Page 106 - Records of Bahrain (1) (i)_Neat
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96                         Records of Bahrain

                                                       9 2








                                              MEMORANDA



                                                    ON THE

                      RESOURCES, LOCALITIES, AND RELATIONS OF THE
                           TRIBES INHABITING THE ARABIAN SHORES OF
                                           THE PERSIAN GULF.


                        The total non-intcrfcrcnce in the internal disputes and affairs of the
                      piratical Arabian Chieftains, wisely enjoined as the first principle of
                      the Government policy, added to the absence of any intercourse, com­
                     mercial or otherwise, with their ports, by individuals and vessels of any
                      nation, have precluded the attainment of any specific and accurate
                      knowledge of inland localities, and extent of population and territory.
                        To fix the limits, therefore, of the lands actually belonging to, or
                      claimed by, each tribe respectively, would, with our present information,
                      be impossible •; nor, indeed, do these often form the grounds of any
                      great altercations or hostilities among themselves, owing to the barren­
                      ness and infertility of the soil; which being, moreover, very imperfectly
                      cultivated, in consequence, probably, of the absence of the means or
                     labour of irrigation, does not yield sufficient for the support* of its
                      inhabitants in even their common article of food,—dates,—the fruit of a
                      tree which may be said to be generally indigenous to Arabia alone, and
                      renders its possession, accordingly, of no worth.
                        Upon the success of the pearl fishery, and the profits of the carrying
                      trade which it brings into operation, must, under these disadvantages,
                      depend the means of obtaining the positive necessaries of life, and those
                      trifling luxuries desirable to an Arab.f It is needless to observe how

                       * The Arabian ports, purticulnvlv Ahoothnbcc, ore consequently dependent upon other
                      places for supplies of provisions, and are soon reduced to great distress by anything like an
                      effective blockade.
                       '+ Captain McLeod, in reporting upon the Jonsmcc Tribe in 1823, stated as follows:—
                      ** The Joasmecs procure all their materials for building, ns well ns their warlike stores, from
                      Musknt, Bahrein, and the Persian ports in the lower part of the Gulf. In the construction
                      of their vessels they use no other wood than Indian teak, and, in respect to arms, those prin­
                      cipally of Persian manufacture. They possess no articles of export, since their pearls arc gene­
                     rally purchased by merchants on the spot, and the produce of their country is not even suffi­
                     cient for their maintenance. Their only employment is fishing, diving for pcnrls, and importing
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