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The TribaJ Structure of Society

       oasis to the extent that his opinion had to be consulted on matters
       concerning even distant areas such as the Wadi Jizi, the Batinah in
       Oman, and Fujairah on the coast of the Indian Ocean. This stale of
       affairs was no coincidence or mere filling of a power vacuum, but the
       deliberately pursued aim of Shaikh Zayid bin Khalifah; and . . the
       Shaikh of Abu Dhabi was still anxious to convince the Bani Qitab of
       the impossibility of opposing his wishes and the Shaikh of Umm-al-
       Qaiwain of the folly of attempting to compete with his influence in
       Bedouin affairs”.06 The other Trucial shaikhs could see the necessity
       to curb Zayid’s ambitions, and in April 1906, after another clash of
       vital interests, negotiated with him a formal agreement on spheres of
       influence over the beduin tribes.
         This agreement was, however, soon quite far from reality, because
       most of the tribes concerned had not even been consulted, and the
       additional influence which Zayid had, with the Sultan’s blessing and
       continued payment of a regular subsidy, over the beduin and the
       settled tribes of the Dhahirah as far as 'Ibri87 and over tribes under
       the administration of the wdli of Suhar, in turn increased his
       standing with those beduin who lived chiefly in Trucial Oman and
       whose alliance and assistance in case of war were constantly sought
       after by the Rulers of the coast.


       Developments since the first decade of this century After the death
       in 1909 of Zayid bin Khalifah, four of his sons followed him in such
       quick succession that a less well-founded system of maintaining the
       newly-established A1 Bu Falah authority in the oasis would have
       collapsed. As it was, only the extent of the political influence over the
       tribes in Oman fluctuated considerably, but the possession of the six
       villages was not contested by any of the concerned parties from the
       area—only by a renewed claim from Saudi Arabia.
         The Abu Dhabi part of the oasis was administered on behalf of the
       A1 Bu Falah by Ahmad bin Hilal al Dhahiri until his death in 1936,
       well into the period of Shaikh Shakhbut bin Sultan’s rule. During the
       latter’s long rule from 1928 to 1966 more Bani Yas bought property in
       the oasis, which had finally become the favourite retreat during the
       hot humid summer months for those families who otherwise lived in
       Abu Dhabi town. Many other families of the Bani Yas and the
       Manasir could not afford to move permanently into the Buraimi oasis,
       and retained the old pattern of returning to their houses in the Llwa
       for the summer if they were not on the pearl banks.

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