Background
Hamad bin Said was the son of the Imam and Sultan Said bin Ahmad, who succeeded to those positions in 1783 on the death of his father, Ahmad bin Said al-Busaidi.
Hamad bin Said was the son of the Imam and Sultan Said bin Ahmad, who succeeded to those positions in 1783 on the death of his father, Ahmad bin Said al-Busaidi.
Said bin Ahmad was increasingly unpopular. This revolt soon collapsed. In 1786 Hamad bin Said managed to get control of Muscat, with its fortress.
One by one the other fortresses in Oman submitted to Hamad.
Said no longer had any temporal power. Hamad took the title of Sayyid and established his court in Muscat.
His father, Said bin Ahmad, remained in Rustaq and retained the title of Imam, but this was purely a symbolic religious title that carried no power. Hamad died of smallpox in 1792.