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'Selections from the Records of the Bombay Government' [‎333] (375/733)

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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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JOASMEES.
333
tribe), who, also acting on the offensive by land, intercepted and carried
oil a caravan of fifty camels, laden with dates from Brymee.
Pressed by famine, they fitted out three boats,* manned with five
hundred men, and secretly despatched them to sea by night. Twenty
vessels of the blockading squadron went in pursuit, but unable
to come up with them, returned after three days to resume their
position off Aboothabee, reinforced by some additional vessels
Irom Bussora. - The blockading squadron was not without its difficulties
and privations : provisions and water had to be brought from Ras-ool-
Khyma and Lingah, and each individual being required to send for
his own food, great suffering was experienced.
Both parties, therefore, tiring of these protracted hostilities, and dis^
a. d. 1834. posed to come to an arrangement, a peace was
easily effected, though the mediation of Ma.
homed bin Guzeeb, the Lingah Chief, on the condition that Shaikh
Khaleefa bin Shakboot should give up all the boats and property his
people had captured since the commencement of the war; and the
blockading fleets were withdrawn.
The Wahabees were desirous of befriending the Beniyas in this
quarrel, but the threats of their representatives at Brymee proved'
insufficient to overawe the Joasmee Chief (whereby a decrease of the
power of the sect at that time may be argued), and had the effect only of
restraining the Bedouins from affording any assistance to Hussein bin
Rahmah, who had been despatched into the interior to raise troops for
the purpose of cutting off the communication with Aboothabee by land.
At the period of the disturbances in the Imaum's dominions, owing
a. d. 1835. t0 t ^ e a ?§" ress i ons of his relative Humood bin
Azan, Sultan bin Suggur proceeded with a large
fleet to his possessions of Khore Fakaun and Dubba. Although
formerly requested by the Imaum to assist his representatives in Mus-
kat in any quarrels with their neighbours, it was evident that, far from
any intention to exert his power and influence in favour of His Highness'
relatives, his sole object was to avail himself of the state of affairs to
benefit and promote his own interests, at the expense of either party.
I he proceedings of his fleet, however, were not confined to depreda
tions upon the boats belonging to Sohar and its dependencies, as the
enemies of the Imaum, whose interests he pretended to serve, as also
upon the property of the subjects of the Muskat Government, his ally,
but were extended to acts of a decidedly piratical nature, upon the
vessels of individuals having no concern or connection whatever with
the contending parties. For these of course he was compelled by the
* For the proceedings of these vessels, vide Sketch of the Beniyas.

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' [‎333] (375/733), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/R/15/1/732, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100022870192.0x0000b0> [accessed 23 April 2024]

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