Page 128 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 128

Administering ci Tribal Society

        bcduin in the Trucial shaikhdoms lived either permanently or very
       frequently in territory which the subjects of successive Rulers of Abu
        Dhabi claimed as their dor. When in the 17th and 18lh centuries the
       confederation of the Bani Yas was developing, the A1 Bu Falah
        shaikhs probably exercised their influence chiefly through the age-
        old system of agreements for mutual assistance between themselves
        and the heads of the tribal subsections; one may also assume that at
        least the larger of the permanent Llwa villages also had a headman.
        In the 1950s the Bani Yas were still one of the least settled of the
        major tribes on the coast because of their diverse economic interests
        in various parts of the shaikhdom. The A1 Bu Falah authority had
        been accepted by most of the settled Dhawahir in and near the Oasis
        of Buraimi, and a varying degree of influence was exercised by Abu
        Dhabi’s Rulers over the visiting nomads such as the Manahfl, A1
        Murrah, ’Afar, or Rashid, and also over tribes settled even in
        Dhahirah, at some distance from the Buraimi Oasis.
          Because the majority of these people changed their habitat at least
        once during the course of a year, there developed two sometimes
        quite separate ways of administering the shaikhdom. There was the
        system dictated by the geography of the country: a wali, here usually
        called amir, was appointed for the main population centres, the Llwa,
        the Buraimi Oasis, Dalma and later TarTf, Das Island, and Jabal al
        Dhannah. Another system addressed itself to the people as members
        of tribal units regardless of their actual abode al any point in time.
        The relationship between these tribal units and the Ruler of Abu
        Dhabi varied: subsidies were demanded from some of them as a sign
        of submission, occasional gifts or regular allowances were given to
        others, and for some the regular taxes were waived. Both systems
        were necessarily interrelated, because often the same people were
        involved at different times in different places.
          The methods of administering the shaikhdom in use at least until
        the late 1950s will be described firstly by listing the successive
        incumbents of certain posts, and secondly by looking at the
        manifestations of sovereignty such as tax collection, jurisdiction and
        subsidies.

        The Ruler’s representatives
        Dhafrah
        Some time after 1793 the shaikh of the Al Bu Falah exchanged a
        village in the Llwa for the growing coastal settlement of Abu Dhabi
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