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- d7eea0f3a9f6d69785fd0ec25bc3f9ca875b24ceb7a63429ad88e38a9a4296a3 date "2007".
- d7eea0f3a9f6d69785fd0ec25bc3f9ca875b24ceb7a63429ad88e38a9a4296a3 editor "Olivier Roy, Antoine Sfeir".
- d7eea0f3a9f6d69785fd0ec25bc3f9ca875b24ceb7a63429ad88e38a9a4296a3 isCitedBy Wahhabism.
- d7eea0f3a9f6d69785fd0ec25bc3f9ca875b24ceb7a63429ad88e38a9a4296a3 pages "399–400".
- d7eea0f3a9f6d69785fd0ec25bc3f9ca875b24ceb7a63429ad88e38a9a4296a3 publisher "Columbia University Press".
- d7eea0f3a9f6d69785fd0ec25bc3f9ca875b24ceb7a63429ad88e38a9a4296a3 quote "The history of the Al Sa'ud dynasty is, therefore, one of political expansion based on the Wahhabi doctrine. After the conclusion of the pact of 1744, Muhammad Ibn Sa'ud, who at the time ruled only the Najd village of Dir'iya, embarked on the conquest of neighboring settlements, destroying idols and obliging his new subjects to submit to Wahhabi Islam.".
- d7eea0f3a9f6d69785fd0ec25bc3f9ca875b24ceb7a63429ad88e38a9a4296a3 title "Columbia World Dictionary of Islamism".