Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Preface
A Brief Chronology of Events
Dramatis Personae
Part One: Introductory
Prologue
1 Outline
2 The Setting
3 The Players
Part Two: Of the Evidence
4 The Question of Piracy
a) Tableux
5 Incidents at Sea, in the Years 1797-1819, Which are Attested by
Virtue of Admissions or Possession
6 The Most Important Cases of Alleged Piracy by the Qawasim Against
British Vessels
b) Perspectives
7 Local Opinion
8 Cruiser Commanders' Blunders
9 Off the Indian Coast
Part Three: Interpretation
10 Preliminary Sketch
11 Political History
12 The Port of Ras al-Khaima, Her Society and Economy
13 Some More Piquant Ingredients in Qasimi Maritime Plunder,
Conclusion
Afterword: The Motivation behind Britain's Two Expeditions Against
Ras al-Khaima in 1809/10 and 1819/20
Appendix A The Qawasim's Seizures off the Coast of India
Appendix B Qasimi Voyages to South Arabia
Appendix C Ras al-Khaima's War with Muscat, and the Political
Fortunes of the Za'ab and the Tanaij, 1808-1809
Appendix D Hostilities Between Muscat and the Wahhabis in the
Aftermath of the First Ras al-Khaima Expedition of 1809/10
Notes
Bibliography
Index
This is more than just an analysis of piratical acts; it is a
successful attempt to understand what ingredients made the players
act the way they did. It also provides the reader with a vivid and
credible account of what life was like, both at sea and on land,
for Persian Gulf dwellers, and in particular for the Qawasim
pirates.
*International History Review*
University of Exeter Press have been brave to bring out a book on
what is at first sight a very specialized subject, and Davies
himself must be congratulated for going beyond that narrow focus to
write a book that, because of the way it makes its arguments and
uses evidence, has a wider significance. It also has to be said
that the book has been beautifully produced . . . this is one of
the best designed books I have seen for a long time.
*The Mariner’s Mirror*
The Blood-Red Arab Flag offers such a detailed and surgically sharp
analysis of British policy and action, on the one hand, and the
maritime history of the Gulf in general and the Qawasim in
particular, that it may indeed, for a considerable time, be
regarded as the definitive work on the subject - this book is
highly recommended. Davies has made a major contribution to a
crucial period of Gulf and British history which maritime
historians will read with great advantage.
*The Northern Mariner*
Despite the lurid title, this is a serious historical
work-sometimes indeed a little too serious to make for easy
reading-but it does lead us to a fascinating but almost forgotten
area of Middle Eastern history. . . A fascinating and scholarly
book . . .
*Times Literary Supplement*
. . . The book's analysis shows that the common superficial view of
piracy in the Gulf area obscures not only the complex issues of the
relations between the Gulf states and Britain but the actual nature
and ramifications of this particular chapter in the history of
marine violence. . . This book makes a major contribution to Arab
Gulf studies.
*Lloyd's List*
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