Page 56 - Arabian Gulf Intellegence
P. 56

t\

                      14                           PIRATE POUTS.



                                                  Tribe Shiiiiyyin.
                        From this cape to the first pirate port at Ramse, on a line of coast of
                     little more than fifteen leagues in extent, lie, at small distances from
                     each other, five towns belonging to the Tribe Shihiyyin, who
                                                                                         also
                     possess Amsandam to the eastward of the        cape. These towns are
                     named Dar Sinni, Khasab, Jadi, Julfar, and JBoka. From Amsandam
                     to Dar Sinni is three Furseekhs to the south ; thence to Khasab four ;
                     thence to Jadi two ; and lastly to Boka four. Of these Khasab is    now
                     the largest; and Julfar, at which the Portuguese once entertained an
                     establishment, protected by a fort, for the purpose of pearl fishing, is the
                     next in size. They are occupied by the stationary and more civilized
                     part of the tribe, who  are  employed in pearl fishing, in trade, and in
                     agriculture. Their food consists of dates, wheat, barley, meat, and fish,
                     in abundance.   The remainder of the tribe is employed in gaining a
                     precarious livelihood, by fishing in the small bays on the coast, or in
                     the islands at the head of the cape, or else, in the character of pastoral
                     Arabs, wandering over the arid and barren rocks of the interior portion
                    of this country, which afford a scanty supply of burnt vegetation for
                    their flocks. These people live on milk and cheese, and dates also,
                    and some little fish, which they procure from their lowland clansmen
                    on the coast, in exchange for the produce of their flocks, which are
                    numerous. The male adults of this tribe are said to amount to fourteen
                    thousand; are the constant and persevering enemies of the Joasim,
                    friendly to Muskat, and easily conciliated. Their pearl fishery is
                    worth 3,000 Tomans yearly, and they have a fleet of two hundred
                    and fifty small boats.




                                               PIRATE PORTS.                                             ;

                                                  Ramse, &c.
                      Hence we enter on the Pirate Ports at Ramse, southward of Mussel-
                    dom, in lat. 25° 33' N., at two days’ journey from Khasab.     The town
                   is composed of four hundred houses, under the government of Shaikh
                   Abdurrahman bin Saleh, of the Tribe Tannay ; and hence to Mahhara,
                   a small village of a hundred houses, under Hussan bin Ali Tannaiye, is
                   four Furseekhs. Two miles off shore is here found a depth of four and
                   a half fathoms ; the anchorage is in four and a half fathoms, sand, wit i
                                  SE.byE. three miles, and Ras-ool-Khyma six miles
                   Ramse town
                     Now the chain of rocky mountains, which formed the promontory ol





                                                                                                         -
   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61