Mu'ammarid Imamate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

StatusNominal vassal of Ottoman Egypt
CapitalDiriyah
Today part ofSaudi Arabia
Mu'ammarid Imamate
إمارة إبن معمر (Arabic)
1818–1820
Location of Diriyah (Imamate)
StatusNominal vassal of Ottoman Egypt
CapitalDiriyah
History 
 Established
1818
 Disestablished
1820
Preceded by
Succeeded by
First Saudi state
Second Saudi state
Today part ofSaudi Arabia

The Mu'ammarid Imamate, also referred to as ibn Muammar's Imamate or Imamate of Diriyah, was a short-lived emirate created after the fall of the first Saudi state. It was based around the city of Diriyah and was briefly a vassal of Muhammad Ali, Ottoman governor of Egypt. The state did not last long as it was reconquered by the Saudis and incorporated into the Second Saudi State.[1][2][3][4][5]

When the Saudi government practically collapsed and after the fall of Dir'iya and the surrender of its leaders, the political unity formed by the reformist call faded, and Najd returned to chaos and disintegration in the form of independent entities. Some of the anti-Diriyah leadership elements returned to their countries, where they sought to regain their influence at the expense of existing leaders, and some of them succeeded in achieving this: Rashid bin Sulaiman al-Hujailan killed Abdullah bin Hujailan bin Hamad in Buraidah in revenge for his father, who was killed by Hujailan bin Hamad during the campaign of Saadoun bin Urayer on Buraidah in 1782.[1]

In Huraymla, the conflict between the Al Hamad family and the Rashid family over the leadership of the country returned, and the leader of the Al Hamad family, Ibrahim bin Nasser Al Zeer Al Hamad, was killed by Nasser bin Mohammed bin Nasser Al Rashid, and he and his family seized the property of the Al Hamad family in Haremla and expelled them from it.[1]

These conflicts also appeared in Al-Kharj, Al-Ahsa, Sedir, and other countries that were under the influence of Diriyah, and the Badia tribes, in the absence of a strong central authority, returned to the practice of looting, plundering, road blocking, and mutual raids between them.[1]

The economic situation was no better, as trade between the Najd countries and with neighboring regions stopped due to insecurity and property looting by some soldiers of the invading armies and taxes that were imposed. Agricultural and animal production decreased as a result of a drought that prevailed in the region, which led to famine. The continuation of the political vacuum in Najd threatened security and created social, religious, and economic risks.[1]

History of the emirate

References

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