Abstract
Abstract
Th e power of the Al Bu Sa’id Sultans of Oman was widely known as based on delicate balances
of forces (and ethnic-social groups), deeply diff erent among them. In fact, the elements that
composed the nineteenth century Omani leadership were, and had always been, generally
‘divided’ amongst three diff erent ethnic groups: the Baluch, the Asian merchant communities
and the African regional leaders (Mwiny Mkuu). Within this framework, the role played by
European Powers, particularly by the Treaties signed between the Sultans of Oman and the East
India Company for abolishing slavery, and by the arms trade was crucial for the development of
the Gulf and the Western Indian Ocean international networks Th ey highly contributed to the
gradual ‘shifting’ of the Omanis from the slave trade to clove and spice cultivation – the major
economic source of Zanzibar Island – along the coastal area of Sub-Saharan East Africa.
Th e role played by the Omani Sultans – the myth – within the western traditional historiography,
which often described them as fi rmly controlling both the Arabian and African littorals and the
major trading ports of the Western Indian Ocean during the nineteenth century, will be reexamined
in this paper, taking into account recent research studies and international debates in
the topic.
Th e new hypothesis consists of a diff erent perception of the concepts of power and control
(political and territorial) of the Western Indian Ocean littorals by the most famous of the Sultans
of Oman during the nineteenth century: Saiyid Sa’id bin Sultan Al Bu Sa’id.
Lingua originale | English |
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pagine (da-a) | 239-287 |
Numero di pagine | 49 |
Rivista | African and Asian Studies |
Volume | 8 |
DOI | |
Stato di pubblicazione | Pubblicato - 2009 |
Keywords
- Arms trade
- East Africa
- History
- Indian Ocean
- Oman
- Teritorial control