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 | | Sherif Hussein <b>ibnb> Ali Hussein <b>ibnb> Ali or Husayn <b>ibnb> Ali was the Abdul Aziz al Saud. |  | | <b>Ibnb> Khaldun Abu Zayd 'Abd al-Rahman <b>ibnb> Muhammad <b>ibnb> Khaldun al-Hadrami (عبد الر... |  | | Abu al-Qasim Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abbad Abu al-Qasim Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abbad, or Abbad I, was born in the 10th century and died in A... |
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http://www.brainyencyclopedia.com/topics/ibn.html
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| Â | Muhammad bin Saud - InformationBlast |
 | | They formed an alliance, and this was formalized by the wedding of <b>Ibnb> Saud's son to Abdul Wahhab's daugther. |  | | Using the ideology of Wahhab, Muhammad bin Saud helped establish the House of Saud among other tribes in the Arabian peninsula. |  | | While many other tribes fought only for power and prestige, the House of Saud's use of religion differentiated them and earned respect among other tribes and build support. |
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http://www.informationblast.com/Muhammad_ibn_Saud.html
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| Â | <b>Ibnb> Saud of Saudi Arabia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | In 1964 King Saud was deposed by the Saudi Council of Ministers and succeeded by King Faisal, another of <b>Ibnb> Saud's sons. |  | | On 10 January 1926 <b>Ibnb> Saud was proclaimed King of the Hejaz in the Great Mosque at Mecca. |  | | <b>Ibnb> Sa'ūd was born in Riyadh, Arabia, the son of Abd al-Rahman bin Faysal bin Turki Al Saud and Sara bint Ahmad al-Kabir Sudayri. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibn_Saud
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| Â | House of Saud - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The House of Saud is also linked with Wahhabism through the marriage of the son of Muhammad <b>ibnb> Saud with the daughter of Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abd al Wahhab in |  | | Saud bin Abdul Aziz bin Muhammad al Saud |  | | The history of the House of Saud has been marked by a desire to unify the Arabian Peninsula and to spread a more pure and simple view of Islam embodied by |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saud
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| Â | Citizens United |
 | | <b>Ibnb> Saud was the warrior founder of the Saudi royal dynasty that now rules Saudi Arabia. |  | | Like Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abd al-Wahhab, Qutb embraced <b>Ibnb> Taymiyyah¨s doctrine for re-vitalizing Islam. |  | | Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abd al-Wahhab decided he knew why Islam was on the defensive. |
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http://www.citizensunited.org/bin_laden.html
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| Â | <b>Ibnb> Saud |
 | | <b>Ibnb> Saud depended most heavily on close relatives from the Al Saud, including his younger brother Muhammad and several cousins. |  | | <b>Ibnb> Saud had learned that piety and traditional Bedouin virtues could no longer be practiced in Arabian isolation, but must coexist with a new world that pressed ineluctably on the desert. |  | | The Al Saud were thus townsmen, but enjoyed identification with an îasil, or noble tribe.They remained rulers of a small Arabian statelet until the middle of the 18th century, when Muhammad <b>ibnb> Saud joined forces with the religious reformer Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abdul Wahhab. |
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http://www.arabies.com/Special%20Report/Ibn%20Saud.htm
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| Â | The Kharijites and their impact on Contemporary Islam 5 |
 | | First, by an essay Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abdul Wahhab wrote to <b>Ibnb> Saud entitled Kashf al-Shubahat 'an Khaliq al-'Ard wa l-Samawaat (Clarifying the Obscurities Surrounding the Creator of the Heavens and Earth); and second, by the marriage of the daughter of <b>Ibnb> Saud to Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abdul Wahhab. |  | | Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abdul Wahhab might have remained an insignificant figure had it not been for an alliance forged between himself and a contemporary of his - the Najdi tribal chief of a small but growing urban clan in the market town of Diriyya, Muhammad <b>ibnb> Saud. |  | | What is known about him too, is that he invoked the ire of two of his prominent Shaikhs in Madina, Shaikh Muhammad <b>ibnb> Sulaiman al-Kurdi and Shaikh Muhammad Hayat al-Sindi. |
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http://www.sunnah.org/aqida/kharijites5.htm
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| Â | Corrupt government, conspiracy, new world order, no future. |
 | | Saud himself was not a significant figure, but his son, Muhammad <b>ibnb> Saud (literally, Muhammad, the son of Saud), conquered most of the Arabian Peninsula in the early eighteenth century. |  | | Saud had been designated crown prince some years before in a political act that went back to the days of Muhammad <b>ibnb> Saud and Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abd al Wahhab. |  | | Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abd al Wahhab offered the Al Saud a clearly defined religious mission to which to contribute their leadership and upon which they might base their political authority. |
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http://www.pushhamburger.com/morenews21.htm
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| Â | [The Harborsite] The Saudi Connection |
 | | <b>Ibnb> Saud, the founder of the dynasty that rules Saudi Arabia today, utilised Wahhab's revivalist fervour to inculcate a sense of discipline in the tribes before hurling them into battle against the Ottoman Empire. |  | | Sheikh Mohammed <b>Ibnb> Abdul Wahhab, the inspirer of this sect, was an 18th century peasant who became tired of tending date palms and grazing cattle and began to preach locally, calling for a return to the pure beliefs of the seventh century. |  | | Even less is known about the state religion, which is not an everyday version of Sunni or Shia Islam, but a peculiarly virulent, ultra-puritanical strain known as Wahhabism. |
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http://grunt.space.swri.edu/pipermail/harborsite/2001-September/000049.html
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| Â | Definition of Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abd al Wahhab |
 | | An alliance between <b>Ibnb> Abd al-Wahhab and Muhammad bin Saud caused Wahhabbism to spread in areas that bin Saud conquered. |  | | <b>Ibnb> Abd al-Wahhab is viewed as a reformer by those who follow the Wahhabi sect of Islam. |  | | The Movement of Muhammad <b>Ibnb> Abdul Wahhab ( http://www.islamland.org/articles1/dawn.htm) |
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http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Muhammad_ibn_Abd_al_Wahhab
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| Â | Islam |
 | | The mutinous troops and others in Medina declared the new caliph to be Ali, a cousin of Muhammad who was an early convert and also the husband of Muhammad's daughter Fatimah (and, therefore, the father of Muhammad's only grandsons, Hasan and Husayn). |  | | Muhammad Abduh in Egypt argued that faith and reason were compatible and that Islam was a reason-based faith. |  | | The heart of this revealed message is the affirmation that "there is no god but Allah (The God), and Muhammad is the messenger of God." The term islam comes from the Arabic word-root s-l-m, which has a general reference to peace and submission. |
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http://www.cqpress.com/context/articles/epr_islam.html
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| Â | Welcome to Web home of " Mohammed Abdul " from Jeddah { Kingdom of Saudi Arabia ! } |
 | | The patriarch of the Al Kabir clan, Muhammad <b>ibnb> Saud (born 1909, not to be confused with Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abd al Aziz Al Saud), was considered one of the senior Al Saud princes and was widely respected for his intimate knowledge of tribal genealogies and oral histories. |  | | These persons traced their patrilineal descent to Muhammad <b>ibnb> Saud, the eighteenth- century founder of the dynasty. |  | | In the early 1960s, Khalid and Muhammad had shared the critical views of their half brothers Faisal and Fahd with respect to Saud's style of rule, and they were among the select group of princes and ulama who joined to depose Saud in 1964. |
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http://www.marhabaksa.faithweb.com/cgovern.html
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| Â | Muslims, the Saud Family and Oil |
 | | <b>Ibnb> Saud won the approval of the sedate religious authorites, the ulama (considered moral authorities) who were content to ally themselves with <b>ibnb> Saud. |  | | Abd al-Aziz <b>ibnb> Saud, (often known as <b>Ibnb> Saud) rode from the desert with 60 brothers and cousins and restored Saud family rule at Riyadh. |  | | In 1932 <b>ibnb> Saud declared himself king and gave his name to the regions in Arabia that he had unified, which were named Saudi Arabia. |
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http://www.fsmitha.com/h2/ch17arab.html
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| Â | Islam & Jihad |
 | | In 1703, Mohammed <b>Ibnb> Adb al-Wahab, the founder of Wahabism was born the son of a judge, in a little village in Najd in central Arabia. |  | | Mohammed <b>ibnb> Abdallah <b>ibnb> abd al-Muttalib was born in the year 570 in the city of Mecca in southwestern Arabia, to a recently widowed woman of good family. |  | | Mohammed had become a prophet, the last, final prophet in a long chain that includes Abraham, Moses and Jesus. |
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http://www.kuufnh.org/jihad.htm
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| Â | A General History of the Near East, Chapter 14 |
 | | In 1901 a twenty-year-old warrior, Abdul-Aziz <b>ibnb> Saud II, assumed leadership of the Wahhabi cause. |  | | Autonomy was also given to Mohammed <b>ibnb> Ali al-Idrisi, ruler of Asir, the province between Mecca and Yemen. |  | | The most important of these "guests" was Hussein <b>ibnb> Ali, a 37th-generation descendant of Mohammed and a member of the Hashemite family, whose members had long held the office of Sharif of Mecca. |
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http://xenohistorian.faithweb.com/neareast/ne14.html
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| Â | frontline: house of saud: analysis: the most pivotal issue PBS |
 | | That was in the 18th century when the clergy or the imam or sheikh -- the religious reformer Sheikh Mohammad <b>ibnb> Wahhab-- had an alliance with Imam Mohammad <b>ibnb> Saud, the grandfather of the royal family. |  | | And together they apparently divided [the state so] the Sauds would be the temporal emirs [and] the members of the Abdullah Haab family, the Al Sheik family, would be the religious people. |  | | A look at the force of religion in Saudi Arabia, its dominant faith, Wahhabism, and the power of the religious establishment, the ulama. |
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http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/saud/themes/pivotal.html
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| Â | Muhammad bin Saud |
 | | They formed an alliance, and this was formalized by the wedding of <b>Ibnb> Saud's son to Abdul Wahhab's daugther. |  | | Using the ideology of Wahhab, Muhammad bin Saud helped establish the House of Saud among other tribes in the Arabian peninsula. |  | | While many other tribes fought only for power and prestige, the House of Saud's use of religion differentiated them and earned respect among other tribes and build support. |
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http://www.sciencedaily.com/encyclopedia/muhammad_bin_saud
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| Â | <b>Ibnb> Saud - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | <b>Ibnb> Saud had 52 children (of which 37 were boys), by several different women. |  | | <b>Ibnb> Saud was considered a "magnetic" leader, and many former supporters of the House of Saud once again rallied to its call following the capture of Riyadh. |  | | <b>Ibnb> Saud did not, however, immediately make war against <b>Ibnb> Rashid, despite a steady supply of weapons and cash (£5,000 Sterling per month) supplied by the British. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul-Aziz_ibn_Saud
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| Â | Islamica Community Forums - Jihad devolved from ancient religious decrees |
 | | Al-Wahhab, allied with a local sheik, Mohammed <b>ibnb> Saud, fought to restore a strict interpretation of the faith. |  | | The descendants of al-Wahhbab and <b>Ibnb> Saud continued this close alliance of religious zeal and territorial conquest — and forced the rest of the Arabian peninsula to comply. |  | | The House of Saud was momentarily paralyzed; they couldn't send security forces into the most sacred site in all of Islam with orders to shoot it out with the jihadists in the tunnels around the mosque. |
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http://www.islamicaweb.com/archive/t-7572
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| Â | King Saud and the Issue of Palestine by Fahda bint Saud <b>ibnb> Abdul Aziz -- 2002 |
 | | The king’s delegation was composed of Prince Musa’id <b>ibnb> Abdulrahman, Royal Counselor Sheikh Yusuf Yaseen, Dr. Jamal Al-Husseini, Sheikh Abdullah Balkhair and Prince Muhammad <b>ibnb> Saud. |  | | King Saud explained that the Gulf of Aqaba was the gateway to the cities of Makkah and Madinah and that the 33rd paragraph of Article Ten of the 1888 Constantinople Convention was meant to ensure the security of the Muslim holy places and a smooth passage for Muslim pilgrims through the Gulf of Aqaba. |  | | In September 1954, King Saud was interviewed by William Polk of the Ford Foundation, who requested him to address few words to the American people. |
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http://www.alfredlilienthal.com/saudpalestine.htm
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| Â | Obsidian Wings: The War on Wahhabism, Continued |
 | | Until late 2003, the institute was an official adjunct campus of the Imam Mohammed <b>Ibnb>-Saud Islamic University in Riyadh, part of Saudi Arabia’s state-run university system, funded and controlled by the Saudi Ministry of Education. |  | | The Saudi royals have supported it not because they are automatically true believers, but because they find legitimacy for their royal dictatorship in promoting this religion (and the religion gains strength by siding with the winning horse). |  | | Its an age old formula practiced by many religions and dictatorships (royal and otherwise), and the Sauds have been doing it themselves for hundreds of years. |
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http://obsidianwings.blogs.com/obsidian_wings/2005/02/the_war_on_wahh.html
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| Â | german.pages.de - a modern mahdi |
 | | In principle, the al-Sauds are not only monarchs but also spiritual heads of Wahhabism because, in 1744, Mohammed <b>Ibnb> Saud – the founder of the al-Saud dynasty – who had struck an alliance with the itinerant mahdi <b>Ibnb> Abdul Wahhab– married his son Abdul Aziz with the daughter of Abdul Wahhab. |  | | Another important mahdi was Sheikh Mohammed <b>ibnb> Abdul Wahhab (1703-1792), the founder of the Islamic school of the muwahhiduns, also known as Wahhabism-- the official religion of Saudi-Arabia, a particularly strict version of Sunni Islam. |  | | <b>Ibnb> Abdul Wahhab "preached the virtues of a permanent jihad (holy war) against Islamic modernisers, hypocrites as well as the infidel."(The Kingdom of Corruption; The Saudi Connection By Tariq Ali. |
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http://a.modern.mahdi.at.german.pages.de
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| Â | <b>Ibnb> Saud of Saudi Arabia - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | In 1964 King Saud was deposed by the Saudi Council of Ministers and succeeded by King Faisal, another of <b>Ibnb> Saud's sons. |  | | On 10 January 1926 <b>Ibnb> Saud was proclaimed King of the Hejaz in the Great Mosque at Mecca. |  | | <b>Ibnb> Saud is the father of all the Kings of Saudi Arabia that have succeeded him. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibn_Saud
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| Â | SAUDI ARABIA: Ruling family faces growing dissent |
 | | This relationship dates back to the 1744 alliance between Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abd al-Wahhab and Muhammad <b>ibnb> Saud, a sort of merger of religious legitimacy and military might. |  | | The official clergy regularly issue fatwas (religious judicial opinions) that justify the policies of the al Saud in Islamic vocabulary, even when those policies are deplored by the people. |  | | In the aftermath of the horrific attacks in New York and Washington, word spread that many of the hijackers were from the Asir, the mountainous southwest province of Saudi Arabia, and were linked to Saudi dissident Osama bin Laden, a man who has vowed to overthrow the Saudi royal family, the al Saud. |
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http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2001/470/470p20.htm
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| Â | The Religious Policeman |
 | | RIYADH, 7 June 2004 — Imam Muhammad <b>ibnb> Saud Islamic University in Riyadh has registered four candidates for a research program into the causes of terrorism. |  | | DAMMAM, 9 June 2004 — Eastern Province Governor Prince Muhammad <b>ibnb> Fahd has promised the Indian ambassador to bring a speedy solution to a labor dispute in a Jubail-based company which has not paid its workers for over eight months. |  | | Twenty-five-year-old Cpl. Muhammad Al-Shatri Al-Mutairi died in the line of duty while Cpl. Muhammad Al-Otaibi, 30, was critically wounded as members of a car with Qatari license plates opened fire when they were asked for papers during a check on the highway leading to Kharj. |
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http://muttawa.blogspot.com/2004_06_01_muttawa_archive.html
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| Â | OpinionJournal - Extra |
 | | Mohammed <b>ibnb> Saud, ancestor to the current king, struck a pact with Mohammed <b>ibnb> Abd al-Wahhab some 250 years ago, whereby Wahhab's fundamentalist clerics and followers would support the Saud family, in exchange for the royal family's generous financial support of Wahhabism, Wahhab's militant version of Sunni Islam. |  | | Dutton also flacks for the House of Saud and even lobbies on the royal family's behalf from time to time. |  | | The House of Saud, however, promotes conversions of a different kind--bringing people into Islam, particularly those who work in embassies. |
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http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra?id=110004154
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| Â | Muhammad <b>ibnb> Abd al Wahhab - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Saudi Arabia 's official religion is Islam according to <b>Ibnb> Abd al-Wahhab's interpretation. |  | | An alliance between <b>Ibnb> Abd al-Wahhab and Muhammad bin Saud caused Wahhabbism to spread in areas that <b>Ibnb> Saud conquered. |  | | <b>Ibnb> Abd al-Wahhab is viewed as a reformer by those who follow the Wahhabi sect of Islam. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_ibn_Abd_al_Wahhab
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| Â | CSW |
 | | In a statement to the UN in April 2000, Prince Dr Turki <b>Ibnb> Mohammed <b>Ibnb> Saud Al-Kabeer said : “No non-Muslims had ever been subjected to prosecution or punishment because of their religious faith.” |  | | Saudi Arabia is a special place; it is the cradle of Islam and the Prophet Mohamed declared it a preserve of Islam. |  | | But Saudi Arabia cannot allow the public practice of any religion which contradicts Islam. |
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http://www.csw.org.uk/Resources/Profiles/saudi_arabia/saudi_arabiamain_Print.htm
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| Â | Muhammad <b>ibnb> Saud |
 | | Please See Muhammad bin Saud For Further Information about Muhammad <b>ibnb> Saud. |
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http://www.bambooweb.com/articles/m/u/Muhammad_ibn_Saud.html
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