Descendants of Ibn Saud
Descendants of Ibn Saud | |
---|---|
Current region | Saudi Arabia |
Ibn Saud (1875–1953), the founder and first king of Saudi Arabia, was very young when he first married. However his wife died shortly after their marriage. Ibn Saud remarried at eighteen and his firstborn child was Turki.[1] He had 45 sons of whom 36 survived to adulthood and had children of their own.[2] He also had many daughters. He is thought to have had 22 wives.[3]
Wives and their children
This is a list of the first generation of offspring of Ibn Saud, sorted by his numerous wives. Many of the sons of Ibn Saud served in prominent leadership positions in Saudi Arabia including all of the nation's monarchs since his death. Those who served as King are in bold.
Sharifa bint Saqr Al Fajri
Ibn Sauds' first wife. She was from Bani Khalid and married Ibn Saud in 1894, but died six months after.[4]
Wadhah bint Muhammad Al Hussein Al Orair
The daughter of Muhammed and Abta Sardah,[5][6] Wadhah belong to Bani Khalid.[7][8][9] Some reports state she is from the Qahtan tribe.[7][10][11][12][13] Ibn Saud and Wadhah have at least four children.[14]
Name | Lifespan | Notes |
---|---|---|
Turki (I) | 1900–1919 | Nominal heir in Riyadh and Najd |
Saud | 12 January 1902 – 23 February 1969 | Crown Prince from 1932; King (1953–1964), Deposed and exiled. |
Khalid | 1902–1909 | |
Munira | She married her full first cousin Fahd, the son of her paternal full uncle Sa'ad Al Abd al-Rahman[15] and daughter of her step mother. She also married Khalid bin Muhammad bin Abd al-Rahman Al Abd al-Rahman the son of her uncle and her step mothers sister Sarah bint Abdullah Al Sheikh. He died in 1972.[citation needed] | |
Nura[10] | ||
Abdullah[citation needed] |
Sarah bint Abdullah bin Faisal
Sarah married Ibn Saud about in 1900, but she bore him no sons.[4] She later married Turki bin Abdallah bin Saud Al Saud and then, Abdul Aziz bin Musaid bin Jiluwi Al Jiluwi. Her mother was the aunt of Ibn Saud's first wife.[16]
Tarfah bint Abdullah Al Sheikh
Tarfah belongs to the Al Sheikh clan.[17][18] Her father was Abdullah bin Abdullatif. She married Ibn Saud in 1902[19] and had at least five children with him.[13]
Name | Lifespan | Notes |
---|---|---|
Khalid (I) | (born 1903, died in 1904) | |
Faisal | (April 1906 – 25 March 1975) | Prime Minister and Regent prior to deposing his brother; King (1964–1975); murdered. |
Saad (I) | (1914–1919) | Robert Lacey in his book The Kingdom states that Princess Hassa mothered Saad.(p. 174 and p. 526) Also reported by other sources.[4] |
Anud | (born 1917, date of death unknown) | |
Nura | (1903–1938) | She married her half first cousin Khalid, the son of her paternal half uncle Muhammad Al Abd al-Rahman[20][21] |
Lulua bint Salih Al Dakhil
Ibn Saud and Lulua had one child.[22]
Name | Lifespan | Notes |
---|---|---|
Fahd (I) | (1906–1919) |
Al Jawhara bint Musaed Al Jiluwi
Ibn Saud and Al Jawhara bint Musaed Al Jiluwi had three children.
Name | Lifespan | Notes |
---|---|---|
Muhammad | (1910–1988) | nicknamed Abu Al-Sharayn ("Father of the two evils"); held many ministries under his father and older brother Saud. Led revolt against Saud and was briefly de jure Crown Prince before ceding the job to his full brother Khalid. |
Khalid (II) | (13 February 1913 – 13 June 1982) | Crown Prince 1965—75; King 1975–1982 |
Al Anoud |
Lajah bint Khalid bin Hithlayn
Ibn Saud and Lajah had one child.[citation needed]
Name | Lifespan | Notes |
---|---|---|
Sara | (1916 – June 2002)[citation needed] |
Bazza (I)
Bazza (I) was a Moroccan woman.[13][23][24] Ibn Saud and Bazza had at least one child.
Name | Lifespan | Notes |
---|---|---|
Nasser[25] | (1911–1984) | His half-brother Mansour died from alcohol poisoning at a party Nasser hosted, while he was governor of Riyadh. He was later excluded from all positions and disgraced.[citation needed] |
Jawhara bint Saad bin Abdul Muhsin Al Sudairi
Jawhara bint Saad Al Sudairi[26] Jawhara bint Saad was the sister of Haya bint Saad who was also spouse of King Abdulaziz and the mother of Prince Badr, late Prince Abdul Majid and Prince Abdul Illah.[26]
Name | Lifespan | Notes |
---|---|---|
Sa'ad (II) | (1915–1993) | Bypassed for throne, given chairmanship of royal family council of Al Saud (precursor of Allegiance Council) as consolation prize. |
Musa'id | (1923–2013)[27] | Disgraced when son murdered King Faisal. Bypassed from succession.[citation needed] |
Abdul Mohsin | (1925–1985) | |
Al Bandari | (1928–2008)[28] |
Hassa Al Sudairi
Her lifespan was 1900–1969. Ibn Saud and Hassa had 7 sons of which 2 were kings and 4 daughters.
- Fahd (II) (1921 – 1 August 2005); King (1982–2005)
- Sultan (1928–2011); Crown Prince (2005–2011)
- Luluwah (ca. 1928–2008)[29]
- Abdul Rahman (1931–2017); Deputy Minister of Defense and Aviation (1978–2011), removed from Succession.
- Nayef (1933–2012); Crown Prince (27 October 2011 – 16 June 2012)
- Turki (II) (1934–2016); Deputy Defense Minister (1969–78), removed from Succession.
- Salman (born 31 December 1935); King (2015–present)
- Ahmed (born 1942); Deputy Minister of the Interior (1975–2012) and briefly as Minister of the Interior in 2012, removed from Succession.
- Jawahir[citation needed]
- Latifa
- Al Jawhara
- Moudhi (died young)[citation needed]
- Felwa (died young)[citation needed]
Shahida
Shahida (died 1938) was an Armenian woman who was reportedly the favourite wife of King Abdulaziz.[30][31] Ibn Saud and Shahida had at least three children.
- Mansour (1921 – 2 May 1951); Minister of Defense, died from alcohol intoxication while partying.
- Misha'al (1926 – 3 May 2017); Minister of Defense, removed from Succession
- Qumash (1927 – September 2011)[32]
- Mutaib (1931-2019); Minister of Municipal and Rural Affairs (1980 to 2009), removed from Succession.
Fahda bint Asi bin Shuraim Al Shammari
- Abdullah (1 August 1924 – 23 January 2015); King (2005–2015)
- Nouf[citation needed]
- Seeta (c. 1930 – 13 April 2011); initiated the Princesses' Council
Bazza (II)
Bazza died in 1940 and was Syrian or Moroccan.[33][13][34]
- Bandar (1923–2019)
- Fawwaz (1934–2008)
- Mishari[citation needed]
Haya bint Sa'ad Al Sudairi
Second wife from that clan.[35] Her lifespan was (1913 – 18 April 2003).[citation needed]
- Badr (I) (1931–1932)[citation needed]
- Badr (II) (1933 – 1 April 2013)
- Huzza (1951 – July 2000)
- Abdul Ilah (born 1939)
- Abdul Majeed (1943–2007)
- Nura (born 1930)[citation needed]
- Mishail[citation needed]
- Zubri[citation needed]
Bushra
Name | Lifespan | Notes |
---|---|---|
Mishari | (1932 – 23 May 2000)[36] |
Munaiyir
Munaiyir was an Armenian woman. Her lifespan was (c. 1909 – December 1991).[citation needed]
- Talal (I) (1924–1927)[citation needed]
- Talal (II) (15 August 1931 – 22 December 2018)
- Nawwaf (16 August 1932 – 29 September 2015)
- Madawi[36]
Mudhi
- Sultana (c. 1928 – 7 July 2008)[37]
- Haya (c. 1929 – 2 November 2009)[38]
- Majid (II) (9 October 1938 – 12 April 2003)
- Sattam (21 January 1941 – 12 February 2013)
Nouf bint Al Shalan
Nouf was the daughter of Nawaaf. She married in November 1935.
- Thamir (1937 – 27 June 1959)[citation needed]
- Mamdouh (born 1941)
- Mashhur (born 1942)
Saida al Yamaniyah
Saida was a Yemeni woman, hence her title al Yamaniyah.[citation needed]
- Hathloul (1942 – 29 September 2012)
Baraka Al Yamaniyah
- Muqrin (born 15 September 1945); Crown Prince (23 January 2015— 29 April 2015)
Futayma
Mudhi bint Abdullah Almandeel Al Khalidi
Mudhi was from Bani Khalid[citation needed]
- Shaikha (born 1922)[citation needed]
Aliyah Fakeer
- Majid (I) (1939–1940)[citation needed]
- Abdul Saleem (1941–1942)[citation needed]
- Jiluwi (I) (1942–1944)[citation needed]
- Jiluwi (II) (1952–1952); the youngest son of Ibn Saud but died as an infant.[citation needed]
Khadra
No known offspring.[39]
Grandchildren
Due to the Islamic traditions of polygyny and easy divorce (on the male side), King Abdul Aziz has approximately a thousand grandchildren.[40] The following is a select list of notable grandsons in the male line. They will be in the line of Succession to the Saudi Arabian throne.
Patrilineal grandsons
- Abdullah bin Khalid (born 1935) – Chairman of the King Khalid Foundation.[citation needed]
- Badr bin Mohammed – Member of Allegiance council.[citation needed]
- Khalid Al Faisal (born 1940) – poet, governor of the Makkah Province (2007—2013) und (2015—present) and managing director of the King Faisal Foundation. Minister of education between December 2013 and January 2015.
- Mishaal bin Saud (born 1940) – Governor of Najran Province (1997—2008).
- Abdul Elah bin Saud (born 1941) Ambassador to Sweden (1964—1968)
- Faisal bin Bandar (born 1943) – Former governor of Qasim Province (1992—2015); governor of Riyadh Province (2015—present).
- Muhammad bin Saad (born 1944) – Former deputy governor of Riyadh Province.
- Mohammad bin Nasser (born 1944) – Governor of Jizan Region (2000—present). [citation needed]
- Turki Al Faisal (born 1945) – Head of Saudi Arabia's General Intelligence Directorate from 1977 to 2001. Former ambassador to the US until December 2006. Member of the board of trustees for the King Faisal Foundation.
- Saud bin Abdul Mohsin (born 1947) – Governor of Ha'il Province (1999—2017).
- Turki bin Nasser (born 1948) – Former president of the meteorology and environment (PME).
- Fahd bin Badr – Governor of Al Jawf Region (2000—2018). [citation needed]
- Badr bin Abdul-Mushin (born 1949) poet.
- Khalid bin Sultan (born 1949) – Deputy minister of defense from November 2011 to 20 April 2013.[41]
- Bandar bin Sultan (born 1949) – Former long-serving ambassador to the US; secretary-general of the National Security Council from October 2005 to January 2015 and director general of the Saudi Intelligence Agency from 19 July 2012 to 2014.
- Muhammad bin Fahd (born January 1950) – Former governor of the Eastern Province (1987 – 13 January 2013).
- Khaled bin Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1950) – Member of the Allegiance Council.
- Saud bin Fahd (born 8 October 1950) – Former vice director of the Saudi Intelligence Agency.
- Fahd bin Sultan (born 1950) – Governor of Tabuk Province (1987—present).
- Sultan bin Fahd (born 1951) – Former president of youth welfare.
- Khalid bin Bandar (born 1951) – Former governor of Riyadh Province (2013—2014).
- Faisal bin Sultan (born 1951) – secretary general of Sultan bin Abdualaziz al Saud foundation. [citation needed]
- Talal bin Mansour (born 1951) – Member of Allegiance Council. [citation needed]
- Mansour bin Bandar – Air Base commander. [citation needed]
- Turki bin Bandar — commander of the air force.
- Mansour bin Mutaib (born 1952) – Former minister of municipal and rural affairs and minister of state.
- Mutaib bin Abdullah (born 1952) – Commander of the national guard (2010–2012) and minister of national guard May 2013-November 2017.
- Faisal bin Thamir (born 1953) – Member of Allegiance Council, whose father died before 1960.{{citation needed|date=October 2016}
- Mohammed bin Nawwaf (born 1953) – Saudi ambassador to London (2005—2018).
- Faisal bin Khalid (born 1954) – Governor of Asir Province (2007—2018)
- Mishari bin Saud (born 1954) – Governor of Al Bahah Province (2010—2017).
- Al-Waleed bin Talal (born 1955) – Investor
- Saud bin Nayef (born 1956) – Governor of Eastern Province (2013—present); former head of the Court of Crown Prince (2011 – 13 January 2013), former Saudi ambassador to Spain and deputy governor of the Eastern Province.
- Sultan bin Salman (born 1956) – Former astronaut (1985) and secretary general of the supreme commission for tourism since 2000.[42]
- Mishaal bin Majid (born 1957) – Jeddah governor.
- Khalid bin Turki (born 1957). — eldest son of Prince Turki II [citation needed]
- Khalid bin Fahd (born 1958). — fifth son of King Fahd [citation needed]
- Muhammad bin Nayef (born 1959) – Minister of interior from 5 November 2012,and Crown Prince from 29 April 2015,to June 2017.
- Fahd bin Turki (born 1959) Commander of Army Ground Forces from April 2017,[43] then of Joint Forces from February 2018[44]
- Abdulaziz bin Majid (born 1960) – Governor of Madinah Province (2005–2013)
- Abdulaziz bin Salman (born 1960) – Petroleum minister (since 2019).
- Hussam bin Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1960) – Chairman of Zain Telecommunication company , Governor of Al Bahah Province (2017—present)
- Abdulaziz bin Bandar (born 1961) – Deputy chief of Intelligence Presidency. [citation needed]
- Khaled bin Talal (born 1962) – Businessman.
- Mansour bin Nasser (born 1962) – advisor to King Abdullah. [citation needed]
- Abdulaziz bin Abdullah (born 1963) – Deputy foreign minister since 2011.
- Abdulaziz bin Ahmed Al Saud (born 1963) – Businessman
- Mohammed bin Bandar (born 1965) — businessman
- Nayef bin Ahmed (born 1965) – Colonel in Saudi Armed Forces.[citation needed]
- Bandar bin Musaid – Member of Allegiance Council.[citation needed]
- Nayef bin Ahmed (born 1965) – Colonel in Saudi Armed Forces.[citation needed]
- Abdullah bin Musa'ad bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1965) – former president of Al-Hilal FC
- Abdul Aziz bin Abdul Elah (born 1965) – stakeholder.[citation needed]
- Faisal bin Turki (born 1965) – adviser at the ministry of petroleum and natural resources.[citation needed]
- Abdulrahman bin Musa'ad (born 1967) – former president of Al-Hilal FC
- Turki bin Talal bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud (born 1968) – aviator ,governor of the Asir Province (2018—present)
- Sultan bin Turki II bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1968) — oppositionist
- Abdulaziz bin Sa'ad (born 1968) – Governor of Hail Province (2017—present).[45]
- Faisal bin Salman (born 1970) – Governor of Madinah Province (2013—present)
- Fahd bin Muqrin – Saudi civic leader,[46] and businessman.[47][48][49][50]
- Mishaal bin Abdullah Al Saud (born 1970) – Governor of Najran Province (2009–2013); governor of Makkah province (December 2013-January 2015).
- Turki bin Abdullah Al Saud (born 1971) – Former deputy governor and governor of the Riyadh Province (2014—2015)
- Nayef bin Mamdouh bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1971) – Inventor
- Faisal bin Abdullah – Head of Saudi Arabia Red Crescent society.
- Abdul Aziz bin Fahd (born 1973) – Former Minister of State.[51]
- Turki bin Muqrin (born 1973) – Businessman.[52]
- Salman bin Sultan (born 1976) – Former deputy defense minister.[53]
- Abdulaziz bin Nawwaf (born 1979) – Member of Allegiance Council.[citation needed]
- Faisal bin Nawaf (born 1979) — the Governor of Al Jawf (December 2018—present)
- Badr bin Sultan (born 1980) — Governor of Al Jawf (February-December 2018) ; Deputy Governor of Mecca (December 2018—present)
- Abdulaziz bin Talal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1982) – Businessma
- Ahmed bin Sultan (born 1983) — philanthropist, businessman and composer
- Mohammad bin Salman (born 1985) – Minister of Defense since January 2015 and Crown Prince since June 2017.
- Majed bin Abdullah (born 1985) – Convicted of cocaine use.[citation needed]
- Saud Bin Salman (born 1986) — Businessman
- Abdullah bin Bandar bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1986) – Minister of the National Guard
- Turki bin Salman (born 1987) – Former chairman of the Saudi Research and Marketing Group.
- Abdullah bin Saad (born 1987) – Poet
- Khalid bin Salman (born 1988) – Ambassador to the United States
- Muhammad bin Mishari – Member of Allegiance Council.[citation needed]
- Faisal bin Abdul Majeed – Member of Allegiance Council.[citation needed]
- Abdul-Majid bin Abdul Elah (born 1993) is the President of the Saudi student Union at northeastern University in Boston
- Sultan bin Abdullah (born 1995) — Businessman
- Rakan bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1997) – youngest son of King Salman.[54]
- Badr bin Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 2003) – youngest son of King Abdullah.[citation needed]
Deceased
- Faisal bin Turki I bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (1918–1968) – Minister of the Interior
- Abdullah bin Faisal Al Saud (1921–2007) – Minister of the Interior and Minister of Health
- Fahad bin Saud (1923–2006) – Minister of Defense. Eldest son of King Saud
- Saad ibn Saud Al Saud (1924–1977) — Deputy emirs of the Northern province (1954—1961) and Asir (1969—1977)
- Bandar bin Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (1926–2016) – advisor
- Badr bin Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (1934–2004) – Governor of Riyadh
- Mohammed bin Saud (1934–2012) – Governor of Al Bahah Province and Minister of Defense.
- Bandar bin Khalid (1935–2014) – eldest son of King Khalid
- Abdullah Ibn Saud Al Saud (1935–1997) — the Governor of Mecca (1961—1963)
- Fahad Bin Khalid Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
- Fahd bin Mohammed (????–2015) - Father of Mishaal bint Fahd bin Mohammed Al Saud, who was executed for adultery.
- Mohammed bin Faisal (1937–2017) – Deputy minister for agriculture. Founder and chairman of DMI Trust and the Faisal Islamic Bank Group; member of the board of trustees for the King Faisal Foundation. Oldest son of Iffat Al Thunayan.
- Sultan bin Saud (1939—1975) – former president of Al-Nassr
- Saud Al Faisal (1940–2015) – Foreign Minister.
- Khalid ibn Saud Al Saud (1940–2020) — commander of the National Guard (1959—1966)
- Khalid bin Musaid (1942–1965) – Killed while protesting introduction of television[citation needed]
- Faisal bin Musaid (1944–1975) – Assassin of King Faisal
- Faisal bin Fahd (1945–1999) – President of Youth Welfare
- Abdul Rahman bin Saud Al Saud (1946–2004) – President of Al-Nassr
- Talal bin Saud Al Saud (1952–2020) – son of King Saud
- Mashhoor bin Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (1954–2004) – Convicted of cocaine possession
- Fahd bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (1955–2001) – Horse owner, businessman
- Ahmed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (1958–2002) – Media executive
- Turki bin Sultan (1959–2012) – Deputy Minister of Culture and Information
- Mansour bin Muqrin (1974–2017) – Advisor at the Crown Prince Court 2015–2017.[55]
- Saad bin Faisal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (????-10 Apr 2017)[56]
Granddaughters
- Lolowah bint Faisal Al Saud (born 1948) – Activist, previously married to Saud bin Abdul Muhsin Al Saud
- Sara bint Faisal Al Saud – Member of the Consultative Assembly of Saudi Arabia; married to Muhammed bin Saud Al Saud
- Haifa bint Faisal (born 1950) – married Bandar bin Sultan
- Fahda bint Saud (born 1953) – President of the Al Faisaliyah women's welfare society
- Moudi bint Khalid Al Saud – Member of the Consultative Assembly of Saudi Arabia, married to Abdul Rahman bin Faisal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, son of King Faisal
- Adila bint Abdullah Al Saud – Advocate of women's rights
- Basmah bint Saud (born 1964) – businesswoman
- Sora bint Saud Al Saud – entrepreneur
- Sara bint Talal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1973)
- Hassa bint Salman Al Saud (born 1974)
- Sahab bint Abdullah (born 1993) – ex-wife of Khalid bin Hamad Al Khalifa[57]
Great-grandchildren
Patrilineal great-grandsons of Ibn Saud
- Turki bin Faisal bin Turki I (1943–2009) - Former member of Allegiance Council.
- Abdullah bin Faisal bin Turki (1945–2019) – Member of Allegiance Council, succeeding late brother Turki bin Faisal[citation needed] (https://www.spa.gov.sa/viewfullstory.php?lang=en&newsid=1887336)
- Faisal bin Muhammad bin Saud (born 1951) – Deputy governor of Al Bahah Region[citation needed]
- Faisal bin Mishaal bin Saud bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1959) – Governor of Qassim Region
- Amr bin Mohammed Al Faisal Al Saud – Businessman
- Bandar bin Khalid Al Saud (born 1965) – Chairman of Al Watan
- Sultan bin Khalid bin Faisal – Naval officer[citation needed]
- Turki Bin Mohammed Bin Nasser Bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1969) – Director of International Affairs Ministry of Industry and Electricity
- Saud bin Khalid Al Saud – Deputy Governor of Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority
- Faisal bin Turki bin Nasser (born 1973) – President of Al Nassr
- Faisal bin Khalid bin Sultan bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1973) – Governor of the Northern Borders Region[58]
- Abdullah bin Khalid bin Sultan Al Saud (born 1988) - Ambassador to the United Nations and International Organizations in Vienna, Austria, Slovenia, and Slovakia[59][60]
- Sattam bin Khalid bin Nasser Al Saud
- Faisal bin Turki Al Faisal Al Saud (born 1975) – Director of Project Aware
- Saud bin Abdulaziz bin Nasser Al Saud (born 1977) – Convicted murderer
- Nawaf bin Faisal bin Fahd (born 1978) – Former President of youth welfare and former International Olympic Committee member
- Khaled bin Alwaleed bin Talal (born 1978) – investor
- Turki bin Mohamed bin Fahd Al Saud (born 1979) – Chairman of TAALEM Educational Services Company
- Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Nayef (born 1983) – Interior Minister since June 2017.
- Mohammed bin Saud bin Nayef – Horse racer[citation needed]
- Abdulaziz bin Turki Al Saud (born 1983) – Athlete
- Abdullah bin Mutaib Al Saud (born 1984) – Olympic athlete
- Khalid bin Bandar bin Sultan Al Saud – Businessman, ambassador to Germany and the United Kingdom
- Faisal bin Abdulrahman bin Saud – Former president of Al Nassr
- Mamdoh Bin Abdulrahman Bin Saud – Former president of Al Nassr
- Ahmed bin Fahd bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud (born 1986) – Foreign affairs worker, Deputy Governor of the Eastern Province.
- Abdulaziz Bin Turki Bin Talal Al-Saud (born 1986) – Investor
- Muhammad bin Faisal bin Bandar – Air Force officer[citation needed]
- Sultan bin Fahad bin Nasser, husband of Deena Aljuhani Abdulaziz.[61]
- Abdulaziz bin Fahd bin Turki, Deputy Governor of Jawf[62]
Great-granddaughters
- Mishaal bint Fahd bin Mohammed Al Saud (1958–1977) – executed for alleged adultery
- Reem Al Faisal – Photographer
- Reema bint Bandar Al Saud – entrepreneur and philanthropist.
Great-great-grandchildren
- Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud (born 1974) – Minister of Foreign Affairs
Non-patrilineal descendants of Ibn Saud
- Abdullah bin Mohammad, son of Muhammad bin Abdul-Rahman (Ibn Saud's half-brother) and Hussa bint Ahmed Al Sudairi (Ibn Saud's wife). This makes him the double step-son and half-nephew of Ibn Saud. He also married Noura bint Saud, the granddaughter of Ibn Saud through his son King Saud, making him a grandson-in-law of Ibn Saud. Father of the below
- Fahd bin Abdullah bin Mohammed Al Saud (born 1941) – Former Deputy Minister of Defense. Son of Noura bint Saud, daughter of King Saud.
- Faisal bin Fahd bin Abdullah Al Saud – Businessman. Son of the above. Son-in-law of Mutaib bin Abdullah
- Faisal bin Abdullah bin Mohammed Al Saud (born 1950) – Former Minister of Education. Son of Nouf bint Abdelaziz and Abdullah bin Mohammed Al Saud. Married to Adila bint Abdulla Al Saud, daughter of King Abdullah.
- Abdullah bin Faisal bin Turki bin Abdullah Al Saud (born 1951) – Former Ambassador to the United States. Son of Luluwah bint Abdulaziz Al Saud and Faisal bin Turki bin Abdullah bin Saud Al Saud.
- Nayef bin Sultan Al Shaalan (born 1956) – Diplomat, convicted of drug trafficking. Maternal grandson of Ibn Saud. Son-in-law of Abdul-Rahman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud
- Sultan bin Faisal bin Turki (1961–2002) – Son of Luluwah bint Abdulaziz Al Saud and Faisal bin Turki bin Abdullah bin Saud Al Saud. Killed in car accident on way to cousin Ahmed bin Salman's funeral.
- Saud bin Khalid bin Abdullah – Deputy chairman of the board of Directors of Al-Mawarid Holding Company and Vice chairman of the board of directors of the Orbit Satellite Television and Radio Network. Son of Al Jawhara bint Abdulaziz Al Saud and Khalid ibn Abdullah, son of Abdullah bin Abdul-Rahman, half-brother of Ibn Saud.
- Turki bin Abdullah – Former member of the National Guard and advisor to King Abdullah. Son of Seeta bint Abdulaziz Al Saud and Abdullah bin Mohammed bin Saud Al Kabir Al Saud.[citation needed]
- Fahd bin Abdullah – Former assistant minister of defense. Son of Seeta bint Abdulaziz Al Saud and Abdullah bin Mohammed bin Saud Al Kabir Al Saud.[citation needed]
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