On this date in 1958, Iraq’s Hashemite dynasty got the Romanov treatment from coup-making nationalist officers.
Having already overstayed their welcome as agents of British-American control in the oil-rich Gulf State, the Hashemites were doubly burdened to be led by the inexperienced King Faisal II, who was all of 23 years old.
For much of the recent past, while this underaged grandson of the Arab Revolt hero matriculated at an English boarding school, his sovereignty had been exercised by his uncle and regent ‘Abd al-Ilah — a practitioner, like all of Iraq’s leadership, of a staunchly pro-British and -American policy that increasingly rankled Iraqis.
On July 14, 1958, a swift coup d’etat led by Abd al-Karim Qasim — and explicitly modeled on the Free Officers Movement that had raised the Arab nationalist Gamal Abdel Nasser to power in Egypt — overturned the Hashemites, and made sure that it was for good.
Captured royal family members — including not only King Faisal but the aforementioned ‘Abd al-Ilah and al-Ilah’s wife and mother, plus a number of royal servants — were all summarily machine-gunned in the palace courtyard, after which the royal corpse was given over to public abuse.
“His legs and arms were decapitated, stomach disemboweled with his intestine gushing outside” recalled one of the king’s helpless royal guards of the late king. “His corpse was later suspended from a building until one came with a dagger in his hand to try to divide it into two pieces. The corpse was burned, cut many times until it was thrown in the Tigris river when night came.”
Today there’s an honorable tomb in Baghdad where Faisal reposes, and considering the many terrors that have befallen Iraq in the intervening decades, one can even find pockets of nostalgia for the monarchy.
Cold comfort that Faisal II lives immortally in the classic Belgian comic series The Adventures of Tintin as the inspiration for the puckish and spoiled Prince Abdullah of Khemed.
On this day..
- 2020: Daniel Lewis Lee
- Daily Double: Iraq's 14 July Revolution
- 1683: Two lynched during the Ottoman siege of Vienna
- 1852: Louis Lullier, wife in a cask
- 1813: John McDonald and James Black, Edinburgh robbers
- 1909: Garry Richard Barrett
- 1455: Kunz von Kauffungen, Altenburg Prince-Robber
- 1584: Balthasar Gerard, assassin of William the Silent
- 1949: Jake Bird
- 1994: Glenn Ashby, abruptly
- 1926: Ziya Hursit and others for a plot against Ataturk
- 1939: Howard Long, New Hampshire's most recent hanging
- 1989: Horace Franklin Dunkins, Jr., "just hope that he was not conscious"