Page 30 - Records of Bahrain (1) (i)_Neat
P. 30

20                       Records of Bahrain

                                                     3 02








                                UTT00BEE A1UBS (BAHREIN).










                        About a. d. 171G, llircc considerable tribes of Arabs, called the Beni
                                           Subah, Al Yalahimah, and A1 Khalecfa, urged
                           a. i). 171G.
                                           by motives of interest or ambition, entered into a
                      compact, and took possession of a spot of ground on the north-western
                      shore of the Persian Gulf, called Kuweit. The Beni Subah were subject
                      at this time to Shaikh Soleyman bin Ahmed; the Beni Yalahimah to
                      Jaubir bin Utloobce ; and the Beni Khalecfa to Khalecfa bin Mahomed.
                        2.  These chiefs strengthened the new settlement by intermarriages
                      with the daughters of the other clans, with the view of being enabled by
                      such alliances to resist the attacks of the Beni IChalid, wliQ were a very
                      powerful tribe.
                        3.  The three tribes determined to follow the occupation of merchants
                      and agriculturists, and to share the profits equally. In the formation
                      of an administration, it was agreed that the sons of the Beni Subah
                      should exercise the functions of government, those of Yalahimah should
                      superintend and control the maritime, and the Beni Khalecfa the
                      mercantile, branch of their concerns.
                        4.  In the course of fifty years, by a prudent and cautious policy, the
                                           new settlement attained a very high degree of
                           a. i). 17GG.
                                           prosperity: but the accumulation of wealth
                      rendered the mercantile branch desirous of seceding from the original
                      league, that they might singly enjoy and add to their acquired riches.
                        5.   They were obliged to have recourse to dissimulation to cfioct
                      their purpose. Khalecfa bin Mahomed, an artful and politic chief,
                     undertook to accomplish it. He represented to the other two the pro­
                     spects of wealth that presented themselves by proceeding to the shores
                     of .that part of the Persian Gulf the most productive of pearls, and, by
                      forming a settlement on some contiguous spot, to conduct the fishery
                     themselves. Lured by the advantages thus held forth,- the. Beni
                     Khalecfa Chief was permitted lo leave Koweit, with a part of his tribe.
                      Ho accordingly passed over and settled alZobara, on the Arabian shore.
   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35