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| Ra'ad bin Zeid | |
|---|---|
| Pretender | |
| Born | February 18, 1936 Berlin, Germany |
| Throne(s) claimed | Iraq |
| Pretend from | October 18, 1970 |
| Monarchy abolished | 1958 |
| Last monarch | Faisal II |
| Connection with | Cousin |
| Royal House | Hashemite |
| Father | Prince Zeid |
| Mother | Princess Fahrelnissa |
| Spouse | Margaretha Lind |
| Predecessor | Prince Zeid |
Prince Ra'ad bin Zeid (Arabic: الأمير رعد بن زيد) (born 18 February 1936 in Berlin where his father was Iraqi ambassador at the time) is the son of Prince Zeid of the Hashemite House and Princess Fahrelnissa Zeid (Fakhr un-nisa), a Turkish noblewoman. Upon the death of his father on October 18, 1970, he inherited the position as head of the Royal Houses of Iraq and Syria. Ra'ad has lived in London and Paris. The Kingdom of Jordan has confirmed his style as His Royal Highness and Prince.
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Prince Raad is an agnatic grandson of the late king Hussein of Hejaz, his father prince Zeid being king Hussein's youngest son. As such he is a first cousin of late kings Talal of Jordan and Ghazi of Iraq.
Raad's paternal first cousin once removed was Faisal II, the last king of Iraq, who was killed in a bloody coup d'etat on 14 July 1958 (Crown Prince Abd-al-Illah was also killed). Following the regicide, Prince Zeid, Raad's father, took the representation of Iraqi monarchy as the next heir, and was recognized as the Head of the Royal House of Iraq by his remaining agnatic co-heirs of Jordan. They continued to live in London, where the family resided during the coup, as Zeid was the Iraqi ambassador there.
Raad himself succeeded his father as all such at the latter's death in 1970 in exile in France.
He was educated in Alexandria, Egypt, and in Christ's College, Cambridge. BA 1960, MA 1963.
In 1960s, prince Raad worked as academic researcher in Britain. After receiving his highest academic degree, he took the position of Chamberlain to the Royal Court of Jordan, in Amman, and afterwards has acted in civil administration and charitable organizations there.
Raad worked as an aide and a close confidant of kings Hussein and Abdullah II of Jordan.
Prince Raad married at Södertälje, Sweden, June 30, 1963 (civil), and at the Royal Palace, Amman, on August 5, 1963, Swedish-born Margaretha Inga Elisabeth Lind, henceforward known as Majda Raad, President of Al-Hussein Society and Director of Bandak Fdn., born in Arboga on September 5, 1942, daughter of Sven Gustav Lind and wife Carin Inga Birgitta Gunlaug Grönwall, daughter of Assar Grönwall and wife, and an illegitimate descendant of the House of Vasa. They have five children:
Prince Raad's position as the head of the Royal House of Iraq is in contention with Sharif Ali Bin al-Hussein (a descendant of Hussein of Hejaz's granddaughter, sister and male cousin, but not in male line from king Hussein) who is another pretender to the Iraqi throne and the leader of the Iraqi Constitutional Monarchy.
The Iraqi Constitution (as amended in November 1943) sets rules of succession that stipulate:
Raad was born in 1936 as a subject of Iraqi monarchy and is regarded to fulfill the nationality requirement. Moreover, his father was at that time recognized as a Prince of Iraq, and was appointed Deputy Regent of Iraq, as well as acted occasionally as full regent during Faisal II's minority. He is a male-line descendant of Hussein of Hejaz aforementioned. According to the provisions of cited constitution, Raad is eligible to succeed in Iraq. No other senior in primogeniture itself (meaning in practice the dynasts of Jordan, as all other lines have gone extinct), is asserting any claim to Iraq as obviously none of such are Iraqi nationals.
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Ra'ad bin Zeid
Born: February 18 1936 |
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| Titles in pretence | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Prince Zeid bin Hussein |
— TITULAR — King of Iraq October 18, 1970 – present Reason for succession failure: Kingdom abolished in 1958 (Coup d'état) |
Incumbent Heir: Zeid Ra’ad Zeid Al-Hussein |
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