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Part of the book series: The Statesman’s Yearbook ((SYBK))

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Abstract

An independent State in South-eastern Arabia extending along a coast line— S E and S W —of almost 1,000-miles from the Gulf of Ormuz and inland to the deserts’ Area, 82,000 square miles ; population, 1,500,000. The capital, Muscat (40 000 inhabitants), was occupied by the Portuguese till the seventeenth century After various vicissitudes it was taken in the eighteenth century by Ahmed bin Sa’eed, of Yemenite origin who was elected Imam in 1741 His family have since ruled. The present Sultan is Seyyid Feysal bin Turk’i, second son of the late Seyyid Turki bin Sa’eed bin Sultan who succeeded his father June 4, 1888, and was formally recognised by the British Goverrnment In the beginning of the present century the power of the Imam of Oman extended over a large area of Arabia the islands in the Persian Gulf a strip on the Persian coast, and a long strip of the African coast south of Cape Guardafui, including Socotra and Zanzibar. On the death of Sultan Sa eed in 1856 one son proclaimed himself Sultan in Zanzibar and another in Muscat. Eventually the rivals agreed to submit their claims to the arbitration of Lord Canning, Viceroy of India, who formally separated the two Sultanates. Subsequent troubles curtailed the area of the state in Asia.

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© 1903 Palgrave Macmillan, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited

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Keltie, J.S. (1903). Oman. In: Keltie, J.S. (eds) The Statesman’s Year-Book. The Statesman’s Yearbook. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230270329_38

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