Page 375 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
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336 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [ell.


                                    marked here than in other settled and civil­
                                    ized parts of Arabia. Both classes have mixed

                                     with their Khuwarijite conquerors, whose
                                     faith they embraced, and all distinction is

                                     now lost between them ; but they have pre­
                                     served another, which is forgotten, as far as I

                                     know, in other provinces. The Arabian his­
                                     torians derive the present population of Oman

                                                              *
                                                              ,
                                     from two stocks; Jactan  the son of Eber
                                     and Adnan I-, the descendant of Ishmael|. In
                                     Oman, the posterity of the former are styled

                                     Ummarf, and that of the latter Gaafiri; but
                                     these terms seem peculiar to the province, for

                                     by other writers the first are called Arab el
                                     Arabi, or pure Arabs, and the latter El Arab

                                     el Mustarab ||, or mixed Arabs.
                                        These two classes in Oman regard each

                                     other with mutual hatred. The town Arabs,
                                     independent of this distinction, are also di­
                                     vided into tribes, who engage as fiercely in

                                     quarrel with each other as their brethen of

                                     the Desert; and the detestable laws of blood

                                       * Jactan the son of Hebra.
                                       f The Arabs trace their descent as far as Adnan, but not to
                                     Ishmael.
                                       J Robinson’s Calmet> Boston Ed. p. 5 70. Ante, a.d. 1817.
                                       || Mos-Arabes, or Mostse-Arabes.
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