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Part II—Chop. XIV. 43
I
CHAPTER XV.
EXPEDITION AGAINST THE JO ASM IS IN 1S00-1810: INS
TRUCTIONS TO MR. DUNCE, NEW RESIDENT AT MASKAT.
111. Tho Joasmis continued truo to thoir engagements in every point
that regarded the British; but they
Bombay Selection Bo. XXIV*
co-operated in the following year with
Syud Bcder, tho Imam, in an attack on Syud Ghes, who had refused to
become a party to the peace, which he could not in honour do until he had
revenged the blood of Syud Sultan.
112. Precluded by the Treaty of 1806 from carrying on their cruises in the
Gulf, and urged by the Wahabis, tho Joasmis extended them to India.
In tho month of April 1808 they made their first appoaranoo as pirates in the
Indian Seas on the coast to tho northward of Bombay. The Wahabi Shaikh
had long contemplated the extension of piratical cruises to India. The Joas
mis had by a late order of tho Wahabi been rendered independent of their
lawful Shaikh, Sultan, who had at this period nothing left but Ras-ul-Khyma.
Ramso, Shargah, and other places sent out their boats without his permission.
Gadif, an Arab Chieftain of the Joasmi tribe, on tho Porsiun main, was
averse to piracy; but his subjects, cut off from trade on account of the
general disrepute of their tribe, sought a livelihood in the vessels of others.
These piracies (as stated by Captain Seton) “ can only bo considered as a
general one at tho instigation of the Wahabees.” In one cruise in this year
they captured twenty country boats, which so elated them that they deter
mined on sending a fleet of fifty towards Sind and Kutoh.
113. On the 20th of October they committed a broach of the Treaty of
1806, by attacking and capturing the Sylph cruiser, in tho Gulf of Persia.
She was re-taken by H. M.’s frigate Nereid, which was in sight when the
Joasmis boarded the cruiser.
114. In 1809 the Wahabis directed the Joasmis and the Uttubis to
proceed against Grane. The latter excused themselves, but the former offered
to go if they were supported by ships.
116. The Persians from Lar attacked the Joasmis at Lingah, and the
town of Charrack, and compelled them to retire to Bassiduh, in the island of
Kishm. The Joasmis wore [however successful against a fleet fitted out by
Mahomed Nubhi Khan against Khor Hassan, which twenty-two Joasmi
boats encountered, beat, and took six of the Bushire vessels.
116. The Wahabi Chief having appointed Hussein bin Ali, a Joasmi,
and who was the 8haikh of Ham8et his vicegerent in the Seer principality,
vested him with authority over Ras-ul-Khima, and nominated Wahabi
officers throughout the Joasmi country. Sheikh Sultan, the Joasmi Chief,
having been invited to Deriah, proceeded to that capital, and was detained and
imprisoned by the Wahabi Chief. He contrived to escape from prison, and
finding his way to Yemen, embarked at Mocha, and, proceeding to Maskat,
made overtures to the Imam, besought His Highness’s protection, disclaiming
all countenance to, or concurrence in, the attack of the Sylph, and professing
on this oocasion a desire to conform to the Treaty of 1806. The Imam took
him to Shargah, and placed him over the Joasmi tribes at that place, Sheikh
Sultan occasionally living at Lingah.
117. The British’ Government, determining to relieve the Imam from
the power of the Wahabis, and to suppress these piracies, an expedition
proceeded to the Gulf under the instructions dated the 7th of September 1809.
Their first operations were directed against Ras-ul-Khima. The attaok
commenced by a bombardment during the 12th of November. On the follow
ing day, the Joasmis were vigorously attaoked by sea and land: after a
bloody but ineffctual resistance they were driven into the interior of the
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