Talal of Jordan
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King
Talal bin Abdullah (
Arabic:
طلال بن عبد الله ) (
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.