Page 31 - Records of Bahrain (1) (i)_Neat
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Selections from the Records, 1818-1856           21


                                      UTTOOBEES.                           363

          By his talents and his treasures he soon acquired a considerable portion
         of the fishery, and by his prudent liberality to the neighbouring Arab
         Chieftains, and to those of his former associates, he drew over the rest
         of his own tribe to the new colony, and at length completely separated
         himself front the other two, and established his independence at Zobara.
           G. The sons of Subah and Yalahimah discovered too late the
         true motives that influenced Khalccfa’s conduct, but were unable to
         resent it,
           7.  The more powerful clan of the two, the A1 Subah, soon felt the
         absence of their commercial brethren, in a deficiency of their finances;
         and, following the example of their renegade brethren, first refused the
         A1 Yalahimah their share of the revenue, and ultimately expelled them
         from the port and town of Koweit.
           8.  The Yalahimah Tribe sought and obtained the protection of their
         kinsmen at Zobara, to each of whom, according to his rank, was
         assigned an adequate income. In a few years they renewed their
         claims to rights founded on their original compact, which they were
         not, however, in a condition to enforce.
           9.  Urged by necessity, and a sense of wrong, the Yalahimah quitted
         Zobara, and took up their residence at Ravcish, a barren spot at a
         short distance eastward of Zobara, and turned their whole attention to
         the increase, equipment, and preservation of their fleet, contemplating
         the object of revenging themselves on their proud and perfidious
         neighbours.' They commenced an extensive system of maritime depre­
         dation, and, by capturing their property, created in the minds of the
         Beni Khalccfa fears for their existence, and such a thirst for the
         punishment and destruction of the Yalahimah Chief, that, adding to
         their own force all the mercenaries their pecuniary resources could
         obtain, they environed the marauders on every side. The treasures
         which the Yalahimah had amassed, which they were determined to
         defend to the last, and the feelings of animosity that existed between
         them, led to a desperate contest: the Yalahimah Chief having been killed
         at an early period of the action, the overwhelming superiority of their
         enemies obtained a complete victory, and a few infants and females
         were alone saved from the massacre that ensued.
            10.  Subsequently to this event, the influence and power of the Beni
                               Khalccfa rapidly increased. They, acquired
             a. D. 1775-76.
                               an accession of wealth and respectability, on
         the attack of Bussora by the Persians, at which period one of the Shaikhs
         of Crane retired to Zobara, with many of the principal people, and ac­
         companied by some of the Bussora merchants also. A great part of
         die pearl and Indian trade in consequence centered at Zobara, and at
         Crane, during the lime the Persians occupied Bussora; and those pi
                                                                          aces
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