Prince Moulay Ismail of Morocco

Prince Moulay Ismail of Morocco (Arabic: إسماعيل بن مولاي عبد الله بن محمد الخامس) (born 7 May 1981) is the son of Prince Moulay Abdallah and Lalla Lamia Solh. His mother is daughter of Riad Al Solh, the first Prime minister of Lebanon. The Prince has one older brother, Prince Moulay Hicham.

Prince Moulay Ismail
إسماعيل بن مولاي عبد الله بن محمد الخامس
Born (1981-05-07) 7 May 1981
Beirut, Lebanon
Spouse
Anissa Lehmkuhl
(
m. 2009)
IssueMoulay Abdallah
Lalla Aisha
Lalla Hala
Lalla Anissa
DynastyAlaouite
FatherPrince Moulay Abdallah
MotherLalla Lamia Solh
ReligionSunni Islam

On 25 September 2009, he married Anissa Lehmkuhl, the daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel Omar Lehmkuhl and his wife, Amina (German citizens converted to Islamic faith).[1] They had issue, one son and four daughters:

  • Sharif Moulay Abdallah, (born on (2010-06-17)17 June 2010 at Rabat),
  • Sharifa Lalla Aisha, (born on (2011-10-09)9 October 2011 at Rabat),
  • Sharifa Lalla Hala, (born on (2013-11-23)23 November 2013 at Rabat).
  • Sharifa Lalla Bahia, (born on (2018-02-05)5 February 2018 at Rabat).

Business

Prince Ismail owns Theora holding, which has a 35% stake[2] in the now-defunct KIA Maroc (exclusive dealer of KIA cars in Morocco)[3] and also co-owns a number of food & restaurants franchises such as Pizza Del Arte (subsidiary of Groupe Le Duff).

Patronages

  • Honorary President of the Hand in Hand Association.
gollark: I know what they do in businesses, I mean I don't understand what they would do in your hypothetical government, how this relates to centralised supply chain management, and why this would involve *less* power.
gollark: Yes, I know what HR stands for, I just have no idea what you mean by that in context.
gollark: What?
gollark: Not as much as it would be if one entity just did *all* economic planning.
gollark: It's not an infrastructure problem, it's a this-is-computationally-very-hard problem, and a horribly-centralizes-power problem, and a bad-incentives-to-be-efficient problem, and a responding-to-local-information problem.

References

Royal titles
Preceded by
Prince Moulay Hicham
Line of succession to the Moroccan Throne Next:
Moulay Abdallah ben Ali Alaoui
as Moulay Abdallah ben Ali Alaoui


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