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The Tribal Structure of Society

       Dispute” will be discussed in Chapter Eight; in the present context it
       illustrates the degree of independence which some tribes of the
       interior were able to reserve for themselves right up to the time oil
       was  being exported from Oman and Abu Dhabi.

       A1 Bu Shamis
       The A1 Bu Shamis section of the Na'lm had, during the general
       disintegration of the homogeneity of the Na'lm, established an
       almost completely separate identity. Originally they represented the
       beduin section of the tribe and the nomadic element was still
       dominant during the 1950s, when their total strength was estimated
       at about 1,000 people including 400 armed men. The shaikh of the
       beduin at that time was Muhammad bin Salmin bin Rahmah, who
       lived either at Sanainah or Qabil south of the Buraimi oasis." The
       settled A1 Bu Shamis, although few in numbers, lived in important
       oases and coastal settlements, and their headmen were accordingly
       rated as prominent figures. Some owned portions of Dhank, others
       under Shaikh Rashid bin Hamad al Shamsi lived in Hamasah. A
       sizeable section of the population of the ports of Hamrlyah and
       Hlrah, both dependencies of Sharjah, has always been Al Bu Shamis,
       and the headmen traditionally come from families within that tribe.
       The Al Bu Shamis came to the coast after they were temporarily
       driven out of Dhahirah early in the 19lh century. As with the other
       Na’lm sections, the sovereignty of the Sultan was generally accepted
       as long as this remained a matter of the usual tax payments on crops,
       but otherwise did not involve many mutual commitments. The
        question of who should benefit from the granting of petroleum
       concessions gave the leaders of the many independent tribal sections
        strong bargaining positions. For instance, it was alleged that the
        leader of the beduin Al Bu Shamis visited the Sultan in Muscat in
        about 1948 and offered complete loyalty of his followers for the sum
        of 10,000 Maria Theresa Dollars, but that the Sultan turned the deal
        down while giving a considerably smaller sum as a present to the
        shaikh.
          Usually the NaTm were on bad terms with most of their
        neighbours, particularly the Bani Ka'ab, the Bani Qitab and the Al Bu
        Falah. But the Al Bu Shamis, although Ghafiri like the rest of the
        Na Im, came to be steadfast allies of the Al Bu Falah, possibly since
        Shaikh Tahnun bin Shakhbut had helped them to regain Qabil and
        Sanainah in Dhahirah some time before 1833. The Al Bu Shamis were
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