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Chapter Two
               the A1 Bu Falah Ruler Khallfah bin Shakhbuj in 1048 and the Sultan
               'Azzan bin Qais in 1869 to evict the Wahhabis from Buraimi.04 The
               NaTm were subsequently allowed to occupy most of the forts in the
               oasis which were in or near Buraimi village. The lamlmah of the
               NaTm look up residence in the fort of Buraimi village and was
               considered to be the representative of the Sultan in the area,
               receiving a regular allowance in the same way as other walis.
                 At the turn of the century 5,500 people were living in the Buraimi
               oasis; there were about 300 houses in Buraimi village, Hamasa and
               Sa’arah occupied almost exclusively by NaTm. To the south-east of
               the oasis the NaTm villages are mostly of the A1 Bu Shamis section;
               they are Hafft and Qabil at the southern foot of jabal Hafft, and
               Dhank in Dhahirah. Others lived in Sanainah, south of the entrance
               to the Wadi Jizi, which leads through the mountains to the Batinah
               coast, where there were some NaTm in Sanqar. In the other direction
               settled NaTm were found in 'Ajman town, where they had some 25
               houses; the ruling family of ’Ajman belongs to the A1 Bu Kharaiban
               section of the NaTm. In the small port of Hamrfyah, a dependency of
               Sharjah, the headman and some 250 of its 300 houses belonged to the
               Darawishah subsection (A1 Bu Shamis division). The same subsec­
               tion dominated Hfrah, another Sharjah dependency (also 250 NaTm
               houses). The NaTm formed a substantial part of the settled popu­
               lation in Sharjah town, with 100 houses (Darawishah), and else­
               where in Sharjah territory, such as Daid, with 30 Khawatir houses.
                 Of the 2,500 nomadic NaTm, about 1,600 were usually somewhere
               in Trucial Oman and its hinterland, and considered the district of al
               Jau as their headquarters. They shared the Dhahirah with many
               Omani tribes and Khatam with the Bani Yas and the Dhawahir.
               Although the NaTm were not settled anywhere in the Wadi Hatta, the
               beduin NaTm and their tamlmah at Buraimi usually protected the
               inhabitants of the village of Masfut in the wadi, who were al enmity
               with the Dubai-protected people of Hajarain. In what came to be
               considered as Ra’s al Khaimah territory, beduin of the Khawatir
               section shared the use of the Jiri plain with the Ghafalah and others.
               In other parts of that district between the mountains and the coast
               the beduin NaTm had lost their once undisputed predominance to
               the Bani Ka'ab, who together with the Bani Qitab became their great
              rivals. The beduin NaTm had camel herds as well as flocks of sheep
              and goats, and since grazing and water were plentiful even near their
              dale gardens, they never needed to go far afield and did not venture

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