Page 69 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
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                    Chapter Two

                    But with a fairly undisputed domination over Dhafrah, the tribe also
                    came to appreciate the economic opportunities which I he district’s
                    shallow coastline had in store. Maybe the reason why some of the
                    Bani Yas tribes took to the waters of the Gulf was the one given by an
                    official of the Government of India sometime before 1856: "The larger
                    portion was composed of beduin residing in the interior, and tending
                    their flocks: but some few individuals, reduced to poverty through
                    loss of their cattle, took up their abode on the shores of the Persian
                    Gulf.”02 There was, however, no permanent settlement on the coast
                    because of the lack of potable water. The pattern of life for many of
                    the Bani Yas sections changed considerably after some water was
                    discovered in 1761 on Abu Dhabi Island, which also happened to
                    have a sheltered anchorage, as good as any on the shallow coast
                    between Dubai and Khaur al 'Udaid. Within the course of two years a
                    village of some 400 houses sprang up on the island. This first
                    permanent settlement on the island developed rapidly, although the
                    shaikhs of the Bani Yas continued to reside in the interior for several
                    decades. The successors of Diyab bin Tsa Al Bu Falah, who died in
                    1793, made Abu Dhabi their place ofresidence and thus the capital of
                    the Bani Yas.
                      The Bani Yas seem to have gradually adapted their lives to make
                    the best possible use of the economic opportunities which the
                    country afforded. Many groups of the Bani Yas built themselves palm
                    frond houses near their date gardens in the Llwa as a permanent
                    abode. Others returned to their Llwa possessions only during the
                    date harvest. Their camels were taken to graze in the winter in
                    Dhafrah proper and Khatam, and even as far away as Qatar and al
                    Hasa. Most of the Bani Yas engaged in the seasonal pearling, and at
                    the beginning of the 20th century over 400 boats on the pearl banks
                    of the Gulf belonged to the Bani Yas. They sailed from Abu Dhabi and
                    its sheltered harbour of Batin63 as well as from other landing-places
                    on the shallow coast nearer to the Llwa. The many islands adjacent to
                    the coast of the shaikhdom of Abu Dhabi were also used in various
                    ways by the Bani Yas. Dalma, Sir Bani Yas, Ghaghah and a few
                    others have been permanently inhabited and served as supply
                   centres for the pearling communities. Other islands were used during
                   the winter to fish, dry the catch, collect guano, or even to graze camels
                                                                                      S
                   which were taken across by boat. A more detailed description of the
                   way  in which the inhabitants of the shaikhdom of Abu Dhabi made
                   use  of the resources of the coast and the hinterland will be given in

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