(Redirected from Ali bin Hussein of Hejaz)'Ali bin Hussein' (
1879–
1935) was King of
Hejaz and Grand
Sharif of Mecca from October
1924 until December
1925. He was the eldest son of
Sharif Hussein bin Ali, the first modern King of Hejaz, and a scion of the
Hashemite family.
Ali bin Hussein's father was appointed Grand Sharif of Mecca by the
Ottoman Empire in
1908. However, his relationship with the
Young Turks in control of the Empire increasingly became strained, and, in
1916, he became one of the leaders of the
Arab Revolt against Turkish rule. Following the Revolt's success, Hussein made himself the first King of Hejaz with British support. His sons
Abdullah and
Faisal were made kings of
Jordan and
Iraq, respectively, while Ali remained the heir to his father's lands in Arabia.
However, King Hussein soon found himself embroiled in fighting with the
Saud family, based in
Riyadh. Following military defeats by the
Saud family, King Hussein abdicated all of his secular titles to Ali on
October 3,
1924 (Hussein had previously awarded himself the religious title of
caliph in March of that year). In December of the following year, Saudi forces finally overran Hejaz, which they eventually incorporated into the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia. Ali and his family fled to
Iraq.
Ali bin Hussein died in
Baghdad,
Iraq in
1935. He had four daughters and one son,
'Abd al-Ilah, who went on to become the Regent of Iraq during the minority of King
Faisal II.
External links
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Information on King Ali's genealogy
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Description of the Royal House of Hejaz
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Family tree of the Hashemites