1922 Dhabyani coup d'état
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Coup Successful
- Sheikh Hamdan Al Nahyan killed
- Sheikh Sultan Al Nahyan installed
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Emirate of Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates | |||||||
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In 1922 Sheikh Sultan Al Nahyan, with a coalition of his brothers Hazza and Saqr staged a palace coup in Abu Dhabi killing their brother Hamdan, the ruling emir at the time, and crowned Sultan in his place.
In 1909 longtime ruler of Abu Dhabi, Zayed Al Nahyan "The Great" died.[1] In Islam there is no stringent monarchical inheritance laws, instead, successors typically are chosen via Shura, although Abu Dhabi's colonial overlord, the British Empire, had been pressuring the Trucial States to adopt primogeniture, this would not be adopted in Abu Dhabi until another palace coup in 1966.[1][2] Zayed's eldest son Khalifa at the urging of his wife who feared for his life if he inherited, declined the throne, with it instead passing to Zayed's second eldest son Tahnoun.[1] However, Tahnoun would die young of illness in 1912 again reopening the issue of succession.[1] Hamdan, Zayed's fifth eldest son would inherit the throne from his brother and become the new emir, passing over several of Zayed's older sons.[2]
Coup
Planning
Hamdan's rule was far from secure, and wasn't helped by an economic collapse in 1920–1921 within the emirate as the economy was almost entirely reliant on pearling, with the pearl fields running dry due to over fishing.[2] However, economic conditions for a coup where only a pretense, with the real reason for the coup being inter-personal family rivalries.[1] Hamdan, who had no adult sons of his own, had begun grooming his older brother Sultan's sons to succeed him, which would've bypassed Sultan. Additionally, Hamdan had earned the ire of nomadic Bedouins due to his insistence that they pay more taxes due to the economic shortfall and for sending tribute to Saudi Arabia. Sultan was able to convince his other, still politically active, brothers Hazza and Saqr to stage a coup and instead determine the new emir by Shura.[2]
Events
On Tuesday, August 22, Sultan entered the Qasr Al Hosn alongside Saqr and four Bedouin retainers from the Bani Yas, as it was just after the midday majlis Hamdan was resting in the shade of the central courtyard with some of his advisors. Sultan then promptly opened fire on his brother point blank, killing him instantly, as the other members of his party opened fire on Hamdan's courtiers killing three of them. Sultan then sealed the fort, secured the keys to the treasury, and sent envoys to his brothers and tribal leaders.[2][1]