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Chapter Six

                 19th century. The growing foreign demand for pearls at that time
                 meant that ever-increasing profits were being made. Beduin who
                 participated in a pearling co-operative organised on a tribal basis
                 also earned more cash; whereas previously l he season’s savings were
                 just enough to purchase the few imported commodities required,
                 now there was extra cash available. The beduin could either buy
                 more camels, and pay for them to be looked after in his absence, or he
                 could buy established dale gardens and arrange for them to be
                 tended by other tribesmen. Others pul their money back into the
                 pearling industry, thereby speeding the transformation from an
                 industry of tribal co-operatives to an industry with entrepreneurs
                 and a whole strata of participants who became locked into a system
                 of financial interdependence. Most pearling boats of Abu Dhabi town
                 were eventually owned by individuals, who because of the cost of
                 fitting out the boats and financing their food supplies in advance,
                 required a system of loans which was adapted from the practices
                 which were already well established in some other ports of the
                 Trucial Slates.
                   This system led to a new stratification of the society of the desert
                 shaikhdom of Abu Dhabi. A growing number of families could afford
                 to buy their own pearling boats and even make enough profit in a
                 season or two to build a good two-storey house in Abu Dhabi town.
                 They spent less and less time at their traditional property in the Llwa,
                 gradually becoming absentee landlords, and some even saved
                 enough to buy a date garden in one of the villages in the Buraimi
                 oasis. This change for the better in the economic situation of these
                 families meant also that they now had the means to employ others to
                 work for them. Some of the tribesmen who remained in the desert
                 were paid to look after the camels, tend the gardens, bring firewood
                 to the town and provide transport for the seasonal move to the oases.
                During this period of increasing prosperity a shortage of labourers
                 developed which was covered by importing slaves. They worked as
                 domestic servants and were employed to lend date gardens,3 but they
                were  used most profitably by their owners as divers.

                Changing population pattern of Abu Dhabi town
                Abu Dhabi town grew in size with the expansion of the pearling
                industry. Many of the formerly beduin tribesmen took to staying
                there for the winter and lived off the money they earned from pearling
                during the summer, or they obtained advances from their captains  on
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