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The Tribal Structure of Society

        Sultanate of Oman, where they do not form the majority of the
        population.117 They are also found in the Wadi Ham on the Jiri plain
        and in and around Dibah. Altogether about 6,000 Sharqiym shared
        this district with another 4,000 members of more than half a dozen
        other tribes. The entire strength of the Sharqiyln was estimated in
        the Gazetteer at around 7,000 people.
          Fujairah became, under the leadership of subsequent headmen of
         the Sharqiyln, their main focal point, and it was from there that the
        secession of most of Shamailiyah from Qasimi Sharjah was per­
        petrated a number of times. The Sharqiyln of Shamaillyah and the
        small number of tribal groups living within their eastern habitat had
        been ruled as an independent shaikhdom since soon after the
        forceful Hamad bin 'Abdullah of the Hafaitat, the tribe’s established
        leading section, became the headman in 1879. This situation was not
        recognised by the British authorities in the Gulf until 1952. It was
        realised then that the Ruler in Fujairah of this particularly coherent
        tribal shaikhdom of the Sharqiyln had to be given the same status as
         the other Trucial Rulers if attempts to obtain concessions for oil
        exploration were to be successful. On many occasions before this
        step, the Ruler of Fujairah tried to play off the Sultan of Oman
        against the British authorities by declaring his allegiance to the
        former. But such declarations were not then followed up by
        arrangements such as allowing tax collectors from Oman to come to
         the villages of the Sharqiym. They could therefore be considered
         merely as diplomatic moves on the part of a Ruler whose urge for
         independence was supported by his tribal followers. Similarly
         shortlived were declarations of Sharqiyln subordination to the
         authority of the Shaikh of the NaTm of Buraimi in 1904 and to that of
         Shaikh Zayid bin Khalifah of Abu Dhabi in 1906.118 Although the
         Sharqiyln had frequent and prolonged disputes with their immediate
         neighbours such as the Shihuh, the Khawatir, the NaTm and the
         Naqbiyfn, the shaikhs usually managed to rally the support of these
         neighbours whenever they attempted to shake off the Qasimi rule.
           By the time of the 1968 census, comparatively few of the Sharqiyln
         had yet followed the growing trend to leave Fujairah territory for
         work in the oil industry of Abu Dhabi or Dubai. Of the total of 8,729
         Sharqiyln counted in the northern Trucial States, 8,372 lived in the
         State of Fujairah, only 116 in Sharjah, and 82 were counted in Ra’s al
         Khaimah. In turn, less than 10 per cent of the tribal population of
         9,138 of the State of Fujairah belonged to tribes other than the
         Sharqiym.

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