Lindbergh Soars from New York: Transatlantic Race Begins
The British diplomat signing the Treaty of Jeddah had met Ibn Saud in a tent just fifteen years earlier, when the future king controlled little more than Riyadh and some desert wells. Now he was recognizing sovereignty over 800,000 square miles. Ibn Saud had united warring tribes through thirty years of raids, marriages, and outright conquest—losing two kingdoms before winning them back. Britain got what it wanted: a stable ally who'd keep his warriors away from Iraq and Kuwait. Five years later, American geologists would strike oil at Dammam, and the handshake would mean something else entirely.
May 20, 1927
99 years ago
Key Figures & Places
United Kingdom
Wikipedia
Hejaz
Wikipedia
Saudi Arabia
Wikipedia
sovereignty
Wikipedia
Ibn Saud
Wikipedia
Treaty of Jedda
Wikipedia
List of kings of Saudi Arabia
Wikipedia
Najd
Wikipedia
Treaty of Jeddah (1927)
Wikipedia
Treaty of Jeddah (1927)
Wikipedia
Sovereignty
Wikipedia
Ibn Saud
Wikipedia
Hejaz
Wikipedia
Najd
Wikipedia
Saudi Arabia
Wikipedia
British
Wikipedia
Abkommen von Dschidda
Wikipedia
Anexo:Colonias y protectorados británicos
Wikipedia
Histoire de l'Arabie saoudite
Wikipedia
Reino do Négede e do Hejaz
Wikipedia
محمد المفرح (ممثل)
Wikipedia
What Else Happened on May 20
Constantine thought inviting 1,800 bishops would unify Christianity. Only 318 showed up to Nicaea, many bearing scars from recent Roman persecutions—missing eye…
A widow chose an emperor. When Zeno died of dysentery in 491, his wife Ariadne held something no Byzantine woman had possessed before: the right to pick the nex…
A massive earthquake leveled the Byzantine city of Antioch, claiming roughly 250,000 lives and shattering the region’s infrastructure. This catastrophe crippled…
King Ecgfrith brought the finest cavalry in Britain into a narrow valley near a Scottish loch. He'd conquered half of northern England by doing exactly this—ove…
He came to marry a princess and left without his head. Æthelberht II of East Anglia arrived at Sutton Walls expecting a wedding to Ælfthryth of Mercia. Instead,…
A seventy-year-old knight saved England by turning a medieval siege into a cavalry charge. William Marshal—already past any reasonable fighting age—led a relief…
Talk to History
Have a conversation with historical figures who witnessed this era. Ask questions, explore perspectives, and bring history to life.