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Chapter Three

                always a sure safeguard against secessionist movements, either led
                by the wali or perpetrated by the inhabitants themselves.
                  In the following paragraphs the history of decentralisation, direct
                rule, secession and annexation of the population centres of the
                Trucial Stales will be sketched. Local history is examined to show
                the working of the modest but adequate institutions for the
                administration of ports, dale groves, and markets throughout the
                country. An occasional spotlight is turned on to detail, to illuminate
                the extent or the deficiency of administration within the tribal
                organisation.
                  Because of their relatively small hinterland, Dubai, 'Ajman and
                Umm al Qaiwain do not furnish much information in this respect.4
                Abu Dhabi, the territorial power which derived most of its strength
                from its interests in the desert hinterland and the remote oases,
                needed a minimum of institutional administration carried out by
                walis because the all-important factor which held the shaikhdom
                together was good management of the tribal relationships. At the
                other end of the spectrum there were the Qasimi Rulers, who at times
                merely claimed and at other limes really exerted full control over a
                geographically disjointed and economically unequal territory. An
                account of the administration of the important population centres by
                walis can therefore not be given by neatly examining each of the
                Emirates in turn, but rather by describing the position of walis in the
                important population centres while their political affiliation changed
                over the decades.


                The Qasimi Empire

                Rise and disintegration
                The Qawasim, not as a tribe but as a ruling clan5 with its centre at
                Sharjah or Ra’s al Khaimah, gained domination over most of the
                tribes of the Musandam promontory with the exception of the Shihuh
                and their allies. Before 1760 Qawasim shaikhs had also established a
                foothold on the economically important island of Qishim off the
                Persian Coast. After a compromise had been reached in 1850
                between Sayyid SaTd of Muscat and Shaikh Sultan bin Saqr
                (1803-66), Qasimi rule was undisputed in the area north of the line
                connecting Sharjah town on the west coast with Khaur Kalba on the
                east coast, but excluding the almost inaccessible territory north of
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