*Now Crown Prince Salman has taken over as New King of Saudi Arabia.  The
following history of Saudi Arabia makes an interesting reading..*
The History of Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia traces its roots back to the
earliest civilizations of the Arabian Peninsula. Over the centuries, the
peninsula has played an important role in history as an ancient trade
center and as the birthplace of Islam, one of the world’s major
monotheistic religions.

Since King Abdulaziz Al-Saud established the modern Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
in 1932, its transformation has been astonishing.
In a few short decades, the Kingdom has turned itself from a desert nation
to a modern, sophisticated state and a major player on the international
stage.


*Early History*

The first concrete evidence of human presence in the Arabian Peninsula
dates back 15,000 to 20,000 years. Bands of hunter-gatherers roamed the
land, living off wild animals and plants.
As the European ice cap melted during the last Ice Age, some 15,000 years
ago, the climate in the peninsula became dry. Vast plains once covered with
lush grasslands gave way to scrubland and deserts, and wild animals
vanished. River systems also disappeared, leaving in their wake the dry
river beds (wadis) that are found in the peninsula today.
This climate change forced humans to move into the lush mountain valleys
and oases. No longer able to survive as hunter-gatherers, they had to
develop another means of survival. As a result, agriculture developed –
first in Mesopotamia, then the Nile River Valley, and eventually spreading
across the Middle East.
The development of agriculture brought other advances. Pottery allowed
farmers to store food. Animals, including goats, cattle, sheep, horses and
camels, were domesticated, and people abandoned hunting altogether. These
advances made intensive farming possible. In turn, settlements became more
permanent, leading to the foundations of what we call civilization –
language, writing, political systems, art and architecture.
*An Ancient Trade Center*
Located between the two great centers of civilization, the Nile River
Valley and Mesopotamia, the Arabian Peninsula was the crossroads of the
ancient world. Trade was crucial to the area’s development; caravan routes
became trade arteries that made life possible in the sparsely populated
peninsula.

The people of the peninsula developed a complex network of trade routes to
transport agricultural goods highly sought after in Mesopotamia, the Nile
Valley and the Mediterranean Basin.  These items included almonds from
Taif, dates from the many oases, and aromatics such as frankincense and
myrrh from the Tihama plain.
Spices were also important trade items. They were shipped across the
Arabian Sea from India and then transported by caravan.
The huge caravans traveled from what is now Oman and Yemen, along the great
trade routes running through Saudi Arabia’s Asir Province and then through
Makkah and Madinah, eventually arriving at the urban centers of the north
and west.
The people of the Arabian Peninsula remained largely untouched by the
political turmoil in Mesopotamia, the Nile Valley and the eastern
Mediterranean. Their goods and services were in great demand regardless of
which power was dominant at the moment – Babylon, Egypt, Persia, Greece or
Rome. In addition, the peninsula’s great expanse of desert formed a natural
barrier that protected it from invasion by powerful neighbors.
*The Birth of Islam*
Around the year 610, Muhammad, a native of the thriving commercial center
of Makkah, received a message from God (in Arabic, Allah) through the Angel
Gabriel. As more revelations bid him to proclaim the oneness of God
universally, the Prophet Muhammad’s following grew.
In 622, learning of an assassination plot against him, the Prophet led his
followers to the town of Yathrib, which was later named Madinat Al-Nabi
(City of the Prophet) and now known simply as Madinah. This was the Hijrah,
or migration, which marks the beginning of the Islamic calendar.
Within the next few years, several battles took place between the followers
of the Prophet Muhammad and the pagans of Makkah. By 628, when Madinah was
entirely in the hands of the Muslims, the Prophet had unified the tribes so
successfully that he and his followers reentered Makkah without bloodshed.
*The Islamic Empire*
Less than 100 years after the birth of Islam, the Islamic Empire extended
from Spain to parts of India and China. Although the political centers of
power had moved out of the Arabian Peninsula, trade flourished in the area.
Also, a large number of pilgrims began regularly visiting the peninsula,
with some settling in the two holy cities of Makkah and Madinah. These
pilgrims facilitated the exchange of ideas and cultures between the people
of the peninsula and other civilizations of the Arab and Muslim worlds.
The emergence of Arabic as the language of international learning was
another major factor in the cultural development of the Arabian Peninsula.
The Muslim world became a center for learning and scientific advances
during what is known as the “Golden Age.” Muslim scholars made major
contributions in many fields, including medicine, biology, philosophy,
astronomy, arts and literature. Many of the ideas and methods pioneered by
Muslim scholars became the foundation of modern sciences.
The Islamic Empire thrived well into the 17th century, when it broke up
into smaller Muslim kingdoms. The Arabian Peninsula gradually entered a
period of relative isolation, although Makkah and Madinah remained the
spiritual heart of the Islamic world and continued to attract pilgrims from
many countries.
*The First Saudi State*
In the early 18th century, a Muslim scholar and reformer named Shaikh
Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab began advocating a return to the original form of
Islam. Abdul Wahhab was initially persecuted by local religious scholars
and leaders who viewed his teachings as a threat to their power bases. He
sought protection in the town of Diriyah, which was ruled by Muhammad bin
Saud.

Muhammad bin Abdul Wahhab and Muhammad bin Saud formed an agreement to
dedicate themselves to restoring the pure teachings of Islam to the Muslim
community. In that spirit, bin Saud established the First Saudi State,
which prospered under the spiritual guidance of bin Abdul Wahhab, known
simply as the Shaikh.

By 1788, the Saudi State ruled over the entire central plateau known as the
Najd. By the early 19th century, its rule extended to most of the Arabian
Peninsula, including Makkah and Madinah.


The popularity and success of the Al-Saud rulers aroused the suspicion of
the Ottoman Empire, the dominant power in the Middle East and North Africa
at the time. In 1818, the Ottomans dispatched a large expeditionary force
armed with modern artillery to the western region of Arabia. The Ottoman
army besieged Diriyah, which by now had grown into one of the largest
cities in the peninsula. Ottoman forces leveled the city with field guns
and made it permanently uninhabitable by ruining the wells and uprooting
date palms.

The Second Saudi State
By 1824, the Al-Saud family had regained political control of central
Arabia. The Saudi ruler Turki bin Abdullah Al-Saud transferred his capital
to Riyadh, some 20 miles south of Diriyah, and established the Second Saudi
State. During his 11-year rule, Turki succeeded in retaking most of the
lands lost to the Ottomans. As he expanded his rule, he took steps to
ensure that his people enjoyed rights, and he saw to their well-being.

Under Turki and his son, Faisal, the Second Saudi State enjoyed a period of
peace and prosperity, and trade and agriculture flourished. The calm was
shattered in 1865 by a renewed Ottoman campaign to extend its Middle
Eastern empire into the Arabian Peninsula. Ottoman armies captured parts of
the Saudi State, which was ruled at the time by Faisal’s son, Abdulrahman.
With the support of the Ottomans, the Al-Rashid family of Hail made a
concerted effort to overthrow the Saudi State.

Faced with a much larger and better equipped army, Abdulrahman bin Faisal
Al-Saud was forced to abandon his struggle in 1891. He sought refuge with
the Bedouin tribes in the vast sand desert of eastern Arabia known as the
Rub’ Al-Khali, or ‘Empty Quarter.’ From there, Abdulrahman and his family
traveled to Kuwait, where they stayed until 1902. With him was his young
son Abdulaziz, who was already making his mark as a natural leader and a
fierce warrior for the cause of Islam.

The Modern Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

The young Abdulaziz was determined to regain his patrimony from the
Al-Rashid family, which had taken over Riyadh and established a governor
and garrison there. In 1902, Abdulaziz, – accompanied by only 40 followers
– staged a daring night march into Riyadh to retake the city garrison,
known as the Masmak Fortress. This legendary event marks the beginning of
the formation of the modern Saudi state.


After establishing Riyadh as his headquarters, Abdulaziz captured all of
the Hijaz, including Makkah and Madinah, in 1924 to 1925. In the process,
he united warring tribes into one nation.


On September 23, 1932, the country was named the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia,
an Islamic state with Arabic as its national language and the Holy Qur’an
as its constitution.

King Abdulaziz (1932-1953)
The legendary King Abdulaziz was a remarkable leader of imagination and
vision who set Saudi Arabia on the road to modernization. During his rule,
King Abdulaziz started building the country’s infrastructure. He
established roads and basic communications systems, introduced modern
technology, and improved education, health care and agriculture.


Although King Abdulaziz never traveled beyond the Arab world, he was a
highly sophisticated statesman. Foreign leaders and diplomats who met with
him came away impressed by his integrity and honesty. He was famous for
dispensing with diplomatic niceties in favor of frank and candid
discussion. He was just as well known for keeping his promises, whether
given to a simple Bedouin or to a world leader. These qualities enhanced
his stature as a reliable and responsible leader dedicated to peace and
justice.

King Saud (1953-1964)
Abdulaziz’ eldest son Saud acceded to the throne upon his father’s death in
1953. He continued King Abdulaziz’s legacy, creating the Council of
Ministers and establishing the Ministries of Health, Education and
Commerce. One of King Saud’s greatest successes was the development of
education – under his rule many schools were established in the Kingdom,
including its first institute of higher education, King Saud University, in
1957.


King Saud also made his mark globally. In 1957, he became the first Saudi
monarch to visit the United States. In 1962 he sponsored an international
Islamic conference that would become the Muslim World League, headquartered
in Makkah.

King Faisal (1964-1975)
King Faisal bin Abdulaziz was a visionary innovator with a great respect
for tradition. He initiated the first of a series of economic and social
development plans that would transform Saudi Arabia’s infrastructure,
especially industry, and set the Kingdom on a path of rapid growth. He also
established the first public schools for girls.


In foreign policy, King Faisal showed a firm commitment to the Islamic
world. He was a central force behind the establishment in Jeddah in 1971 of
the Organization of the Islamic Cooperation (OIC), a group of 57 Islamic
countries that promotes Islamic unity and cooperation.


Throughout the turbulent period of the 1960s and 1970s, which included two
Arab-Israeli wars and the oil crisis of 1973, King Faisal was a voice for
moderation, peace and stability.

King Khalid (1975-1982)
Khalid bin Abdulaziz succeeded King Faisal in 1975. King Khalid also
emphasized development, and his reign was marked by an almost explosive
growth in the country’s physical infrastructure. It was a period of
enormous wealth and prosperity for Saudi Arabia.


On the international stage, King Khalid was a prime mover in forming the
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) in 1981, an organization that promotes
economic and security cooperation among its six member countries: Bahrain,
Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.

King Fahd (1982-2005)
Under King Fahd bin Abdulaziz, who adopted the title Custodian of the Two
Holy Mosques, Saudi Arabia continued its tremendous socioeconomic
development and emerged as a leading political and economic force.


King Fahd was central to Saudi Arabia’s efforts to diversify its economy
and promote private enterprise and investment. He restructured the Saudi
government and approved the first nationwide municipal elections, which
took place in 2005.


One of King Fahd’s greatest accomplishments in Saudi Arabia was a series of
projects to expand the Kingdom’s facilities to accommodate the millions of
pilgrims who come to the country each year. These projects involved major
expansions of Islam’s two holiest sites, the Holy Mosque in Makkah and the
Prophet’s Mosque in Madinah, as well as airports and ports.


In the international arena, King Fahd worked actively to resolve regional
and global crises. These crises included the Arab-Palestinian conflict,
Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait, the Lebanese civil war in addition to conflicts
in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, Chechnya, Afghanistan, Somalia and Kashmir.


As Crown Prince in 1981, he proposed an eight-point plan to resolve the
Arab-Israeli conflict and give the Palestinians an independent state. The
plan was considered one of the first attempts to find a just and lasting
settlement that took into consideration the needs of both the Arabs and
Israel. It was unanimously adopted by the Arab League at a summit in Fez,
Morocco in 1982.


King Fahd also dedicated years of diplomacy to resolving the civil war in
Lebanon. He hosted a meeting of Lebanese members of parliament in Taif,
Saudi Arabia in 1989. The meeting resulted in a national reconciliation
accord signed in Taif that ended the fighting and opened the way for
reconstruction with help from Saudi Arabia and other Arab countries.


Perhaps the greatest international crisis of King Fahd’s rule occurred when
Iraq invaded Kuwait on August 2, 1990. The King played a key role in
putting together the international coalition that drove Iraqi forces out of
Kuwait.


King Fahd was also concerned with humanitarian issues. Under his rule,
Saudi Arabia provided emergency humanitarian assistance to numerous
countries, including Somalia, Bosnia and Afghanistan, as well as countries
suffering from natural disasters, such as earthquakes (Turkey in 1999, Iran
in 2003) and the tsunami that struck Southeast Asia in December 2004.

King Abdullah (2005 - )
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz acceded to
the throne after the death of King Fahd on August 1, 2005.

King Abdullah was born in Riyadh in 1924, and received his early education
at the royal court. Influenced by his father King Abdulaziz, he developed a
profound respect for religion, history and Arab heritage. His years spent
living in the desert with Bedouin tribes taught him their values of honor,
simplicity, generosity and bravery, and instilled in him the desire to
assist in the development of his people.

As Crown Prince, he traveled widely in the Kingdom and inaugurated a number
of projects throughout the country. In 2005 he closely monitored the
election process for the country’s municipal councils.

The Prince’s first official visit to the United States was in 1976 when he
met with President Gerald Ford. Since then, he has made a number of visits
to the United States, including his most recent on April 25, 2005 to
President George W. Bush’s ranch in Crawford, Texas.

His international diplomacy reflects Saudi Arabia’s leadership role in
defense of Arab and Islamic issues and for the achievement of world peace,
stability and security. Peace in the Middle East and the plight of the
Palestinians are of particular concern to King Abdullah. His proposal for a
comprehensive Arab-Israeli peace, presented at the Beirut Arab Summit in
2002, has been adopted by the League of Arab States and is known as the
Arab Peace Initiative.

King Abdullah has been unwavering in his condemnation of terrorism. At the
International Counterterrorism Conference in Riyadh in February, 2005, he
called for greater international cooperation to fight this global problem.


*Crown Prince Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz*

His Royal Highness Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz was designated Crown Prince
of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and appointed Deputy Prime Minister, by
Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz on June 18,
2012, upon the death of Crown Prince Nayef bin Abdulaziz. Crown Prince
Salman also serves as Minister of Defense.

Prince Salman was born in Riyadh on Dec. 31, 1935, and received his
education at the Prince’s School in Riyadh. He served as Deputy Governor of
Riyadh from March 1954 to April 1955, and Governor of Riyadh from April
1955 to December 1960 and again from February 1963 to Nov. 5, 2011, when he
was appointed Minister of Defense.
Since 1956, Prince Salman has chaired various humanitarian and service
committees that provide relief from natural and man-made disasters.  For
his humanitarian services, he has been awarded many medals and decorations,
including awards from Bahrain, Bosnia and Herzegovina, France, Morocco,
Palestine, the Philippines, Senegal, the United Nations, Yemen, and the
King Abdulaziz Medal - First Class.
He is a recipient of several honorary degrees and academic awards,
including an honorary doctorate from the Islamic University of Madinah, the
Prince Salman academic award, and the Kant Medal by the Berlin-Brandenburg
Academy of Sciences and Humanities in appreciation of his contributions to
the field of science.
During official visits to the United States in April 2012, Prince Salman
met with President Barack Obama and a number of U.S. officials.


-- 
With best wishes

S Chander

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