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The Tribal Structure of Society

       sovereignty on the Arab side of the Gulf. The nomadic population as
       well as the few tribal sections who lived in the wadi-oases in the
       mountains needed to be on reasonably good terms with whoever
       dominated the ports on which they relied for a market as well as for
       occasional employment.
         The Qasimi domination over the Musandam promontory was
       repeatedly contested by the Sultans of Muscat. But from 1850
       onwards the sovereignty of the Qawasim shaikhs was firmly
       established in the entire coastal and mountainous area north of a line
       between Sharjah town and Khaur Kalba. The notable exception was
       the inaccessible terrain inhabited by the various sections and allies
       of the Shihuh north of Sha'am and Dibah. Since this administrative
       entity soon broke up again into independent shaikhdoms, it may
       seem arbitrary to use the extent of this former Qasimi empire as a
       basis for the enumeration of the tribes in the northern part of the
       Trucial States. But the Qasimi-held territory, if Umm al Qaiwain and
       'Ajman are also included, represents in fact those areas of the
       present State of the UAE which are either mountainous or dominated
        by the vicinity of inaccessible and barren heights and their water-
       providing wadis. Therefore living conditions in that area are very
        different from those in the sandy desert of the Bani Yas shaikhdoms.
       Thus the authority of the Bani Yas shaikhs in Abu Dhabi or Dubai
        stopped short of the mountains beyond al 'Ain and elsewhere,
        although their influence extended from time to time into these
        areas.112
         The different tribes who have for many generations lived among or
        near the mountains either as nomads or in a settled existence have
        developed a common socio-economic pattern; having a descendant of
        the Qasimi family as overlord set the political stage. On it a
        continuous play developed of disputes and changing alliances
        between the many neighbouring ports, villages, rulers, walis, head­
        men, tribal shaikhs and independent nomadic groups. As was shown
        earlier, at times when Abu Dhabi was particularly strong, such as
        during the rule of Shaikh Zayid the Great, it also played a part. But
        the almost continuous tug-of-war between the shaikhs of Abu Dhabi
        and the Qawasim shaikhs for dominance over the usually ‘non-
        aligned’ beduin tribes was often carried out by proxy; for instance
        when beduin shaikhs took one side or the other in a local dispute.
        The description in Chapter Three of the decentralised administration
        of the Qasimi Empire gives some insight into this particularly closely

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