House of Aidarus
House of Aidarus العيدروسة | |
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Royal House | |
Parent house | House of Ash'arah |
Country | Kingdom of Fahran |
Founded | October 1328 |
Founder | Aidarus the Thunderbolt |
Current head | Hazea I |
Titles | King of al-Fahraan, Mukarrib of the Hasidhmawt, Sultan of Amran and Khimyariyyah, Emir of Zabral, Sharif of Sulh, Sheikh of the Banu Qays', Prince-Regent of Nimanher, Suzerain of Tammuz and al-Bahriyyah, Light of the Gheiravin |
Style(s) | His/Her Serene Highness |
Estate(s) | Tel Imradhil, Zabral, Tirmidh, Palace of the Golden Gate |
Deposition | May 18th, 1995 |
The House of Aidarus (Gheiravic: العيدروسة, Romanization: Al Eidrusah) was the lasting ruling house of the Kingdom of Fahran, reigning from 1517 to 1954 and from 1988 to 1996, when the Monarchy of Fahran was overthrown and abolished as a result of the December Intifada. The family belongs to the Ash'arah, one of the four clans of the Sub'ay, a sub-tribe of the Banu Qays', and claim matrilineal descent from Idris ibn Nawfal through the House of Haidar.
The dynasty was founded by Aidarus the Thunderbolt, a tribal sheikh of the Banu Qays', in 1328 when he established the Emirate of Zabral. The family became the ruling house of Fahran when Abd ar-Rahman I conquered Sulh on June 9th, 1517, an event that led to the formation of the Sultanate of Fahran. During the reign of Salim the Magnificent, the Sultanate entered a century golden age that saw the formalization of the Ash'ari School of Yen jurisprudence, the cultivation of commercial ties to Malaio and western Ochran, and the cultivation of numerous literary, cultural, and academic achievements such as the authoring of the country's national epic the Aydhariadh by Tamim ibn Jabal Al Hashmari. In the aftermath of the Ozeros War, however, Fahran would be reduced to the status of a minor polity, a state that would persist until the reformist upheavals Tajdid Period.
Musa II and his successor Salim II aligned the family with anti-communist blocs and sought to foster positive relations with other monarchist states such as Vardana and Uluujol, even while struggling to appease a burgeoning well-educated middle-class intrigued with the political possibilities offered by republicanism and nationalism. The death of Salim II in 1954 ushered in the Great Interregnum as the late sultan's prime minister Bachir El Erian, a liberal aristocrat of middling rank, declared, in light of Prince Abd ar-Rahman ibn Abduallh's minority, that the people were sovereign and dictated the adoption of a constitution that created a parliamentary democracy. The family initially retained their titles and wealth, albeit as mostly private citizens, but their situation deteriorated notably following the August 3 Revolution that swept President Abu Nasir al-Hariri from office in 1962 and resulted in the institution of a hard-line socialist single-party state under Alim Mustaffari two months later. Targeted purges of "royalists" resulted in as many as two thousand deaths, mostly of landowners suspected of being descended from Aidarus the Thunderbolt, and compelled several members of the House of Aidarus to seek asylum in the Eastern Diocese.
Title
History
Heads
Emirate of Zabral
Name | Lifespan | Reign start | Reign end | Notes | Family | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aidarus the Thunderbolt
| 1298 – 1355 | 1328 | 1355 (fell from his horse) | Was the eponymous ancestor of the House of Aidarus | Ash'ar | |
Safwan I
| 1319 – 1368 | 1355 | 1368 (died in battle) | Son of Aidarus and Bilqis bint Samaw'al | Aidarus | |
Yu'suf I
| 1319 – 1416 | 1368 | 1416 (death by natural causes) | Son of Safwan I and Ruqayya bint As'ad | Aidarus | |
Idris I
| 1373 – 1437 | 1416 | 1437 (death by natural causes) | Son of Yu'suf I and 'Ulayya bint Salman | Aidarus |