Said had 36 children: • Sayyid Sultan bin Said al-Busaidi (–1851): an alcoholic, according to Ruete (Ch. 15), he left three sons, Saud, Faisal, and Muhammed • Sayyid Khalid bin Said al-Busaidi (–1854) •
Sayyid Thuwaini bin Said al-busaidi (also called Tueni) (−1866): Sultan of Muscat and Oman, 1856–1866 •
Sayyid Muhammad bin Said al-Busaidi (1826–1863): he "...was considered the most pious of our entire family.... cared little for the world and worldly goods.... possessed by... antipathy against Zanzibar" (Ch. 14, Ruete); he lived most of his life in Oman; father of
Hamoud bin Mohammed, Sultan of Zanzibar. •
Sayyid Turki bin Said (1832–1888): Sultan of Muscat and Oman, 1871–1888 • Sayyid
Majid bin Said Al-Busaid (1834/5-1870): 1st Sultan of Zanzibar, 1856–1870 • Sayyid Ali bin Said al-Busaidi (?-1893) • Sayyid
Barghash bin Said Al-Busaid (1837–1888): 2nd Sultan of Zanzibar, 1870–1888 • Sayyid Abdu'l-Wahhab bin Said al-Busaidi (1840–1866) • Sayyid Jamshid bin Said al-Busaidi (1842–1870) • Sayyid Hamdan bin Said al-Busaidi (1843–1858) • Sayyid Ghalib bin Said al-Busaidi • Sayyid Sawedan bin Said al-Busaidi (1845–?) • Sayyid Abdu'l-Aziz bin Said al-Busaidi (1850–1907) •
Sayyid Khalifah bin Said Al-Busaid, 3rd Sultan of Zanzibar (1852–1890): Sultan of Zanzibar, 1888–1890 • Sayyid Hamad bin Said al-Busaidi • Sayyid Shuwaid bin Said al-Busaidi • Sayyid Abbas bin Said al-Busaidi • Sayyid Manin bin Said al-Busaidi •
Sayyid Ali bin Said Al-Busaid, 4th Sultan of Zanzibar (1854–1893): Sultan of Zanzibar, 1890–1893 • Sayyid Badran bin Said al-Busaidi (?-1887) • Sayyid Nasir bin Said al-Busaidi (also called Nasor) (?-1887) went to
Mecca with his older sister Chadudj: died in his twenties • Sayyid Abdu'l-Rab bin Said al-Busaidi (?-1888) • Sayyid Ahmad bin Said al-Busaidi • Sayyid Talib bin Said al-Busaidi • Sayyid Abdullah bin Said al-Busaidi • Sayyida Sharîfe of Zanzibar and Oman: the daughter of a
Circassian woman, she was "a dazzling beauty with the complexion of a German blonde. Besides, she possessed a sharp intellect, which made her into a faithful advisor of my father's" (described in Ruete, Ch. 15) • Sayyida Chole (or Khwala) of Zanzibar and Oman (died 1875): the daughter of a Mesopotamian woman, she "was particularly close to our father; her enchanting personality, her cheerfulness and charm won him over completely" (Ruete, Ch. 15) • Sayyida Aashe of Zanzibar and Oman: full sister of Chole; after the death of their brother Hilal (1851), she "took motherly care of his eldest son Suud" (Ruete) • Sayyida Chadudj of Zanzibar and Oman: full sister of Majid; after his death (1870), she went with her younger brother Nasir to
Mecca and died not long afterward (Ruete) • Sayyida Shewâne of Zanzibar and Oman: the daughter of an Abyssinian woman; "a
classical beauty ... endowed with a keen mind", she died early (Ruete) • Sayyida Mettle of Zanzibar and Oman: the daughter of an Abyssinian woman, she married a "distant cousin" in Stonetown and had "two charming twin boys" (Ruete) • Sayyida Zeyâne of Zanzibar and Oman: the daughter of an Abyssinian woman (Ruete) • Sayyida Semsem of Zanzibar and Oman: full sister of Zeyâne, she was married "rather late in life [to] our distant cousin Humud" (Ruete) • Sayyida Nunu of Zanzibar and Oman: the daughter of a Circassian woman, she was born blind; after the deaths of her parents, she lived with her sister Aashe (Ruete) • Sayyida Salme of Zanzibar and Oman (1844–1924): she became known as
Emily Ruete ==References==