THEIR ORIGIN, HISTURY, TENETS, AND INFLUENCE. 329 
1815. Battle of Bessel; Wahabis defeated. 
1816. Ibrahim Pasha lands at Yenbo to continue war. 
i818. Ibrahim Pasha after a siege of five months takes 
Deriah, the Wahabi capital, and demolishes it; 
Abdullah executed at Constantinople, December 
19th. 
1819. Second English expedition against pirate Wahabis. 
1820. Turki, the younger son of Abdullah, raises the Wahabi 
standard in revolt against the Turks. 
1821. Riadh becomes the new capital. 
1826. Wakabi Jihad under Seyyid Ahmed in Northern India 
against the Sikhs. 
1832. Feysul, brother of Turki, succeeds to the sultanate. 
1842. Khursid Pasha, the last representative of Egyptian 
rule, compelled to quit his frontier residence at 
Kaseem; Asir returns to imdependence and 
Wahabiism. 
1863. Palgrave visits Feysul at his capital. 
1865. Sir Lewis Pelly visits Feysul. 
1866 [2]. Feysul assassinated. His two sons, Saood and 
Abdullah, rival claimants for the rulership. 
1868. Saood battles with the Ateyba tribe and loses heavily. 
He returns to Riadh. But the Wahabi power is 
broken. The Shammar dynasty of Ibn Rashid 
becomes paramount in all Centrai Arabia. 
List or AUTHORITIES. 
Encyclopedia Britannica, art. “Arabia.” Ninth Edition. 
Hughes's Dictionary of Islam. (London, 1885.) 
Araric Manuscripr entitled: Avtab el Kafiet el Shafiet fil Intisar el 
firket el Najiet by Abd Allah bin Abi Bekr ibn Neem el JSoziet el 
Hanbali. (Riadh, Arabia, A.H. 1187=1773 a.p.) At Bahrein. 
Burckhardt’s Notes on the Bedouins and Wahabys. (London, 1831.) 
Brydge’s Brief History of the Wahhdabis. (2) 
Sir Lewis Pelly’s Political Mission to Nejd. (London, 1868.) 
Hunter’s Musulmans of Indie, (London, 1878.) 
Palgrave’s Central and Eastern Arabia. (London, 1883.) 
Badger’s Imams and Seyyids of Oman. (London, 1871.) 
Ali Bey’s (Juan Badia y Leblich) Travels in Arabia. 2 vols. (London 
1816.) 
Lady Ann Blunt’s Pilgrimage to Nejd. 
Clark’s The Arabs and the Turks. (Boston, 1875.) 
O. De Corancez, Histoire des Wahabis. (Paris, 1810.) 
Blunt’s Future of Islam. (London, 1883.) 
Arnold’s Preaching of Islam. (Westminster, 1896.) 
Dozy’s Het Islamisme. (Haarlem, 1880.) 
