Muhammad ibn Ali al-Idrisi

Sayyid Muhammad ibn Ali al-Idrisi (1876–1920) (Arabic: محمد بن علي الإدريسي) founded and ruled the Idrisid Emirate of Sabya.

Muhammad ibn Ali al-Idrisi
Emir of Asir
Idrisid Emirate of Sabya
Reign1906–1920
PredecessorOffice established
SuccessorAli ibn Muhammad al-Idrisi
Born1876
Sabya, Yemen Vilayet, Ottoman Empire (Present-day Saudi Arabia)
Died1920
Sabya, Emirate of Asir
(Present-day Saudi Arabia)
DynastyIdrisid dynasty
FatherAli bin Muhammad bin Ahmad bin Idris al-Fasi al-Idrisi

Biography

He was born at Sabya (now Saudi Arabia).[1] He was a grandson of Sayyid Ahmad ibn Idris al-Fasi, a Moroccan scholar from Fez, who was head of a religious fraternity (tariqa) at Mecca and who acquired land at Sabya, settled there and died in 1837. The descendants of Sayyid Ahmed appear to have increased in wealth and influence and to have gradually supplanted the ruling sherifial family of Abu ‛Arish.[2]

Sayyid Muhammad was educated partly at Al-Azhar University and partly by the Senussi at Kufra, and subsequently resided for a time in the Sudan, at Argo Island. On his return to Asir, his one ambition was to render that district independent of the Ottoman Empire. He gradually expanded his political power to include Mikhlaf el Yemen and a large part of the Tihamah, with control over several tribes outside these limits. He threw in his lot with the Allies in World War I, and was the inexorable foe of the Imam of Yemen.[2]

See also

Notes

  1. "Sabia (County), Saudi Arabia". earthexplorer.info. Retrieved June 1, 2013.
  2.  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1922). "Idrisi". Encyclopædia Britannica (12th ed.). London & New York: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company.

Further reading

  • Headley, R.L. "ʿAsīr." Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition.
  • Anne K. Bang, The Idrisi State of Asir 1906-1934: Politics, Religion and Personal Prestige as State-building factors in early twentieth century Arabia (London: Bergen Studies on the Middle East and Africa, 1996)
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