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      • Ibn Saud was 15 at the time. He and his family initially took refuge with the Al Murrah, a Bedouin tribe in the southern desert of Arabia.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibn_Saud
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  2. Quick Facts. Also called: Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia. In full: ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz ibn ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn Fayṣal ibn Turkī ʿAbd Allāh ibn Muḥammad Āl Saʿūd. Born: c. 1880, Riyadh, Arabia. Died: November 9, 1953, Al-Ṭāʾif, Saudi Arabia. Title / Office: king (1932-1953), Saudi Arabia. Founder: Ikhwān. Notable Family Members: son Fahd. son ʿAbd Allāh.

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  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ibn_SaudIbn Saud - Wikipedia

    Abdulaziz bin Abdul Rahman, also known as Ibn Saud, was born on 15 January 1875 in Riyadh. [5][6] He was the fourth child and third son of Abdul Rahman bin Faisal, [7] one of the last rulers of the Emirate of Nejd, the Second Saudi State, a tribal sheikhdom centered on Riyadh. [8]

  4. King Abdulaziz al-Saud was the first monarch of Saudi Arabia. Born as the son of Abdul Rahman bin Faisal Al Saud, the last ruler of the Second Saudi State, he consolidated his control over his ancestral lands and became the ruler of nearly all of central Arabia.

    • Was Ibn Saud a Bedouin?1
    • Was Ibn Saud a Bedouin?2
    • Was Ibn Saud a Bedouin?3
    • Was Ibn Saud a Bedouin?4
    • Was Ibn Saud a Bedouin?5
  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BedouinBedouin - Wikipedia

    The Bedouin originated in the Syrian Desert [19] and Arabian Desert but spread across the rest of the Arab world in West Asia and North Africa after the spread of Islam. [20] The English word bedouin comes from the Arabic badawī, which means "desert-dweller", and is traditionally contrasted with ḥāḍir, the term for sedentary people. [21]

  6. Ibn Saud's family (then known as the Al Muqrin) traced its descent to the Banu Hanifa tribes but, despite popular misconceptions, Muhammad bin Saud was neither a nomadic bedouin nor a tribal leader. Rather, he was the chief (emir) of an agricultural settlement near modern-day Riyadh, called Diriyah. [2]

  7. Jun 19, 2012 · In 1902 Ibn Saud captured Riyadh, in 1906 he defeated an Ottoman-Bedouin force and in 1918 he defeated the Hashemites, ejecting them from the Hijaz from where they wandered to Damascus, Amman and Baghdad, and eventually established two states.

  8. Feb 15, 2019 · Meanwhile, Ibn Saud rode 400 kilometers north with 6,000 men to confront the forces of his old enemy, the Al-Rashids, at a spot called Jarrab in what was both a traditional bedouin battle,...

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