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Part VI—Chap. XLII.            191

                332.  Tlio Joasmi Chief superseded his brother Saleh in the Government of
            Sharp ah, and appointed in liis place liis son, Saggar bin Sultan; a change
            ■which was viewed with some dissatisfaction by the British authorities, the
            former being by them considered one of the moat enlightoned and intelligent
            Arabs on the coast, who had ovor laboured to check the predatory spirit of his
            countrymon, and maintained a continued cordial understanding with the
            British Agent, Mulla Hussein, residing at this port,
                333.  Two piracies wore in 1838 committed by two Joasmi subjects,
            named Sultan bin Soliur and his brother Mahomed ; the former attended with
            the murdor of several persons, and the plunder of much property, to the north
            of tho Gulf, upon a boat belonging to Karraok, having on board a wealthy
            subject of Chaab, who had fled Mohammerali on its attack and capture by Ali
            Pasha of Bagdad, and was now on his return ; the other on a Batinah boat off
            Ra8-ul-Hud. Sultan bin Sohar was after some time discovered and seized at
            Lingab, and placed at tho disposal of tho Resident, who sent him to Sheikh
            Samur, the Chaab Chief, to bo dealt with as ho might think proper ; the other
            Mahomed took refuge at Ejman, but, as a subject of Sultan bin Saggar, was
            upon demand subsequently given up by that Chief, together with the Nakhoda
            of tho pirate vessel. As tho first of these had suffered severely from his con­
            finement in chains atShargah, he was released, together with his follow-prisoner
            on their furnishing a bond to pay the sum of 100 crowns.
                331. Alarmed at the threats held out against them by Sheikh Samur, the
            Governor of Chaab, in consequence of the piracy committed on the Karrack
            boat, having on board one of his most wealthy subjects and firmest
            adherents, by Sultan bin Sohar, the Joasmi Chiefs of Lingab and Ras-ul-
            Khima, despatched their boats in a body, forming unitedly a fleet of
            twenty-two sail, in order that, in paying their annual visit to Basrah, they
            might be prepared to repel force by force. On their arrival at Busbire, the
            Resident addressed a letter to the Sheikh of Chaab, deprecating any interference
            or molestation on his part towards the Joasmi boats, on the grounds that
            neither Sheikh Sultan bin Saggar nor his subjects had the slightest concern in
            the piracy on the Karrack boat, and that Sheikh Syud bin Guzib had done
            all m his power to forward justice, inasmuch as he had, at great trouble and
            expense, seized and given over the perpetrators. The misunderstanding was
            thereby amicably arranged, to the satisfaction of both parties.
                335. Shaikh Sultan bin Saggar, after various unsuccessful attempts by
                                          land against the Shihayin tribe, residing
                        A.D. 1839.
                                          at Kasaab, Kumza, and Bas Mussendom,
            resolved to despatch a naval force to blockade their ports, and thus briug
            them under control. Although the Shihayin were completely enclosed on
            the land side by the territories of the Joasmi Chief, whose alleged authority
            over them to as admitted by His Highness the Imam to the British authorities
            in the Gulf in 1836, yet that tribe had long continued to maintain a sort of
            independence, and, keeping up a friendly intercourse with Maskat, to exhibit
            little disposition to submit to the claim of supremacy advanced by the Joasmi

                836. The immediate cause of the present quarrel arose from the trea­
            cherous surrender of one of the Shihayin forts to the Naib of Sheikh Sultan,
            residing at Dubba, who immediately dismantled it. Skirmishes and predatory
            inroads on either side were the consequence, until the Joasmi Chief, finding
            that he could make no impression by land, meditated the adoption of the
            measures before alluded to.
                Alarmed, however, at the rapid successes of the Egyptians, and their tool
            Amir Khalid, he relinquished his hostile intentions against the Shihayin, and
            both parties being thus equally averse to war, amicable arrangements were
            quioldy concluded, through tho means of an envoy from himself.
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