Isa Bin Tarif

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Shaikh Isa Bin Tarif (Arabic: الشيخ عيسى بن طريف) Al Bin Ali Al Utbi was the chief of the Bahrain-based Utub Al Bin Ali tribe from the beginning of the 19th Century until his death in 1847.

Isa Bin Tarif, Chief of the Al Bin Ali Al Utbi Tribe, is a desendant of the Original Utub who conquered Bahrain[1].

The Al Bin Ali were a politically important group that moved backwards and forwards between Qatar and Bahrain, they were the original dominant group of Zubara area [2].


Sayyid Saeed Bin Sultan, Imam of Muscat, asked for the assistance of Shaikh Isa Bin Tarif in conquering the town of Mombasa in Kenya in 1837 with his tribe Utub Al Bin Ali[3]. Fort Jesus in Mombasa was named after Shaikh Isa Bin Tarif after he conquered the fort. The translation of Jesus in Arabic is Isa, hence in Arabic it is called the Fort of Isa.

In the year 1843, Shaikh Isa Bin Tarif was one of the men who assisted Shaikh Mohamed Bin Khalifa to overthrow the ruler of Bahrain who was Shaikh Mohamed's great uncle Shaikh Abdulla Bin Ahmed Al Khalifa whom was also Shaikh Isa Bin Tarif's enemy.[4]. After helping Shaikh Mohamed in ousting Shaikh Abdulla from rulership of Bahrain, Shaikh Isa Bin Tarif and his tribe Al Bin Ali moved to the town of Al-Bida (known today as Doha) and re-established it after the removal of the Al-Sudan Tribe from it. In Al-Bida, Shaikh Isa Bin Tarif built a wall to the sea from both the East and West[5]. In Al-Bida, Shaikh Isa Bin Tarif was considered as the Shaikh of Al-Bida which at that time meant the Shaikh of Qatar since power was centralised in Al-Bida.

His last battle was in the Battle of Fowairat in Qatar against Shaikh Mohamed Bin Khalifa Al Khalifa, Ruler of Bahrain in which Shaikh Mohamed's forces were defeated. But hours after the finish of the battle one of Shaikh Mohamed's followers killed Shaikh Isa Bin Tarif. The battle took place in the year 1847.

[edit] References

  1. ^ The Precis Of Turkish Expansion On The Arab Littoral Of The Persian Gulf And Hasa And Katif Affairs. By J. A. Saldana; 1904 , I.o. R R/15/1/724
  2. ^ Arabia's Frontiers: The Story of Britain's Boundary Drawing in the Desert, John C. Wilkinson, p44
  3. ^ The Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf, Oman and Central Arabia by John Gordon Lorimer p451
  4. ^ Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf, Oman, and Central Arabia, historical, volume 1, part 1 B, p866-870
  5. ^ (Arabic: مجموعة الفضائل في فن النسب وتاريخ القبائل - الشيخ راشد بن فاضل آل بن علي بتحقيق من الشيخ حسن بن محمد آل ثاني ص 76)

[edit] See also