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History of Riyadh - The Capital City of Saudi Arabia |
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A
sense of history - what had gone before - the first Saudi era
Al-Riyadh (from the word Al-Rowdah, meaning garden) was a small settlement formed at the
confluence of several wadis (riverbeds). It had not been the "capital" of the
Al-Saud for long. The home base of the tribe was (and remains) Ad-Diriyah, a walled town
to the north-west founded 500 years ago, where in the mid-eighteenth century an alliance
was formed between Mohammed Ibn Saud and a muslim cleric Mohammed Ibn Abdul-Wahab, who
advocated a return to a "pure" form of Islam. The mixture proved popular and, by
a combination of conquest and alliances, the Al-Saud soon controlled much of the peninsula
including the Hejaz (western Arabia), capturing Makkah in 1802. However, this was a time
of colonialism and the Turkish Ottoman Empire resented Ibn Saud’s power and control over
the holy cities of Makkah and Medinah. A military force was sent from Egypt in 1815, which
drove the Saudis out of the Hejaz and by 1819 had arrived at the gates of Diriyah. A six
month siege ensued with daily artillery bombardment of the Al-Tob/adobe (mud-and-straw
brick) town. Eventually surrender was the only option. The Saudis were driven out of the
area. Diriyah was in ruins and was never rebuilt. |
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A
sense of home - and having to leave - the second Saudi era
Five years later, in 1824, Imam ibn Turki ibn Abdullah recaptured the area and set up a
Saudi capital in Riyadh for the first time. The Saudi’s influence grew strong again as
the tribal conflicts continued. Riyadh became a political and economic centre, although
still a very small settlement, consisting of one, two and three storey adobe houses and
palaces. It was into this environment that Abdul-Aziz was born. Little did he know that he
too would be driven out of his home. In 1891, the Al-Rashid and their allies from the
north, who had been rivals of the Al-Saud for over 100 years, succeeded in capturing
Riyadh, and Abdul-Aziz and his father Imam Abdul-Rahman fled to Kuwait, where they were
given shelter by Sheikh Mubarak.
Aged only fifteen, Abdul-Aziz was a refugee. And like many refugees his only thought was
to return home. In these formative years, he listened carefully to what went on in
Mubarak’s court, learned the intricacies of tribal politics and family feuds (witnessing
first-hand, assassinations and the like). He also learned about international diplomacy.
At this time the British had an exclusive treaty with Kuwait and Abdul-Aziz was party to
many important negotiations concerning control of the Gulf and the passage to India.
Armed with this knowledge, but little else more than his desire to retake his homeland,
Abdul-Aziz set out from Kuwait in late 1901 aged only 26, and headed for Riyadh with a
small band of followers. His finest hour was soon to arrive. |
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Taking
back his homeland and the beginning of the 3rd era
Leaving most of his men on the outskirts, on January 2nd 1902, Abdul-Aziz and a small
group slipped into the city under cover of darkness. Surprising the Rashidi governor Ajlan
on his morning stroll outside the main gate of the Musmak fortress, the commando group
attacked him and his guards with rifles and spears. One of Abdul-Aziz’s men Ibn Jalawi
threw his spear and its tip broke off in the gate itself and can still be seen today.
Ajlan and his men scrambled back to the fort but, despite being seriously outnumbered, the
Saudi force broke through, Ajlan was killed and the garrison surrendered. He who held the
Musmak Fort, held Riyadh, so Abdul-Aziz was now in charge. This day, 15th Shawal 1319 in
the Hejira calendar, is considered the first day of the 3rd Saudi era and the birth of
what was to become Saudi Arabia. |
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