caliphate was abolished by the Turkish Grand National Assembly, Hussein was proclaimed as Caliph. The accounts on the official date and proceedings vary, some place the beginning of the Caliphate on 3 March 1924, when Hussein would have declared himself Caliph at his son Abdullah's winter camp in Shunah, Transjordan.[99] Other accounts, such as a Reuters dispatch, instead set the date as March 7, 1924, and describe Hussein bin Ali being elected as a caliph by Muslims from "Mesopotamia, Transjordan, and Hejaz."[100] A third counting of the official date takes place when he received the homage of the majority of the Arab population in Amman as the caliph, on March 11, 1924.[101] Finally, a fourth version places the date on Friday, March 14, 1924, when Hussein is evidently enthroned as caliph in Baghdad during the Friday prayer.[100] In any case, all sources agree on a date in March 1924, shortly after the abolition of the Ottoman caliphate by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.[99][100][101] Separately, he made statements in support of the Ottoman dynasty, which had been ruined and exiled from Turkey. In this regard, he declared:[102]

 
Mahmal of Hussein bin Ali in Mecca, 1916–1918

The services rendered by the Ottoman family to Islam and Muslims are undeniable; their heroism cannot be belittled. The recent decision regarding the family [exile] has pierced the hearts and saddened the spirits of Muslims. Therefore, we see it as an obligation of Islamic brotherhood to meet the needs of the family and prevent them from experiencing financial difficulties. Those who wish to participate in this great endeavor should express their intentions to our representatives in Mecca.

 
Testimony of Vatan, quoted by The Times, on the approval given to Hussein's caliphate by Vehideddin, a nickname of Mehmed VI

In the same perspective, he financially supported the members of the exiled Ottoman dynasty to prevent them from being ruined. Despite his complicated financial and economic situation, he provided them with 2400 liras.[102] The claim to the title was recognized by a large part of the Hejazi, Levantine[14] and more generally Arabic Muslim population.[101] He also received the support of Mehmed VI, on March 18, 1924, one of the last Ottoman Caliphs and the last Ottoman Sultan, according to The Times and Vatan, that reported that he supported him as the new Caliph.[18]

The French viewed this proclamation as "the worst possible solution," in the words of Hubert Lyautey, who also defended that the Ottoman Caliphate was better for French interests than the Sharifian Caliphate.[103] They believed that having a new influential caliph could risk reviving pan-Islamism, causing instability in French Muslim colonies in the event of a conflict, and potentially giving the Red Sea to the British.[103] As a result, the French did not support it at all, preferring to wait and see how events unfolded. Meanwhile, they had the Sultan of Morocco ready to assume the caliph title if necessary, offering the French a caliph who was more aligned with their interests, albeit less significant.[103]

To reinforce his proclamation and establish legal foundations for his caliphate, Hussein convened an Islamic Congress at Mecca in 1924,[104] it comprised both Sunni and Shia Muslims and was thus arguably one of the most inclusive Islamic Congresses in history.[105] The Congress held twelve sessions before being indefinitely adjourned due to the advance of Saudi forces.[104]

His Caliphate only lasted for a few months, though,[106] because he was invaded and defeated quickly by Abdulaziz ibn Saud.[107][108]

Defeat against Saudis and abdication edit

Although the British had supported Hussein from the start of the Arab Revolt and the McMahon–Hussein Correspondence, they not only chose not to help him to repel the Saudi conquest of Hejaz, but even provided weapons to Ibn Saud,[107] which eventually took Mecca, Medina, and Jeddah. The British offered several times to assist him and to stop supporting the Saudis, in exchange for his recognition of the Balfour Declaration, which he refused each time.[109] According to the Institute of Contemporary Islamic Thought, the British not only supported Ibn Saud against Hussein bin Ali but they also supported him subsequently against the Ikhwan.[110] Hussein attempted to make appeals to the League of Nations, Muslim powers, and Western powers; however, they did not intervene and merely monitored the events.[111] The British were highly negative towards him since he assumed the caliphal title and refused to support him.[111]

He chose to abdicate.[111] After his abdication, another of his sons, Ali, briefly assumed the throne of the Hejaz, but then he too had to flee from the encroachment of the Saudi forces. Another of Hussein's sons, Faisal, was briefly King of Syria and later King of Iraq, while Abdullah was Emir of Transjordan. While he was in exile, he still used the title of caliph[112] until his death.[113]

Exile edit

 
Hussein bin Ali posing with his retinue and his horses during his exile in Cyprus

King Hussein was then forced to flee to Amman, Transjordan, where his son Abdullah was Emir. During this period, King Hussein is described as having taken over control that his son wielded, and therefore was sent to live in Aqaba (which was recently transferred from Hijazi to Transjordanian sovereignty by the British).[114] Britain – responding to Ibn Saud's plea that the Sharif be expelled from Aqaba[115] – exiled him from Aqaba to British-controlled Cyprus.[116]

He lived in Nicosia from 1925,[117] with his sons coming to visit him at some times, even if his relationships with them were strained, except for Zeid. who came to visit him the most. According to the British governor of Cyprus, Ronald Storrs, when he went to see Hussein, he found his son Zeid reading him the commentary of al-Bukhari on the Quran.[117] He rarely left his home, lived an austere lifestyle, and read the Quran, religious books, he also read Arabic newspapers in the mornings.[117] However, he still went to see horse-races and had brought Arabic horses in his exile that he treated "like his own family".[117] Hussein also did some interviews with the press during his exile.[117] He received some visitors, such as Sheikh Fuad al-Khatib, Muhammad Jamil Bayham, who wanted to write his biography, or the Jordanian poet Mustafa Wahbi Tal, among others.[117] Hussein was ruined, but the local Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot population considered him to be a very wealthy man and therefore tried to win his favors.[117] Meanwhile, he was entangled in legal matters regarding property income in Egypt, among other things.[117]

 
The funeral of Hussein in Jerusalem, 1931.

He tried to be friendly towards the various ethnic communities on the island but was particularly close to the Armenians of the island, seeing them as victims, like himself, of the Young Turks.[117] Hussein did not have any documented connection with the Turkish Cypriot community; though it is possible that one exists, there is no mention of him having visited a Turkish mosque in Nicosia.[117] He met with the Armenian Archbishop of Nicosia in 1926 and received a warm welcome,[117] after that, he donated drums and instruments to the Armenian community of the island, including the Armenian Philharmonic Melkonian School.[118][119][120]

 
Chief mourners at funeral of Hussein. His sons King Ali and Emir Abdullah among crowd
 
Funeral of Hussein, Jerusalem, the casket

He began to fall ill as early as 1928, but his favorite wife, Adila Khanum, passed away in 1929, which exacerbated his illness. She was buried at Hala Sultan Tekke, the largest Muslim shrine on the island.[117] His two sons, Ali and Abdallah, attended the funeral and started making preparations and requesting the British for his repatriation, believing that he didn't have much time left to live and that they needed to be by his side.[117]

Return and death edit

 
Funeral of Hussein, Jerusalem

As his health continued to deteriorate and as he was paralyzed by a stroke at age 79 in 1930,[114][121] the British became increasingly inclined to send him back to the Middle East. They feared that his death would not only stir resentment among Arabs towards the United Kingdom but also potentially strain their relationships with the Hashemite rulers, all of whom were allies in the Middle East.[117] The Saudis expressed their displeasure with rumors of Hussein's repatriation, especially after Hussein expressed his wish to be buried in Mecca, an event the Saudis feared would lead to "pro-Hashemite gatherings."[117] Eventually, the British decided to repatriate him to Amman, with Baghdad as another option they had considered.[117] Upon his arrival, he was greeted by a large crowd that cheered him and followed him to the Raghadan Palace.[117] There, while in Amman, he published a series of texts in al-Yarmouk, an Arabic newspaper, where he defended his actions and stated once again that he was against the British mandate of Palestine.[122]

He died on June 4, 1931. After a procession where 30,000 people took part,[123] he was buried in Jerusalem: inside the Arghūniyya, a building on the Haram esh-Sharif or "Temple Mount", in a walled enclosure decorated with white marble and carpets.[124][125] His son Faisal, with whom the relationship was the worse at that point, didn't attend his funerals, claiming he had "government business" to attend to.[117]

On the window above his tomb is written the following inscription: Arabic: هَذَا قَبْرُ أَمِيرِ ٱلْمُؤْمِنِينَ ٱلْحُسَيْن بْنُ عَلِي, lit.'Haḏa qabru ʾamīri ʾal-mūˈminīna ʾal-Ḥusayn bnu ʿAlī' which translates "This is the tomb of the Commander of the Faithful, Hussein bin Ali".[21][123][126]

Marriage and children edit

 
The sons of Sharif Hussein, King of Hejaz: King Ali of Hejaz and King Feisal I of Iraq and King Abdullah I of Transjordan

Hussein, who had four wives, fathered five sons and three daughters with three of his wives:

  • Sharifa Abidiya bint Abdullah (died Constantinople, Ottoman Empire, 1888, buried there), eldest daughter of his paternal uncle, Amir Abdullah Kamil Pasha, Grand Sharif of Mecca;
  • Madiha, a Circassian;
  • Sharifa Khadija bint Abdullah (1866 – Amman, Transjordan, 4 July 1921), second daughter of Amir Abdullah Kamil Pasha, Grand Sharif of Mecca;
  • Adila Khanum (Constantinople, Ottoman Empire, 1879 – Larnaca, Cyprus, 12 July 1929, buried there at the Hala Sultan, Umm Haram, Tekke), daughter of Salah Bey and granddaughter of Mustafa Rashid Pasha, sometime Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire;

With his first wife Abidiya bint Abdullah, he had:

With his second wife Madiha, he had:

  • Princess Saleha, married Abdullah bin Muhammed.

With his third wife Adila, he had:

  • Princess Sara, married Muhammad Atta Amin in July 1933, divorced September 1933.
  • Prince Zeid, who succeeded in pretense King Faisal II of Iraq upon his assassination in 1958, but never actually ruled as Iraq became a republic. Married to Fahrelnissa Kabaağaç.

Works edit

Literature edit

Hussein wrote extensively, his most important papers were published in a book by Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad.[122] Otherwise, he is known to have written a large series of articles in al-Qibla.[127][128]

Legacy edit

Art edit

 
Hussein bin Ali mosque in Aqaba

Several poets wrote about him, including Ahmed Shawqi, nicknamed the Prince of Poets,[129] who wrote a poem about his funerals[130] and Mustafa Wahbi Tal, one of the most prominents Jordanian poets,[131][132][133] who wrote a poem about him.[134]

Armenian genocide edit

His role in the support of Armenian refugees, especially during the Armenian genocide, led him to be cited in 2014 and 2020 by Armenian Presidents Serzh Sargsyan and Armen Sarkissian as an example of tolerance and friendship between people[135][136][137][138] also stressed by Jordanian Prince Hassan bin Talal.[139] Hussein is quoted in the book Crows of the Desert from Armenian survivor Levon Yotnakhparian, when he discusses the help Hussein provided to the survivors and to save victims.[90] This book subsequently gave birth to a movie of the same name.[140]

For his actions during the Armenian genocide, Hussein was awarded the title of "Righteous of the Armenian genocide" by Armenian researchers.[141] On Friday 24 April 2015, on the occasion of the centennial of the Armenian genocide, Lebanese Sheikh Maher Hammoud referenced Hussein ben Ali in his sermon condemning the genocide.[142]

Others edit

Several mosques bear his name to the present day, such as the Hussein bin Ali mosque in Aqaba,[143] the Hussein bin Ali mosque in Ma'an[144] or the al-Husseini mosque in Amman.[145][146] A school is named after him in Ma'an.[147] His house in Aqaba began to be restored in 2023 at the initiative of the Jordanian government.[148][149]

In 2020, a documentary was made about him and his life by Al-Araby,[150] which was seen more than five million times on YouTube as of May 2023.[151]

Decorations edit

Ancestry edit

Hashim
(eponymous ancestor)
Abd al-Muttalib
Abu TalibAbdallah
Muhammad
(Islamic prophet)
Ali
(fourth caliph)
Fatimah
Hasan
(fifth caliph)
Hasan Al-Mu'thanna
Abdullah
Musa Al-Djawn
Abdullah
Musa
Muhammad
Abdullah
Ali
Suleiman
Hussein
Issa
Abd Al-Karim
Muta'in
Idris
Qatada
(Sharif of Mecca)
Ali
Hassan
(Sharif of Mecca)
Abu Numayy I
(Sharif of Mecca)
Rumaythah
(Sharif of Mecca)
'Ajlan
(Sharif of Mecca)
Hassan
(Sharif of Mecca)
Barakat I
(Sharif of Mecca)
Muhammad
(Sharif of Mecca)
Barakat II
(Sharif of Mecca)
Abu Numayy II
(Sharif of Mecca)
Hassan
(Sharif of Mecca)
Abdullah
(Sharif of Mecca)
Hussein
Abdullah
Muhsin
Auon, Ra'i Al-Hadala
Abdul Mu'een
Muhammad
(Sharif of Mecca)
Ali
  Hussein
(Sharif of Mecca King of Hejaz)
  Ali
(King of Hejaz)
  Abdullah I
(King of Jordan)
  Faisal I
(King of Syria King of Iraq)
Zeid
(pretender to Iraq)
'Abd Al-Ilah
(Regent of Iraq)
  Talal
(King of Jordan)
  Ghazi
(King of Iraq)
Ra'ad
(pretender to Iraq)
  Hussein
(King of Jordan)
  Faisal II
(King of Iraq)
Zeid
  Abdullah II
(King of Jordan)
Hussein
(Crown Prince of Jordan)


See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The legitimacy of his Caliphate is disputed; however, the date of end can be assigned to his loss of the Harayman, in 1925 or to his death, in 1931. Both interpretations can be found in sources.

Citations edit

  1. ^ "IRAQ – Resurgence In The Shiite World – Part 8 – Jordan & The Hashemite Factors". APS Diplomat Redrawing the Islamic Map. 2005. Archived from the original on 9 July 2012.
  2. ^ Roshwald, Aviel (2013). "Part II. The Emergence of Nationalism: Politics and Power – Nationalism in the Middle East, 1876–1945". In Breuilly, John (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the History of Nationalism. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 220–241. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199209194.013.0011. ISBN 978-0-19-175030-4. from the original on 15 January 2023. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
  3. ^ a b c Representation Of Hedjaz At The Peace Conference: Hussein Bin Ali's Correspondence With Colonel Wilson; Status Of Arabic Countries; King's Rejection Of 'Hedjaz' Title. Paris Peace Conference 1919: Representation Of Hedjaz, Feb. 24, 1919, Manuscript Number FO 608/97-0068 The National Archives (Kew, United Kingdom)
  4. ^ Bosworth, Clifford Edmund (1996). The new Islamic dynasties: a chronological and genealogical manual. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. p. 212. ISBN 978-0-7486-0684-9. OCLC 35692500.
  5. ^ a b c Teitelbaum, Joshua (1998). "Sharif Husayn ibn Ali and the Hashemite Vision of the Post-Ottoman Order: From Chieftaincy to Suzerainty". Middle Eastern Studies. 34 (1): 103–122. doi:10.1080/00263209808701212. JSTOR 4283920.
  6. ^ Kramer, Martin (1986). Islam assembled the advent of the Muslim Congresses. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 80–86. ISBN 978-1-59740-468-6. OCLC 1113069713.
  7. ^ "Hussein et la famille Hachémite". www.lesclesdumoyenorient.com. from the original on 5 December 2022. Retrieved 2 December 2022.
  8. ^ a b Liah Greenfeld, ed. (2016). Globalisation of nationalism: the motive-force behind twenty-first century politics. Colchester: ECPR Press. p. 170. ISBN 978-1-78552-214-7. OCLC 957243120. Politically, Pan-Arabism was first endorsed by Sharif Hussein bin Ali (1908–1917), the Sharif of Mecca, who wanted to gain independence from the Ottoman Empire.
  9. ^ a b Zeine, Zeine N. (1973). The emergence of Arab nationalism; with a background study of Arab-Turkish relations in the Near East. Caravan Books. ISBN 978-0-88206-000-2. OCLC 590512.[page needed]
  10. ^ . Sayyid Ahmed Amiruddin. 13 August 2013. Archived from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved 2 December 2022.
  11. ^ a b Mousa, Suleiman (1978). "A Matter of Principle: King Hussein of the Hijaz and the Arabs of Palestine". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 9 (2): 184–185. doi:10.1017/S0020743800000052. S2CID 163677445.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i Al-Momani, Nidal Daoud Mohammad (2014). "Al-Sharif, Al-Hussein Bin Ali between the Zionists and the Palestinians in 1924 A decisive year in the political history of Al-Hussein". Journal of Human Sciences. 2014 (2): 312–335. doi:10.12785/jhs/20140213.
  13. ^ a b Hanne, Olivier (17 November 2016). SPM (ed.). "La révolte arabe en 1916: mythe et réalité". TELEMME – Temps, espaces, langages Europe méridionale-Méditerranée (in French): 331. from the original on 8 October 2022. Retrieved 7 October 2022. Dès l'automne 1916, il commence à imprimer sa marque dans le Hejâz, puisque le corps sénatorial qu'il constitue le 7 octobre est composé notamment des muftis chafite et malékite, mais pas des représentants du rite hanafte – offciel dans l'empire ottoman – ni hanbalite – celui des wahhabites. Le 23 décembre, il se déclare indifférent à la monarchie et libre face aux puissances européennes et va jusqu'à décliner l'offre de débarquement franco-britannique (27 décembre). Son obsession reste le califat. Sa législation en est le signe puisqu'il lance la lutte contre le péché à Médine. Le 30 octobre 1916, les cafés ne peuvent rien vendre durant les heures de prières ; le 3 mai 1917, l'alcool est interdit. Il restaure en janvier 1917 les titres traditionnels arabo-musulmans (chérif, sayyid, shaykh) et abolit les titres turcs (effendi, bey, pacha…).
  14. ^ a b الوطن, جريدة; webmaster (5 May 2020). ""مملكة الحجاز".. وقــصـــة الـغــزو المـســلّـــح". جريدة الوطن (in Arabic). from the original on 16 May 2023. Retrieved 16 May 2023. وذكر الوثائقي أنه في 1924م، اندفع الشريف الحسين بن علي متشبثاً برداء النبوة ليعلن نفسه خليفة للمسلمين، فتلقى بيعة واسعة في الحجاز والشام، الأمر الذي زاد من غضب بن سعود، فكان إعلان الخلافة القشة التي قصمت ظهر البعير، فقرر بن سعود غزو الحجاز فوراً.
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  32. ^ Khayr ad-Dīn az-Ziriklī (1923). ما رأيت وما سمعت / Mā ra'aytu wa-mā sami't (in Arabic). al-Qāhirah [Cairo]: al-Maṭba'ah al-'Arabīyah wa-Maktabatuhā.
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Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Longrigg, Steven Helmsley; Ochsenwald, William (2021). "Ḥusayn b. ʿAlī". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online. ISSN 1873-9830.

External links edit

al-Ḥusayn ibn 'Alī ibn Muḥammad ibn 'Abd al-Mu'īn ibn 'Awn
House of Hashim
Dhawu Awn, branch of Banu Qatadah
Born: 1854 Died: 4 June 1931
Regnal titles
New creation
King of the Arab Lands
October 1916 – 3 October 1924
Recognized by the Allies only as King of Hejaz
Succeeded byas King of Hejaz
Preceded by
Himself
as Ottoman emir
Sharif and Emir of Mecca
June 1916 – 3 October 1924
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Sharif and Emir of Mecca
November 1908 – June 1916
Ottoman-appointed
Succeeded by
Himself
as independent emir
Succeeded by
Sunni Islam titles
Preceded by — TITULAR —
Caliph of the Muslims
11 March 1924 – 3 October 1924
Reason for succession failure:
Not widely recognized outside Middle-East
Haramayn invaded
Vacant

hussein, king, hejaz, people, with, similar, names, hussein, disambiguation, hussein, hashimi, arabic, ٱل, ٱل, اش, romanized, Ḥusayn, alī, hāshimī, 1854, june, 1931, arab, leader, from, banu, qatadah, branch, banu, hashim, clan, sharif, emir, mecca, from, 1908. For people with similar names see Hussein bin Ali disambiguation Hussein bin Ali al Hashimi Arabic ٱل ح س ي ن ب ن ع ل ي ٱل ه اش م ي romanized al Ḥusayn bin Ali al Hashimi 1 May 1854 4 June 1931 was an Arab leader from the Banu Qatadah branch of the Banu Hashim clan who was the Sharif and Emir of Mecca from 1908 and after proclaiming the Great Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire 2 King of the Hejaz even if he refused this title 3 from 1916 to 1924 He proclaimed himself Caliph 4 5 6 after the abolition of the Ottoman Caliphate in 1924 and stayed in power until 1925 when Hejaz was invaded by the Saudis 7 He is usually considered as the father of modern pan Arabism 8 9 Hussein bin Aliٱل ح س ي ن ب ن ع ل يKing of the ArabsSharifian CaliphCustodian of the Two Holy MosquesKing Hussein in 1917King of HejazReign10 June 1916 3 October 1924PredecessorOffice establishedSuccessorAli bin HusseinSharif and Emir of MeccaReign1 November 1908 3 October 1924PredecessorAbdallah bin MuhammadSuccessorAli bin HusseinCaliphReign3 March 1924 19 December 1925 4 June 1931PredecessorAbdulmejid IISuccessorOffice abolishedBorn1 May 1854Constantinople Ottoman EmpireDied4 June 1931 aged 77 Amman TransjordanBurialal Arghuniyya the Noble Sanctuary Jerusalem British PalestineSpouseSharifa Abdiyah bint Abdullah Madiha Sharifa Khadija bint Abdullah Adila KhanumIssueAli of Hejaz Sharif Hasan Abdullah I of Jordan Princess Fatima Faisal I of Iraq Princess Saliha Princess Sara Prince ZeidHouseBanu QatadahDynastyHashemite dynastyFatherAli bin MuhammadMotherSalah Bani ShaharReligionSunni Islam 1 Military careerAllegianceKingdom of HejazService wbr branchSharifian ArmyBattles warsArab Revolt In 1908 in the aftermath of the Young Turk Revolution Hussein was appointed Sharif of Mecca by the Ottoman sultan Abdul Hamid II In 1916 with the promise of British support for Arab independence he proclaimed the Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire accusing the Committee of Union and Progress of violating tenets of Islam and limiting the power of the sultan caliph 10 While his armies led by his sons were engaged in fighting the Ottoman and German troops in the Middle East Hussein supported the Armenians during the Armenian genocide and saved up to 4 000 of them In the aftermath of World War I Hussein refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles in protest of the Balfour Declaration a document supporting the Jewish settlers in Palestine and the establishment of British and French mandates in Syria Iraq and Palestine His sons Faisal and Abdullah were made rulers of Iraq and Transjordan respectively in 1921 In March 1924 when the Ottoman Caliphate was abolished Hussein proclaimed himself Caliph of all Muslims His Caliphate was opposed by the British Empire 11 the Zionists 12 and the Wahhabis alike 13 However he received support from a large part of the Muslim population of that time 14 15 16 17 and from Mehmed VI 18 He later refused to sign the Anglo Hashemite Treaty and thus was left alone the British decided progressively to stop supporting him and start helping Ibn Saud who promptly launched an invasion of the Kingdom of Hejaz In October 1924 facing defeat by Ibn Saud he abdicated and was succeeded as king by his eldest son Ali After Hejaz was subsequently completely invaded by the Ibn Saud Wahhabi armies of the Ikhwan on 23 December 1925 King Hussein bin Ali surrendered to the Saudis bringing the Kingdom of Hejaz the Sharifate of Mecca and the Sharifian Caliphate to an end a 19 Hussein went into exile to Cyprus where the British kept him prisoner until his health deteriorated so much that they allowed him to go back to Amman next to his son Abdullah I of Jordan 20 He died in Amman in 1931 and was buried as a Caliph in the Al Aqsa mosque compound 21 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Ascendance and early life 1 1 1 Ascendance 1 1 2 Power struggles and birth 1 1 3 Youth and education 1 1 4 Exile to Constantinople 1 2 As Emir 1 2 1 Religious stances 1 2 2 Pan Arabism and relationship with the Ottomans 1 2 3 Relationship with the British 1 3 Arab Revolt 1 3 1 King of Hejaz 1 3 2 Rule 1 3 3 Armenian genocide 1 4 Following World War I 1 4 1 The issue of Palestine and deterioration in British relationship 1 4 2 Caliphate 1 4 3 Defeat against Saudis and abdication 1 4 4 Exile 1 4 5 Return and death 2 Marriage and children 3 Works 3 1 Literature 4 Legacy 4 1 Art 4 2 Armenian genocide 4 3 Others 5 Decorations 6 Ancestry 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksBiography editAscendance and early life edit Ascendance edit Hussein bin Ali bin Muhammad bin Abd al Mu in bin Awn was born in Constantinople in 1853 or 1854 He was the eldest son of Sharif Ali bin Muhammad who is the second son of Muhammad bin Abd al Mu in the former Sharif of Mecca As a member of the Hashemite dynasty he was a descendant of Muhammad in the 37th generation 22 through his grandson Hasan bin Ali His mother Salah Bani Shahar the wife of Ali would have been a Circassian 23 He belonged to the Dhawu Awn clan of the Abadilah a branch of the Banu Qatadah tribe The Banu Qatadah had ruled the Sharifate of Mecca since the accession of their ancestor Qatadah ibn Idris in 1201 and were the last of the four branches of Hashemite sharifs who together had governed Mecca since the 11th century Power struggles and birth edit In 1827 Muhammad bin Abd al Mu in was appointed as the Sharif becoming the first Sharif of the Dhawu Awn branch and ending the centuries long dominance of the Dhawu Zayd 24 He reigned until 1851 when he was replaced by Sharif Abd al Muttalib ibn Ghalib of the Dhawu Zayd After being deposed he sent his family and sons to reside in the Ottoman capital of Constantinople It was there that Hussein was born to Muhammad s son Ali in 1853 1854 Muhammad was reinstated to power in 1856 and Hussein then two or three years old accompanied his father and grandfather to Mecca 23 Muhammad quickly died in 1858 and was succeeded by his eldest son Sharif Abdullah Pasha Hussein s uncle He returned to Mecca after his father s death at a young age when his uncle Sharif Abdullah called them back with his mother in 1861 1862 22 Youth and education edit Hussein was raised at home unlike other Hashemite youth who were typically sent outside the city to grow up among Bedouin nomads Apparently a diligent young man he mastered the principles of the Arabic language and was also educated in Islamic law and doctrine Among his teachers was Sheikh Muhammad Mahmud at Turkizi ash Shinqiti with whom he studied the seven Mu allaqat With Sheikh Ahmad Zayni Dahlan he studied the Quran completing its memorization before the age of 20 23 25 26 During Abdullah s reign Hussein became familiar with the politics and intrigue surrounding the Sharifian court He also participated in numerous expeditions to the Najd and the eastern regions of Hejaz to meet the Arab tribes over whom the Sharifate of Mecca then exerted a loose form of control He learned the customs of the Bedouins including the skills necessary to withstand the harsh desert environment During his travels he also gained a thorough knowledge of the desert s flora and fauna and composed poems in humayni verse a type of vernacular poetry malhun of the Bedouins He also practiced horseback riding and hunting 23 Exile to Constantinople editIn 1875 he married Abdullah s daughter Abdiyah his cousin In 1877 Abdullah died and Hussein along with his cousin Ali ibn Abdullah received the rank of Pasha After a series of political assassinations among his uncles vying for the position of Sharif he gained attention for his independence of thought and was sent back to Constantinople by the reigning uncle at that time in 1892 1893 27 He remained there for 15 years until 1908 mainly focusing on raising his children learning the politics of the Sublime Porte where he aligned with the conservative faction and hoping to return home 27 nbsp Mahmal of Hussein bin Ali 1890s As Emir edit Following the removal of his predecessor in October and the sudden death of his successor shortly thereafter Hussein was appointed grand sharif by official decree of the sultan Abdul Hamid II in November 1908 28 29 However the situation was peculiar for Hussein who arrived in Mecca in the midst of the Young Turk Revolution which brought the Young Turks CUP to power 29 Upon his arrival he met CUP representatives who greeted him as the Constitutional Sharif intending to gauge his response to such a designation He replied Verily these are the lands of Allah in which nothing will ever stand except the Shariah of Allah The constitution of the lands of Allah is the Shariah of Allah and the Sunnah of His Prophet 29 30 Religious stances edit nbsp Hussein bin Ali date unknown His main teacher was Ahmad Zayni Dahlan with whom he became a hafiz 31 32 He had a Shafi i and Hanafi education 33 34 35 but also allied with the Malikis and opposed the Wahhabis 13 at a time when adherence to a madhhab was more fluid 34 Pan Arabism and relationship with the Ottomans edit nbsp The flag of the Arab Revolt was the flag of Hussein bin Ali The flag consists of three horizontal stripes black white and green and a red triangle on the hoist side Each color has a symbolic meaning black represents the Abbasid dynasty or the Rashidun caliphs white represents the Umayyad dynasty and green represents Islam or possibly but it s not certain the Fatimid dynasty The red triangle represents the Hashemite dynasty to which Hussein bin Ali belonged The flag became a symbol of Arab nationalism and unity and is still used today in various forms in the flags of Egypt Jordan Iraq Kuwait Sudan Syria the United Arab Emirates Yemen Palestine Somaliland the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic and Libya Although there is no formal evidence suggesting that Hussein bin Ali was inclined towards Arab nationalism before 1916 the rise of Turkish nationalism towards the end of the Ottoman Empire culminating in the Young Turks Revolution of 1908 strongly displeased the Hashemites and Bedouins 36 Additionally the increasing centralization of the Ottoman Empire the progressive prohibition of Arabic in teaching Turkification policies and the settlement of Turkish colonists in Arab areas worried and frightened Arabs throughout the empire 37 38 In 1908 the Hejaz Railway was completed allowing the Turks to strengthen their control over the Hejaz and provide a rapid response capability to reinforce their garrisons in Mecca and Medina It was built under constant threat of Arab raids such as those from the Harb tribe which demonstrated their hostility towards the project 39 40 Furthermore in April 1915 the Ottoman government began a policy of extermination of the minorities in the Ottoman Empire through various genocides This frightened the Arabs 9 41 42 43 who were the largest minority in the Empire and was openly criticized by Hussein bin Ali 44 45 These oppositions with the Turks became so violent that they overshadowed those that existed in Arab society and Bedouin society and many rival tribes to the Hashemites rallied behind their leadership 38 46 An independentist and anti colonial Arab movement developed mainly in Ottoman Syria where Arab intellectuals and newspapers called for the restoration of the caliphate in the hands of a Quraysh and especially for the acquisition of Arab independence from the Ottoman Empire 47 48 The relationship between Hussein and the Committee of Union and Progress worsened even more after the discovery and foiling of a plot by Enver Pasha to assassinate Hussein 49 50 All of these points led to a violent rupture between Arab elites and the Ottoman political class 51 and are reflected in Hussein s later proclamation of independence where he presented his struggle as a religious and anti colonial one 37 5 52 Twenty days after the start of the Armenian genocide in the Ottoman Empire Hussein bin Ali s son Faisal met with the leaders of the revolutionary organization Al Fatat in Damascus They assured him of their support in case of revolt and recognized Hussein as the representative of the Arab nation 5 53 54 55 When Hussein took up the pan Arab claims in 1916 after his proclamation of independence he became the leading figure behind whom the pan Arabs rallied and is therefore frequently regarded as the father of pan Arabism 8 56 57 During World War I Hussein initially remained allied with the Ottomans but began secret negotiations with the British on the advice of his son Abdullah who had served in the Ottoman parliament up to 1914 and was convinced that it was necessary to separate from the increasingly nationalistic Ottoman administration 51 Relationship with the British edit Main article McMahon Hussein Correspondence nbsp Proclamation of independence of Hussein 27 June 1916 In it Hussein only used religious reasons and not nationalist ones 58 to explain why he was revolting 59 Following deliberations at Ta if between Hussein and his sons in June 1915 during which Faisal counselled caution Ali argued against rebellion and Abdullah advocated action 60 and encouraged his father to enter into correspondence with Sir Henry McMahon over the period 14 July 1915 to 10 March 1916 a total of ten letters five from each side were exchanged between Sir Henry McMahon and Sherif Hussein McMahon was in contact with British Foreign Secretary Edward Grey throughout and Grey was to authorise and be ultimately responsible for the correspondence The British Secretary of State for War Field Marshal Lord Kitchener appealed to him for assistance in the conflict on the side of the Triple Entente Starting in 1915 as indicated by an exchange of letters with Lieutenant Colonel Sir Henry McMahon the British High Commissioner in the Sultanate of Egypt Hussein seized the opportunity and demanded recognition of an Arab nation that included the Hejaz and other adjacent territories as well as approval for the proclamation of an Arab Caliphate of Islam 51 High Commissioner McMahon accepted and assured him that his assistance would be rewarded by an Arab empire encompassing the entire span between Egypt and Persia with the exception of British possessions and interests in Kuwait Aden and the Syrian coast 61 However at that time the British scarcely thought about the promises made their primary concern was winning the war and dismantling the Ottoman Empire 62 63 The fate of the Arab populations and the division of territory were left for a future date 62 nbsp Hussein with dignitaries Arab Revolt edit Main article Arab RevoltHe decided to join the Allied camp immediately because of information 64 that he would soon be deposed as Sharif of Mecca by the Ottoman government in favor of Sharif Ali Haidar leader of the rival Zaʻid family 65 The much publicized executions of the Arab nationalist leaders in Damascus led Hussein to fear for his life if he were deposed in favour of Ali Haidar 65 nbsp Illustration from Le Petit Journal depicting the sons of Hussein bin Ali as they liberate Mecca 16 July 1916 The revolt proper began on 10 June 1916 when Hussein proclaimed the independence of the Kingdom of Hejaz and ordered his supporters to attack the Ottoman garrison in Mecca 66 In the Battle of Mecca there ensued over a month of bloody street fighting between the out numbered but far better armed Ottoman troops and Hussein s tribesmen 67 Indiscriminate Ottoman artillery fire set fire to the veil covering the Kaaba and turned out to be a potent propaganda weapon for the Hashemites who portrayed the Ottomans as desecrating Islam s most holy site 67 68 Also on 10 June another of Hussein s sons the Emir Abdullah attacked Ta if which after an initial repulse settled down into a siege 67 With the British Egyptian artillery support Abdullah took Ta if on 22 September 1916 67 nbsp Ageyl bodyguards of Faisal After this and for most of the war Hussein s sons directed the fighting most notably Faisal future Faisal I of Iraq and Abdullah future Abdullah I of Jordan 49 Hussein mostly stayed in Mecca to direct the operations while his sons were fighting 49 The Arab revolt laid siege to Medina but wasn t able to take it for a year thus impeding the operations 49 During this battle the Ottomans killed and deported the civilian Arabic population of Medina into the Syrian desert an event hidden by the pretense of doing Seferberlik or mobilization 69 70 On 30 October 1916 Emir Abdullah called a meeting of majlis where he read a letter in which Husayn ibn Ali was recognized as sovereign of the Arab nation Then all those present arose and proclaimed him Malik al Arab King of the Arabs 71 During the whole duration of the war Hussein s troops stayed underequipped and lacking artillery which the Allies didn t want to give seing that front as utopical and not as important as the fight was in the Western front among others 65 This lack of artillery and high mobility since most of the troops were mounted Bedouins pushed them to use guerilla tactics in the desert for example by severing Ottoman supplies with the bombings of specific sections of the Hejaz railway 65 After the fall of Medina the Arab troops were able to secure Aqaba quickly and this allowed them to project themselves farther 65 they still ambushed Ottoman troops such as during the battle of Wadi Musa helping themselves with their superior knowledge of the Arabian and Syrian deserts 65 72 This conflict was marked by widespread ethnic cleansing directed at non Turkish populations in the areas affected The troops of Hussein also committed war crimes deciding to execute Turkish troops responsible of the Tafas massacre against Arabian civilians instead of taking them prisoners 73 nbsp A flag bearer mounted on a camel leading the triumphal entry into Aqaba After the fall of Aqaba the Arab forces supplemented with British auxiliaries and with the design of joining forces with the British main armies which were trying to break out of Egypt and Palestine managed to join them 65 During the Battle of Megiddo in September 1918 Hussein s troops led by his son Faisal joined the British forces and managed to utterly destroy the 4th 7th and 8th Ottoman armies and push into retreat the Yildirim Army Group comprising the German Asian Corps and led at the time by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk thus leaving the Palestinian and Arabian front without defence and finally breaking inside the Ottoman Empire 65 74 The battle happened at the same time as the Vardar offensive in the Balkans which managed to overrun Bulgarian defences thus opening the Balkans and ultimately Austria Hungary 75 Since the war was seemingly won and the Ottoman defences were crumbling Faisal projected himself towards Damascus which he took the 1st of October 1918 65 After this he engaged in the pursuit to Haritan pursuing the remnants of the Yildirim Army Group and ultimately taking Aleppo on the 25 of October 1918 thus ending the war on that front 65 King of Hejaz edit Main article Kingdom of Hejaz The US State Department quotes an aide memoire dated 24 October 1917 given by the Arab Bureau to the American Diplomatic Agency in Cairo confirming that Britain France and Russia agreed to recognize the Sherif as lawful independent ruler of the Hejaz and to use the title of King of the Hejaz when addressing him and a note to this effect was handed to him on December 10 1916 76 nbsp Hussein in Amman Transjordan before he left for Aqaba 1921When Hussein declared himself King of the Hejaz he also declared himself King of the Arab lands malik bilad al Arab 63 This only aggravated his conflict with Abdulaziz ibn Saud which was already present because of their differences in religious beliefs and with whom he had fought before the First World War siding with fellow anti Saudis the Ottomans in 1910 Rule edit Hussein initiated a series of reforms including measures to avoid offending Muslims from French or British colonies who undertook the Hajj He also addressed the issue of stray dogs attempted to ensure the security of the Hajj routes and sought to combat the prevalent slave markets in the Hejaz region 77 He undertook the last major restoration of the Masjid al Haram in 1920 78 and a restoration of the mosques of Palestine and more specifically of al Aqsa mosque 79 nbsp Drawing by Khalil Gibran 1916 Armenian genocide edit See also Armenian genocide and Rescue of Armenians during the Armenian genocide Starting from 1917 Hussein made decisions to protect the Armenian refugees and those residing in his lands from the Armenian genocide 80 First he condemned the genocide publicly as early as 1916 stating We specifically bring to the world s condemnation the atrocities committed against the Greeks and Armenians atrocities that our holy law can only disapprove of 81 In this regard he promulgated in 1917 in a decree In the name of Most Merciful Allah and our prophet Muhammad we are addressing our Arab brothers to take Armenian refugees in their families to share with them their belongings camels food shelter blankets and share everything that you have in excess and everything that you can give to people 80 In April 1918 as part of his conquest of the Syrian territories in which the Armenian genocide took place he issued a decree to protect Armenians from persecution and allow them to settle in peace in which he ordered 82 83 84 85 What is requested of you is to protect and to take good care of everyone from the Jacobite Armenian community living in your territories and frontiers and among your tribes to help them in all of their affairs and defend them as you would defend yourselves your properties and children and provide everything they might need whether they are settled or moving from place to place because they are the Protected People of the Muslims Ahl Dimmat al Muslimin about whom the Prophet Muhammad may Allah grant him His blessings and peace said Whosoever takes from them even a rope I will be his adversary on the day of Judgment 86 This is among the most important things we require of you to do and expect you to accomplish in view of your noble character and determination The Armenian National Institute considers it to be the oldest declaration by a head of state to recognize the Armenian genocide 87 Alongside this he gave citizenship to his Armenian subjects 88 According to survivors of the Armenian genocide such as Levon Yotnakhparian Hussein personally received him and was shocked by the news of what was happening 89 He also supported Armenian survivors and provided men and protection for expeditions in the Syrian desert aimed at rescuing Armenian deportees 90 91 According to testimonies this method is said to have saved up to 4 000 people from the genocide in collaboration with Hussein al Attrache a Druze chieftain who then disguised the refugees as Druzes 90 91 His son Faisal provided free transportation to all Armenian refugees for their trip towards the British refugee camp in Damascus and free use of the Hejaz railway even if that meant impeding on the war effort 92 Following World War I edit In the aftermath of the war the Arabs found themselves freed from centuries of Ottoman rule Hussein s son Faisal was made King of Syria but this kingdom proved short lived as the Middle East came under mandate rule of France and the United Kingdom The British Government subsequently made Faisal and his brother Abdullah kings of Iraq and Transjordan respectively The issue of Palestine and deterioration in British relationship edit Starting at the end of the war Hussein found himself in severe conflict with Britain s views on the subject of Palestine 12 93 In January and February 1918 Hussein received the Hogarth Message and Bassett Letter in response to his requests for an explanation of the Balfour Declaration and Sykes Picot Agreement respectively 94 Despite their explanations he stated that Palestine should be included within the borders of the newly founded Arab Kingdom 95 and should refuse Zionist settlers even if he was ready to accept Jewish people in Palestine 93 95 notably those who already lived there and were not coming from foreign countries 12 However even after an assurance by McMahon Hussein did not receive the lands promised by their British allies 96 McMahon claimed that the proposed lands to be taken in by the new Arab State were not purely Arab In actuality McMahon refused to hand over the new lands as the areas in question had already been claimed by the new British ally France 97 98 Having received a British subsidy totalling 6 5m between 1916 and April 1919 in May 1919 the subsidy was reduced to 100K monthly from 200K dropped to 75K from October 50K in November 25K in December until February 1920 after which no more payments were made The British were not disposed to fulfill their promises to Hussein as Colonel Wilson stated in secret correspondence 3 At one time our Arabic copies of Sir H MacMahon s letters to the Grand Sherif could not be found if they are still unavailable it may be somewhat awkward when King Hussein produces the originals Failing a satisfactory solution King Hussein will have some grounds for considering that Great Britain has broken her pledged word 3 In 1919 King Hussein refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles In August 1920 five days after the signing of the Treaty of Sevres Curzon asked Cairo to procure Hussein s signature to both treaties and agreed to make a payment of 30 000 conditional on signature Hussein declined and in 1921 stated that he could not be expected to affix his name to a document assigning Palestine to the Zionists and Syria to foreigners 11 He refused again to accept the Balfour Declaration in 1923 and stated I look at the people of Palestine as I look at my own family without distinction between Muslim Christian Jewish or nationalist 12 In January 1924 Hussein received in Amman a Zionist delegation led by rabbi Yaakov Meir and a British colonel 12 Despite having welcomed them with respect he would not change his position As his stance was seen by the United Kingdom as extremist the British and the Zionist media engaged in press campaigns against Hussein where his positions were misrepresented 12 They also engaged heavily against his Caliphate calling it illegitimate 12 After him becoming Caliph he continued on this path stating I consider Zionism unjust towards Muslims Christians and Orthodox Jews and as a protector of justice I will resist this unjust Zionism 12 This contributed to aggravate his relationship with the Zionists towards a breaking point 12 Caliphate edit Main article Sharifian CaliphateAfter the Caliphate was abolished by the Turkish Grand National Assembly Hussein was proclaimed as Caliph The accounts on the official date and proceedings vary some place the beginning of the Caliphate on 3 March 1924 when Hussein would have declared himself Caliph at his son Abdullah s winter camp in Shunah Transjordan 99 Other accounts such as a Reuters dispatch instead set the date as March 7 1924 and describe Hussein bin Ali being elected as a caliph by Muslims from Mesopotamia Transjordan and Hejaz 100 A third counting of the official date takes place when he received the homage of the majority of the Arab population in Amman as the caliph on March 11 1924 101 Finally a fourth version places the date on Friday March 14 1924 when Hussein is evidently enthroned as caliph in Baghdad during the Friday prayer 100 In any case all sources agree on a date in March 1924 shortly after the abolition of the Ottoman caliphate by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk 99 100 101 Separately he made statements in support of the Ottoman dynasty which had been ruined and exiled from Turkey In this regard he declared 102 nbsp Mahmal of Hussein bin Ali in Mecca 1916 1918The services rendered by the Ottoman family to Islam and Muslims are undeniable their heroism cannot be belittled The recent decision regarding the family exile has pierced the hearts and saddened the spirits of Muslims Therefore we see it as an obligation of Islamic brotherhood to meet the needs of the family and prevent them from experiencing financial difficulties Those who wish to participate in this great endeavor should express their intentions to our representatives in Mecca nbsp Testimony of Vatan quoted by The Times on the approval given to Hussein s caliphate by Vehideddin a nickname of Mehmed VI In the same perspective he financially supported the members of the exiled Ottoman dynasty to prevent them from being ruined Despite his complicated financial and economic situation he provided them with 2400 liras 102 The claim to the title was recognized by a large part of the Hejazi Levantine 14 and more generally Arabic Muslim population 101 He also received the support of Mehmed VI on March 18 1924 one of the last Ottoman Caliphs and the last Ottoman Sultan according to The Times and Vatan that reported that he supported him as the new Caliph 18 The French viewed this proclamation as the worst possible solution in the words of Hubert Lyautey who also defended that the Ottoman Caliphate was better for French interests than the Sharifian Caliphate 103 They believed that having a new influential caliph could risk reviving pan Islamism causing instability in French Muslim colonies in the event of a conflict and potentially giving the Red Sea to the British 103 As a result the French did not support it at all preferring to wait and see how events unfolded Meanwhile they had the Sultan of Morocco ready to assume the caliph title if necessary offering the French a caliph who was more aligned with their interests albeit less significant 103 To reinforce his proclamation and establish legal foundations for his caliphate Hussein convened an Islamic Congress at Mecca in 1924 104 it comprised both Sunni and Shia Muslims and was thus arguably one of the most inclusive Islamic Congresses in history 105 The Congress held twelve sessions before being indefinitely adjourned due to the advance of Saudi forces 104 His Caliphate only lasted for a few months though 106 because he was invaded and defeated quickly by Abdulaziz ibn Saud 107 108 Defeat against Saudis and abdication edit Although the British had supported Hussein from the start of the Arab Revolt and the McMahon Hussein Correspondence they not only chose not to help him to repel the Saudi conquest of Hejaz but even provided weapons to Ibn Saud 107 which eventually took Mecca Medina and Jeddah The British offered several times to assist him and to stop supporting the Saudis in exchange for his recognition of the Balfour Declaration which he refused each time 109 According to the Institute of Contemporary Islamic Thought the British not only supported Ibn Saud against Hussein bin Ali but they also supported him subsequently against the Ikhwan 110 Hussein attempted to make appeals to the League of Nations Muslim powers and Western powers however they did not intervene and merely monitored the events 111 The British were highly negative towards him since he assumed the caliphal title and refused to support him 111 He chose to abdicate 111 After his abdication another of his sons Ali briefly assumed the throne of the Hejaz but then he too had to flee from the encroachment of the Saudi forces Another of Hussein s sons Faisal was briefly King of Syria and later King of Iraq while Abdullah was Emir of Transjordan While he was in exile he still used the title of caliph 112 until his death 113 Exile edit nbsp Hussein bin Ali posing with his retinue and his horses during his exile in Cyprus King Hussein was then forced to flee to Amman Transjordan where his son Abdullah was Emir During this period King Hussein is described as having taken over control that his son wielded and therefore was sent to live in Aqaba which was recently transferred from Hijazi to Transjordanian sovereignty by the British 114 Britain responding to Ibn Saud s plea that the Sharif be expelled from Aqaba 115 exiled him from Aqaba to British controlled Cyprus 116 He lived in Nicosia from 1925 117 with his sons coming to visit him at some times even if his relationships with them were strained except for Zeid who came to visit him the most According to the British governor of Cyprus Ronald Storrs when he went to see Hussein he found his son Zeid reading him the commentary of al Bukhari on the Quran 117 He rarely left his home lived an austere lifestyle and read the Quran religious books he also read Arabic newspapers in the mornings 117 However he still went to see horse races and had brought Arabic horses in his exile that he treated like his own family 117 Hussein also did some interviews with the press during his exile 117 He received some visitors such as Sheikh Fuad al Khatib Muhammad Jamil Bayham who wanted to write his biography or the Jordanian poet Mustafa Wahbi Tal among others 117 Hussein was ruined but the local Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot population considered him to be a very wealthy man and therefore tried to win his favors 117 Meanwhile he was entangled in legal matters regarding property income in Egypt among other things 117 nbsp The funeral of Hussein in Jerusalem 1931 He tried to be friendly towards the various ethnic communities on the island but was particularly close to the Armenians of the island seeing them as victims like himself of the Young Turks 117 Hussein did not have any documented connection with the Turkish Cypriot community though it is possible that one exists there is no mention of him having visited a Turkish mosque in Nicosia 117 He met with the Armenian Archbishop of Nicosia in 1926 and received a warm welcome 117 after that he donated drums and instruments to the Armenian community of the island including the Armenian Philharmonic Melkonian School 118 119 120 nbsp Chief mourners at funeral of Hussein His sons King Ali and Emir Abdullah among crowd nbsp Funeral of Hussein Jerusalem the casket He began to fall ill as early as 1928 but his favorite wife Adila Khanum passed away in 1929 which exacerbated his illness She was buried at Hala Sultan Tekke the largest Muslim shrine on the island 117 His two sons Ali and Abdallah attended the funeral and started making preparations and requesting the British for his repatriation believing that he didn t have much time left to live and that they needed to be by his side 117 Return and death edit nbsp Funeral of Hussein JerusalemAs his health continued to deteriorate and as he was paralyzed by a stroke at age 79 in 1930 114 121 the British became increasingly inclined to send him back to the Middle East They feared that his death would not only stir resentment among Arabs towards the United Kingdom but also potentially strain their relationships with the Hashemite rulers all of whom were allies in the Middle East 117 The Saudis expressed their displeasure with rumors of Hussein s repatriation especially after Hussein expressed his wish to be buried in Mecca an event the Saudis feared would lead to pro Hashemite gatherings 117 Eventually the British decided to repatriate him to Amman with Baghdad as another option they had considered 117 Upon his arrival he was greeted by a large crowd that cheered him and followed him to the Raghadan Palace 117 There while in Amman he published a series of texts in al Yarmouk an Arabic newspaper where he defended his actions and stated once again that he was against the British mandate of Palestine 122 He died on June 4 1931 After a procession where 30 000 people took part 123 he was buried in Jerusalem inside the Arghuniyya a building on the Haram esh Sharif or Temple Mount in a walled enclosure decorated with white marble and carpets 124 125 His son Faisal with whom the relationship was the worse at that point didn t attend his funerals claiming he had government business to attend to 117 On the window above his tomb is written the following inscription Arabic ه ذ ا ق ب ر أ م ير ٱل م ؤ م ن ين ٱل ح س ي ن ب ن ع ل ي lit Haḏa qabru ʾamiri ʾal muˈminina ʾal Ḥusayn bnu ʿAli which translates This is the tomb of the Commander of the Faithful Hussein bin Ali 21 123 126 Marriage and children edit nbsp The sons of Sharif Hussein King of Hejaz King Ali of Hejaz and King Feisal I of Iraq and King Abdullah I of TransjordanHussein who had four wives fathered five sons and three daughters with three of his wives Sharifa Abidiya bint Abdullah died Constantinople Ottoman Empire 1888 buried there eldest daughter of his paternal uncle Amir Abdullah Kamil Pasha Grand Sharif of Mecca Madiha a Circassian Sharifa Khadija bint Abdullah 1866 Amman Transjordan 4 July 1921 second daughter of Amir Abdullah Kamil Pasha Grand Sharif of Mecca Adila Khanum Constantinople Ottoman Empire 1879 Larnaca Cyprus 12 July 1929 buried there at the Hala Sultan Umm Haram Tekke daughter of Salah Bey and granddaughter of Mustafa Rashid Pasha sometime Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire With his first wife Abidiya bint Abdullah he had Prince Ali last King of Hejaz married to Nafisa bint Abdullah Parents of Aliya bint Ali Grandparents of Sharif Ali bin al Hussein Hasan bin Hussein died young citation needed Prince Abdullah Emir later King of Transjordan married to Musbah bint Nasser Suzdil Hanum and Nahda bint Uman Princess Fatima married a European Muslim businessman from France Prince Faisal later King of Iraq and Syria married to Huzaima bint Nasser Parents of Ghazi King of Iraq born 1912 died 4 April 1939 married his first cousin Princess Aliya bint Ali daughter of HM King Ali of Hejaz With his second wife Madiha he had Princess Saleha married Abdullah bin Muhammed With his third wife Adila he had Princess Sara married Muhammad Atta Amin in July 1933 divorced September 1933 Prince Zeid who succeeded in pretense King Faisal II of Iraq upon his assassination in 1958 but never actually ruled as Iraq became a republic Married to Fahrelnissa Kabaagac Works editLiterature edit Hussein wrote extensively his most important papers were published in a book by Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad 122 Otherwise he is known to have written a large series of articles in al Qibla 127 128 Legacy editArt edit nbsp Hussein bin Ali mosque in AqabaSeveral poets wrote about him including Ahmed Shawqi nicknamed the Prince of Poets 129 who wrote a poem about his funerals 130 and Mustafa Wahbi Tal one of the most prominents Jordanian poets 131 132 133 who wrote a poem about him 134 Armenian genocide edit His role in the support of Armenian refugees especially during the Armenian genocide led him to be cited in 2014 and 2020 by Armenian Presidents Serzh Sargsyan and Armen Sarkissian as an example of tolerance and friendship between people 135 136 137 138 also stressed by Jordanian Prince Hassan bin Talal 139 Hussein is quoted in the book Crows of the Desert from Armenian survivor Levon Yotnakhparian when he discusses the help Hussein provided to the survivors and to save victims 90 This book subsequently gave birth to a movie of the same name 140 For his actions during the Armenian genocide Hussein was awarded the title of Righteous of the Armenian genocide by Armenian researchers 141 On Friday 24 April 2015 on the occasion of the centennial of the Armenian genocide Lebanese Sheikh Maher Hammoud referenced Hussein ben Ali in his sermon condemning the genocide 142 Others edit Several mosques bear his name to the present day such as the Hussein bin Ali mosque in Aqaba 143 the Hussein bin Ali mosque in Ma an 144 or the al Husseini mosque in Amman 145 146 A school is named after him in Ma an 147 His house in Aqaba began to be restored in 2023 at the initiative of the Jordanian government 148 149 In 2020 a documentary was made about him and his life by Al Araby 150 which was seen more than five million times on YouTube as of May 2023 151 Decorations edit nbsp Grand cordon of the Order of Muhammad Ali Egypt nbsp Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold Belgium nbsp Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour France nbsp First Class of the Order of Osmanieh Ottoman Empire nbsp First Class of the Order of the Medjidie Ottoman Empire nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of the Nichan Iftikhar Ottoman Empire nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath United Kingdom Ancestry editvteHashemites 152 153 Hashim eponymous ancestor Abd al Muttalib Abu TalibAbdallah Muhammad Islamic prophet Ali fourth caliph Fatimah Hasan fifth caliph Hasan Al Mu thanna Abdullah Musa Al Djawn Abdullah Musa Muhammad Abdullah Ali Suleiman Hussein Issa Abd Al Karim Muta in Idris Qatada Sharif of Mecca Ali Hassan Sharif of Mecca Abu Numayy I Sharif of Mecca Rumaythah Sharif of Mecca Ajlan Sharif of Mecca Hassan Sharif of Mecca Barakat I Sharif of Mecca Muhammad Sharif of Mecca Barakat II Sharif of Mecca Abu Numayy II Sharif of Mecca Hassan Sharif of Mecca Abdullah Sharif of Mecca Hussein Abdullah Muhsin Auon Ra i Al Hadala Abdul Mu een Muhammad Sharif of Mecca Ali nbsp Hussein Sharif of Mecca King of Hejaz nbsp Ali King of Hejaz nbsp Abdullah I King of Jordan nbsp Faisal I King of Syria King of Iraq Zeid pretender to Iraq Abd Al Ilah Regent of Iraq nbsp Talal King of Jordan nbsp Ghazi King of Iraq Ra ad pretender to Iraq nbsp Hussein King of Jordan nbsp Faisal II King of Iraq Zeid nbsp Abdullah II King of Jordan Hussein Crown Prince of Jordan See also editBattle of Mecca 1916 Sharifian Caliphate Siege of Medina Suleiman MousaReferences editNotes edit The legitimacy of his Caliphate is disputed however the date of end can be assigned to his loss of the Harayman in 1925 or to his death in 1931 Both interpretations can be found in sources Citations edit IRAQ Resurgence In The Shiite World Part 8 Jordan amp The Hashemite Factors APS Diplomat Redrawing the Islamic Map 2005 Archived from the original on 9 July 2012 Roshwald Aviel 2013 Part II The Emergence of Nationalism Politics and Power Nationalism in the Middle East 1876 1945 In Breuilly John ed The Oxford Handbook of the History of Nationalism Oxford and New York Oxford University Press pp 220 241 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199209194 013 0011 ISBN 978 0 19 175030 4 Archived from the original on 15 January 2023 Retrieved 16 December 2022 a b c Representation Of Hedjaz At The Peace Conference Hussein Bin Ali s Correspondence With Colonel Wilson Status Of Arabic Countries King s Rejection Of Hedjaz Title Paris Peace Conference 1919 Representation Of Hedjaz Feb 24 1919 Manuscript Number FO 608 97 0068 The National Archives Kew United Kingdom Bosworth Clifford Edmund 1996 The new Islamic dynasties a chronological and genealogical manual Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press p 212 ISBN 978 0 7486 0684 9 OCLC 35692500 a b c Teitelbaum Joshua 1998 Sharif Husayn ibn Ali and the Hashemite Vision of the Post Ottoman Order From Chieftaincy to Suzerainty Middle Eastern Studies 34 1 103 122 doi 10 1080 00263209808701212 JSTOR 4283920 Kramer Martin 1986 Islam assembled the advent of the Muslim Congresses New York Columbia University Press pp 80 86 ISBN 978 1 59740 468 6 OCLC 1113069713 Hussein et la famille Hachemite www lesclesdumoyenorient com Archived from the original on 5 December 2022 Retrieved 2 December 2022 a b Liah Greenfeld ed 2016 Globalisation of nationalism the motive force behind twenty first century politics Colchester ECPR Press p 170 ISBN 978 1 78552 214 7 OCLC 957243120 Politically Pan Arabism was first endorsed by Sharif Hussein bin Ali 1908 1917 the Sharif of Mecca who wanted to gain independence from the Ottoman Empire a b Zeine Zeine N 1973 The emergence of Arab nationalism with a background study of Arab Turkish relations in the Near East Caravan Books ISBN 978 0 88206 000 2 OCLC 590512 page needed Source Records of the Great War Sharif Hussein s Proclamation of Independence from Turkey 27th June 1916 Sayyid Ahmed Amiruddin 13 August 2013 Archived from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 2 December 2022 a b Mousa Suleiman 1978 A Matter of Principle King Hussein of the Hijaz and the Arabs of Palestine International Journal of Middle East Studies 9 2 184 185 doi 10 1017 S0020743800000052 S2CID 163677445 a b c d e f g h i Al Momani Nidal Daoud Mohammad 2014 Al Sharif Al Hussein Bin Ali between the Zionists and the Palestinians in 1924 A decisive year in the political history of Al Hussein Journal of Human Sciences 2014 2 312 335 doi 10 12785 jhs 20140213 a b Hanne Olivier 17 November 2016 SPM ed La revolte arabe en 1916 mythe et realite TELEMME Temps espaces langages Europe meridionale Mediterranee in French 331 Archived from the original on 8 October 2022 Retrieved 7 October 2022 Des l automne 1916 il commence a imprimer sa marque dans le Hejaz puisque le corps senatorial qu il constitue le 7 octobre est compose notamment des muftis chafite et malekite mais pas des representants du rite hanafte offciel dans l empire ottoman ni hanbalite celui des wahhabites Le 23 decembre il se declare indifferent a la monarchie et libre face aux puissances europeennes et va jusqu a decliner l offre de debarquement franco britannique 27 decembre Son obsession reste le califat Sa legislation en est le signe puisqu il lance la lutte contre le peche a Medine Le 30 octobre 1916 les cafes ne peuvent rien vendre durant les heures de prieres le 3 mai 1917 l alcool est interdit Il restaure en janvier 1917 les titres traditionnels arabo musulmans cherif sayyid shaykh et abolit les titres turcs effendi bey pacha a b الوطن جريدة webmaster 5 May 2020 مملكة الحجاز وقــصـــة الـغــزو المـســل ـــح جريدة الوطن in Arabic Archived from the original on 16 May 2023 Retrieved 16 May 2023 وذكر الوثائقي أنه في 1924م اندفع الشريف الحسين بن علي متشبثا برداء النبوة ليعلن نفسه خليفة للمسلمين فتلقى بيعة واسعة في الحجاز والشام الأمر الذي زاد من غضب بن سعود فكان إعلان الخلافة القشة التي قصمت ظهر البعير فقرر بن سعود غزو الحجاز فورا British Secret Service 29 March 1924 Jeddah Report 1 29 Mars 1924 Jeddah British Secret Service p FO 371 100CWE 3356 Kramer Martin 1986 Islam assembled the advent of the Muslim Congresses Columbia University Press ISBN 978 1 59740 468 6 OCLC 1113069713 page needed نضال داود المومني 1996 الشريف الحسين بن علي والخلافة a b Central File Decimal File 867 9111 Internal Affairs Of States Public Press Newspapers Turkey Clippings And Items March 22 1924 March 12 1925 March 22 1924 March 12 1925 MS Turkey Records of the U S Department of State 1802 1949 Records of the Department of State Relating to Internal Affairs of Turkey 1910 1929 National Archives United States Archives Unbound link gale com apps doc SC5111548903 GDCS GRC pg 5 Accessed 17 May 2023 Peters Francis E 2017 1994 Mecca A Literary History of the Muslim Holy Land Princeton Legacy Library Princeton New Jersey and Woodstock Oxfordshire Princeton University Press p 397 ISBN 978 1 4008 8736 1 OCLC 468351969 Strohmeier Martin 3 September 2019 The exile of Husayn b Ali ex sharif of Mecca and ex king of the Hijaz in Cyprus 1925 1930 Middle Eastern Studies 55 5 733 755 doi 10 1080 00263206 2019 1596895 S2CID 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lost opportunities of Anglo Arab relations 1916 1924 Thesis hdl 20 500 11929 sdsu 57703 OCLC 1228848499 ProQuest 2451400709 Further reading editLongrigg Steven Helmsley Ochsenwald William 2021 Ḥusayn b ʿAli In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 3rd ed Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 External links editNewspaper clippings about Hussein bin Ali King of Hejaz in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW al Ḥusayn ibn Ali ibn Muḥammad ibn Abd al Mu in ibn AwnHouse of HashimDhawu Awn branch of Banu QatadahBorn 1854 Died 4 June 1931 Regnal titles New creationArab revolt King of the Arab LandsOctober 1916 3 October 1924Recognized by the Allies only as King of Hejaz Succeeded byAli ibn al Husaynas King of Hejaz Preceded byHimselfas Ottoman emir Sharif and Emir of MeccaJune 1916 3 October 1924 Succeeded byAli ibn al Husayn Political offices Preceded byAbd al Ilah Pasha Sharif and Emir of MeccaNovember 1908 June 1916Ottoman appointed Succeeded byHimselfas independent emir Succeeded byAli Haydar Pasha Sunni Islam titles Preceded byAbdulmecid II TITULAR Caliph of the Muslims11 March 1924 3 October 1924Reason for succession failure Not widely recognized outside Middle East Haramayn invaded Vacant Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hussein bin Ali King of Hejaz amp oldid 1218305535, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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