Muscat History
Muscat, the capital of
Oman, is one of the oldest cities
in the Middle East. It has been
known since the
second century
AD. Some 3,000
pounds (1,400 kg) of
frankincense was transported
each year by ship from southern
Arabia to
Greece,
Rome and the
Mediterranean.

The centre of
this trade was in a place called Khour Rouri, which the
Greeks called "Muscat". (Note
that Khour Rouri is now recognized
as an archaeological site in the
Dhofar region of the country, more
than 500 miles south of present-day
Muscat, far closer to the
present-day city of
Salalah).
The first European
presence in Muscat was in the form
of the
Portuguese explorer
Vasco da Gama, who landed in
Oman on his way to
India. The Portuguese returned
in
1507 to sack and capture Muscat.
In
1649, the
Imam Sultan bin Saif defeated
the Portuguese under
André Pereira dos Reis and drove
them away east to
Goa,
India.

With the superior, captured
warships of the Portuguese navy, the
Imam established an empire that
spanned from
Zanzibar in the south to
Gwadar in what is now
Pakistan in the east. Slaves
were brought in from Zanzibar and
Balochistan to work in Oman and
traded elsewhere. This was a period
of relative stability and prosperity
in Muscat and Oman.
The country was torn apart by
strife and unrest upon the death of
the Imam in
1679. Muscat was then invaded by
the
Persians in 1737, albeit
briefly, since Admad bin Said
defeated them and was subsequently
elected Imam.

In 1803, the
Wahabbis of Saudi Arabia
attacked Oman, but were repulsed by
Sayyid
Said bin Sultan. The sultan then
set up a colony in the fertile areas
of Zanzibar and essentially ruled
Oman from a foreign island. Later,
in 1853, the Sultan transferred the
title of "capital" of Oman to
Zanzibar. Thus began to decline of
the fortunes of Muscat and Oman.
In 1913, Sultan
Taimur bin Faisal became Sultan
and the territory was renamed
"Muscat and Oman" with the Sultan
ruling Muscat and the Imam ruling
Oman. After
Indian independence in
1947, the Sultan, with the help
of the
British, defeated the Imam,
unified most of Oman taking command
of the Buraimi
oasis.

The Dhofar War began in
1964 which was a communist
insurrection staged from the Peoples
Democratic Republic of Yemen against
the Sultan of Oman. The insurrection
was opposed by Omani, British and
Iranian forces and was successfully
put down. Six years later, Prince
Qaboos bin Said, son of Sultan
Said bin Taimur staged a palace
coup and claimed the throne. The
old Sultan was flown to
London by the British
Royal Air Force. The coup,
staged by Prince Qaboos, with his
close friend and confidant
Tim Landon at his side, was the
beginning of a new consolidated,
modern sultanate
source: wikipidia.com
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