Saud bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud | |
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Saud bin Abdul-Aziz bin Muhammad al Saud | |
Noble family | House of Saud |
Issue |
Imam Saud al Kabeer bin Abdul-Aziz bin Muhammad bin Saud (Arabic: سعود الكبير بن عبد العزيز بن محمد آل سعود) (d. 1814) ruled the First Saudi State from 1803 to 1814. During his rule, Saud annexed Mecca and Medina from the Ottoman Empire.
He created the largest Arabian empire in the last 1300 years.
His father had appointed him as the head of the raid on Karbala in 1802. After the plundering and massacres in the city during the attack, he came to be known as the "butcher of Karbala".
The House of Saud extended its rule beyond the Najd and into the Hijaz which culminated with the capture of Makkah and Madinah. Saud's reign was a period of religious cleansing in Arabia. During his reign, attacks on shrines in Iraq continued. The new Saudis cleansed the Kaaba in Mecca and destroyed the tombs of numerous men in Madinah. This was in accordance with the Wahhabi desire to return Islam to its simple beginnings. The forces of Saud also felt that they were emulating the example of Muhammad who smashed idols when he retook Mecca.
This religious cleansing did not sit well with other Muslims though. Many other Muslims found the actions to be extreme, and were stunned that the holy cities had been taken so easily. The Ottoman Empire did not want to relent control over the cities to local tribesmen. The Ottomans could not retake the cities on their own though as the bulk of their forces was tied up in Europe. Muhammad Ali, the viceroy of Egypt, was assigned to recapture the Arabian territories. One of his sons, commanding the Egyptian troops, succeeded in conquering the Hijaz in 1812.