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'Persian Gulf Gazetteer. Part I. Historical and Political Materials. Précis of Koweit Affairs, 1896-1904' [‎54v] (108/128)

The record is made up of 1 volume (64 folios). It was created in 1904. It was written in English. 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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96
APPENDIX E.
{See Section XIV.)
Communications made at Constantinople in regard to the proposal of
the Baghdad Railway Commission to make Koweit their Railway
Terminus. April 1900-
I took an opportunity yesterday afternoon, in the course of an interview with the
Minister for Foreign Affairs, to refer to the visit which, the German Railway Commission had
paid to Koweit with a view, as it was reported, to a harbour and terminal station for the
Baghdad Railway.
I said that Her Majesty's Government did not desire to interfere with the status quo
or with the Sultan's authority in those parts, but that they could not, in view of their great
interests in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. , view with indifference any action which would alter the existing
condition of affairs or give another power special rights or privileges over territory belonging
to the Sheikh of Koweit with whom Her Majesty's Government had certain agreements. *
* * * *
The same afternoon the German Ambassador called upon me. I enquired about the
movements of the Railway Commission, and whether they had delayed here on their way to
Berlin. Baron von Marschall said that they had stopped only a very short time, and that he had
had little opportunity of talking to them.
I then said that I had heard from Basrah that they had visted Koweit, and that I thought
it would be in the interest of the great railway enterprise which they had undertaken that he
should know that Her Majesty's Government had an agreement with the Sheikh of Koweit,
which, although not opposed to the status quo, yet prevented the Sheikh from making any
concession of territory to another power without the consent of Her Majesty's Government. I
was anxious, I said, that nothing should occur to deter British capitalists from participating
upon fair terms in the construction of the Baghdad Railway, and I thought it therefore a
friendly act to warn him of the position in which the Sheikh of Koweit stood towards Her
Majesty's Government.
There was nothing antagonistic to the Ottoman Government in this position, but our
interests were so great in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. that we could not afford to look with indifference
on any proposals tending to alter the condition of affairs. I felt sure also that it was not in/
the interests of the Anatolian Railway to do anything which would disquiet British subscri
bers, and he knew that we were particularly alive to any proceedings in those parts.
No. 252 o£ Secret E., October 1900, Noa. 175-281.
In his Despatch No. 130 dated 9tk
.April 1900 Sir N. O. Conor reported :—
8 ■

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Content

The volume, stamped ‘Secret’ on the front cover and frontispiece, is part 1 (historical and political materials) of a précis of Kuwait (spelt Koweit throughout) affairs for the years 1896-1904. It was prepared by Jerome Antony Saldanha of the Bombay Provincial Civil Service, and published in 1904 by the Government of India Foreign Department, Simla, India.

The volume includes a preface (folio 4), list of contents (folio 5) and list of appendices (folio 6). The sections listed in the contents run as follows:

  • I: Brief History of Koweit from circa 1716 to 1896 A.D.;
  • II: Murder of Mahomed bin Subah [Muḥammad bin Ṣabāḥ] and his brother Jarrah [Jarrāḥ bin Ṣabāḥ] by Mubarak [Mubārak] and Mubarak’s succession, 1896;
  • III: (1) Proposed Turkish Quarantine at Koweit, (2) views of the Government of India and 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. ;
  • IV: Haripasa Piracy case. Warning to Sheikh of Koweit. Question of Protectorate over Koweit raised - 1895-1896;
  • V: Threatened attack of Sheikhs Jasim bin Thani [Jāsim bin Muḥammad Āl Thānī] and Yusuf bin Ibrahim [Yūsuf bin Ibrāhīm] on Koweit. Question of Protectorate over Koweit discussed 1897-98;
  • VI: (1) Movements of Turkish troops towards Koweit, (2) Russian intrigues, (3) Question of Protectorate over Koweit further discussed;
  • VII: Proposed British Protectorate over Koweit. Agreement with the Sheikh of Koweit, December 1898 - May 1899;
  • VIII: Porte's complaints against British proceedings at Koweit as infrigement of quarantine regulations, May 1899;
  • IX: (1) Threatened attack on Koweit by the Turks, (2) Defence of Koweit, February - March 1899;
  • X: (1) Question of status of the Sheikh of Koweit, (2) Turkish activity in the neighbourhood, (3) Imposition of customs duty by Sheikh, March - June 1899;
  • XI: Turkish attempts to exercise soverign rights on Koweit, by appointing harbour master and opening a custom house. A forward Turkish policy advocated. The British Government's protest. July - September 1899;
  • XII: Sheikh Mubarak's diffidence in the British and desire of Persian protection. September - October 1899;
  • XIII: Appointment of Muhsin [Muḥsin] Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. as Vasli of Basrah. Change of policy inaugurated. Turkish Decoration for Sheikh Mubarak 1899;
  • XIV: Visit of the German Railway Commission to Koweit and their scheme to make Katham their Railway's Terminus, January 1900;
  • XV: Proposal to make Koweit a Port of call for Mail steamers July 1900 - June 1901;
  • XVI: Threatened hostilities between the Sheikh of Koweit and Amir of Nejd [Najd];
  • XVII: Renewal of hostilities between the Sheikh of Koweit and the Amir of Nejd , December 1900 - May 1901;
  • XVIII: (1) Ibn Rashid [Ibn Rasīd] seeks British protection, (2) Sheikh Mubarak asks for assumption of permanent British protectorate over Koweit, May - June 1901;
  • XIX: (1) Threatened attack on Koweit by Amir of Nejd and the Turks, (2) Measures for defence of Koweit, (3) Attempt to settle difference between the Sheikh and Amir amicably, July - October 1901;
  • XX: Question of defence of Koweit by sea and land, 1899-1901;
  • XXI: Question of discontinuance of the use of the Turkish flag at Koweit, August - September 1901;
  • XXII: Attempt to take the Sheikh of Koweit to Constantinople, November and December 1901;
  • XXIII: Alarm at Koweit and Landing of British Guns, December 1901 - January 1902;
  • XXIV: Prohibition of exports to Koweit from Turkish territory and movements of the Amir of Nejd, December 1901 - January 1902;
  • XXV: Dispute about the Fao [al-Fāw] Estates, December 1901 - January 1902;
  • XXVI: Occupation of Um Kasr [Umm Qaṣr], Bubyan [Būbīyān] Island and Subbiyah [al-Ṣubīyah] by the Turks, January - March 1902;
  • XXVII: Complaints against the proceedings of the British Officer and the Sheikh of Koweit, March 1902;
  • XXVIII: Sheikh Mubarak's offers of reconciliation with the Porte, March 1902;
  • XXIX: Arrest of agent of Sheikh Mubarak at Basrah and his imprisonment, May - December 1902;
  • XXX: Further movements of Ibn Rashid (2) Ibn Saud [‘Abd al-‘Azīz bin ‘Abd al-Raḥmān bin Fayṣal bin Sa‘ūd] in the field again, and captures Riadh [Riyadh], January, November 1902;
  • XXXI: (1) Fear of Renewal of hostilities between Ibn Rashid and Sheikh Mubarak, (2) The Sheikh warned not to involved himself in difficulties with Nejd or the Turks, (3) Application of the Sheikh for guns, August - October 1902;
  • XXXII: Threatened attack on Koweit from Mubarak's nephews and Sheikh Yusuf-el-Ibrahim. Lapwing case. September 1902 - January 1903;
  • XXXIII: Ibn Rashid near Koweit and Sheikh Mubarak's movements, December 1902 - February 1903;
  • XXXIV: Fao Estates' dispute, February 1903-04;
  • XXXV: Importance of Khor Abdulla [Khawr ‘Abdullāh] as a future Railway terminus, etc. 1904;
  • XXXVI: Recent movements of Ibn Rashid, January 1903 - March 1904;
  • XXXVII: Montefik Arabs [al-Muntafiq] seek Russian protection, (2) Revolt of Sadun [Sa‘dūn] Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. ;
  • XXXVIII: Advance of a loan made to Sheikh Mubarak, March - May 1904;
  • XXXIX: Opening of a British post office at Koweit, 1901-1904;
  • XL: Appointment of British Agent at Koweit. June 1899 - August 1903;
  • XLI: (1) Turkish aid to Ibn Rashid, (2) Proposed British protest, (3) Appointment of Political Agent A mid-ranking political representative (equivalent to a Consul) from the diplomatic corps of the Government of India or one of its subordinate provincial governments, in charge of a Political Agency. at Koweit, April - October 1904.

The Appendices are as follows:

Extent and format
1 volume (64 folios)
Arrangement

The volume is arranged divided into forty one (identified by Roman numerals), which are followed by ten appendices (lettered A to J). There are paragraph numbers that are continuous throughout the whole volume, beginning on 1 at the start of the first section, and ending on 351 in the final section. A contents page and list of appendices are at the front of the volume (folios 5-6).

Physical characteristics

Foliation: The foliation sequence commences at the front cover, and terminates at the inside back cover; 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'. side of each folio. The volume also contains an original printed pagination sequence.

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English in Latin script
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'Persian Gulf Gazetteer. Part I. Historical and Political Materials. Précis of Koweit Affairs, 1896-1904' [‎54v] (108/128), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/20/C239, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023515249.0x00006e> [accessed 9 May 2024]

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