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'Farouk I of Egypt' (
Arabic: فاروق الأول ''Fārūq al-Awwal'') (
February 11,
1920 –
March 18,
1965), was the tenth ruler from the
Muhammad Ali Dynasty and the penultimate
King of
Egypt and
Sudan, succeeding his father,
Fuad I, in 1936. His sister
Fawzia was Queen of
Iran for a brief period. His full title was "H.M. Farouk I, by the grace of God, King of Egypt and of
Sudan, Sovereign of
Nubia, of
Kordofan and of
Darfur." He was overthrown in the
Egyptian Revolution of 1952, and forced to abdicate in favor of his infant son
Ahmed Fuad. He died in exile in Italy in 1965.
Reign
The great-great-grandson of
Muhammad Ali Pasha, Farouk was of Albanian descent. Before his father's death, he was educated at the
Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, England. Upon his coronation, the 16 year-old King Farouk made a public radio address to the nation, the first time a sovereign of Egypt had ever spoken directly to his people in such a way:
The teenage monarch was enamored of the glamorous royal lifestyle. Although he already had thousands of acres of land, dozens of palaces and hundreds of cars, the king never seemed satisfied with his wealth. He would often travel to Europe for grand shopping sprees.
During the hardships of
World War II, criticism was leveled at Farouk for his lavish lifestyle. His decision to keep all the lights burning at his palace in
Alexandria, during a time when the city was
blacked-out because of
Italian bombing, was deemed particularly offensive by some. Due to the continuing British occupation of Egypt, many Egyptians, Farouk included, were positively disposed towards Germany and Italy, and despite the presence of British troops, Egypt remained officially neutral until the final year of the war. Consequently, the royal Italian servants of Farouk were not interned, and there is an unconfirmed story that Farouk told British Ambassador
Sir Miles Lampson (who had an Italian wife), "I'll get rid of my Italians, when you get rid of yours". Farouk only declared war on the Axis Powers under heavy British pressure in 1945, long after the
fighting in Egypt's Western Desert had ceased.

Official marriage photograph of King Farouk, taken in 1938
As he got older, the king began pilfering objects and artifacts while on state visits abroad, including a ceremonial sword from the
Shah of Iran and a pocket watch from
Winston Churchill. Common people were also often the victims of the
kleptomaniacal monarch, and by mingling with commoners Farouk soon became a highly-skilled pickpocket. He got a nickname from his own citizens "The Thief of Cairo" to signify his well-known aptitude for thievery, as well as his lavish lifestyle and corrupt regime.
Widely condemned for his corrupt and ineffectual governance, the continued British occupation, and the Egyptian army's defeat in the
1948 Arab-Israeli War, public discontent against Farouk rose to new levels. Finally, on
July 23,
1952, the
Free Officers Movement under
Muhammad Naguib and
Gamal Abdel Nasser staged a military coup that launched the
Revolution of 1952. Farouk was forced to abdicate, and went into exile in
Italy and
Monaco where he lived the rest of his life. Immediately following his abdication, Farouk's baby son, Ahmed Fuad was proclaimed
King Fuad II, but for all intents and purposes Egypt was now governed by the Naguib, Nasser and Free Officers. On
June 18 1953, The revolutionary government formally abolished the monarchy, ending 150 years of the Muhammad Ali dynasty's rule, and Egypt was declared a
republic.
The new regime quickly moved to auction off the king's vast collection of trinkets and treasures. Among the more famous of his possessions was one of the rare
1933 Double Eagle coins, though the coin disappeared before it could be returned to the United States.
The blue-eyed Farouk was thin early in his reign, but later gained an enormous amount of weight. His taste for fine cuisine made him dangerously obese, weighing nearly 300 pounds (136 kg). He died in
Rome,
Italy on
March 3,
1965. He collapsed and died at the dinner table following a characteristically heavy meal.
Affairs and marriages
In addition to an affair with the British writer and siren
Barbara Skelton, among numerous others, the king was married twice, with a claim of a third marriage (see below). His first wife was
Safinaz Zulficar (1921–1988), a pasha's daughter who was renamed
Farida upon her marriage; they married in 1938, divorced in 1948, and had three daughters.
His second was a commoner,
Nariman Sadeq (1934–2005); they married in 1951 and divorced in 1954; they had one son, the future King
Fuad II.
Whilst in exile in Italy he met
Irma Capece Minutolo, an opera singer, who became his companion. In 2005, she claimed that she married the king in 1957.
[1]
Trivia
The actor
David Suchet modelled his mustache for detective
Hercule Poirot on King Farouk's.
The 1950s game show ''
Treasure Hunt'', hosted by
Jan Murray, had as a gag prize "a beach ball once used by King Farouk."
Marriages

King Farouk I, Queen Farida and their first-born daughter Farial ca. 1940
===
Farida===
(
Safinaz Zulficar) (1921-1988)
Children
★
Farial (1938-)
★
Fawzia (1940-2005)
★
Fadia (1943-2002)
===
Nariman Sadek
(1934-2005)
Children
★
Fuad II (1952-)
Marriage claimed
Irma Capece Minutolo di Canosa (born 1935 or 1936)
Quotes about King Farouk
★ But this Farouk, the one I came to know, was not the overweight, dissipated monarch who became the subject of so many Western satirists and cartoonists. He was still a handsome man, lean and tall, patriotic and idealistic, with clear blue eyes that sparkled when he spoke. -Princess Ashraf Pahlavi, pg. 57 in Faces in Mirror, 1980.
★ In ''Celebrity Trivia'' by Edward Lucaire (1981),
Red Skelton is quoted, according to reporter
James Bacon, as having said to the Queen Mother of Egypt, "Queenie, do you know your son is 'farouking' Egypt?"
★ Farouk was mentioned in a verse of Noel Coward's new 1950s lyrics for Cole Porter's 1928 song "Let's Do It, Let's Fall in Love": "Monkeys whenever you look do it / Aly Khan and King Farouk do it/Let's do it, let's fall in love."
See also
★
Muhammad Ali Dynasty
★
Egyptian Revolution of 1952
★
List of rulers of modern Egypt
Endnotes
★ 1 -- ''The Battle of Alamein: Turning Point, World War II'' by
Bierman and
Smith (2002)
References
★ Ashraf Pahlavi "Faces in a Mirror", Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1980
★ McLeave, Hugh ''The Last Pharaoh : Farouk of Egypt'', New York : McCall Pub. Co., 1970, 1969 ISBN 0841500207.
★
New King, Old Trouble, Time Magazine, Monday, May 11, 1936.
★ Sadat, Jehan "A Woman of Egypt", New York: Simon and Schuster, 1987 ISBN 0671540713
★ Stadiem, William ''Too Rich: The High Life and Tragic Death of King Farouk'', New York: Carroll & Graf Pub, 1991 ISBN 0881846295