Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Wahhabi movement was perceived as an endeavour led by the settled populations of the Arabian Peninsula against the nomadic domination of trade-routes, taxes as well as their jahiliyya customs. Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab had criticized the nomadic tribes and the Wahhabi chroniclers praised Saudi rulers for taming the Bedouins. [121]
The Ottomans had grown increasingly wary of Ali's reign. ordering him to go to war with the Wahhabi state would serve their interests regardless as the destruction of either would be beneficial to them. [22] Tensions between Ali and his troops also prompted him to send them to Arabia and fight against the Wahhabi movement where many would die. [23]
The designation Wahhabi for this movement was likely first used by Sulayman ibn Abd al-Wahhab, an ardent critic of his brother's views, who used the term in his purported treatise Fasl al-Khitab fi al-Radd ala Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab. [10] The movement's political opponents widely used the term to denounce it. [11]
The Wahhabi cause would flourish for more than two decades after Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab's death; until the defeat of the First Saudi State in the Ottoman-Saudi war. 'Abd Allah would spend his last days as an exile in Cairo, having witnessed the destruction of Dirʿiyya and the execution of his talented son Sulayman ibn 'Abd Allah in 1818. [106] [107]
On 18 Dhu al-Hijjah, coincident with the anniversary of Ghadir Khum, [2]: 74 Wahhabis of the Najd led by Abdulaziz bin Muhammad ' s son, Saud, attacked Karbala. The Ottoman garrison escaped, and the Wahhabis were left free to loot the city and the shrine and kill 2,000 [2]: 74 –5,000 people.
The Battle of Izki was a battle that took place in June 1808 AD, between the First Saudi State led by Mutlaq bin Muhammad Al-Mutairi Against the Iranian campaign led by Saadi Khan and Oman led by Said bin Sultan and his brother Salem bin Sultan.
Tenggelamnja Kapal van der Wijck (The Sinking of the van der Wijck) is an Indonesian serial and later novel by Haji Abdul Malik Karim Amrullah (Hamka; 1908–1981) published in 1938.
Al-Baqi Cemetery, the oldest and one of the two most important Islamic graveyards [1] located in Medina, in current-day Saudi Arabia, was demolished [2] in 1806 and, following reconstruction in the mid-19th century, was destroyed again in 1925 [3]: 55 or 1926.