Front cover image for The House of Saud : the rise and rule of the most powerful dynasty in the Arab world

The House of Saud : the rise and rule of the most powerful dynasty in the Arab world

David Holden (Author), Richard Johns (Author), James Buchan (Author)
Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud, a young prince from the heart of the Arabian interior, began his extraordinary ascent to power in 1902. He reclaimed the realm of his ancestors, extending his domain from one coast to the other and establishing guardianship of the Muslim Holy Places. He laid the basis of the modern Saudi state in a land where life had changed little since the time of Muhammad: religious faith, clan loyalties, and personal honor were its moral inspiration, the dreadful heat and menacing emptiness of the desert its frame. Cutting through the clichés that cover the West's lack of understanding of the House of Saud, this book offers a highly informed, balanced assessment of the kingdom and its ruling family--from the emergence of this desert dynasty on the world stage to its current key position in oil politics. The turbulent story that unfolds is of a colorful people in an exotic land intertwined with the machinations of Western diplomats, soldiers of fortune, foreign financiers, and multinational oil interests. In precise detail, this book answers the crucial questions about the oil-rich Saudis that directly affect our lives and the stability of the world

Print Book, English, 1982
First American edition
Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, New York, 1982