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C'est un pactole inespéré. Le sultanat d'Oman vient de verser 1,8 Mâ?¬ à une association de Roissy-en-Brie pour la construction du lieu de c
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When Sayyid Said Bin Sultan started leading Oman in 1806, the Omani-French relations were excellent and very prospective. The basis of such relation were trading with Meuritius island. Sayyid Said tried to continue such mode of relations taking into account keeping Oman away from the continuing French- Britain conflict those days. From its side, France worked on developing its relations with Muscat through some agreements, but the British occupation of Meuritius island in 1810 and French defeat destroyed the Omani-French relations. Five years after that, Britain retuned Meuritius to France in 1815. This led to rebuild the relations once again between Muscat and France via some trading and diplomatic agreements. This could not prevent the occur of some other conflicts in those relations because of the contradictions in occupation of some places and properties in East of Africa. Thus, these relations were highly affected by the abstract roll of Britain. This forced Sayyid Said to establish some consulting agreement with Britain to supervise his relations with France in older to keep France away his properties. He always took the right decisions to get much benefits with less losses.
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عمر, ب. ع. ا. (2009). العلاقات العمانية الفرنسية (1741-1810)م. مجلة الخليج العربي, 37(3–4), 175–198.
During the eighteenth century, the Arabian Gulf region had witnessed a great European competition and, due to its strategic location on the way to India, sultanate of Oman had felt such competition between England and France to have its ally and to be preferred, and due to the increase of such competition between England and France, Muscat thought that it is preferable to be idle in its relation with the two competitive powers at that time. In spite of that, the first roller of Albu-Said family, Ahmed bin Said (1741-1783) knew the benefit of the French friendship, the relation between Muscat and France had not developed to the level of diplomatic one but only a trade relation because England was competing them. However Muscat relations with France took a developed phase with Sultan bin Ahmed while he was rolling Muscat. He got benefit from the English - French competition to build a good relation with France in 1796, in addition to the predominant trade relations. Such action had its influence on England, which forced the Sultan to sign an agreement on 1800, rejecting some of the facilities which had been given to France before, and the English occupation of Morrishious Island (the main French Colony in the Indian Ocean), ended the French dreams in extending their power and finished a phase of a hesitated Omani-French relations.
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Le retour de la France à Oman et dans l’océan Indien à la fin du XIXe siècle fut une source de tensions importantes entre Paris, Londres et le gouvernement des Indes britanniques. Cet article met en lumière un épisode qui mit à mal, loin de l’Europe, les négociations entre la France et la Grande-Bretagne : l’affaire du dépôt de charbon, qui faillit conduire à un nouveau Fachoda en mer d’Oman. Réglée aux dépens de la France, cette affaire illustre l’importance acquise par Oman et le golfe Persique à l’âge du nouvel impérialisme et la marge d’action des Indes, alors à la tête d’un Empire qui s’étendait de l’Afrique de l’Est à la mer de Chine.
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