Page 422 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 422
XXIII.] TRAVELS IN OMAN. .383
pains to obtain an account as accurate as
possible. Southern Oman is but thinly peo
pled, for the whole number, including women
and children, does not exceed fifty thousand ;
but the northern districts are far more popu
lous, and probably contain, including Maskat
and Matarah, two hundred and fifty thousand
souls, which I am convinced is rather within
than above the mark.
The Batna coast, throughout its whole
length, is thickly studded with towns and
villages; and amidst the valleys, wherever
the ground affords a sufficient space for till
age, are found hamlets of ten or twenty houses
each.
With the exception of Rostak, which is
extensive and well built, there are no towns
of any extent in the interior. Many of those
which from native information have figured
in our maps as large cities, and are even
classed by Niebuhr as principalities, do not
now rise into more importance than villages
or hamlets. The ruins of houses, and the
remains of former embankments, denote how
ever both a superior population and more
extensive cultivation ; but, wherever irrigation