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  military stations, Cûfa Bussora, Fostât, etc., where they waited for the
  next campaign. When thus cantoned, distinct quarters were assigned to each
  tribe, or corps of allied tribes; the military, rolls were kept accordingly,
  every tribe going up as a separate body for its pay. The officers were paid at
  from six to nine thousand dirhems. Every boy born in these military quarters
  received from his birth 100 dirhems yearly, and two measures of wheat a day,the
  allowance rising with age to 600 dirhems. Such was the constitution of that
  force which like wild-fire overran so many fair and powerful provinces. There
  were individual soldiers who received their pay separately,belonging, as it
  would seem, to none of the Arab tribes; but these formed the exception. Such
  of the tribes as did not go into the field received no pay; but largesses were
  often made by the Caliphs to various tribes throughout the Peninsula. The
  system was long maintained; and we find it adduced as a reproach to the Caliph
  Walîd, near the end of the first century, that he had withheld their
  allowances from some Junds or tribal corps settled in the military
  stations. 
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  Before the rise of Islam, tribal distinction was the sole nobility of Arabia.
  Each tribe vied with its neighbour; and the rivalry was not only for victory
  in the field, but for the laurel of the poet and orator, pre-eminence in
  hospitality and munificence,for whatever, in fact, conferred, in the eyes
  of an Arab, glory and honour. It is true that a new and higher nobility, that
  of relationship to Mahomet and service to Islam, now sprang up, before which
  the pride of clan waned, and finally (excepting in the Peninsula itself wholly
  disappeared. But for a time the military organisation above explained fostered
  the tribal spirit; and thus afforded the antiquarians of the day exact and
  ample materials to describe the races and clans of Arabia, and trace their
  ancient history. 
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  Genealogies divide themselves into three classes, the person, the family,
  and the tribe. The love of genealogies amounts in the Mahometan to a
  passion. There are more genealogical trees among them than in the whole world
  beside. The taste survives to the present day; and even in India we find clans
  and families 
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