1874] 
187 
E. C. Eoss— Annals of c Oman .— Notes to Boole I. 
1 * (p. 114.) The account of the battle has been abridged in translating. 
1 8 (p. 115.) Aqueducts. In the Arabic “ felej.” They are subterraneous artificial 
channels, similar in all respects to the “ Kanats” or /‘ Karizes” of Persia and neighbouring 
countries. Probably the system was introduced into ‘Oman by Persians. 
19 (p. 116.) The families here enumerated are all Azdite, and the pedigrees are 
correctly given. The mention of ‘Arman-bin ‘Amr-bin el-Azd amongst the contemporaries 
of Malik-bin Fahm must be an anachronism, the former personage having been in the 
10th line of descent only from Kahtan. The Yahmadi family of ‘Oman derive, I take 
it, from el-Yahmad-bin Homma. It is more than doubtful whether so many famous 
Yemenite families settled in ‘Oman, as stated by the author. 
20 (p. 116.) The el-Azd named it ‘Oman, &c. The name is also by some asserted to 
be derived from a son of Kahtan, named ‘Oman. According to this version, when 
Ya‘rub-bin Kahtan established the Yemenite Empire, he conferred the government of two 
Provinces on his brothers ‘Oman and Hadhramowt, and the Provinces were thereafter 
so named. These two-personages are, however, usually ^thought mythical. 
The country might have been named by Arabians from the root ‘Oman, which 
has a sense of tarrying'or abiding. 
2 i (p. 116.) The Persians called it ‘ Mazun.’ This statement is borne out by other 
authorities. 
22 (p. 116.) Samah-bin Loweij. 
This name may be noted as the first mentioned of the Ishmailite branch. Samah be¬ 
longed to the famous Koreysh family and was of the 14th generation from ‘Adnan. The 
following notice of him is translated from Dr. Wiistenfeld’s Index. “ Sama-bin Loweij 
« on account of a quarrel with his brother ‘Amir abandoned the ‘ Heimath’ and journeyed 
“ towards ‘Oman. In Jowf el-Hamila his camel fell over an ‘Arfaja tree (a thorny shrub), 
“ in which a snake had concealed itself. The snake struck at his leg and bit him so that 
“ he died. Ilis descendants who were called after his mother “ Beni-Xajiya,” dw r elt in 
“‘Oman in the hamlet of el-Towam.” A portion ultimately settled themselves in Basra, 
where the Quarter Sama is named after him. 
2 3 (p. 116.) El-Jow is the name of the district immediately surrounding Bereynn. 
2 4 (p. 116.) As Asd-bin ‘Imran was Azdite, this was an intermarriage between the 
great rival stocks. 
2 6 (p. 116.) El-Sirr. This name has been variously applied. Sometimes it has 
designated the Western coastline of ‘Oman. As here used, its site w r as apparently some- 
wdiere between Bereymi and the modern Abu-Dliebl. 
2 6 (p. 116.) Benu-Ruaheh. There is a strong clan so called now in ‘Oman. 
2 ? (p. 116.) Nizar. From Nizar-bin Ma‘add-bin ‘Adnan. 
2 8 (p. 116.) Malik-bin Zoheir. This person w r as not of the Azdite stock, but was 
of the tribe el-Tanukli whom he led from Nejd to el-Hira in ‘Irak. 
2 9 (p 117) “ The historian Hamza relates that Malik-bin Fahm was accidentally slain 
“ by his son Suleimali, wdio thereupon fled into ‘Oman, where he left a large progeny, 
“ which existed a long time after the rise of Islam.” Imams and Seyyids of ‘Oman, Intro., 
p. VII. 
Also “ Salimah-bin Malik shot his father by accident in the darkness, wdio had 
himself instructed him in the use of the bow.” Reistce, Hist. Aral., p. 12. [Register 
zu den genealogischen Tabellon, Dr. Wiistenfeld, p. 408]. 
The Arabic couplet is a favorite quotation in allusion to ingratitude— 
« i taught him archery day by day : when his arm grew strong, he shot me.” 
3 0 (p. 117.) His adventures are omitted in translation. 
AA 
