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'Files 61/12 and 61/16 (D 80) Treaty between Bin Saud and H. M. Govt' [‎109r] (224/408)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (200 folios). It was created in 19 Apr 1923-10 Mar 1930. It was written in English. The original is part of the British Library: India Office The department of the British Government to which the Government of India reported between 1858 and 1947. The successor to the Court of Directors. Records and Private Papers Documents collected in a private capacity. .

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5. Ihe coastal tracts east of Katar and the Dhafrah desert, with its numerous
oases, on the other hand, are inhabited—more or less sparsely—by Bani Yas, who are
fellow-tribesmen of the Chiefs of Abu Dhabi and Uibai, and Manasir, who have
no connection with Hasa but deal with the towns of Trucial Oman A name used by Britain from the nineteenth century to 1971 to refer to the present-day United Arab Emirates. , and resort in
considerable and increasing numbers, to its pearl-banks.
Ea st 0 [ pbafrah are the oases of Dhaid, Baraimi, Hafit and Mahadha.
By some authorities the last three of these are geographically located in a region
called Jau, which Mr. Lonmer styled " Independent Oman.""
i . which is 30 miles inland and east of Shargah, belongs to that chiefship,
but the Bedouin who live round it are Beni Kitab, subordinate to the Sheikh of
Umm at Kaiwam.
B a ':f l l mi l is < t l ,ccu P 1 1 ec l b y opposing tribes—the Dhawahir, who are allies of
the iSht'ikh o Abu Dhaln, and the Naim, who for the last three years have been
actually at tend with this chief. The Naim properly belong to Dhahirah (Oman
bultanate), but they also own Hafit, and a large contingent of them, including the
Chief of Ajman and the petty Sheikhs of Hamriyah and Hairah, subordinate to
bhargah, are settled on the trucial coast A name used by Britain from the nineteenth century to 1971 to refer to the present-day United Arab Emirates. . In the deserts surroundin 0- Baraimi,
besides tht JNaim, aie Awamir and Daru Bedouin, whose main bodies reside further
east in Muscat territory.
Mahadhah, inhabited by Bani Kaab, according to mv latest information should
be regarded as belonging to the Sultanate of Muscat.
7. South-east of Dhafrah is the large district of Dhahirah, containim/
numerous towns, which indubitably belongs historically and geographically to the
Oman Sultanate. Until lately its political sympathies appear to have leant to the
side of the Sultan of Muscat against the Ibadhi Imam of Oman; but last year the
latter made a determined effort to attach it forcibly to his side, fearing that
otherwise the Wahabis will absorb it. The attempt failed, and it remains to be
seen who will make the next move to deprive the Sultan of Oman of this district.
8. The recent history of all this disputed country, so far as can be ascertained,
is as follows :—
When Sheikh Sultan-bin-Zaid murdered his brother Hamdan, the Chief of Abu
Dhabi, in 1922, he found that his family's authority in Baraimi had fallen to a low
ebb. The Nairn had summoned to their aid the Bani Kitab, the Awamir and the
Daru of Dhahirah and were then holding their own in conflicts in Dhafrah with the
Bani \as, who were led by Sheikh Sultan's brothers and cousins. In June 1925 it
was reported that the Awamir and the Daru had appealed to the Amir of Hasa to
protect them from the Sheikh of Abu Dhabi. Presumably they really wished their
encroachments on Dhafrah to be confirmed to them. It Vas reported in the same
month that the Amir had sent an official named Said to collect zikat in the Baraimi
oasis. This official employed about sixty men, who went about in fifteen parties.
They were generally, but not invariably, successful. The tax demanded was 1 rial
per camel, 1 piastre per head of cattle and 5 per cent, of the flocks. Said arrested
and hanged a Hasawi refugee in Baraimi. It was also he who notified to the Sheikh?
of Abu Dhabi and Dibai that the Amir of Hasa had taken the Awamir and Daru
tribes (Muscat subjects, fundamentally) under the Sultan of Nejd's protection.
9. In July 1925 it was reported that the Sheikhs of the Naim of Baraimi, the
Bani Kaab and the Bani Kitab had been negotiating with the young Sheikh of
Shargah for mutual assistance in the event of aggression by the deputy oi the Amir
of Hasa.
10. In August 1925, after a conference between relatives of the Sheikh of Dibai
and Sheikh Isa-bin-Saleh, the Ibadhi supporter of the Imam of Oman, it was agreed
that these two sheikhs should support each other in resisting Wahabi encroach
ments. Immediately afterwards the Chief of Abu Dhabi paid visits to Dibai, Shargah
and Umm-al-Kaiwain, while Sheikh Isa-bin-Saleh visited Baraimi.
11. In December 1925 the Chief of Umm-al-Kiawain and the Naimi headman
of Hamriyah took the Bani Kitab Sheikh to Abu Dhabi to settle the feud between
the Bani Kitab and the Bani Yas.
12. In the same month the Ibadhi leaders of Oman, who are equally
anti-Sultan (of Muscat) and anti-Ibn Saud, commenced their offensive against
Dhahirah and Baraimi and initially achieved considerable success. After the
capture of Ibri, however, they quarrelled. Sheikh Suleiman-bin-Hamyar defected,
the Sheikh Isa-bin-Saleh fell ill. The Imam and Sheikh Iga then abandoned the
expedition and returned to their homes.
[1451 c—1j B 3

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Content

The volume mostly consists of correspondence concerning the relations between Britain and Ibn Sa'ud, with a specific focus on the negotiation and signing of the Treaty of Jeddah. The majority of the correspondence is between the British Legation in Jeddah and the Foreign and Colonial Offices in London. Copies were often sent to the Political Residency An office of the East India Company and, later, of the British Raj, established in the provinces and regions considered part of, or under the influence of, British India. in Bushire, the Political Agencies in Bahrain and Kuwait, and the High Commissioners in Baghdad and Jerusalem.

The volume follows the evolution of the Treaty:

  • Britain's initial reluctance, due to their official friendship with King Hussein, to engage with the issue prior to Ibn Sa'ud's conquest of the Hejaz;
  • how this event then gave cause for the Bahra and Hadda agreements of November 1925;
  • the negotiations between Ibn Sa'ud and Gilbert Clayton in early 1927 leading to the signing of the Treaty of Jeddah on 20 May that year and its ratification in August.

At the end of the volume (folios192-196) is Clayton's final report on his mission to the Hejaz and includes a copy of the Treaty.

Extent and format
1 volume (200 folios)
Arrangement

The volume is arranged chronologically.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the sequence starts on the first folio and continues through to the inside back cover. The numbering is written in pencil, circled and written in the top right corner of each folio. There are the following irregularities: ff 1A-1C; f 185A; ff 78-84 are those of a booklet, stored in an envelope (f 77A). There is a second sequence that is also written in pencil but is not circled and is inconsistent.

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English in Latin script
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'Files 61/12 and 61/16 (D 80) Treaty between Bin Saud and H. M. Govt' [‎109r] (224/408), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/R/15/1/574, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100087786908.0x000019> [accessed 24 March 2025]

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