Page 99 - Records of Bahrain (1) (i)_Neat
P. 99

Selections from the Records, 1818-1856           89

                                                                          26
                                      BAHREIN.

         Kasim bin Jabir of Asccloo came to his aid, and enabled him to drive
        Jabara from the island.
          “At this time, however, as the public troubles of Persia were daily
        increasing, Mahomed bin Jaber, of.Asccloo, and of the race of Havant,
        brought the island under his own power, but was dispossessed of it by
        the united powers of Mir Nasr of Bender Rig, and Shaikh Nasr of
        Abooshahai\ The first of these established a superiority over the second j
        and lie was in turn driven out by the tribe Haram, who were themselves
        obliged to yield at length to Shaikh Nasr of Abooshahar, This chief,
        after many successive changes in the result of his military operations
        against the tribes Beni IIul and Haram, finally succeeded in making
        himself master of the island.” (a. d. 1765.)
           With regard to this island, Justamond, in his History of life East and,.
        West Indies, has this striking and remarkable passage:—
           “This Company (the English East India) have never attempted to
        establish themselves on the island of Bahrein, which we arc at a loss to
         account for. This island, which lies in the Persian Gulf, has often
         changed its* masters. It fell, with Ormus, under the dominion of the
         Portuguese, and was governed by the same laws. These conquerors
         were afterwards deprived of it, and it has since undergone a variety of
         revolutions.
           “Tahmasp Koly Khan restored it to Persia, to which it had belonged.
         Iiis death put a period to his vast designs, and the confusion into
         which his empire was thrown afforded a fair opportunity to an
         ambitious and enterprising x\rab of taking possession of Bahrein,
         where he still maintains his authority.
           “ This island, famous for its pearl fishery, even at the time when pearls
         were found at Ormus, Karel, Kishen, and other places in the Gulf, is
         now become of much greater consequence, the other banks having been
         exhausted, while those near it have suffered no sensible diminution.
         The time of fishing begins in April, and ends in October. It is
         confined to a tract of four or five leagues. The Arabs, who alone
         follow this employment, pass their nights upon the island or the coast,
         unless they are prevented by the wind from going on shore. They
         formerly paid a toll, which was received by the galliots on that station.
         Since the last changes, none but the inhabitants of this island pay this
         acknowledgment to their chief, who is not in a condition to demand it
         from others.                          1
           “ The pearls taken at Bahrein, though not so while as those of Ceylon
         and Japan, arc much larger than those of the former place, and of a
         more regular shape than those of the latter. They arc of a yellowish
         cast, but have this recommendation, that they preserve their golden
         hue ; whereas the whiter kind lose much of their lustre by keeping,
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