Saudi Arabia officially known as the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (
KSA), is the largest
Arab state in
Western Asia by land area (approximately 2,
150,
000 km2 (830,000 sq mi), constituting the bulk of the
Arabian Peninsula) and the second-largest in the
Arab world after
Algeria. It is bordered by
Jordan and
Iraq to the north,
Kuwait to the northeast,
Qatar,
Bahrain and the
United Arab Emirates to the east,
Oman to the southeast, and
Yemen in the south. It is the only nation with both a
Red Sea coast and a
Persian Gulf coast.
Before the inception of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, modern-day Saudi Arabia consisted of four distinct regions: Hejaz,
Najd and parts of
Eastern Arabia (Al-Hasa) and
Southern Arabia ('
Asir).
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia was founded in 1932 by
Ibn Saud; he united the four regions into a single state through a series of conquests beginning in 1902 with the capture of
Riyadh, the ancestral home of his family, the
House of Saud.
The country has since been an absolute monarchy governed along Islamic lines, namely under the influence of Wahhabism. Saudi Arabia is sometimes called "the
Land of the
Two Holy Mosques" in reference to
Al-Masjid al-Haram (in
Mecca), and
Al-Masjid an-Nabawi (in
Medina), the two holiest places in
Islam.
There are 20 million
Saudi citizens and 5 million foreigners living in Saudi Arabia. Most
Saudis are
Sunni Muslims, approximately 23 percent are Wahhabis, especially those living in Najd. With the world's second largest oil reserves and the world's sixth largest natural gas reserves, Saudi Arabia is the world's largest oil exporter.
The Kingdom is categorized as a high income economy with the 19th highest
GDP in the world. It is a member of
Gulf Cooperation Council,
Organisation of Islamic Cooperation,
G-20 major economies and
OPEC. A large portion of the landscape is uninhabitable desert. Its economy is largely backed by its oil industry, which accounts for more than 95% of exports and 70% of government revenue, although at the turn of the
21st century the government has attempted to diversify the economy away from the oil sector.
Following the unification of the kingdoms of
Hejaz and Nejd, the new state was named al-Mamlakah al-ʻArabīyah as-Suʻūdīyah (a transliteration of
المملكة العربية السعودية in
Arabic) by royal decree on
23 September 1932 by its founder,
Abdulaziz Al Saud (Ibn Saud). This is normally translated as "the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia" in
English, although it literally means "the
Saudi Arab Kingdom".
The word "Saudi" is derived from the element as-Suʻūdīyah in the
Arabic name of the country, which is a type of adjective known as a nisba, formed from the dynastic name of the
Saudi royal family, the Al
Saud (آل سعود). Its inclusion indicated that the country's ruler viewed it as the personal possession of the royal family. Al Saud is an Arabic name formed by adding the word Al, meaning "family of" or "
House of", to the personal name of an ancestor
. In the case
of the Al Saud, this is the father of the dynasty's
18th century founder,
Muhammad bin Saud
In pre-Islamic times, apart from a small number of urban trading settlements (such as Mecca and Medina), most of what was to become Saudi Arabia was populated by nomadic tribal societies in the inhospitable desert.
The Prophet of Islam,
Muhammad, was born in Mecca in about 571. In the early
7th century, Muhammad united the various tribes of the peninsula and created a single Islamic religious polity. Following his death in 632, his followers rapidly expanded the territory under Muslim rule beyond
Arabia, conquering huge swathes of territory (from the
Iberian Peninsula in west to modern day
Pakistan in east) in a matter of decades. In so doing, Arabia soon became a politically peripheral region of the
Muslim world as the focus shifted to the more developed conquered lands. From the
10th century to the early
20th century Mecca and Medina were under the control of a local
Arab ruler known as the
Sharif of Mecca, but at most times the
Sharif owed allegiance to the ruler of one of the major
Islamic empires based in
Baghdad,
Cairo or
Istanbul. Most of the remainder of what became Saudi Arabia reverted to traditional tribal rule
.
In the 16th century, the
Ottomans added the Red Sea and Persian Gulf coast (the Hejaz, Asir and Al-Hasa) to the
Empire and claimed suzerainty over the interior. One reason was to thwart
Portuguese attempts to attack the Red Sea (hence the Hejaz) and the
Indian Ocean. Ottoman degree of control over these lands varied over the next four centuries with the fluctuating strength or weakness of the Empire's central authority. The emergence of what was to become the Saudi royal family, known as the Al Saud, began in Nejd in central Arabia in 1744, when Muhammad bin Saud, founder of the dynasty, joined forces with the religious leader
Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, founder of the
Wahhabi movement, a strict puritanical form of
Sunni Islam.
- published: 22 May 2015
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