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'Handbook of Mesopotamia. Vol. I. 1918' [‎127] (136/568)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (282 folios). It was created in 1918. It was written in English, Arabic, Persian, Turkish, Armenian, Kurdish and Syriac. The original is part of the British Library: India Office The department of the British Government to which the Government of India reported between 1858 and 1947. The successor to the Court of Directors. Records and Private Papers Documents collected in a private capacity. .

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RELIGIONS
127
ascendancy which the recognized Mujtahids enjoy is very remark
able. Among Shiahs their word is law: they disburse large sums
received from their co-religionists for sacred and charitable pur
poses ; and occasionally they exercise strong political influence,
even in opposition to the established government of the country.
The Mujtahids of Nejef and Kerbela are the most distinguished,
their authority predominating throughout the entire Shiah world
over that of all other Mujtahids: collectively they are known as
Aatabah, 1 the Threshold Though some 2,000 claimants to the
title exist at Nejef and 200 at Kerbela, inquiries made in 1903
elicited the fact that not more than 41 enjoyed undisputed authority.
(6) Sun
The historical origin of the differences between Sunni and Shiah
has been noted above (p. 123). For most non-Arab Sunnis the Sultan
of Turkey is Caliph, but his claim is little regarded by most Arabs.
The Sunnis profess an unquestioning faith in the Koran, and in the
accepted Tradition {sunna}, which is a record of the sayings and
doings of the Prophet that serves as a supplement to the Koran. On
this basis four principal systems of Sunni law have arisen. The
official code of the Ottoman Empire, in so far as it is still truly
Moslem, is that of the Hanifite school. The Shiahs in theory reject
the authority of the Sunni Tradition altogether, but in fact their
law is to a great extent borrowed from the Sunni schools.
The Arab Sunnis of Mesopotamia are said to be on the whole not
fanatical. Sunni feeling is now apparently stronger among the
Kurds. The Government of Constantinople has done much in
recent years to encourage Sunnism among the Kurdish tribes, in
the hope of increasing their respect for the Sultan as Caliph. This
policy apparently had a considerable measure of success in Abdul
Hamid's reign. The most important Sunni shrine in Mesopotamia
is that of Sheikh Abdul Qadir Gilani, at Baghdad. This Abdul
Qadir ( a. d . 1077-1165) was a Sufi preacher of renown in his day,
being credited with miraculous powers. His mosque and tomb,
honorifically known as ' Janab Ghauth el-Adham Dastgirform not
only one of the principal sights of Baghdad, but a religious centre
lyi frequented by Sunni Mussulmans from regions as remote as Afghani-
L : stan and India. Poor pilgrims are gratuitously supported, and
', sometimes as many as 4,000 loaves of bread issue in a single day
from the kitchens of the Pir-i-Dastgir. Other 'Sunni shrines exist
in Irak, but none comparable with that of Sheikh Abdul Qadir,
such being the Maqam Yunas at Kufeh and tomb of Ezekiel at Kifl,

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Content

This volume is A Handbook of Mesopotamia, Volume I, General (Naval Staff, Intelligence Department: November 1918). This is an updated and expanded edition of A Handbook of Mesopotamia, Volume I, General (Admiralty War Staff, Intelligence Department: August 1916) (IOR/L/MIL17/15/41/1). This is an introductory volume containing matter of a general nature giving an account of conditions in Mesopotamia, for the most part as they were before the First World War.

The volume includes a note on official use, a title page and 'Note'. There is a page of 'Contents' that includes the following chapters and sections:

  • Chapter 1: Boundaries and Physical Features;
  • Chapter 2: Climate;
  • Chapter 3: Minerals;
  • Chapter 4: Fauna and Flora;
  • Chapter 5: Hygiene;
  • Chapter 6: History;
  • Chapter 7: Inhabitants;
  • Chapter 8: Religions;
  • Chapter 9: Administration;
  • Chapter 10: Irrigation of Irak [Iraq];
  • Chapter 11: Agriculture and Land Tenure;
  • Chapter 12: Commerce and Industry;
  • Chapter 13: Currency, Weights, and Measures;
  • Chapter 14: Communications and Transport;
  • Vocabularies;
  • Index.
Extent and format
1 volume (282 folios)
Arrangement

The volume is arranged in numbered chapters. There is a contents page and an alphabetically arranged index.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: The foliation sequence commences at the first folio and terminates at the last folio; these numbers are written in pencil, are circled, and are located in the top right corner of the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. of the folio.

Pagination: The volume also contains an original printed pagination sequence.

Written in
English, Arabic, Persian, Turkish, Armenian, Kurdish and Syriac in Latin and Arabic script
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'Handbook of Mesopotamia. Vol. I. 1918' [‎127] (136/568), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/MIL/17/15/41/2, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023472673.0x000089> [accessed 16 June 2026]

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