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"ملف 53/32 III (D 53) مسائل متنوعة خاصة بالكويت" [و‎‎٢‎٢‎٠] (٤٨٦/٤٤٨)

هذه المادة جزء من

محتويات السجل: مجلد واحد (٢٤٠ ورقة). يعود تاريخه إلى ٣ سبتمبر ١٩١٢-٤ يونيو ١٩٢٨. اللغة أو اللغات المستخدمة: الإنجليزية. النسخة الأصلية محفوظة في المكتبة البريطانية: أوراق خاصة وثائق جُمعت بصفة شخصية. وسجلات من مكتب الهند إدارة الحكومة البريطانية التي كانت الحكومة في الهند ترفع إليها تقاريرها بين عامي ١٨٥٨ و١٩٤٧، حيث خلِفت مجلس إدارة شركة الهند الشرقية. .

نسخ

النسخ مستحدث آليًا ومن المرجّح أن يحتوي على أخطاء.

عرض تخطيط الصفحة

1 ' -
7
The 'Ajmun, usually pronounced ^Aiman—the
sing-ular of which is 'Ajmi (Aimi)—are one of
the most imp'Ttant tribes of EaStfrn Arabia.
Their proper summer range is the Gulf lovvlandis
from laff to ""Uqair ( Ujair) enveloping the Hasa
oasis on the north and east. Inland their count-
a'y stretches back ov^-r thp Summan, and in
winter as f r «s Sudair. On the littoral they
have sometimes straggled into Qatar, and fre-
quentlv to, and beyond, Kuwait town. Some
settled 'Ajman, detached fr 'tn the tribe, have for
many years be n found in Kuwait town, and in
the coastal villages to the south of it. The tribe
is a strong one, althnngh their claim to be able to
turn out over 10,000 fighting men, including
2,U0U horsemen, is probably exaggerated ; yet
there is little doubt that they number over 30,000
souls. In politics they have always been a shift
ing a: d inc-nstant factor. During the Ottoman
occupation of Hasi and Qitif they were constant
ly recalcitrant. Tin y welcomed Ihn Sa ud when
he invaded Hasa in 1913, init, once he was
establ^hed, liked him and his taxes no better
than the Turks. In 1915 he organized a cam
paign against them but was defeated in an abortive
night attack, and his own brother, Sa'd, was
ki led. Later on, with the assistance of a Knw.iit
force under Shaikh Salim, he hemmed them in
near the Q:it f coast. After being besieged for
s"me time the 'Ajman surrendered to Shaikh
Salim, who sent them to Kuwait, where Shaikh
Mubarak accepted them, aginst Ibn Sa'ud's
wishes, who wished to further avenge his brother's
death. Soon after this Shaikh Mubarak died,
and Shaikh Jabir, in ordor to placate Ibn Sa'ud,
ejected the^Ajman from Kuwait territory. After
making overtures first to 'Ujaimi as-Sadun and
then to Ibn Rashid, thev obtained permission
from the Shaikh of Zubair to settle quietly at
fSafwan. On the occasion of Ibn Sa'ud's visit to
Kuwait and Basrah in November 1916 a truce was
arranged between him and the 'Ajman. In the
middle of 1917 however Ihn Sa'ud induced the
Awazim to leave Kuwait terit ry and settle in
Najd. Shaikh Salim, who was then Ruler, retali
ated by seducing the 'Ajman, who moved en ma8*e
into Kuwait territory Eventually after much
corresp ndence, Ibn Sa'ud agreed to restore the
Awazim if Shaikh Salim would turn out the 'Ajman
and cut off his relations with the Shammar. The
Awazim were returned, but the 'Ajman remained
in Kuwait territ-ry. By the beginning of 1''18
the question had become such a burning one that
it was decided to take the tribe under British
protection, and they were settled to the north of
Zubair. Here they were guilty of so much raid
ing that Ibn Sa'ud way eventually told that, so
far as the British were concerned, there was no
objection to his taking action against them.
About a year later the 'Ajman again acknowledged
their allegiance to Ibn Sa'ud and returned to Najd.
Since then they have become Ikhwan.
The paramount chieftainship of the Ajman is
in the Hithlain family of the Naji'ah sub-section
of the Mai'dh section of the tribe, the present
holder being Dhaidan al-Hithlain. His head
quarters is at Sarar (165 miles south of Kuwait).
The chief sections of the tribe are the Arjah
under Saikh Maui bin' Jum'ah; the Dha'in, under
Shaikh Fahad bin Sa'd; the Hadi, under Shaikh
Nahar al-Mutalaqqim (recently in 'Iraq) ; the
Hajraf, the Hajjan, the Hamad bin Rashid and

the Hithlain, all under Nahar al Mufalaqqim ; the
Khuwaitirj the Mahfudh, under Mabkhut al-
Muqrad ; the Maidh, the Miflih, the Misra, the
Rushaid and the Snlaifi, under Dhaidan al-
Hithla n himself; the Shamir under Sultan bin
Hithalain; the Shawawilah, under Fahad bin
Hithlain ; the Sifran, under Mansur bin Shafi
al-Munaikh; the Sulaiman, under Muhammad
bin Musf.mi; and the Suraih.
The Awazim (singular Azimi) are a Bedonin
tribe of the country to the south of Kuwait.
About 250 non-nomadic fam li"s of the tribe are
settled in Kuwait town, where one of the quarters
is c-dled after them ; others possess the village of
Dimnah to the west of Ras al-Ardh ; and a few
more live on Maskhan island, or Mascban as it is
always called. The tribe ha^ no connection with
another tribe of Awazim or Hawazim found in
Central Arabia, especially near Jauf. These
Awazim, who claim to be of Harb origin, appa
rently first made their appearance in the neigh
bourhood of Kawait daring the early part of the
19th Century. They are divided into two main
sections, the Kuah and the Ghiyadh, of which
the former takes precedence. Their paramount
shaikh is Habib bin Jami of the Hadalin sub
section of the Kuah. The tribe numbers aboirt
4,000 souls. They are pastoral nomads, fishermen
and pearl divers. They are large breeders of
camels sheep and goats, also a fair number of
donkeys, but few horses. In Kuwait town the
fishing trade is mostly in their hands. The
Awazim are recognised as an inferior tribe and
intermarry only amongst themselves and with the
Rashaidah. For many years the Awazim were
the loyal subjects of Kuwait, and from a military
point of view formed the backbone of Ibn Subahs
state. During the rule of Sha'kh Salim the ques
tion of their tribute was one of the chief causes of
his quarrel with Dm Sa'ud. The nomads of the
tribe have now become Ikhw'an, and have natu
rally oriented themselves towards Ibn Sa'ud.
The Rashaid h (singular Rashidi) are an
inferior tribe of Kuwait and the territory to the
south of it. They number about 4,000 souls and
are ssid to be of Hutaim extraction; those in
Kuwait town, who are largely of th^ Hirshan
seciion, are not unfrequently called Hutaim —a
term which is also applied to the Saluba, those
despised tinker outcasts who are found all over
Arabia. A few years ago the majority of the
nomadic Rashaidah beoame Ikhwan. The chief
shaikhs of the tribe at present are Mutlaq al-
Musailim (whom I last heard of in Laq) and
Asi al-Musailim (who is with the Ikhwan).
There are seventeen sections to the tribe, but no
useful purpose is served by enumerating them.
The Bhafir is an Iraq tribe of Bedouins whose
winter habitation is the country to the south of
the railway line between Zubair and Nasiriyah.
In the summer they are mostly on the Urum
al-Afur island, opposite Samawah. They have
for some time been flirting with Ikhwanism.
The Muntafik.—Ox "Muntafiq" as the name
is officially spelt in English in 'Ii^q, though I
have never hear J it pronounced that way, or spelt
that way in Arabic—are a very large ' Iraq tribe,
of which a portion are still Bedouin. e are
only concerned with them here in that, amongst
other places, they are found in the western desert

حول هذه المادة

المحتوى

يحتوي هذا الملف على مراسلات متعلقة بعدة أمور مختلفة؛ جميعها خاصة بالكويت. يتناول الملف الموضوعات التالية ذات الأهمية الخاصة:

الشكل والحيّز
مجلد واحد (٢٤٠ ورقة)
الترتيب

الملف مُرتَّب ترتيبًا زمنيًا، من الأقدم في بداية الملف إلى الأحدث في نهايته.

يوجد فهرس بالموضوعات التي يتناولها الملف في الأوراق ٤-٦.

الخصائص المادية

الحالة: مجلد مراسلات مغلف مُسبقًا، وقد تم تفكيك أوراقه وهي الآن مفردة وغير مجلدة.

ترقيم الأوراق: يحتوي الملف على تسلسل غير مكتمل لترقيم الأوراق، وعلى تسلسل آخر مكتمل. التسلسل المكتمل، الذي ينبغي استخدامه لأغراض الفهرسة، محاطٌ بدائرةٍ ومكتوب بالقلم الرصاص في أعلى يمين كل ورقة. يبدأ الترقيم على الورقة الأولى بعد الغلاف الأمامي بالرقم ٢ وينتهي على آخر ورقة مكتوبة بالرقم ٢٣٧.

لغة الكتابة
الإنجليزية بالأحرف اللاتينية
للاطّلاع على المعلومات الكاملة لهذا السجل

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"ملف 53/32 III (D 53) مسائل متنوعة خاصة بالكويت" [و‎‎٢‎٢‎٠] (٤٨٦/٤٤٨)و المكتبة البريطانية: أوراق خاصة وسجلات من مكتب الهندو IOR/R/15/1/504و مكتبة قطر الرقمية <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023613997.0x000031> [تم الوصول إليها في ٦ يونيو ٢٠٢٤]

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