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Chaplor Eight

                 which were eventually granted to English traders in a firm an of 1617
                 confirming the concession at Jashk thus already signalled the
                 political character of such agreements. It provided for the residence
                 of an English ambassador at the Persian court at Isphahan, spelled
                 out the jurisdiction of the latter over English subjects, and the
                 conditions under which disputes with a Persian subject came under
                 Persian jurisdiction. It also mentioned the right of the English to
                 practise their religion.
                   Thus from the very beginning the promotion and the protection of
                 the English trading interests in the Gulf inevitably involved the
                  Crown. Not only was the Crown a party to the negotiations with the
                 local potentates but also it inevitably became involved militarily.
                 This first happened when in 1621/2 the Persian army required the
                 assistance of the naval force of the East India Company at Surat to
                 expel the Portuguese from Hormuz.20 During subsequent decades the
                 Indian subcontinent proved itself to be the far more rewarding target
                 for commercial enterprise, while the unstable relations with Persia
                 never allowed complete British domination of its markets. The East
                 India Company's governing body developed into the Government of
                 India, ruling from Bombay with full powers conferred on it by the
                 Crown. But just as English commercial enterprise in India could not
                 be successful, nor even survive for long, without political support
                 from London, it also required military might to protect both the trade
                 in neighbouring regions and the shipping to and from India. By the
                 end of the 18th century the British in India had become a regional
                 power, and as such were involved in various economic, political, and
                 military interactions with other regional powers including the
                 Persians and the Arabs. Britain was also locked in power struggles in
                 Europe notably with revolutionary and Napoleonic France which led
                 to the British endeavours to exclude such powers from Oman and the
                 Gulf.
                   Initial contacts with the Arabs of the southern shores of the Gulf
                 also began through the medium of trade. In about 1720 the Ruler of
                 Ra’s al Khaimah seized BasTdu on the island of Qishim and estab­
                 lished a trading centre there. This new entrepot port seriously
                 affected the customs receipts which were previously shared between
                 the English and the Persians. In 1727 the East India Company’s agent
                 at Bandar 'Abbas led a naval expedition in company ships and
                 recovered the share of the customs dues which were estimated to
                 belong to the Company.
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