Page 98 - Records of Bahrain (1) (i)_Neat
P. 98

88                       Records of Bahrain

                                                      nAIlllEIN.

                         the latter part of the same century, it was reduced by the Generals
                         of Sullan Snlaiman the Sophi, and continued to recognise the authority
                         of this dynasty until its close in the early part of the succeeding, or
                         eighteenth century, in the person of Shah Sultan Hussein. Sultan the
                         son  of Suif next became possessed of the island, after a bloody and
                         obstinate resistance; and retained the supreme authority until lie   was
                         driven out by Nadir Shah, under whose power it remained until his
                          death.
                            After this, during a period of fifty-seven years, it passed into the
                          hands of four different chiefs of districts on the Persian shore of the
                          Gulf, at no great distance from each other. The first of these was
                         Jabara bin Yasir the Nasiri, surnamed Nasuri, Shaikh of Tahiri, who
                          held it fourteen years; next, the family of the Shaikhs of Abooshahar
                          retained the government for thirty years; after them, Mahomed bin
                          Jabir, of the family of Ilaram Shaikhs of Asecloo, for five years; from
                          whom, after a sanguinary contest, it reverted once more to the Shaikhs
                          of Abooshahar, for eight succeeding years, when the Utloobccs wrested
                          the island from the Shaikhs of Abooshahar, and have retained it ever
                          since.
                            The celebrated traveller Carsten Neibuhr gives the following more
                          particular account of these sudden revolutions in the government of
                          this island :—
                            “Within the last few years Bahrein has had many masters. It once
                          belonged to the Portuguese, who were deprived of it by the Shaikh of
                          Lahsa. He was himself in turn obliged to deliver it up to the Persians,
                          who took the island headed by Imaum Kuli Khan, Governor of Ormus,
                          in the name of a king of the Salli dynasty. A Prince of Oman now
                          possessed himself of it; but ceded it to the Persians for a sum of money,
                          through the intervention of Shaikh Mahomed Majid, who was still
                          governor of it at the period of the Afghan invasion of Persia, andwas
                          at his death succeeded by his son, Shaikh Ahmed. The citadel, or
                          principal fortress of the island, had at this time a distinct and different
                          commandant, on the part of the Sophis of Persia, one of whom,
                          Mahomed Kuli Khan, who had succeeded a former officer in this
                          charge, delivered the surrounding territory to Shaikh Mahomed
                          Majid, of Naband (Nabor), of the race of Ilaram. prom him it was
                          taken by Jabara-al-Nasur, Shaikh of Tahiri, also of this family of
                          Ilaram.
                            “While Nadir Shah maintained a naval force in the Persian Gulf,
                          Taki Khan, Beglcrbeg of Pars, reduced the island, and appointed a
                          commandant of the citadel; but the moment that Taki Khan had pro­
                          ceeded to Oman with the licet, Jabara reconquered the whole domain,
                          except the citadel, which the commandant bravely defended, until









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