Saud bin Muhammed Al Thani


Saud bin Muhammad bin Ali bin Abdullah bin Jassim bin Muhammed Al Thani was a Qatari prince who served as minister of Culture, Arts and Heritage.
By the turn of the 21st century, Shaikh Sa’ud had established an international reputation as an avid art collector, both for his own collection as well as those of several state-owned museums he oversaw in Qatar.

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As Minister of Culture, Arts, and Heritage from 1997, he was entrusted with creating the collections to fill an ambitious program of world-class museums in Qatar, including a Museum of Islamic Art a combined Qatar National Library and Natural History Museum, a Museum of Photography, and a Museum of Traditional Clothes & Textiles. He was dismissed from his post in 2005. He collected Leica APO-Telyt-R 1:5.6/1600mm lens, furniture, vintage cars, natural history, jewellery, even bicycles, but it was sometimes unclear if the collections he had assembled belonged to him or to Qatar.
Al Thani founded the Al Wabra Wildlife Preservation, a private conservation and endangered species breeding center in Qatar, which focuses on breeding and preservation of rare bird species, particularly the Spix's macaw. Al Wabra is also an important centre for endangered Arabian species such as the sand gazelle and Arabian oryx
The Sheikh also founded the Al-Thani Awards in 2000. It claims to be the biggest photography competition in the Middle-East with roughly 54,000 entrants in 2010.
He was married to Sheikha Amna bint Ahmad bin Hassan bin Abdualla bin Jassim Althani.
In the chapter "Goldeneye" from the book Travels with Myself, the author narrates a visit to Saud's home and his magnificent art collection.
Saud bin Muhammed Al Thani died in London on 9 November 2014.

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