Ahmed bin Abdullah Al Thunayan explained

Full Name:Ahmed bin Abdullah bin Abdullah bin Thunayan bin Ibrahim bin Thunayan Al Saud
Birth Date:1889
Birth Place:Istanbul, Ottoman Empire
Death Place:Istanbul
House:House of Saud
Father:Abdullah bin Abdullah bin Thunayan Al Saud
Mother:Tazeruh Hanım

Ahmed bin Abdullah Al Thunayan (1889–1923) was a Turkish-born Saudi royal and government official who was one of the advisors to Abdulaziz, Emir of Nejd, who later founded the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.[1] He was the paternal uncle of Iffat Al Thunayan, spouse of King Faisal.

Origins and early life

Prince Ahmed's family were the descendants of Thunayan, one of the brothers of Muhammad bin Saud, who is the patriarch of the House of Saud.[2] Ahmed's father was Abdullah bin Abdullah bin Thunayan Al Saud, who was captured by the Ottomans in Bombay and sent to Istanbul in August 1880.[3] He was appointed to the royal court there and was a member of the Ottoman Council of State in the 1880s and 1890s.[3] [4] Ahmed's mother was a Cherkess-origin Turkish woman named Tazeruh.[1] His paternal grandfather, Abdullah bin Thunayan, ruled the Emirate of Nejd from 1841 to 1843.[1]

Prince Ahmed was born in 1889 in Istanbul and raised there.[5] [6] He had a twin-sister, Jawhara, and two brothers, Mohammed and Suleiman.[1] Mohammed was the father of Iffat, who married the future King Faisal in the 1930s.[1]

Career and activities

Just before World War I, Prince Ahmed went to Arabia and became a private secretary of Emir Abdulaziz.[2] [3] In March 1913, he met with the Ottoman governor of Baghdad, Cemal Pasha, as an envoy of Abdulaziz to eliminate the tensions between Abdulaziz and Sharif Hussein.[7] Prince Ahmed headed the Saudi delegations which met with Sharif Hussein's staff following the establishment of the Kingdom of Hejaz in 1916. Over time, Prince Ahmed became Abdulaziz's chief foreign affairs advisor[8] and acted as Saudi foreign minister.[9] Prince Ahmed, together with Abdullah Al Qusaibi, another advisor of Abdulaziz, accompanied Prince Faisal (later King Faisal) during his official visit to London and Paris in 1919.[2] [10] Prince Ahmed's mission in this visit was to transmit the demands of Abdulaziz to British officials.[11] Through Prince Ahmed, Abdulaziz asked the British to exert pressure on Sharif Hussain to allow Najdi people to go on pilgrimage.[12] Prince Ahmed and Sharif Hussain's son Abdullah managed to sign a peace and friendship agreement in February 1920 in Baghdad, which lasted only for a short time.[13] Prince Ahmed was accompanied by Abdullah Al Damluji in this visit.[13]

On 1 May 1922, Prince Ahmed represented Abdulaziz in the Conference of Al Muhammarah, which was held to resolve the problematic Saudi-Iraqi border issues.[10] [14] Despite the objections of Abdulaziz, Prince Ahmed signed the treaty of al Muhammarah, which led to his dismissal from the post.[10] Abdulaziz did not ratify the treaty and informed the British High Commissioner B. H. Bourdillon that Prince Ahmed had no authority to sign it.[14] Following this incident, Prince Ahmed was replaced by Abdullah Al Damluji as chief foreign affairs advisor.[8]

Personal life and death

Prince Ahmed was fluent in Turkish, Arabic, English and German.[1] [15] He died in Istanbul in 1923[10] shortly after his return from Saudi Arabia.[1] However, Joseph A. Kechichian argues that he died in 1921 which contradicts with the fact that he participated in the Conference of Al Muhammarah in May 1922.[10]

In popular culture

Prince Ahmed was featured by Rubén Ochandiano in the 2019 film on King Faisal entitled Born a King.[16]

Notes and References

  1. News: Joseph A. Kechichian. Joseph A. Kéchichian. Self-assurance in the face of military might. 23 January 2021. Gulf News. 20 January 2012.
  2. Encyclopedia: Al Thunayyan Family. Encyclopedia.
  3. Book: Joseph A. Kechichian. 'Iffat Al Thunayan: An Arabian Queen. 2014. 16–20. 9781845196851. Sussex Academic Press. Brighton.
  4. Eugene L. Rogan. Aşiret Mektebi: Abdülhamid II's School for Tribes (1892–1907). International Journal of Middle East Studies. 28. 1. 1996. 176116. 10.1017/s0020743800062796. 85. 154106467 .
  5. Book: Leslie McLoughlin. Ibn Saud: Founder of A Kingdom. 1993. St. Martin's Press. 978-1-349-22578-1. 56. New York.
  6. G. Leachman. A Journey through Central Arabia. The Geographical Journal. May 1914. 43. 5. 518. 1778299. 10.2307/1778299. 1914GeogJ..43..500L .
  7. Lawrence Paul Goldrup. Saudi Arabia 1902 - 1932: The Development of a Wahhabi Society. 1971. University of California, Los Angeles. PhD. 139. . 9798657910797.
  8. Book: Joseph Kostiner. The Making of Saudi Arabia, 1916-1936: From Chieftaincy to Monarchical State. New York; Oxford. 1993. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-536070-7. 105.
  9. Book: F. E. Peters. Mecca. 1994. Princeton University Press. 9781400887361. 388. 10.1515/9781400887361-014. Francis Edward Peters. Princeton, NJ.
  10. The Foreign Policy of King Abdulaziz (1927–1953). Mohammad Zaid Al Kahtani. 36. PhD. University of Leeds.
  11. Jerald L. Thompson. H. St. John Philby, Ibn Saud and Palestine. DTIC. MA. December 1981.
  12. Joshua Teitelbaum. Hashemites, Egyptians and Saudis: the tripartite struggle for the pilgrimage in the shadow of Ottoman defeat. Middle Eastern Studies. 2020. 56. 41. 10.1080/00263206.2019.1650349. 1. 202264793.
  13. Noel Walter Spencer Jr.. The Diplomatic History of Iraq, 1920-1932. University of Utah. . 213–214. Ph.D.. 9798403473699. 1979.
  14. Gamal Hagar. Britain, Her Middle East Mandates and the Emergence of Saudi Arabia, 1926-1932: A Study in the Process of British Policy-making and in the Conduct and Development of Britain's Relations with Ibn Saud. PhD. 1981. Keele University. 70–72.
  15. Book: Adam Mestyan. 2023. Modern Arab Kingship: Remaking the Ottoman Political Order in the Interwar Middle East. Princeton University Press. 184–185. Princeton, NJ; Oxford. 9780691249353. 10.1353/book.113384. 260307818.
  16. News: Luis Martínez. 'Nacido rey': la millonaria aventura saudí de Agustí Villaronga. El Mundo. 20 August 2019. es. 15 March 2024.