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Kuwait
/ History / Independence under British protection
To counter
growing Turkish ambitions, Sheikh Mubarak the Great (1896-1915)
signed a treaty with Britain in 1899 which defined Kuwait as :
"An independent Country Under British Protection".
Britain promised
to protect Sheikh Mubarak and his heirs, and in turn the latter
agreed to conclude no treaties with other powers, to admit no
foreign agents and to cede no part of Kuwait's territory without
British consent.
Though Sheikh
Mubarak increased taxes, thus making himself unpopular with local
merchants, the country benefited greatly from his rule. Hundreds
arrived to settle in Kuwait, attracted by its orderly administration
and increasing commercial activity.
But trade
declined sharply in Kuwait from the 1920's onwards due to the
World Wide Recession, Kuwait's reduced importance as a major link
in 20th century international trade routes and because of hostilities
from the Ikhwan tribesmen from the interior of Arabia, who were
only finally defeated in 1930.
Kuwait's
pearling industry, which once boasted 800 pearling ships, almost
dissappeared with the introduction of Japanese cultured pearls
and the worldwide fall in demand for luxury goods following the
Wall Street Crash of 1929.
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