Said bin Ahmad

Said ibn Ahmad (Arabic: سعيد بن أحمد, DMG Sa ʿ ibn Aḥmad īd, † 1811) was from 1783 until his death, the Imam of Oman.

The successor of Ahmad ibn Said ( Ahmad ibn Sa'eed, 1749-1783 ) the founder of the Said Dynasty was not without controversy, as Ahmad's son Hillal stayed in what is now Pakistan. Although Said was elected Imam, but he was quite unpopular among the people, so that he could be replaced in 1784 by his son Hamad ibn Said ( 1784-1792 ), who brought from Muscat from large parts of Oman under his control. But Said ( Sa'eed ) also held in Rustaq, where he claimed the title of the Imam of the Ibadis until his death in 1811.

Importance was the conflict insofar as Hamad in the aftermath renounced the election as Imam and entirely on control of Muscat, the Omani coastal areas and the colonies in Africa (see Zanzibar ) concentrated. This led to a split in the country in Muscat and the Imamate of Oman that could be lifted until the mid-20th century.

Ahmad ibn Said | Said ibn Ahmad | Hamad ibn Said | Sultan ibn Ahmad | Said ibn Sultan al - Buraidi | Thuwaini ibn Said | Salim ibn Thuwaini | Azzan ibn Qays | Turki ibn Said | Faisal ibn Turki | Taimur ibn Faisal | Said ibn Taimur | Qaboos bin Said

  • Omani
  • Imam
  • Sultan (Oman )
  • Born in the 18th century
  • Died in 1811
  • Man
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