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Administering a Tribal Society

         bin Ahmad delegated many of the affairs of the eastern area to his
         nephew Humaid bin 'Abdullah, who gained a corrupting influence
         over  the young Hamad bin Sa'Id in Kalba. The Regent Khalid bin
         Ahmad was by then too old and ill to interfere in the deteriorating
         state of affairs. When Humaid bin 'Abdullah died in 1950 the British
         Government favoured Hamad bin Sa'Id as Ruler of Kalba; but he was
         murdered in 1951, probably by the secretary of Saqr bin Sultan bin
         Salim. The last of the descendants in the male line of the Qawasim
         headmen and Rulers in Kalba having died, it seemed the most con­
         venient arrangement to let Kalba revert to direct administration
         from Sharjah, of which it has been a dependency ever since.

         Shamaillyah—Fujairah
         The most important single factor causing the decline of the influence
         of the shaikhs of Sharjah in the eastern part of their realm was the
         fact that within the conglomerate of settled tribes in the Shamaillyah
         one tribe was disproportionately more numerous than any of the
         others. The Sharqiyln were about 6,000 strong in a population of
         about 10,000 while of the other tribes in the Shamaillyah or the
         Naqbiyln none was more than 1,000 persons strong.30 The admini­
         stration of Shamaillyah was arranged in the same way as that of
         Dibah, that is, that the Qasimi wali was a fief and entitled to the use
         of the revenue, some 2,000 M.T. Dollars in 1905; he did not have to
         remit any of the revenue to the Ruler in Sharjah.37 So long as the
         Qawasim had a wali on the east coast he had his seat in Ghallah
         (Kalba) or at the long established natural port of Khaur Fakkan,
         which has always been more important economically and had a
         mixed population of Naqbiyln tribesmen and Arabised Persians.
           Because of the distance and difficulty of access of the Shamaillyah
         from Sharjah the district could be held by Qawasim Rulers only with
         the co-operation of the big tribes. As long as the leading shaikh of the
         Sharqiyln considered himself and his tribe as subjects of the Shaikh
         of Sharjah, the rest of the Shamaillyah could be administered by the
         wali in Kalba. Several times in the 19th century the Sharqiyln leaders
         withheld their co-operation, but they were always brought back into
         the fold of the Qasimi rule by the various means of pressure available
         to strong Qawasim Rulers of either Sharjah or Ra’s al Khaimah.
           The Qawasim Rulers had discovered early on that it was not easy
         to maintain their own appointee as wali in the village of Fujairah.38
         There the tribal leaders of the Sharqiyln were in a strong position to
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