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p. 156 : 1289-1310. - De l'ile de Gerba et de sa population. p. 157 : Conquise par Roger Doria, l'ile reste aux héritiers de l'amiral sous la suzeraineté apostolique, p. 158 : tentatives des rois de Tunis pour reprendre Gerba p. 159 : 1310-1311 : Muntaner devient Capitane de Gerba et de Kerkenu au nom du roi de Sicile, seigneur usufruitier des îles p. 159 : 1311-1313 - Muntaner seigneur de Gerba pendant trois ans sous la suzeraineté du roi de Sicile, à qui passe la souveraineté définitive de l'île p. 161 : 1313-1315 - d'un nouveaut tribut qui aurait été payé par les rois de Tunis aux rois de Sicile pendant l'occupation de Gerba p. 162 : 1335 - les rois de Sicile perdent l'île de Gerba et les autres iles du Golfe
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The file contains printed narrative reports of the Government of India concerning internal politics and relations with the Muscat Government (also called Maskat) between 1869 and 1892. The reports are signed by Assistant Political Residents in the Persian Gulf and others. Each report is preceded by a table of contents. The reports are as follows: Muscat Affairs, October 1869 to March 1872 Muscat Précis which contains papers up to proceedings, Political A., June 1873 Continuation of Narrative of Muscat Affairs, June 1873 to July 1874 Continuation of Narrative of Muscat Affairs, Jul 1874 to July 1875 Continuation of Narrative of Muscat Affairs, August 1875 to December 1880 Continuation of Narrative of Muscat Affairs, January 1881 to December 1884, (pages 179-180 of the report are missing, these have an account of the Khojas settled in Oman) Continuation of Narrative of Muscat Affairs, January 1885 to December 1888 Continuation of Narrative of Muscat Affairs, January 1889 to December 1892
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Six memoranda pertaining to British handling of relations between Muscat, Zanzibar, and Persia. The authors are all connected to the India Office, in London, mostly members of the Council of India. Some seem to be written independently, others in response to earlier memoranda. All documents cover some or all of the following matters: The $40,000 annual subsidy that Muscat receives from Zanzibar; The murder of Thuwaynī bin Sa‘īd Āl Sa‘īd, Sultan of Muscat, by his son, Sālim bin Thuwaynī Āl Sa‘īd, who subsequently made himself Sultan; The East African slave trade; Persia's ambitions for a naval presence in the Persian Gulf; Measures to police the Gulf; The lease of Bandar Abbas from Persia by Muscat; How the region should be administered: to what authority - Foreign Office or Government of India - are the various offices responsible to.
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Chapitre X : —Les djemâa mzabites. — Notre camp dans l'ouad Mzab. — La dhifa pantagruélique. — La confédération des Bni-Mzab. — Histoire, moeurs, gouvernement, religion, législation, police. —Les femmes mzabiles. — Commerce. —- Les qsour des Bni-Isguen, de Ghardaïa, de Melika et de Bou-Noura. — Fraternisation. — Le qseur d'El-Atheuf. —Ses deux mosquées et son schisme