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  1. She was the widow of Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Rashid, tenth Emir of the Rashidi Emirate which was overthrown by Ibn Saud. By her former husband, Fahda was the mother of at least two sons. She bore three children to Ibn Saud, and died when the eldest among them, the future king Abdullah, was only six years old. Her children with Ibn Saud were:

    • 23 September 1932
    • 23 September 1932 – 9 November 1953
    • Post established
    • Saud
  2. king (1932-1953), Saudi Arabia. Founder: Ikhwān. Notable Family Members: son Fahd. son Fayṣal. son Saud. son ʿAbd Allāh. Ibn Saud (born c. 1880, Riyadh, Arabia—died November 9, 1953, Al-Ṭāʾif, Saudi Arabia) was a tribal and Muslim religious leader who formed the modern state of Saudi Arabia and initiated the exploitation of its oil.

    • John Bagot Glubb
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ibn_SaudIbn Saud - Wikipedia

    Ibn Saud was the son of Abdul Rahman bin Faisal, Emir of Nejd, and Sara bint Ahmed Al Sudairi. The family were exiled from their residence in the city of Riyadh in 1890. Ibn Saud reconquered Riyadh in 1902, starting three decades of conquests that made him the ruler of nearly all of central and north Arabia.

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  5. Aug 1, 2005 · The modern House of Saud was established in 1932, when Abd al-Aziz ibn Saud, a direct descendent of the 18th-century ruler, established the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia with himself as absolute monarch.

  6. House of Saud is a translation of Al Saud, an Arabic dynastic name formed by adding the word Al (meaning "family of" or "House of") to the personal name of an ancestor. In the case of the Al Saud, the ancestor is Saud ibn Muhammad ibn Muqrin, the father of the dynasty's 18th century founder Muhammad bin Saud (Muhammad, son of Saud).

    • 1720; 303 years ago
    • Saud I (died 1725)
  7. Apr 2, 2024 · Arabic: Āl Saʿūd (“House of Saʿūd”) Ibn Saud. Ibn Saud (ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz II), founder of the third Saudi kingdom and the country of Saudi Arabia. Saud dynasty, rulers of Saudi Arabia. In the 18th century Muhammad ibn Saud (died 1765), chief of an Arabian village that had never fallen under control of the Ottoman Empire, rose to power ...

  8. The Holy Alliance. Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, founder of "Wahhabism," an austere form of Islam, arrives in the central Arabian state of Najd in 1744 preaching a return to "pure" Islam. He seeks ...

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