Said bin Taimur

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Sayyid Sir Said bin Taimur, GCMG, GCIE (August 13, 1910October 19, 1972) (Arabic: سعيد بن تيمور) was the sultan of Muscat and Oman (the country later renamed to Oman) from February 10, 1932 to July 23, 1970.

The son of Taimur bin Feisal, he inherited the remains of an Omani Empire, which included the neighboring provinces of Oman and Dhofar, as well as the last remnants of an overseas empire, including Gwadar on the Pakistani coast--the latter was ceded to Pakistan in 1958. Nevertheless, his petroleum-rich country also had long established ties with the United Kingdom, based on a 1798 Treaty of Friendship, and was a British protectorate since 1891.

As sultan, oil wealth would have allowed Sultan Said bin Taimur to modernize his country, and, in fact, he secured British recognition of its independence in 1951. Nevertheless, he also faced serious internal opposition, from the imam, or religious leader, of Oman, who claimed power in the kingdom for himself. The imam's revolt was suppressed in 1955 with the help of Great Britain, but this, in turn, earned Taimur the animosity of Saudi Arabia, which supported the imam, and of Egypt, which regarded British involvement in suppressing the revolt as inconducive to the cause of Arab nationalism. In 1957, these two countries supported a second revolt by the imam, which was similarly suppressed.

Despite the wealth that Oman accumulated through its vast petroleum reserves, the Sultan refused to use this money for the benefit of his subjects, and the country essentially remained a feudal monarchy, run at Said's whim. In 1965, the province of Dhofar revolted, this time with the support of China and some of the nationalist Arab states, followed by an assassination attempt in 1966, which had a marked effect on Said causing him to become even more erratic in governing the country. Reportedly, even wearing eyeglasses was discouraged, and the Sultan meted out punishments to people who appeared in his dreams. No one was safe from the sultan's paranoia, not even his own son, Qaboos, who was kept under virtual house arrest at the Sultan's palace in Salalah.

Qaboos staged a coup in 1970 and sent his father to exile in the United Kingdom. Said lived his last two years of life at the Dorchester Hotel in London[1], seldom leaving his suite, till his death in 1972. He is buried in Brookwood Cemetery, in Woking, Surrey, England.

  • Harris M. Lentz III, Heads of States and Governments: A Worldwide Encyclopedia of Over 2,300 Leaders, 1945 through 1992. McFarland & Company, Inc., 1994, p. 604. ISBN 0-89950-926-6.

Preceded by
Taimur bin Feisal
Sultan of Oman
1932–1970
Succeeded by
Qaboos Bin Said
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