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Said bin Sultan

Sayyid Saïd bin Sultan al-Busaidi (Arabic: سعيد بن سلطان, Saʿīd bin Sulṭān, Swahili: Saïd bin Sultani) (5 June 1791 – 19 October 1856) was Sultan of Muscat and Oman, the fifth ruler of the Busaid dynasty from 1804 to 4 June 1856. His rule began after a period of conflict and internecine rivalry of succession that followed the death of his father, Sultan bin Ahmad, in November 1804. He is often referred to as the Lion of Oman (أسد عمان), as one of the greatest Omani sultans.[2]

Said bin Sultan
Sultan of the Omani Empire
Reign1804–1856
PredecessorSultan bin Ahmad
SuccessorThuwaini bin Said (as Sultan of Muscat and Oman)
Majid bin Said (as Sultan of Zanzibar)
Born(1791-06-05)5 June 1791[1]
Samail, Oman
Died19 October 1856(1856-10-19) (aged 65)
Seychelles
Burial
Makusurani Cemetery
Issue
Detail
Names
Sa'id bin Sulṭān al-Bu'saidi
سعيد بن سلطان
DynastyHouse of Busaid
FatherSultan bin Ahmad
MotherSayyida Ghanneyeh bint Saif Al-Busaidi
ReligionIbadi Islam

Said's uncle Qais bin Ahmad finally agreed to Said's primacy after Said had killed his cousin, Badr bin Saif, a pretender to the throne. Said is noted for moving his capital to Zanzibar, where it remained during the time when the Omani Empire reached the zenith of its power and wealth.[3][4]

Early years Edit

Said bin Sultan was son of Sultan bin Ahmed, who ruled Oman from 1792 to 1804. Sultan bin Ahmed died in 1804 on an expedition to Basra. He appointed Mohammed bin Nasir bin Mohammed al-Jabry as the Regent and guardian of his two sons, Salim bin Sultan and Said bin Sultan.[5] Sultan's brother Qais bin Ahmad, the ruler of Sohar, decided to attempt to seize power. Early in 1805 Qais and his brother Mohammed marched south along the coast to Muttrah, which he easily captured. Qais then started to besiege Muscat. Mohammed bin Nasir tried to bribe Qais to leave, but did not succeed.[5]

Mohammed bin Nasir called on Badr bin Saif for help.[5] After a series of engagements, Qais was forced to retire to Sohar. Badr bin Saif became the effective ruler.[6] Allied with the Wahhabis, Badr bin Saif became increasingly unpopular.[7] To get his wards out of the way, Badr bin Saif made Salim bin Sultan governor of al Maṣna'ah on the Batinah coast and Said bin Sultan governor of Barka.[8]

In 1806, Said bin Sultan lured Badr bin Saif to Barka and murdered him nearby. There are different accounts of what happened, but it seems clear that Said struck the first blow and his supporters finished the job. Said was acclaimed by the people as a liberator from the Wahhabis, who left the country. Qais bin Ahmad at once gave his support to Said. Nervous of the Wahhabi reaction, Said blamed Mohammed bin Nasir for the murder.[1]

Sultan Edit

Said bin Sultan became the sole ruler of Oman, apparently with the consent of his brother. Their aunt, the daughter of the Imam Ahmad bin Said al-Busaidi, seems to have influenced this decision.[9]

In 1820, he launched a punitive expedition against the Bani Bu Ali with the assistance of the East India Company. It was defeated, but the following year a larger Company force returned and defeated the tribe.[10]

In 1835, he ratified a treaty with the United States on very favorable terms, that had been negotiated by Edmund Roberts at Muscat on 21 September 1833,[11] and returned by USS Peacock.[12]

In 1837, he conquered Mombasa (now in Kenya). In 1840, Said moved his capital from Muscat to Stone Town in Zanzibar, where Richard Waters was American Consul,[13] and sent a ship to the United States to try to further a trading relationship.[14]

In 1843 he nominated a nominal representative in Mogadishu and was forced to pay tribute to Sultan Yusuf Mahamud Ibrahim of the Sultanate of the Geledi.[15]

Upon Said's death in 1856, his realm was divided. His third son, Thuwaini bin Said, became the Sultan of Muscat and Oman, and his sixth son, Majid bin Said, became the Sultan of Zanzibar.

The National Museum in Muscat houses numerous items of silverware and other possessions that belonged to Said.

Children Edit

Said had 36 children:

  1. Sayyid Sultan bin Said al-Said (c. 1815–1851): an alcoholic, according to Ruete (Ch. 15), he left three sons, Saud, Faisal, and Muhammed
  2. Sayyid Khalid bin Said al-Said (c. 1819–1854)
  3. Sayyid Thuwaini bin Said al-Said (also called Tueni) (−1866): Sultan of Muscat and Oman, 1856–1866
  4. Sayyid Muhammad bin Said al-Said (1826–1863): he "...was considered the most pious of our entire family.... cared little for the world and worldly goods.... possessed by... antipathy against Zanzibar" (Ch. 14, Ruete); he lived most of his life in Oman; father of Hamoud bin Mohammed, Sultan of Zanzibar.
  5. Sayyid Turki bin Said (1832–1888): Sultan of Muscat and Oman, 1871–1888
  6. Sayyid Majid bin Said Al-Busaid (1834/5-1870): 1st Sultan of Zanzibar, 1856–1870
  7. Sayyid Ali bin Said al-Said (?-1893)
  8. Sayyid Barghash bin Said Al-Busaid (1837–1888): 2nd Sultan of Zanzibar, 1870–1888
  9. Sayyid Abdu'l-Wahhab bin Said al-Said (1840–1866)
  10. Sayyid Jamshid bin Said al-Said (1842–1870)
  11. Sayyid Hamdan bin Said al-Said (1843–1858)
  12. Sayyid Ghalib bin Said al-Said
  13. Sayyid Sawedan bin Said al-Said (1845–?)
  14. Sayyid Abdu'l-Aziz bin Said al-Said (1850–1907)
  15. Sayyid Khalifah bin Said Al-Busaid, 3rd Sultan of Zanzibar (1852–1890): Sultan of Zanzibar, 1888–1890
  16. Sayyid Hamad bin Said al-Said
  17. Sayyid Shuwaid bin Said al-Said
  18. Sayyid Abbas bin Said al-Said
  19. Sayyid Manin bin Said al-Said
  20. Sayyid Ali bin Said Al-Busaid, 4th Sultan of Zanzibar (1854–1893): Sultan of Zanzibar, 1890–1893
  21. Sayyid Badran bin Said al-Said (?-1887)
  22. Sayyid Nasir bin Said al-Said (also called Nasor) (?-1887) went to Mecca with his older sister Chadudj: died in his twenties
  23. Sayyid Abdu'l-Rab bin Said al-Said (?-1888)
  24. Sayyid Ahmad bin Said al-Said
  25. Sayyid Talib bin Said al-Said
  26. Sayyid Abdullah bin Said al-Said
  27. Sayyida Sharîfe of Zanzibar and Oman: the daughter of a Circassian woman, she was "a dazzling beauty with the complexion of a German blonde. Besides, she possessed a sharp intellect, which made her into a faithful advisor of my father's" (described in Ruete, Ch. 15)
  28. Sayyida Chole (or Khwala) of Zanzibar and Oman (died 1875): the daughter of a Mesopotamian woman, she "was particularly close to our father; her enchanting personality, her cheerfulness and charm won him over completely" (Ruete, Ch. 15)
  29. Sayyida Aashe of Zanzibar and Oman: full sister of Chole; after the death of their brother Hilal (1851), she "took motherly care of his eldest son Suud" (Ruete)
  30. Sayyida Chadudj of Zanzibar and Oman: full sister of Majid; after his death (1870), she went with her younger brother Nasir to Mecca and died not long afterward (Ruete)
  31. Sayyida Shewâne of Zanzibar and Oman: the daughter of an Abyssinian woman; "a classical beauty ... endowed with a keen mind", she died early (Ruete)
  32. Sayyida Mettle of Zanzibar and Oman: the daughter of an Abyssinian woman, she married a "distant cousin" in Stonetown and had "two charming twin boys" (Ruete)
  33. Sayyida Zeyâne of Zanzibar and Oman: the daughter of an Abyssinian woman (Ruete)
  34. Sayyida Semsem of Zanzibar and Oman: full sister of Zeyâne, she was married "rather late in life [to] our distant cousin Humud" (Ruete)
  35. Sayyida Nunu of Zanzibar and Oman: the daughter of a Circassian woman, she was born blind; after the deaths of her parents, she lived with her sister Aashe (Ruete)
  36. Sayyida Salme of Zanzibar and Oman (1844–1924): she became known as Emily Ruete[16]

References Edit

Citations

  1. ^ a b Miles 1919, p. 309.
  2. ^ Nicolini, Beatrice (1999). Saiyid bin Sultan al Bu Saidi of Oman and his relationship with Europe. Aram. pp. 159–161.
  3. ^ Lorimer, John Gordon (1915). Gazetter of the Persian Gulf Vol 1. Bombay: British Government. pp. 437–440.
  4. ^ "Saʿīd ibn Sulṭān | ruler of Muscat, Oman, and Zanzibar". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 2021-10-30.
  5. ^ a b c Miles 1919, p. 304.
  6. ^ Miles 1919, p. 305.
  7. ^ Miles 1919, p. 307.
  8. ^ Miles 1919, p. 308.
  9. ^ Badger 1871, p. 144.
  10. ^ Peterson 2013.
  11. ^ Cotheal 2008.
  12. ^ Ruschenberger 1838.
  13. ^ Gilbert 2011.
  14. ^ Barrett 1863.
  15. ^ Shillington, Kevin (2005). Encyclopedia of African History, Volume 2. Fitzroy Dearborn. p. 990. ISBN 9781579584542.
  16. ^ Ruete 1888.

Sources

  • Badger, George Percy (1871). Reports from Committees. Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons. Retrieved 2013-11-19.
  • Barrett, Walter (1863). "Chapter X". The Old Merchants of New York City. Second series. The Brooklyn Information Page. p. 103. He loads one of his own ships in the early part of 1840, and sends her to New York, consigned to this house, that had been doing business with him for some time.
  • Cotheal, Alexander I. (2008-01-17). "Treaty between the United States of America and the Sultân of Masḳaṭ: The Arabic Text". Journal of the American Oriental Society. JSTOR. 4 (1854): 341–343. JSTOR 592284.
  • Gilbert, Wesley John (April 2011). "Our Man in Zanzibar: Richard Waters, American Consul (1837-1845)". Retrieved 2014-06-18.
  • Miles, Samuel Barrett (1919). The Countries and Tribes of the Persian Gulf. Garnet Pub. ISBN 978-1-873938-56-0. Retrieved 19 November 2013.
  • Peterson, J. E. (2013). Oman's Insurgencies: The Sultanate's Struggle for Supremacy. Saqi.
  • Roberts, Edmund (1929) [1837]. "XXIII". Embassy to the Eastern courts of Cochin-China, Siam, and Muscat : in the U. S. sloop-of-war Peacock ... during the years 1832-3-4. Harper & brothers. Retrieved March 29, 2012.
  • Ruete, Emily (1888). "Memoirs of an Arabian Princess: An Autobiography". World Digital Library. Retrieved 2013-09-19.
  • Ruschenberger, W. S. W. (1838). A Voyage Round the World, Including an Embassy to Muscat and Siam in 1835, 1836, and 1837. Retrieved 2014-06-18.

Further reading Edit

  • Memoirs of an Arabian Princess from Zanzibar, Emily Ruete, 1888. (Many reprints). Author (1844–1924) was born Princess Salme of Zanzibar and Oman and was a daughter of Sayyid Said. In the fifteenth chapter of her book, she describes her sisters and two of her brothers (Hilal and Thuweini).

External links Edit

  • Seyyid Said Facts

said, sultan, sayyid, saïd, sultan, busaidi, arabic, سعيد, بن, سلطان, saʿīd, sulṭān, swahili, saïd, sultani, june, 1791, october, 1856, sultan, muscat, oman, fifth, ruler, busaid, dynasty, from, 1804, june, 1856, rule, began, after, period, conflict, interneci. Sayyid Said bin Sultan al Busaidi Arabic سعيد بن سلطان Saʿid bin Sulṭan Swahili Said bin Sultani 5 June 1791 19 October 1856 was Sultan of Muscat and Oman the fifth ruler of the Busaid dynasty from 1804 to 4 June 1856 His rule began after a period of conflict and internecine rivalry of succession that followed the death of his father Sultan bin Ahmad in November 1804 He is often referred to as the Lion of Oman أسد عمان as one of the greatest Omani sultans 2 Said bin SultanImamSultan of Oman and ZanzibarSultan of the Omani EmpireReign1804 1856PredecessorSultan bin AhmadSuccessorThuwaini bin Said as Sultan of Muscat and Oman Majid bin Said as Sultan of Zanzibar Born 1791 06 05 5 June 1791 1 Samail OmanDied19 October 1856 1856 10 19 aged 65 SeychellesBurialMakusurani CemeteryIssueDetailThuwaini bin Said Mohammed bin Said Turki bin Said Majid bin Said Barghash bin Said Khalifah bin Said Ali bin SaidNamesSa id bin Sulṭan al Bu saidi سعيد بن سلطانDynastyHouse of BusaidFatherSultan bin AhmadMotherSayyida Ghanneyeh bint Saif Al BusaidiReligionIbadi IslamSaid s uncle Qais bin Ahmad finally agreed to Said s primacy after Said had killed his cousin Badr bin Saif a pretender to the throne Said is noted for moving his capital to Zanzibar where it remained during the time when the Omani Empire reached the zenith of its power and wealth 3 4 Contents 1 Early years 2 Sultan 3 Children 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksEarly years EditSaid bin Sultan was son of Sultan bin Ahmed who ruled Oman from 1792 to 1804 Sultan bin Ahmed died in 1804 on an expedition to Basra He appointed Mohammed bin Nasir bin Mohammed al Jabry as the Regent and guardian of his two sons Salim bin Sultan and Said bin Sultan 5 Sultan s brother Qais bin Ahmad the ruler of Sohar decided to attempt to seize power Early in 1805 Qais and his brother Mohammed marched south along the coast to Muttrah which he easily captured Qais then started to besiege Muscat Mohammed bin Nasir tried to bribe Qais to leave but did not succeed 5 Mohammed bin Nasir called on Badr bin Saif for help 5 After a series of engagements Qais was forced to retire to Sohar Badr bin Saif became the effective ruler 6 Allied with the Wahhabis Badr bin Saif became increasingly unpopular 7 To get his wards out of the way Badr bin Saif made Salim bin Sultan governor of al Maṣna ah on the Batinah coast and Said bin Sultan governor of Barka 8 In 1806 Said bin Sultan lured Badr bin Saif to Barka and murdered him nearby There are different accounts of what happened but it seems clear that Said struck the first blow and his supporters finished the job Said was acclaimed by the people as a liberator from the Wahhabis who left the country Qais bin Ahmad at once gave his support to Said Nervous of the Wahhabi reaction Said blamed Mohammed bin Nasir for the murder 1 Sultan EditSaid bin Sultan became the sole ruler of Oman apparently with the consent of his brother Their aunt the daughter of the Imam Ahmad bin Said al Busaidi seems to have influenced this decision 9 In 1820 he launched a punitive expedition against the Bani Bu Ali with the assistance of the East India Company It was defeated but the following year a larger Company force returned and defeated the tribe 10 In 1835 he ratified a treaty with the United States on very favorable terms that had been negotiated by Edmund Roberts at Muscat on 21 September 1833 11 and returned by USS Peacock 12 In 1837 he conquered Mombasa now in Kenya In 1840 Said moved his capital from Muscat to Stone Town in Zanzibar where Richard Waters was American Consul 13 and sent a ship to the United States to try to further a trading relationship 14 In 1843 he nominated a nominal representative in Mogadishu and was forced to pay tribute to Sultan Yusuf Mahamud Ibrahim of the Sultanate of the Geledi 15 Upon Said s death in 1856 his realm was divided His third son Thuwaini bin Said became the Sultan of Muscat and Oman and his sixth son Majid bin Said became the Sultan of Zanzibar The National Museum in Muscat houses numerous items of silverware and other possessions that belonged to Said Children EditSaid had 36 children Sayyid Sultan bin Said al Said c 1815 1851 an alcoholic according to Ruete Ch 15 he left three sons Saud Faisal and Muhammed Sayyid Khalid bin Said al Said c 1819 1854 Sayyid Thuwaini bin Said al Said also called Tueni 1866 Sultan of Muscat and Oman 1856 1866 Sayyid Muhammad bin Said al Said 1826 1863 he was considered the most pious of our entire family cared little for the world and worldly goods possessed by antipathy against Zanzibar Ch 14 Ruete he lived most of his life in Oman father of Hamoud bin Mohammed Sultan of Zanzibar Sayyid Turki bin Said 1832 1888 Sultan of Muscat and Oman 1871 1888 Sayyid Majid bin Said Al Busaid 1834 5 1870 1st Sultan of Zanzibar 1856 1870 Sayyid Ali bin Said al Said 1893 Sayyid Barghash bin Said Al Busaid 1837 1888 2nd Sultan of Zanzibar 1870 1888 Sayyid Abdu l Wahhab bin Said al Said 1840 1866 Sayyid Jamshid bin Said al Said 1842 1870 Sayyid Hamdan bin Said al Said 1843 1858 Sayyid Ghalib bin Said al Said Sayyid Sawedan bin Said al Said 1845 Sayyid Abdu l Aziz bin Said al Said 1850 1907 Sayyid Khalifah bin Said Al Busaid 3rd Sultan of Zanzibar 1852 1890 Sultan of Zanzibar 1888 1890 Sayyid Hamad bin Said al Said Sayyid Shuwaid bin Said al Said Sayyid Abbas bin Said al Said Sayyid Manin bin Said al Said Sayyid Ali bin Said Al Busaid 4th Sultan of Zanzibar 1854 1893 Sultan of Zanzibar 1890 1893 Sayyid Badran bin Said al Said 1887 Sayyid Nasir bin Said al Said also called Nasor 1887 went to Mecca with his older sister Chadudj died in his twenties Sayyid Abdu l Rab bin Said al Said 1888 Sayyid Ahmad bin Said al Said Sayyid Talib bin Said al Said Sayyid Abdullah bin Said al Said Sayyida Sharife of Zanzibar and Oman the daughter of a Circassian woman she was a dazzling beauty with the complexion of a German blonde Besides she possessed a sharp intellect which made her into a faithful advisor of my father s described in Ruete Ch 15 Sayyida Chole or Khwala of Zanzibar and Oman died 1875 the daughter of a Mesopotamian woman she was particularly close to our father her enchanting personality her cheerfulness and charm won him over completely Ruete Ch 15 Sayyida Aashe of Zanzibar and Oman full sister of Chole after the death of their brother Hilal 1851 she took motherly care of his eldest son Suud Ruete Sayyida Chadudj of Zanzibar and Oman full sister of Majid after his death 1870 she went with her younger brother Nasir to Mecca and died not long afterward Ruete Sayyida Shewane of Zanzibar and Oman the daughter of an Abyssinian woman a classical beauty endowed with a keen mind she died early Ruete Sayyida Mettle of Zanzibar and Oman the daughter of an Abyssinian woman she married a distant cousin in Stonetown and had two charming twin boys Ruete Sayyida Zeyane of Zanzibar and Oman the daughter of an Abyssinian woman Ruete Sayyida Semsem of Zanzibar and Oman full sister of Zeyane she was married rather late in life to our distant cousin Humud Ruete Sayyida Nunu of Zanzibar and Oman the daughter of a Circassian woman she was born blind after the deaths of her parents she lived with her sister Aashe Ruete Sayyida Salme of Zanzibar and Oman 1844 1924 she became known as Emily Ruete 16 References EditCitations a b Miles 1919 p 309 Nicolini Beatrice 1999 Saiyid bin Sultan al Bu Saidi of Oman and his relationship with Europe Aram pp 159 161 Lorimer John Gordon 1915 Gazetter of the Persian Gulf Vol 1 Bombay British Government pp 437 440 Saʿid ibn Sulṭan ruler of Muscat Oman and Zanzibar Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2021 10 30 a b c Miles 1919 p 304 Miles 1919 p 305 Miles 1919 p 307 Miles 1919 p 308 Badger 1871 p 144 Peterson 2013 Cotheal 2008 Ruschenberger 1838 Gilbert 2011 Barrett 1863 Shillington Kevin 2005 Encyclopedia of African History Volume 2 Fitzroy Dearborn p 990 ISBN 9781579584542 Ruete 1888 Sources Badger George Percy 1871 Reports from Committees Great Britain Parliament House of Commons Retrieved 2013 11 19 Barrett Walter 1863 Chapter X The Old Merchants of New York City Second series The Brooklyn Information Page p 103 He loads one of his own ships in the early part of 1840 and sends her to New York consigned to this house that had been doing business with him for some time Cotheal Alexander I 2008 01 17 Treaty between the United States of America and the Sultan of Masḳaṭ The Arabic Text Journal of the American Oriental Society JSTOR 4 1854 341 343 JSTOR 592284 Gilbert Wesley John April 2011 Our Man in Zanzibar Richard Waters American Consul 1837 1845 Retrieved 2014 06 18 Miles Samuel Barrett 1919 The Countries and Tribes of the Persian Gulf Garnet Pub ISBN 978 1 873938 56 0 Retrieved 19 November 2013 Peterson J E 2013 Oman s Insurgencies The Sultanate s Struggle for Supremacy Saqi Roberts Edmund 1929 1837 XXIII Embassy to the Eastern courts of Cochin China Siam and Muscat in the U S sloop of war Peacock during the years 1832 3 4 Harper amp brothers Retrieved March 29 2012 Ruete Emily 1888 Memoirs of an Arabian Princess An Autobiography World Digital Library Retrieved 2013 09 19 Ruschenberger W S W 1838 A Voyage Round the World Including an Embassy to Muscat and Siam in 1835 1836 and 1837 Retrieved 2014 06 18 Further reading EditMemoirs of an Arabian Princess from Zanzibar Emily Ruete 1888 Many reprints Author 1844 1924 was born Princess Salme of Zanzibar and Oman and was a daughter of Sayyid Said In the fifteenth chapter of her book she describes her sisters and two of her brothers Hilal and Thuweini External links EditSeyyid Said Facts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Said bin Sultan amp oldid 1177451205, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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