Page 30 - A Hand Book of Arabia Vol 2_Neat
P. 30

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                       THE CAMEL TRADE OF ARABIA                                       17 •


         In Central Arabia, the Shammar of Jebel Shammar, the Ateibah,
      the Qahtan, and the Dawasir. Of these the most-renowned camel
      breeders are the Qahtan, though they cannot rival the Anazah.
      Some of the Harb, the sub-tribes of the Beni Salim, and the Beni
      ‘Ali are camel owners.
         In Eastern Arabia, the Muteir, the ‘Ajman, to a lesser extent the                             !
      Dhafir and the Murrah. The Manaslr, south of the Murrah on the                                   :
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      ed^e of the great sand desert, have few camels and are seldom seen
      by°the merchants of the Qasim. The camels of Oman, like those
      of Aden (see above, p. 14), are to a great extent absorbed by local
      requirements.
         The camel trade has its centre in Damascus, where almost all
      the capital is supplied. The principal merchants were, in 1914,
      Mohammed el-Bassam, a native of the Qasim, who held half
      the trade in his hands, Yasim edh-Dhiyab, Suwwah, Ibn Rawwaf,                                     '
      and ‘Abdullah Haleisi. These bring yearly into Damascus 300—400
      ra‘iyahs, i. e. 24,000-32,000 camels. There are one or two dealers
      in Baghdad, such as ‘Assafi and Da’ud ibn Juweili, but these handle
      a much smaller number of beasts. They buy from the tribes near
      the ‘Iraq, chiefly from the Shammar and the ‘Amarat, and sell in
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      Damascus, where alone there is any market. About 300 camels
      are sold in Aleppo every Wednesday for six months in the year.
      These are mostly from the Siba‘ and Fed‘an, but some come from
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      the smaller people in the Jebel el-Hass and the Euphrates valley.
      Most of the beasts are driven from Aleppo straight over the Amanus                                 \
      into Asia Minor, but a few go south to Hamah for Damascus.
         The dealers of Damascus and Baghdad employ as buyers men
      of the ‘Uqeil. In the days when the strong hand of Mohammed
      ibn Rashid kept the desert under control, a number of Damascenes *
      used to go out and buy from the tribes ; but when he died, Central
      and Western Arabia became so turbulent that caravans could no
      longer pass through them with any degree of safety, and the well-
      known Ma'rawi family are now almost the only Damascenes em­
      ployed as buyers. The ‘Uqeil are all Nejd Arabs, townsfolk, or                                     \
      nomads chiefly from the Qasim, but always chosen from among
      tribes such as the settled Beni Tamim, who are not engaged in
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      interminable blood-feuds with other tribal groups. They are the
      recognized guides and conductors of caravans in Arabia, an organi­
      zation partaking of the nature of a club and a benefit societv, with
      a president who is always a native of Boreidah and head-quarters
      at Baghdad. But though men of the Qasim carry on all the dealings                                   • i
      with the tribes, they do it on behalf of the merchants of Damascus
      °r              ’ t^iere is no one in the Qasim with sufficient capital

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