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As a diver, I'd love to dive the area if it weren't for all those Saudis, Egyptians and Sudanese around. Clear them out and I'd be right over.
@al-Hasani Nice pictures and video's. I had no idea there is high mountains with snow fall in KSA:
Saudi Aramco World : In the Alps of Arabia
@ al-Hasani
Wonderful pics bro. Are there any Turkish buildings left in Saudi Arabia from the Ottoman Era ?
Yes, quite a few fortifications and a few castles. Some architecture here and there as well. Mostly mixed with local traditions since it already pre-dated the Ottomans by many hundreds of years. You also need to remember that most parts of KSA were not part of the Ottoman Empire but self-ruled (kingdoms, emirates etc.) and those that were (parts of Hijaz and parts of the Eastern Province) were ruled by local rulers such as the Sharifs of Makkah. There were also some Emirates in what is now Northern Najd in the Al-Rashid's that ruled the Emirate of Jabal Shammar who were not formally part of the Ottoman Empire but allies. In general those were pro-Ottoman rulers that gave their allegiance to the Sultan/Caliph. In the case of parts of modern day KSA that were officially a part of the Ottoman Empire.
There are also Turks or descendants of Turks living in KSA (mostly mixed now) just like there are Arab communities in Turkey. People by far have mostly a positive view of Turkey and Turks especially in these days were Arab-Turkish relations have improved.
Thanks for the info, appreciated very much.
I really learned much in PDF about Turkish-Arab relations both for Turkey Era and Ottoman Era.
I used to think that "Arabs stabbed us in the back while we were in need of a help." But later on i discovered different perspectives of the situation. ( Thanks goes to @BLACKEAGLE for his explanatory posts ).
I hope Arab-Turkish relations continues to flourish.
I'm going to place a good luck talisman here.
^^ This one is for the Arab and/or Turkish haters.
You are very welcome, bro.
Regarding the Caliphate talk then you need to remember that we Arabs ruled the Caliphate for nearly 1000 years. From the very beginning and throughout the most vital and important parts of Islamic history - Rashidun (4 rightly guided Caliphs), Umayyads, Al-Andalus, Abbasids, Golden Age of Islam, nearly all the Islamic conquests etc.
The Ottomans or rather the House of Osman (originally Turks from modern-day Turkmenistan) proclaimed themselves as Caliphs and replaced the Abbasids who ruled as nominal "Caliphs" from Cairo after the sacking of Baghdad by the Mongols in 1258. It was Selim I the grandson of Mehmed the Conqueror (who conquered modern-day Istanbul) that crowned himself as Caliph in 1512 after he gained control of Hijaz. This is all history and no Arab are angry about that today or is blaming the Ottomans/Turks for "stealing" their Caliphate. I believe that the Turks should do the same the other way around. Because we all know that many of the Caliphs were more rulers/sultans than Caliphs. This is why we Sunni Muslims at least distinguish between the 4 Rightly guided Caliphs (Rashidun) and all the others including all the Arab Caliphs that ruled for 800 years after and the Ottoman/Turkish ones.
Besides many Arabs were also pro-Ottoman and even fought for the Ottoman Empire despite their opponents fighting for their own countries. Anyway all history today as I told.
Let us hope for a continued brotherly Arab-Turkish relations in the future at least.
We are thought Arab Caliphate Eras in school. I think this is the only historical teaching that doesn't belong to Turkic history.
I understand that there is no bad-blood for caliphate "exchange"
What about the abolish of caliphate ? I mean we ended caliphate, a very important figure in Islam which has been founded by Arabs...
Well, that is great. It is part of fundamental Islamic history that every Muslim know or at least have heard about. Yes, among some. I look at it as history and a struggle of power that I had no role in.
Well, correct me if I am wrong bro, but did the Turks themselves not abolish the Caliphate? At least they ousted the last nominal Caliph.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdülmecid_II
Or Abdul-Majid as he was also known as. He is buried in Makkah btw.
Later came Ataturk and the rest is history I guess.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_National_Movement
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atatürk's_Reforms
Most Turks I know are happy about that transformation but at the same time are Muslims and proud of their Ottoman past.
Times changes and history too. Maybe in 200 years the Turks will look at that period differently? Who knows? Rulers come and come but the people, land they inhabit, history, culture etc. often remain although they can change to. That's my philosophy.
Yes yes, I'm not saying otherwise.
Most true bro. Me and most of the Turks believe that whatever Atatürk done at that time was necessary. Great Ottoman Empire reduced to nothing, Sultan sold his people and our land. Allied forces invaded our country. The whole nation was war weary ( There were 300.000 Ottoman army deserters living in mountains across Anatolia as bandits.... some of them had been recruited as a boy and fought in many fronts for 10-15 years.) All of our armies disbanded, most of the weapons captured by allies. Even on these terms he managed to unite the Turkish people. And gained a deceive victory against invaders. We are most glad for him...
So true my brother, so true.....
We know for a fact that thousands settled not only in parts of KSA that were formally under Ottoman rule (although ruled by local rulers that had pledged their allegiance to the Sultan/Caliph in Istanbul) but other former Ottoman territories in the Arab and non-Arab world. Be it Yemen, Iraq, Syria etc. So the number is probably bigger than 200.000. At least partially. But again the Ottomans themselves came from a mixed background. Some were Turks some were Caucasians, Albanians etc.
You probably know all this already.
Thanks man, great info.
It's true we have mixed background. My father side is pure-turcomans. But mothers ancestors lived in Egypt as Ottoman officers, than later moved to Crete island. My grandfather has a slightly dark skin and sharp outlines (probably from Egytian heritage) and Dark Green eyes ( probably from Crete/Greek heritage).