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Piracy combined with heightened Anglo-French rivalry led Britain to reconsider the level of its involvement in the Gulf at the end of the eighteenth century. Against the backdrop of punitive naval action, Britain proposed a “General Treaty of Peace with the Arab Tribes.” Signatories would refrain from piracy and fly a registered flag; British naval power would guarantee the peace. With these maritime truces in place, British officials now referred to Eastern Arabia as the Trucial coast rather than the pirate coast. Britain further bound itself through Exclusive Treaties to defend the territorial integrity of the tiny shaikdoms, but was unwilling and ill-equipped to deal with trouble on land. Before the formation of organised and centrally controlled security forces, the leading shaikhs of Eastern Arabia relied on tribal alliances to defeat or deter rival claimants; to defend key settlements and vital wells against aggressors; and to embark on expeditions against neighbors. With a small band of armed retainers, the leading shaikhs were unable to exercise much political control within their territories In the 1920s, Britain began to change this by establishing local militaries.
In the Arabian peninsula, the second/eighth century independent and semi-independent polities appeared, and regions underwent cycles of unification and fragmentation. This chapter is divided into four sections: the Hijaz, the Yemen, Oman, and Central and Eastern Arabia. In the first section, an outline of the Hijazi history in the first/seventh and second/eighth centuries is provided; attention is also drawn to the rebellions and disorders in the holy cities of Mecca and Medina. Next, the chapter focuses on the history of Yemen from the first/seventh to the end of the second/eighth century. Non-sectarian dynasties, religious activity, and sectarian states in Yemen are also discussed here. Oman from the first/seventh to the third/ninth century, and from the third/ninth to the fifth/eleventh century is the focus of the third section of the chapter. The final section deals with Central and Eastern Arabia from the first/seventh to the third/ninth century.
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