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384                           tJTTOOBEES.

                           of Kalcef, producing annually from its dale groves, and the
                                                                                       usual taxes,
                           an income of 30,000 dollars.
                              The vicious and oppressive conduct of the
                                                                            sons of Abdoolla bin
                           Ahmed, added to the death on the 31st May 1834 of Shaikh Khalccfa
                           bin Suliman (nephew and colleague of Abdoolla bin Ahmed) whose
                           authority upon the island of Bahrein had been little inferior to that of his
                           uncle, which relieved his turbulent and refractory brothers and sons of
                           all control, promised eventually to prove a fertile source of anarchy and
                           confusion.
                             A party of the Amayir Tribe (before mentioned as having joined the
                           Shaikh of Bahrein) under the command of one Mooshrif, now made an
                           attempt to recover their possessions at Lahsa and Kateef, but      met
                           by Omer bin Oofeysan, the Wahabee governor of the former town, were
                           defeated with great loss, and compelled to retreat under the guns of
                           Tirhoot, now held by the Bahrein Chief.
                             Upon the ejection of Abdoolla bin Moosharee, and the failure of the
                                                  attempt thereon made by the Wahabees to recover
                             1 a. d. 1835.
                                                  Tirhoot, Shaikh Abdoolla bin Ahmed resumed
                           the strict blockade of Kateef and Ajeer, and commenced plundering the
                           boats belonging to those places.
                             While the war was being thus carried on with varied success, neither
                           party gaining any material advantage, the attention of Abdoolla bin
                           Ahmed was called to the internal dissensions in his own family, and
                           among his relatives, which, owing to his own misrule, partiality, and
                           leniency, began to wear a most serious aspect. The Chiefs of Huailah,
                           until lately dependent upon his authority, now not only opposed him,
                           but entered into communications of a tendency inimical to his interests
                           with the Imaum and the Wahabee Chief. They were, moreover, joined
                           by one of the sons of the old Shaikh, who, obtaining the aid of several
                           hundred Wahabees, set the power of the father at defiance, and captured
                           several boats belonging to Bahrein, within a short distance of that island.
                           Another son, Ahmed, made his escape from the Coast of Guttur, and
                           proceeded to Muskat, for the avowed purpose of soliciting His High­
                           ness the Imaum to espouse his cause, and to supply his party with
                           ammunition and warlike stores,    Some seizures having been made at
                           sea by Ahmed, the circumstances were brought to the notice of the
                           British authorities, who called upon him to make restitution, a demand
                           with which he did not hesitate compliance. His Highness the Imaum
                           not only declined taking any part in the dispute so unhappily existing
                           between the Shaikh of Bahrein and the members of his family, ut sen
                                                                            mediate between the
                           his son Syud Hillal in one of his frigates to                  reconci-
                           contending parties. Syud Hillal’s efforts, however, to e ect a
                           liation, were nullified by the proceedings of the nephews and par *

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