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'Selections from the Records of the Bombay Government' [‎4] (39/733)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (364 folios). It was created in 1856. It was written in English. The original is part of the British Library: India Office The department of the British Government to which the Government of India reported between 1858 and 1947. The successor to the Court of Directors. Records and Private Papers Documents collected in a private capacity. .

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4
oman.
five-and-twenty miles to the westward of Muskat. This chieftain left
behind him four sons, and a numerous clan of adherents, in the indivi
duals of the tribes of Honaifah and Ilinavi, whom he had with consum
mate policy united by the indissoluble ties of intermarriage, and
collectively named Hinavi; wishing thus to commemorate the aid the
superior numbers, constancy, and valour of this tribe had afforded in the
attainment of his earliest successes.
In the third year of the reign of his eldest son, who succeeded to the
government, a thousand men of the tribe of Obar, passing out of
Nujd, settled in the interior portion of Oman, in a plain, open spot of
land ; and from this circumsfance received and retained the appellation
Banu Ghafir, the ancestors of the present tribe Ghafiri. Zaid, the son
of Malik, noticed this infringement of their territory, but as he was
assured by the strangers, in answer, that they considered themselves as
subjects and dependents on his power, he admitted them at length to
his piotection, and in course of time identified them, by intermarriage
with the clan Hinavi.
The sons and descendants of Malik continued thus in the enjoyment
of power until the birth of the Mahomedan Prophet ( a. d. 571), when
one of these, named Jalanda, a powerful and enterprising prince, first
constructed a fleet, with which he seized on the island of Ormus, from
the Persians, and established it as the naval rendezvous of a fleet of
boats, which he gradually habituated to the pursuit of piracy.
Prince Jalanda dying after a reign of forty years (a. d. 615), in the
first year of the Prophet's mission, his two sons reigned in succession
T.n'^ei wi ,ed an< , i T al aUltlOTi, y- the year of the Mission
{ • • 621) they and a large portion of their subjects were converted to
(! TeTsi lIie , Pr0phet; and 111 ay"" after his death
other. 0 br0ther9 de Parted this life, within, a month of each
Disenssions now began to divide the hitherto united tribes of Ghafiri
and Hinavi, and each was governed by its respective chief until Khalif
oobelu. hearing of a fued so dangerous to the interests of the faith
m vv TT ' ' againSt them ' With an a™y of seven thousand
Ghafiri ^ 'nvestigated the causes of disunion, and finding in'the
Ghdfiu a superior inclination to be stead fist to tlio f 'h .
the Government into their possession an 1 il ; ucccsslon J and gave
accession of the Juribah n l i / i 18 lt remained liI1 the
Hijree 158 (a b! 780) ' " ^ in the ^ of ^
Both the tribes having ta.ted of power, each remained impatient of

About this item

Content

The volume is Selections from the records of the Bombay Government , compiled and edited by Robert Hughes Thomas, Assistant Secretary, Political Department, New Series: 24 (Bombay: Printed for Government at the Bombay Education Society's Press, 1856).

Extent and format
1 volume (364 folios)
Arrangement

The volume contains an abstract of contents on p. iii, a detailed list of contents on pp. vii-xx, an alphabetical index on pp. xxi-xxvii, and a list of maps etc on p. xviii.

Physical characteristics

Pagination: two separate pagination sequences are present in the volume. The first sequence (pp. i-xviii) commences at the first page and terminates at the list of maps (p. xviii). A second pagination sequence then takes over (pp. 1-688), commencing at the title page and terminating at the final page. Both these pagination sequences are printed, with additions in pencil, and the numbers are found at the top (left, right or centre) of each page.

The fold-outs in this volume were not paginated by the publisher. As a result, these have been foliated using the nearest page number. For example, the fold-out attached to p.51 has been numbered as 51A.

Pagination anomalies: pp. 15, 15A; 45, 45A; 49, 49A; 51, 51A; 531, 531A.

The following pages need to be folded out to be read: 15A, 45A, 51A, 327-328, 531A.

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English in Latin script
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'Selections from the Records of the Bombay Government' [‎4] (39/733), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/R/15/1/732, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100022870191.0x000028> [accessed 24 April 2024]

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