'Sayyid Hasan al-Rida al-Mahdi as-Senussi, Crown Prince of Libya' (
1928-
April 28,
1992) was the heir apparent to the
Kingdom of Libya from
26 October 1956 to
1 September 1969 when the monarchy was abolished.
Hasan was born in
1928 the fifth son of
Sayyid Muhammad al-Rida as-Senussi (
1890-
1955) and his tenth wife
Imbaraika al-Fallatiyya. He was educated at
Al-Taj,
Kufra and
Al-Azhar University in
Cairo,
Egypt.
On
December 24,
1951 Libya became independent. Following the death of his father he was nominated
Crown Prince by his uncle
King Idris I on
October 26,
1956.
1969 revolution
The events of
September,
1969, proved to be pivotal both for Crown Prince Hasan and for
Libya. As Crown Prince, Hasan was first in line succeed to the Libyan throne. The ailing Idris presented a signed document on 4th August,
1969 to the President of the Libyan Senate, whereby Idris was to abdicate in favour of the Crown Prince. The instrument of abdication specified
September 2, the date when the
King undertook formally to stand down. Indeed, the Crown Prince was already exercising regal powers in the name of King Idris, in the run up to
September 2. However, on 1st September, while Idris was out of the country undergoing medical treatment, a group of Libyan army officers, among them
Colonel Muammar al-Qaddafi, staged a rebellion and announced that King
Idris I was deposed. Since King
Idris I was unable to complete the term of his reign as envisaged by his instrument of abdication Hasan never actually became king. His legacy, however, was in his role of Crown Prince, exercised between
1956 and
1969, towards the end of which he was the
de facto ruler of Libya. As Crown Prince, he repeatedly undertook official trips abroad, notably to negotiate the purchase of
U.S.-built jet fighters from the
Kennedy Administration for the
Libyan Air Force.
House arrest and death
Following the revolution Hasan was kept under
house arrest in Libya. In
1984 the Crown Prince and his family were thrown out of their house which was then burnt down with his family being forced to move into cabins on one of Tripoli's public beaches. It was in these cabins that the Crown Prince suffered a stroke in
1986. In
1988 the Crown Prince was permitted by Colonel Qaddafi to travel to
London for medical treatment where he died in
1992.
[1] The Crown Prince was buried beside his uncle King Idris at
Al-Baqi Cemetery in
Medina,
Saudi Arabia.
Prior to his death in
1992 he appointed his second son
Muhammad as-Senussi (Born
1962) to succeed him as head of the
Royal House of Libya.
References
1. Gaddafi and the Libyan Crown Prince
★
Royal Ark