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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Arabian Peninsula Political Geography > Saudi Arabia
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Saudi Arabia, Arabian Peninsula Political Geography

Related Category: Arabian Peninsula Political Geography

Saudi Arabia[sAOO´dE urA´bEu, sou´–, sO–] Pronunciation Key - History-

Origins of Saudi Arabia

As a political unit, Saudi Arabia is of relatively recent creation. Its origins lay with the puritanical Wahhabi movement (18th cent.), which gained the allegiance of the powerful Saud family of the Nejd, in central Arabia. Supported by a large Bedouin following, the Sauds brought most of the peninsula under their control, except for Yemen and the Hadhramaut in the extreme south. The Wahhabi movement was crushed (1811–18) by an Egyptian expedition under the sons of Muhammad Ali. After reviving in the mid-19th cent., the Wahhabis were defeated in 1891 by the Rashid dynasty, which gained effective control of central Arabia.

It was Abd al-Aziz ibn Saud, known as Ibn Saud, a descendant of the first Wahhabi rulers, who laid the basis of the present Saudi Arabian state. Beginning the Wahhabi reconquest at the turn of the century, Ibn Saud took Riyadh in 1902 and was master of the Nejd by 1906. On the eve of World War I he conquered the Al-Hasa region from the Ottoman Turks and soon extended his control over other areas. He was then ready for the conquest of the Hejaz, ruled since 1916 by Husayn ibn Ali of Mecca. The Hejaz fell to Saud in 1924–25 and in 1932 was combined with the Nejd to form the kingdom of Saudi Arabia, an absolute monarchy, ruled under Islamic law. In much of the country, King Ibn Saud compelled the Bedouins to abandon traditional ways and encouraged their settlement as farmers.

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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Arabia
Fahd ibn Abdul Aziz
Faisal ibn Abd al-Aziz ibn Saud
hajj
Hejaz
Hofuf
Husayn ibn Ali
Ibn Saud
Iran-Iraq War
Jidda
Khalid ibn Abd al-Aziz al-Saud
Henry Alfred Kissinger
Mecca
Medina, city, Saudi Arabia
Muhammad Ali, pasha of Egypt
Gamal Abdal Nasser
Nejd
Persian Gulf Wars
Riyadh
Saud
Shiites
United Arab Emirates
Wahhabi

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