“…The concept of edge‐sewing planks is universal throughout the western Indian Ocean. The beden of Somalia (Chittick, : 297–310), the masula (Kentley, : 303–317, 2003: 120–166) and numerous extended logboats and small open boats of India (Shaikh et al ., , Fenwick, , ; Shaikh, ) the odam of the Lakshadweeps (Varadarajan, ), the yatra dhoni (Vosmer, : 38–39), madel paruwa (Kentley and Gunaratne, : 35–48), the oruwa of Sri Lanka (Kapitän, : 135–148), and the mtepe of East Africa (Hornell, ; Prins, ; Adams, ) were all sewn vessels, to name only a few. That mtepe sailed in Omani waters, or at the least sailors familiar with mtepe visited Oman, is demonstrated by the image of a mtepe in al‐Hazm castle, an Omani fortress built in 1711 (Fig.…”