Misha'al bint Fahd al Saud
Known simply as Princess Misha
of Saudi Arabia, little else is
publicly known about the life of this
young member of the royal Saudi family.
But the tragic circumstances of her death became a widely-known scandal
that was immortalized in the 1980 documentary film "Death of a Princess".
Misha was executed on the orders of her
grandfather to preserve the family honor because she ran off to elope
with her lover whom was considered to be an unsuitable husband for her.
The young princess had fallen in love with a common man outside of the
royal family and had been told that her marriage was arranged that would
bind her to a much older man whom she had never met. Understandably
distraught, Misha attempted to fake her own death by planting evidence
to suggest she had drowned in the sea, and then disguised herself as a
man in order to make her way out of the country.
After marrying in secret, she and her
husband were arrested as they attempted to board a plane to leave Saudi
Arabia. While the religious court and even the King himself refused to
condemn the princess on the grounds that she had married her lover and
therefore the law regarding adultery had not been broken, Misha's
grandfather was adamant about restoring the honor that he believed she
had tarnished.
In 1977, the young princess,
along with her husband, were dragged to the traditional execution
location where Misha was shot. Her husband was then beheaded by men in
her grandfather's employ.