Ikhwan revolt

Ikhwan revolt
Part of the Unification of Saudi Arabia

Flag of Ikhwan
Date1929–1930
Location
Result Saudi victory
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Faisal bin Sultan 
Sultan bin Bajad 
Meqaid al-Duhainah 
Ibn Saud
Fawzi al-Qawuqji
Eqab bin Mohaya
Faisal bin Abdulaziz
Mubarak Al Azmi 
Strength
47,000 30,000
Casualties and losses
500 in Battle of Sabilla
450 in Jabal Shammar
200 in Battle of Sabilla
500 in Jabal Shammar
About 100 killed in the raids
700 killed in Sabilla
1,000 killed in Jabal Shammar
250 killed in raid on Awazim tribe
2,000 killed in total

The Ikhwan revolt was an uprising in the Arabian Peninsula from 1929 to 1930 led by the Ikhwan. In late 1927, the tribesmen of the Otaibah, Mutayr and Ajman launched cross-border raids into parts of Mandatory Iraq, challenging the authority of Ibn Saud. The relations between the House of Saud and the Ikhwan mutineers gradually worsened, and deteriorated into an open bloody feud by January 1929. The main instigators of the rebellion were defeated in the Battle of Sabilla, on 29 March 1929. Ikhwan tribal rebels and troops loyal to Ibn Saud clashed again in the Jabal Shammar region in August 1929, and Ikhwan tribesmen attacked the Awazim tribe on 5 October 1929.

Faisal al-Duwaish, the main leader of the rebellion and the Mutair tribe, fled to Kuwait in October 1929 before being detained by the British and handed over to Ibn Saud. Al-Duwaish would die in Riyadh on 3 October 1931 from an apparent heart condition. Government troops had finally suppressed the rebellion on 10 January 1930, when other Ikhwan rebel leaders surrendered to the British. In the aftermath, the Ikhwan leadership was slain, and the remains were eventually incorporated into regular Saudi units. Sultan bin Bajad, one of the three main Ikhwan leaders, was killed in 1931.