Talal of Jordan

Birthday February 26, 1909

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Mecca, Hejaz Vilayet, Ottoman Empire

DEATH DATE 1972-7-7, Istanbul, Turkey (63 years old)

Nationality Oman

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1909

Talal bin Abdullah (طلال بن عبد الله; 26 February 1909 – 7 July 1972) was King of Jordan from the assassination of his father, King Abdullah I, on 20 July 1951 until his forced abdication on 11 August 1952.

1916

Abdullah was a son of Hussein bin Ali, Sharif of Mecca, who led the Great Arab Revolt during World War I against the Ottoman Empire in 1916.

Sharif Hussein and his sons led the Great Arab Revolt against the Ottoman Empire in 1916; after removing Ottoman rule, the Sharif's sons established Arab monarchies in place.

1921

As a member of the Hashemite dynasty, the royal family of Jordan since 1921, Talal was a 39th-generation direct descendant of Muhammad.

Talal was born in Mecca as the eldest child of Abdullah bin Hussein and his wife Musbah bint Nasser.

After removing Ottoman rule, Abdullah established the Emirate of Transjordan in 1921, which became a British Protectorate, and ruled as its Emir.

During Abdullah's absence, Talal spent his early years alone with his mother.

Abdullah established the Emirate of Transjordan in 1921, a British Protectorate, for which he was Emir.

During Abdullah's absence, Talal spent his early years alone with his mother.

1927

Talal received private education in Amman, later joining Transjordan's Arab Legion as second lieutenant in 1927.

He then became aide to his grandfather Sharif Hussein, the ousted king of the Hejaz, during his exile in Cyprus.

Talal received private education in Amman, later joining Transjordan's Arab Legion as second lieutenant in 1927.

He then became aide to his grandfather Sharif Hussein, the ousted King of the Hejaz, during his exile in Cyprus.

1929

He was educated privately before attending the British Army's Royal Military College, Sandhurst, from which he graduated in 1929 when he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Cavalry Regiment of the Arab Legion.

His regiment was attached to a British regiment in Jerusalem and also to the Royal Artillery in Baghdad.

1934

He married Zein al-Sharaf bint Jamil in November of 1934, who bore his first son Hussein in 1935.

Talal ascended the Jordanian throne after the assassination of his father, Abdullah I, in Jerusalem.

His son Hussein, who was accompanying his grandfather at Friday prayers, was also nearly a victim.

1939

Talal was described by British resident in Transjordan Sir Alec Kirkbride in a 1939 correspondence as being "at heart, deeply anti-British".

However, Kirkbride doubted the meaningfulness of this animosity towards the British, owing it purely to the "tension" between Talal and his father Emir Abdullah and Talal's desire to create of himself as a "big nuisance as possible".

Israeli historian Avi Shlaim, however, argues that Talal's contempt for the British was genuine as he "bitterly resented British affairs in the affairs of his country" and that such hostility towards the British was downplayed by Kirkbride due to Britain's "self-serving" interests to "protect her reputation".

Furthermore, at the time of the succession crisis that occurred after King Abdullah I's assassination, Talal was described by contemporary Egyptian and Syrian press as a "great patriotic anti-imperialist" in contrast to his half-brother Naif, who also sought the throne, and was denounced as "weak-minded and entirely subservient to British influence".

A year into Talal's reign, Arab Legion intelligence officer Major Hutson reported that Amman was "seething with a rumor to the effect that the Legion, or Cabinet, intend on handing over West Jordan to Israel and that King Talal was deported by the British for refusing to agree".

At this time, Talal was reported by British resident Furlonge, Queen Zein (mother of Talal's son and successor Hussein), and Prime Minister Tawfik Abu Al-Huda as experiencing a mental illness.

1946

Abdullah sought independence in 1946, and the Emirate became the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.

Talal became crown prince upon his father's designation as king of Jordan.

1948

By 1948, Talal became a general in the Arab Legion.

By 1948, Talal became a general in the Army.

1951

Abdullah was assassinated in Jerusalem in 1951, and Talal became king.

On 20 July 1951, Prince Hussein travelled to Jerusalem to perform Friday prayers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque with his grandfather, King Abdullah I. An assassin, fearing that the king might normalise relations with the State of Israel, killed Abdullah, but the 15-year-old Hussein survived.

During his short reign he was responsible for the formation of a liberalised constitution for the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, which made the government collectively, and the ministers individually, responsible before the Jordanian Parliament.

1952

Talal's most revered achievement as king is the establishment of Jordan's modern constitution in 1952, rendering his kingdom a constitutional monarchy.

He ruled for less than thirteen months until he was forced to abdicate by Parliament because he was experiencing a mental illness, reported as schizophrenia.

The constitution was ratified on 1 January 1952.

King Talal is also judged as having done much to smooth the previously strained relations between Jordan and the neighbouring Arab states of Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

1972

Talal spent the rest of his life at a sanatorium in Istanbul and died there on 7 July 1972.

He was succeeded by his oldest son Hussein.

Talal was born in Mecca as the eldest child of Abdullah, an Arab deputy of Mecca in the Ottoman Parliament, and his wife Musbah bint Nasser.

Abdullah was the son of Hussein bin Ali, Sharif of Mecca, traditional steward of the holy cities of Mecca and Medina.

2002

Talal has been described by his cousin Prince Ra'ad bin Zeid in a 2002 interview as having "very anti-British sentiments", caused by Britain's failure to fully comply with their agreement with his grandfather Sharif Hussein ibn Ali in the McMahon–Hussein Correspondence to establish an independent Arab kingdom under his rule.