Paris - AFP
From the late 19th to the early 21st century, the right to vote has been a long struggle for women.
Saudis join the rest of the world on Saturday, leaving only Brunei, where neither men nor women hold this fundamental right.
Here is a look back:
- Pioneers -
1893
New Zealand blazes the way, extending the right to vote to women following a petition signed by about one quarter of the country's adult female population. They must wait until 1919, however, to run for office as well.
Australia follows in 1902, but aborigines of both sexes remain excluded until 1962.
1906
Finnish women are the first in the world to be able to vote and run for office.
Scandinavian neighbours follow suit, beginning with Norway in 1913 and ending with Sweden in 1919.
- Followers -
1918
Germany and Russia join the movement, and it starts to gain traction.
1919
Luxembourg, the Netherlands and the United States get with the programme, though on a state level in the US, Wyoming women could already vote in 1869 and their counterparts in Colorado in 1893.
1928
While Britain granted the right to vote to women aged 30 and older in 1918, its full extension did not come until 10 years later.
British suffragettes had launched their battle in 1903.
1934
Turkey is the first Muslim country excluding Soviet republics to open the door to women, an initiative of secular leader Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.
1944
France, the nation of human rights, grants women the right to vote nearly a century after men obtain it.
- Laggards -
1971
Switzerland allows women to vote in federal elections, but the last canton to follow suit does so only in 1990.
1976
Poland extends the right to all women. Prior to that, women with university degrees had been allowed to vote since 1931.
1993
Moldova becomes the last country in Europe to grant women their full civic rights.
1994
South Africa extends the right to women of all colour. White women have voted since 1930 and mixed-race women since 1984.
1994-2006
Women in Gulf monarchies join the others, with Oman making the step in 1994, Qatar in 1999, Bahrain in 2001 and Kuwait in 2005.
In 2006, rulers of the United Arab Emirates allow just 6,000 men and women to vote, and the emirs still control electoral rolls today.
In October, the list included 224,000 people, about one quarter of the total UAE population of just under one million.
2015
Saudi women vote and run for office for the first time, a decision taken in 2011 by the now late King Abdullah.