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Chapter Four

                formed pari or an Omani State, and were also considered to be within
                the province of Oman when il was administered by the Caliph’s
                cmi7r.,B But the tribes of the mountain foreland and the desert beyond
                it were, although involved in (he politics of Oman, not always  an
                integral and taxable part of il. The arrival, probably during the 16th
                century ad, of Sunni tribes such as the Bani Yas confederation,
                became an important enough factor on the eastern Arabian scene to
                give al Gharblyah (Sahil ’Union) a political character of its own, so
                that it could no longer be automatically regarded as an integral part
                of Oman.


                3 The religious communities in Trucial Oman
                    at the turn of the twentieth century

                Muslim and other communities
                At the turn of the century the population of the Trucial Slates was
                not only entirely Muslim—with the exception of the few Hindu
                merchants living in some of the towns—but was also almost
                completely Sunni.
                  The homogeneity with regard to religious practice was not
                disturbed by the fact that three of the four schools of jurisprudence
                which are recognised by Sunnis were adhered to by the tribal
                population. These madahib were the Hanbali, the Maliki, and the
                Shafi’i madhab. The three schools do not differ in the fundamentals
                of religious belief, but only in minor rules concerning the perform­
                ance of the religious rites and certain legal interpretations of concern
                to the learned and the experts in Islamic jurisprudence.
                  Because there was not even a formally trained qadi in each of the
                towns of the Trucial States, and a learned man, mulowwo', acquired
                his knowledge from a very limited number of written sources besides
                the Koran, arguments about finer points of difference between these
               schools could never form part of jurisdiction in this society. Thus,
               rather than consciously following in one shaikhdom a madhab which
               differed from that followed by the neighbours up or down the coast,
               each community continued to accept most readily the judgements
               which were in conformity with earlier judgements in identical or
               similar cases. These judgements, which were thus bound to take
               precedents and analogies into account, almost inadvertently per­
               petuated the adherence to a particular madhab. But for the people
               themselves these differences did not exist.

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