Page 61 - Travels in Arabis (Vol I)
P. 61
22 TRAVELS IN OMAN. [cH.
are not, as in the town of Yemen, compelled
to occupy a distant and separate part of the
town, nor is the observance, so strictly ad
hered to in Persia, of compelling them to
pass to the left of Mussulmans when meeting
in the streets, here insisted on. Their avo
cations in Maskat are various, many being
employed in the fabrication of silver orna
ments, others in shroffing money, and some
few retail intoxicating liquors.
I should fix the population of Maskat and
Muttrah at sixty thousand souls.
This town is entitled to a high rank among
Oriental cities, not only as the emporium of
a very considerable trade between Arabia,
India, and Persia, but also, in reference to
its extensive imports, of some note as the
seaport of Oman.
The customs, fixed at five per cent, on all
imported goods, are farmed at Maskat for
one hundred and five thousand, and at
Muttrah for sixty thousand dollars, which
give, collectively, an annual importation of
three millions three hundred thousand dol
lars, or about nine hundred thousand pounds
sterling. No duties of any kind are levied