Page 474 - Arabian Gulf Intellegence
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430                           WAHABEES.

                          12. The Wahabcc troops again appeared     near  Oman, having com-
                                              pcllcd the wild Arabs in the vicinity to join them.
                             a. d. 1802.
                                              They had at this period reduced to nominal sub­
                       mission the whole coast from Bussora river to Dcba, which is the boun­
                       dary between the Muskat and Joasmee territories; and, if allowed to
                       strengthen themselves in their acquisitions, they would, it   was appre-
                       bended, commence the same depredations by sea      as they were prose-
                       cuting on shore. A conviction of this danger had united the mercantile
                       powers in the Gulf against the sect.
                         13.   The measures which the Wahabee Chief was actively prosecut­
                       ing for the extension of his power and possessions, and the propagation
                       of his doctrines, derived considerable support from the success of an
                       expedition against Kerbelah, which he attacked on the 21st of April,
                       pillaged the whole of it (the Mehallah or division of Abbas alone
                       excepted), and plundered the Tomb of Hossein, slaying in the  course
                       of the day, with circumstances of peculiar cruelty, above five thousand
                       of the inhabitants. This event, which made a deep impression on the
                       minds of the Turks, Arabs, and Persians, was attributed to the guilty
                       negligence of the Turkish Government, in failing to keep the Tomb of
                       Hossein in a proper state of defence.
                         14. Unable to check their progress, the Imaum in 1803 acceded to
                                              a truce of three years, with the Wahabee, who
                            a. d. 1803.
                                              had succeeded in converting, or rendering tribu­
                      tary to his power, the Arabs who inhabited the Arabian shore of the
                      Persian Gulf.
                         15.  This truce left the Wahabee Chief at liberty to prosecute his
                      ambitious views of aggrandisement, which were next directed to the
                      reduction of Medina and Mecca. The latter he soon reduced, having
                      however previously attacked and taken Taif, which he converted from
                      a  fertile region to an absolute desert. He next invested Jedda, which
                      having reduced to great distress, the Imaum succeeded in purchasing
                      a truce for the sum of one lakh and forty thousand dollars. On the
                      fall of Mecca and Yamboo, the extensive adjoining country submitted
                      to the Wahabee, who was now in possession of nearly the whole sea
                      coast on the western frontier of Arabia.
                        16.  Returning from his victorious  career  in that quarter of Arabia,
                      Abdool Azeez prepared, notwithstanding the three years’ truce he had
                      entered into with the Imaum, for the invasion of Oman by land and
                      sea,—a detachment of his troops had already entered the province,
                      and advanced within two days’ journey of Burka, the summer residence
                      of the Imaum of Muskat. Captain Seton observed on this occasion, tha
                             Wahabee reduced Oman, all Arabia must submit to his power,
                      if the
                     and the whole coast would become       nest of pirates, who would extend
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