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Encyclopedia > King Talal
Image:Kingtalal.jpg

King Talal bin Abdullah (February 26, 1909 - July 7, 1972) was King of Jordan from July 20, 1951 until forced to abdicate due to health reasons (he suffered from schizophrenia) on August 11, 1952. Talal had ascended the Jordanian throne after the assassination in Jerusalem of his father Abdullah, of which his eldest son, Hussein, was also a near victim. Hussein formally succeeded his father in 1952 (but did not reign immediately, as he was not yet 18 years old).


Born in Mecca in 1909, in 1934 he married Zein al Sharaf Talal. He attended the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst from which he graduated in 1939.


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. The constitution was ratified on January 1, 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.

Preceded by:
Abdullah I
Hashemite King of Jordan Succeeded by:
Hussein

  Results from FactBites:
 
Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Hussein of Jordan (1494 words)
Hussein bin Talal (حسين بن طلال Ḥusayn bin Ṭalāl; November 14, 1935 – February 7, 1999) was the King of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan from 1952 to 1999.
A graduate of Cambridge University and a former lecturer in English literature at Cairo University, the bride was 26 to the groom's 19.
King Hussein was succeeded as king by his eldest son Abdullah II of Jordan.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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