Qasimi dynasty, ruling family of the emirates of Ras al-Khaimah and Sharjah, constituent parts of the United Arab Emirates. Little is known of the family before the 18th century, when the dynasty became a leading clan among a group of tribes—which the British referred to collectively as “Joasmee” (from Qawāsim, plural of Qāsimī)—along the coast of Greater Oman.
The decline of the Yaʿrubid dynasty of Oman in the early 18th century allowed the Qasimi family to establish their autonomy in the town of Ras al-Khaimah by the late 1710s, but the power vacuum also led to conflict between the Ghāfirī and Hināwī tribal confederations. The Qasimi sheikh became a leading figure of the Ghāfirī confederation and was able to expand Qasimi control of ports along the coast, including the port of Sharjah. By the late 18th century the Qasimi dynasty was the dominant maritime power in the lower Persian Gulf, but the Āl Bū Saʿīd dynasty of the Hināwī confederation, with the help of its firm presence inland, began challenging Qasimi dominance at sea in the 1790s. As hostilities intensified, so did incidents of maritime raids and plunder. Meanwhile, Great Britain’s East India Company, which sought to edify its sea route to India, entered into a treaty with the Āl Bū Saʿīd sheikh in 1798. The ongoing tension between the Āl Bū Saʿīd and Qasimi dynasties, however, led to confrontations between Qasimi seafarers and the British, who accused the Qasimi family and their allies of piracy. The British, keen to continue their sea trade without barrier or disruption, launched a series of campaigns against the Qasimi dynasty in the early 19th century and successfully subdued it in 1819.
The signing of the General Treaty of Peace in 1820, which limited maritime aggression along the coast, initiated a series of treaties establishing British paramountcy over the sheikhdoms that would become the United Arab Emirates. Deprived of control over the sea trade, the Qasimi dynasty was weakened and never regained its former prominence.
Nevertheless, the family’s lasting importance was reflected in the choice of Sharjah as the seat of Britain’s principal representative to the sheikhdoms in 1823; it remained the seat until 1954, when it was transferred to Dubai. Quarreling within the Qasimi family was apparent, however, in the secession of Ras al-Khaimah from Sharjah in 1869, followed by its temporary reincorporation into Sharjah in 1900. Its independence was officially recognized in 1921; in 1972, with the accession of Ras al-Khaimah to the United Arab Emirates, the Qasimi dynasty became the only royal family to rule two emirates. These emirates lost their primary industry with the decline of pearl fishing after World War I, however, and do not share in the sort of oil wealth enjoyed by Abu Dhabi; the oil reserves in the Ras al-Khaimah and Sharjah emirates are meagre. The dynasty also faced a number of challenges from outside the family, including from the Shiḥūḥ tribe in the Musandam Peninsula (now under the sultanate of Oman) and the Sharqi family in Fujairah (since 1952 an independent emirate). By the mid-20th century the town of Dibba, once fully under Qasimi control, was divided between Sharjah emirate, the Musandam governorate, and Fujairah emirate.