Queen Noor of Jordan

Birthday August 23, 1951

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Washington, D.C., U.S.

Age 72 years old

Nationality United States

#13314 Most Popular

1894

His wife, Almas Mallouk, and their remaining children joined him in the United States in 1894.

He died three years later, leaving his teenage sons, Habib, and Najeeb (her paternal grandfather), to run his import business.

1910

Najeeb moved to Dallas around 1910 and fully assimilated into U.S. society.

Halaby attended schools in New York and California before entering National Cathedral School in Washington, D.C. from fourth to eighth grade.

She attended the Chapin School in New York City for two years, and then went on to graduate from Concord Academy.

1915

Queen Noor was born Lisa Najeeb Halaby in Washington, D.C., U.S., the eldest child of Najeeb Halaby (1915–2003) and Doris Carlquist (1918–2015).

Her paternal family is Syrian; her maternal family is Swedish American.

Her father was raised a Christian Scientist and was a Navy experimental test pilot, an airline executive, and government official.

He served as an aide to the United States Secretary of Defense in the Truman administration, before being appointed by President John F. Kennedy to head the Federal Aviation Administration.

1920

He was a petroleum broker, according to 1920 Census records.

Merchant Stanley Marcus recalled that in the mid-1920s, Halaby opened Halaby Galleries, a rug boutique and interior-decorating shop, at Neiman Marcus in Dallas, Texas, and ran it with his Texas-born wife, Laura Wilkins (1889–1987, later Mrs. Urban B. Koen).

Najeeb Halaby died shortly afterward, and his estate was unable to continue the new enterprise.

1951

Noor Al Hussein (نور الحسين; born Lisa Najeeb Halaby; August 23, 1951) is an American-born Jordanian philanthropist and activist who is the fourth wife and widow of King Hussein of Jordan.

1969

Najeeb Halaby also had a private-sector career, serving as CEO of Pan American World Airways from 1969 to 1972.

The Halabys had two children following Lisa; a son, Christian, and a younger daughter, Alexa.

The children were raised nominally Episcopalian.

1974

She entered Princeton University with its first coeducational freshman class and received an A.B. in architecture and urban planning in 1974 after completing a 32-page long senior thesis titled "96th Street and Second Avenue."

She was also a member of Princeton's first women's ice hockey team.

After she graduated from Princeton, Halaby moved to Australia, where she worked for a firm that specialized in planning new towns, with a burgeoning interest in the Middle East.

Because of Halaby's Syrian roots, this had special appeal for her.

1975

After a year, in 1975, she accepted a job offer from Llewelyn Davies, a British architectural and planning firm, which had been employed to design a model capital city center in Tehran, Iran.

When increasing political instability forced the company to relocate to the UK, she traveled to the Arab world and decided to apply to Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism while taking a temporary aviation facility research job in Amman.

Eventually, she left Arab Air and accepted a job with Alia Airlines to become Director of Facilities Planning and Design.

Halaby and the king became friends while he was still mourning the death of his third wife.

1977

Najeeb and Doris divorced in 1977.

1978

She was Queen of Jordan from their marriage on June 15, 1978, until Hussein's death on February 7, 1999.

Noor is the longest-standing member of the Board of Commissioners of the International Commission on Missing Persons.

As of 2023, she is president of the United World Colleges movement and an advocate of the anti-nuclear weapons proliferation campaign Global Zero.

Their friendship evolved and the couple became engaged in 1978.

Halaby wed King Hussein on June 15, 1978, in Amman, becoming Queen of Jordan.

Before her marriage, she accepted her husband's Sunni Islamic religion and upon the marriage, changed her name from Lisa Halaby to the royal name Noor Al Hussein ("Light of Hussein").

The wedding was a traditional Muslim ceremony.

Noor assumed management of the royal household and three stepchildren, Princess Haya bint Al Hussein, Prince Ali bin Al Hussein and Abir Muhaisen (her husband's children by Queen Alia).

Noor and Hussein had four children:

2010

According to research done in 2010 for the PBS series Faces of America by Professor Henry Louis Gates Jr.., of Harvard University, her great-grandfather, Elias Halaby, came to New York circa 1891, one of the earliest Syrian-Lebanese immigrants to the United States.

He was a Christian as well as having been a provincial treasurer (magistrate) as stated before by Najeeb Halaby in his autobiography Crosswinds: an Airman's Memoir.

He left Ottoman Syria with his two eldest sons.

2015

In 2015, Queen Noor received Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson Award for her public service.

Doris, who was of Swedish descent, died on December 25, 2015, aged 97.

Noor's paternal grandfather was Najeeb Elias Halaby, a Syrian-Lebanese businessman born in Zahle, and whose parents hailed from Aleppo.