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Chapter Two

                   in Qalar and oilier Qataris. During the winter of 1948/49 some A1
                   Murrah came with their camels to the vicinity of Abu Dhabi town and
                   their headman Atyar bin Muhammad al Murri presented Shaikh
                   Shakhbul with three camels.

                   Expansion of Bani Yas territory

                   Longstanding possession of Dhafrah and the Liwa oases
                   The history of Abu Dhabi is an example of how a coherent beduin
                   tribe over several generations extended its area of undisputed
                   dominance, and while remaining under the leadership of one and the
                   same ruling family it built what amounted to a small ■ nation-state".
                   By the time the disputes over the exact geographical limits of the
                   Eastern Arabian Rulers’ authority had sprung up as a result of the
                   signing of oil concessions, the dar of the Bani Yas could be
                   considered as the territorial extent of the State of Abu Dhabi.
                     The Bani Yas were with 10 to 12 thousand members the largest of
                   the 40 or so tribes which made up the population of theTrucial States
                   at the beginning of this century. They were described in the Gazetteer
                   as "one of the most compact and powerful tribes of Trucial Oman;
                   their range is practically co-exlensive with the territories of the
                   Shaikh of Abu Dhabi."50 Unlike most other equally coherent tribes
                   on the Peninsula, the Bani Yas do not have one common ancestor who
                   figures in the recorded genealogies of Arab tribes. However, some
                   Bani Yas claim that the tribe was in the past one with the 'Awamir
                   and that both descended from 'Amir bin Sa'sa', one of whose sons
                   was called Yas. Both tribes have been mentioned as integral
                   branches of one tribe,57 but although they are both Hinawi in the
                   political division within the tribes of Oman and the Trucial Coast,
                   their immigration routes into the area which they now share,
                   Dhafrah, have been quite different. The 'Awamir spread from
                   Hadhramaut eastwards along the edge of the Rub' al Khali, while the
                   Bani Yas came from Najd, north-west of their present homeland.
                     Such uncertainty about which tribe actually forms an integral part
                   of the Bani Yas and which does not indicate that the tribe is a
                   confederation which was welded together by a common history
                   rather than by the ties of blood relationship. They were probably a
                   number of beduin groups which gradually extended their seasonal
                   migration in search of grazing, from the areas in and around Najd58
                   into the relatively well-watered Dhafrah, returning to the familiar
                   wells of the area where they customarily spent the summer with their

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