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Topic: Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad bin Saud


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In the News (Thu 9 Jul 09)

  
  House of Saud - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
The House of Saud is also linked with Wahhabism through the marriage of the son of Muhammad ibn Saud with the daughter of Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab in 1744.
The Head of the House of Saud is the King of Saudi Arabia who serves as Head of State and monarch of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Sons of Abdul Aziz (ibn Saud, the founder of the modern Saudi state) are from the Abdul Aziz line of the family, and have been the only members allowed to serve as King or Crown Prince.
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/Saud   (604 words)

  
 Saud bin Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad al Saud - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Saud bin Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad al Saud (Arabic: سعود بن عبد العزيز بن محمد آل سعود) ruled the First Saudi State from the death of his father Abdul Aziz in 1803 until his own death in 1814.
bin Muhammad al Saud's reign was a period of religious cleansing in Arabia.
The forces of Saud also felt that they were emulating the example of Muhammad who smashed idols when he retook Mecca.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Saud_bin_Abdul_Aziz_bin_Muhammad_al_Saud   (309 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Mohammed bin Laden was a native of the Chafeite (Sunni) Hadhramaut coast in southern Yemen and emigrated to Saudi Arabia prior to World War I.
The bin Laden connection with the House of Saud was severely strained in 1979, when pro-Iranian Islamist insurgents briefly took control of the mosque at Mecca.
The two closest friends of King Fahd were Prince Mohammed ben Abdullah (son of Abdul Aziz ibn Saud's youngest brother) who died in the early 1980s and Salem bin Laden who died in 1988, when a plane that he was flying flew into powerlines in San Antonio, Texas.
www.gamecheatz.net /games.php?title=Bin_Laden_family   (1891 words)

  
 King Abdul Aziz   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Abdul Aziz was born about 1880 and spent the early years of his life with his father in exile in Kuwait.
On 22 September 1933, the lands under the control of Abdul Aziz were renamed the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and in 1936 a treaty was signed with Yemen marking the southern borders of the Kingdom.
What set Abdul Aziz apart from other leaders was not only his ability to unite the Kingdom, but the manner in which he did so and the example he set for his successors and his people.
www.kfshrc.edu.sa /ksa100/html/king_abdul_aziz.html   (1565 words)

  
 SUPPLEMENT   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
King Abdul Aziz built the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia on the strong foundation of the oneness of God and Submission to the Judgement of God's Holy Book and the Traditions of His Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him.
Abdul Aziz, driven by a strong belief in God, strong will and all instinctive understanding of the needs of the hour and aspirations of his people, succeeded in overcoming obstacles and laid the foundation of the young state under tile banner of: "There is no divinity but God and Muhammad is the Messenger of God".
His Majesty, late King Abdul Aziz, who is considered to be one of the towering personalities of modern history, finally succeeded, through a strenuous journey of struggles, to re-unite and re-build the state of Saudi Arabia.
independent-bangladesh.com /news/sep/23/23092005sl.htm   (2984 words)

  
 Saud bin Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad Al Saud - The Saudi Arabian Information Resource
In 1803 (1218 AH), Saud bin Abdul Aziz, provoked by the Sharif of Makkah, marched on the Holy City and took it.
The Turkish Empire concluded that action must be taken and invited Muhammad Ali, the Viceroy of Egypt (which at that time fell within the Ottoman sphere of influence) to dismantle the work of Muhammad bin Saud, his son and grandson, and to put an end to the emerging nation.
Before Saud bin Abdul Aziz died in 1814 (1230 AH), Muhammad Ali had retaken the Hijaz.
www.saudinf.com /main/b24.htm   (153 words)

  
 Bin Laden: The Man Who Declared War on America   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Osama bin Muhammad bin Laden was born in the city of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, probably in 1957.
Muhammad bin Laden was conscientious about education and advancement in life and tried to provide his children with proper schooling.
During the 1970s, the bin Laden company was involved in the construction of roads, buildings, mosques, airports, and the entire infrastructure of many of the Arab countries of the Persian Gulf.
www.usatoday.com /life/books/fc/2001-10-26-bin-laden.htm   (968 words)

  
 The Kharijites and their impact on Contemporary Islam 6
Muhammad Ali of Egypt and his son Ibrahim Pasha were assigned by the Ottomans to remove the Wahhabites from the Hijaz.
Abdul Aziz was appointed king, consolidated the Najd, and steadily started to increase the scope of his power.
Despite the destructive nature of Wahhabism, Abdul Aziz was, nonetheless, an insightful leader that managed to return a measure of security to a country that was by then the victims of all sorts of social dangers.
www.sunnah.org /aqida/kharijites6.htm   (1804 words)

  
 Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Ibn Sa'ūd was born in Riyadh, Arabia, the son of Abd al-Rahman bin Faysal bin Turki Al Saud and Sara bint Ahmad al-Kabir Sudayri.
In 1964 King Saud was deposed by the Saudi Council of Ministers and succeeded by King Faisal, another of Ibn Saud's sons.
^ "ibn Saud" or "bin Saud", meaning 'son of Saud', was a sort of title borne by previous heads of the House of Saud, similar to a Scottish clan chief's title of "the MacGregor" or "the MacDougall".
www.higiena-system.com /wiki/link-Abdul_Aziz_Al-Saud   (1486 words)

  
 wbs_logo.jpg
Muhammad bin Saud adopted Wahhabism as the religion of his tribe, which occupied the eastern Arabian province of Najd.
Between 1919-1926 the Wahhabi Saud tribe conquered the western Arabian province of Hejaz, with its Holy Cities of Mecca and Medina, from Sherif Hussein of the Hashemite dynasty.
On September 18, 1932, "King" Abdul Aziz bin Saud proclaimed the establishment of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
www.biblestudents.ca /pages/in_the_news/news_terrorism.html   (1258 words)

  
 We Are Michigan : Your Alternative News & Information Resource
Osama bin Muhammad bin Awad bin Laden was born in 1955, the youngest of some twenty surviving sons of one of Saudi Arabia's wealthiest and most prominent families.
Bin Laden's quietude, however, did not last long, as he increasingly came under the sway of two of Saudi Arabia's most militant clerics, Sheikhs Safar Hawali and Salman Awdah—whose views are considered revolutionary by the Saudi regime, and whose fatwas, or religious opinions, bin Laden still propagates.
Bin Laden gave the mullah an initial payment of three million dollars for the cause, and the Taliban was able to capture the key center of Jalalabad in September of 1996.
www.wearemichigan.com /world/resources/binLaden.htm   (4317 words)

  
 kingaziz
King Abdul Aziz bin Abdul Rahman Al Saud or (Ibn Saud) was born in Riyadh in 1880.
Abdul Aziz (Ibn Saud)'s drive for consolidation was successful to the extent that by the end of 1904, he had managed to break the stranglehold of the Rashid and push them into the area at Jabal Shammar in northern Nejd.
Abdul Aziz (Ibn Saud), responding to a popular demand from the people of Makkah, became the King of Hijaz and the Sultan of Nejd and its Dependencies.
web.pdx.edu /~aziz/kingaziz.html   (2133 words)

  
 Abdul Aziz bin Abdul Rahman ibn Faisal Al Saud (Ibn Saud)
Abdul Aziz bin Abdul Rahman ibn Faisal Al Saud, also known by several abbreviated forms of this name, or simply as Ibn Saud, was first monarch of Saudi Arabia.
In 1901, at the age of 21, Ibn Saud succeeded his father, Abdul Rahman bin Faisal, to become the leader of the Saud dynasty with the title Sultan of Nejd.
The armies of the House of Saud suffered a major defeat on June 15, 1904, but his forces soon reconstituted and resumed the offensive as the Turkish troops left the country due to supply problems.
www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org /jsource/biography/AlSaud.html   (920 words)

  
 Whabbism
Muhammad Ibn 'Abdi'-l-Wahhab daughter married Abdul Aziz, son of Muhammad bin Saud, leader of the al-Saud tribe, in 1744.
Muhammad bin Saud adopted Wahhabism as the religion for his al-Saud tribe, which lived in the eastern Arabian province of Najd.
Osama bin Laden, a member of the bin Laden family nicknamed the "Rockefellers of Arabia", is a Wahhabi.
www.christiantrumpetsounding.com /whabbism.htm   (530 words)

  
 WAHABISM EXPOSED! , The truth about wahabism, wahhaabis and Sheikh Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Sheikh Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab ibn Sulaiman ibn Ali ibn Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn Rashid al Tamimi was born in the year 1115 A.H.(1703 C.E.) in ‘Ayina to the north of Riyadh, in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia during the reign of Abdulla ibn Muhammad ibn Hamd ibn Muammar.
Sheikh Muhammad acquired a good deal of knowledge from him and came to be loved and held in high esteem by his teacher.
The Sheikh and his message came to be widely known, and his reputation spread far and wide and it also reached Sulaiman bin Muhammad bin Urai’ir, the Governor of Ahsa and the children of Khalid.
sultan.org /articles/wahabism.html   (4371 words)

  
 Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad bin Saud - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad bin Saud (Arabic: عبد العزيز ن محمد بن سعود) was the second ruler of the First Saudi State and son of Muhammad bin Saud.
Their standing was also boosted by Abdul Aziz's practice of holding open meetings where tribal elders could meet with him, allowing access to their ruler.
One notable event of his reign were attacks on the shrines of Ali bin Abu Talib in Najaf, Iraq and on the shrine of Imam Husayn in Karbala, Iraq.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Abdul_Aziz_bin_Muhammad_bin_Saud   (191 words)

  
 Tracking Osama bin Laden
To bin Laden, King Fahd's departure can only be considered a victory in his campaign to rid Saudi Arabia of the contamination of American rule through their surrogates in the House of Saud.
Bin Laden has waited for this since 1991, when he was cast aside by the Saudis for offering his fighting forces in defence of the kingdom against Saddam Hussein.
With a deteriorating economic and political environment, bin Laden may decide that the time is approaching to activate the thousands of Saudi dissidents in the kingdom who form the core of his support, and thereby exploit the schism between Abdullah and Sultan to launch the destabilisation of the Saudi monarchy.
www.massagedepot.com /pointsbinLaden.htm   (5117 words)

  
 HISTORY OF SAUDI ARABIA
In the early 18th Century, Sheikh Muhammad Bin Abdul Wahab, the son of a religious judge, called on Muslims to return to the original form of Islam.
Initially persecuted, he later found protection in the town of Diriyah, which was ruled by Muhammad Bin Saud, a member of the Al-Saud family.
Twenty-one year old Abdul Aziz Bin Adbul Rahman Al-Saud left Kuwait in 1901, determined to recapture all of the territory once held by his forefathers.
www.angelfire.com /tn/BattlePride/Saudi2.html   (394 words)

  
 Wahhabism, bin Ladenism, and the Saudi Arabia Dilemma, UCLA International Institute
The ulema ratified the 1964 deposing of Saud bin Abdul Aziz and issued a fatwa, or a religious ruling, legitimating the 1991 Gulf War attack on Iraq.
Bin Laden, he said, adopted the idea of labeling others as takfir and affected social conservatism, especially in the dress and role of women among his followers.
Bin Laden, however, diverged from Wahhabism in one important way: He went against the Wahhabi state and established his own political order in al-Qaeda, thus dismissing the prescribed obeisance to Saudi rulers.
www.international.ucla.edu /article.asp?parentid=25057   (1717 words)

  
 History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
During that meeting, Emir Muhammad Bin Saud, the ruler of Dariyah and the central Najd region of the peninsula, and Sheikh Muhammad Bin Abdul Wahhab, a Muslim scholar and reformer, reached a compact to dedicate their lives to restoring the pure teachings of Islam to the Muslim community.
Within forty years of that fateful meeting, Muhammad Bin Saud and his son and successor, Abdul Aziz, managed to garner the support of numerous tribes attracted to the rulers of Dariyah by the purity of Islam they upheld and the simplicity of their ruling style.
Among his followers was his young son Abdul Aziz, already making his mark as a fierce warrior for the cause of Islam and a natural leader of men.
www.kfshrc.edu.sa /ksa100/html/history.html   (1542 words)

  
 #1 World's Most Wanted Terrorist - Osama Bin Laden   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Abdul Aziz Bin Fahd Bin Nasser Al-Mothem, Khalid Bin Ahmed Bin Ibrahim Al-Sa'eed, Riyadh Bin Suleiman Bin Is'haq Al-Hajeri and Muslih Bin Ayedh Al-Shemrani all pleaded guilty and were executed by beheading on May 30th 1996.
Bin Laden's faction came to be called, turned their fire against the US and its allies in the Middle East.
Bin Laden was involved in at least three major attacks - the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, the 1996 killing of 19 US soldiers in Saudi Arabia, and the 1998 bombings in Kenya and Tanzania.
itscool.com /OsamaBinLaden.htm   (8714 words)

  
 Osmanlı Tarihi Kültürü Medeniyeti Edebiyatı Sanatı
Abdullah bin Saud succeeded his father Saud bin Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad al Saud in 1814 and ruled until 1818.
While the House of Saud had many successes under Saud, they had also managed to get into a war with the Ottoman Empire.
As such, Abdullah was almost immediately faced with the prospect of having to face an army under the command of Muhammad Ali.
www.osmanlimedeniyeti.com /wiki/Abdullah_bin_Saud_.html   (152 words)

  
 DAWN - Letters; August 21, 2005
Later on with the active support of his able son and heir Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad bin Saud (1755-1803) this doctrine was spread over the entire Najd, the Saudi family’s sphere of influence.
Besides that, Shah Waliullah Dehlvi (1703-62), who is called the founder of Islamic modernism despite being a contemporary of Muhammad bin Abdul Wahab, had attempted the reintegration of the socio-economic and religio-ethical structure of Islam.
In fact, Muhammad bin Abdul Wahab was influenced by the preaching of Imam Taymiyah of the 13th century of the strict Hambli school of thought.
www.dawn.com /2005/08/21/letted.htm   (2862 words)

  
 The Founder   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Sheikh Muhammad was primarily taught by his father, Sheikh Ibrahim, and his uncle, Sheikh Abdullah.
Being one of the prominent students of his uncle, Sheikh Abdullah bin Abdullatif, the latter commended him to the late King Abdul Aziz Al-Saud as his successor in leading prayers, teaching Islamic subjects and ruling on judicial and juristic issues raised by people.
Sheikh Muhammad bin Ibrahim Al-Sheikh passed away at an age of 80 years on Wednesday, 24th Ramadhan, 1389 H. The funeral prayer for him was performed in Riyadh Grand Mosque.
www.aldaawah.com /English/index_theFounder.html   (553 words)

  
 Osama bin Laden, the Islamic terrorist believed responsible for the September 11, 2001 attacks - The Crime library
Following the cataclysmic events of September 11, the U.S. authorities were quick to name bin Laden their prime suspect.  The reasons for their suspicions are many, and the evidence collected during the ensuing investigation seems to support their theory.
Osama bin Laden (Usamah bin Muhammad bin Awad bin Ladin) was born in 1957 or 1958 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.  He was the seventh son in a family of 52 children.
The success of the Afghan war changed bin Laden; he saw that a lightly armed force could defeat a superpower.  Most observers believe that this was an important turning point in his organization because he was able to use the victory in Afghanistan to advance his goal of "radicalizing" Islam.
www.crimelibrary.com /terrorists/binladen/2.htm   (1856 words)

  
 USCFL - Who's Who in the House of Saud
King Fahd, Crown Prince Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz al-Saud, Prince Sultan bin Abdul Aziz, Prince Salman, Prince Nayef, Prince Saud al-Faisal, Prince Nawaf bin Abdul Aziz, Bandar bin Sultan, Prince Turki al-Faisal, Muhammad bin Fahd, Abdul Aziz bin Fahd, Khalid bin Sultan.
After bin Laden became a liability and then a threat to the Saudi regime, Turki reportedly tried to get the Taliban to hand him over in 1998.
Despite the scandal, according to a London-based dissident, Saad el-Fagih, Muhammad is ''the most visible of his brothers and a secret pretender to the Saudi throne.'' While his power stems mostly from being the son of the afflicted king, he has leveraged that into significant wealth through dealings with Western companies in Saudi Arabia.
www.freelebanon.org /articles/a344.htm   (1210 words)

  
 Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad bin Saud - The Saudi Arabian Information Resource
Muhammad bin Saud's son, Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad bin Saud, ruled from 1765 (1179 AH) through 1803 (1218 AH), retaining the association with Imam Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab in the same capacity as his father and continuing to reform Islam in the peninsula.
Abdul Aziz successfully captured the city of Riyadh in 1773 (1146 AH).
As a result, the Saudi state began to spread rapidly and within fifteen years had extended its authority all over Nejd.
www.saudinf.com /main/b23.htm   (103 words)

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