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‘File 4/3 (1.a/51) Propaganda’ [‎43r] (87/194)

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The record is made up of 1 file (95 folios). It was created in 14 Dec 1940-23 Jul 1949. 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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-2-
Perhaps here
cut in Picture
of a medieval
galleon.
iinimation on
map.
Omit in filming
Shot of Muscat.
Trucial Coast A name used by Britain from the nineteenth century to 1971 to refer to the present-day United Arab Emirates.
scenes
Sea scene
Muscat harbour
4. But after him the curtain of history fall again
till fiuropean galleons sail in at the Straits of Hormuz,
having rounded the Cape of Good Hope in the wake of Vasco
da Gama. Then began the struggle of Portuguese, Dutch and
English for the trade of the Gulf, for the favour of Pers
ian Khans and princes, for the establishment of their
factories ( agencies, as we should now call them). The
details of that struggle I need not give. The significant
thing for us is that the two main rivals based themselves
on India; and the struggle passed slowly from a contest
of i^ngland v/ith Portugal to a contest of Bombay with Goa.
Incia, after her forgotten wave of expansion to the is
lands which now are the jNetherlands East Indies, again
began to look beyond the seas; and it was to the Persian
Gulf that her eyes turned. Jask, Bandar .abbas, Bushire -
all along the Persian coast the East India Coy. established
its factoties; until finally in 1763, Basra became its
chief trading establishment. The southern, or Arab, coast,
as you see, was left neglected. The treasures of oil,
which, aided by the xenophobic commercial policy of the late
Shah of Persia, have in the last half-centujay swung the
balance across the Gulf, still lay undreamed of below the
surface.
5o Side by side with the urge to peaceful trade went
responsibility for peace, health and safe navigation in
the Gulf coasts and waters; and the next phase was the
slow transference from the interests of a strictly
commercial company to the wider outlook and developing
policy of a Government. This started long oefore the
transference of actual government in India from the Company
to the Crown. Early in the 19th century, the Company
appointed its Political Agents in Muscat ( and it is a
tragic commentary on the devotion of these men, as well
as on the Muscat summer, that three out of the first four
die4 at their post, and now lie on the shore of a lonely
little bay opposite the Political Agency An office of the East India Company and, later, of the British Raj, headed by an agent. , surrounded
by mountains and accessible only by sea).
6o India's first great problem in developing her new
field of trade was the suppression of piracy. Along the
southern shore of the Gulf, formerly called the Pirate
Coast, in the multitude of salt-water creeks lurked the
Jawasimi corsairs - Qawasim One of the ruling families of the United Arab Emirates; also used to refer to a confederation of seafaring Arabs led by the Qāsimī tribe from Ras al Khaima. , to give them their correct
pronunciation. One by one, their strongholds were reduced
until a final expedition was launched against Ras-al-Kiiaima
("the headland of the tent 11 - the name probably derived from
a look-out post encamped on the end of the spit of land,
past which ships must sail to enter the lagoon)o The
pirates were crushed and the "maritime truce" of 1820
signed by every Shaikh. ( From this truce the coast derives
its present name of Trucial Coast A name used by Britain from the nineteenth century to 1971 to refer to the present-day United Arab Emirates. , a rather more respectable
title than the old "Pirate Coast";o The Gulf was safe
for India's trade from the hand of man. It is perhaps
of interest to remark that a few years ago, a gold dinar
of Kumayun's reign was dug up on the beach at Ras-al-Khaima,
and was presented by the writer The lowest of the four classes into which East India Company civil servants were divided. A Writer’s duties originally consisted mostly of copying documents and book-keeping. to the British ^iuseum.
7o After the ravages of man, the next enemy to be tackled
was the stormy and uncharted sea, full of reefs, rocky
islets, tide-rips and overfalls. To this, tafek the ships
of the Bombay Marine The navy of the East India Company. , direct progenitor of the Royal Indian
Tjavy, betook themselves, side by side with their sisters of
the Royal Navy. Their names, with the name of every ship
that has anchored in the harbour, are painted in white on
the steep volcanic rocks that surround the port of Muscat.
Above them flashes the modern light-house whicj^ with scores
of other buoys and beacons, commenorates their achievement.
Warships, cargo ships, and passenger ships have all written
their names in this unique " visiters' book." French ships

About this item

Content

The file contains exchanges of secret and confidential letters, memoranda and telegrams, mainly between Major Reginald George Evelyn William Alban and his successor Cornelius James Pelly (British Political Agents, Bahrain); Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Charles Geoffrey Prior ( Political Resident A senior ranking political representative (equivalent to a Consul General) from the diplomatic corps of the Government of India or one of its subordinate provincial governments, in charge of a Political Residency. in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. , Bushire); Major Tom Hickinbotham and his successor A.L.A. Dredge, (Public Relations Officers in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. , Bahrain); Captain J.B. Howes (Publicity Officer in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. , Bahrain then Deputy Secretary, Government of India Information and Broadcasting Department, New Delhi).

File correspondence discusses: the script and arrangements for making a British public information film about the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. , by an Indian film unit, in 1945; requests for funds to develop a recreation ground and provide a cinema in Bahrain, in order to promote social contact between the British, Arabs and Persians, 1940-1941; and compiling a list of Sheikhs in Bahrain and Qatar and also Trucial Coast A name used by Britain from the nineteenth century to 1971 to refer to the present-day United Arab Emirates. Rulers, who would appreciate a supply of Arabic literature from the Public Relations Office in Bahrain, 1949. There is also a copy of the minutes of a meeting of the Public Information Committee held in the Public Information Office, Bahrain on 12 January 1941 (ff.6-8).

The file also contains policies, plans, information and guidance relating to publicity work in the Middle East which were circulated to British officials in the region by the Ministry of Information in London and Cairo. These include British propaganda policy and planning for Persia 1944-1945 by the Overseas Planning Committee; information about British publicity work in Palestine; notes for making public statements about the political assassination of Lord Moyne (British Minister Resident in the Middle East) in Cairo on 6 November 1944; French claims in the Levant A geographical area corresponding to the region around the eastern Mediterranean Sea. , 1945; and participation by Syria and Lebanon in the United Nations Conference on International Organization, San Francisco, 1945.

Extent and format
1 file (95 folios)
Arrangement

File papers are arranged chronologically. The notes at the end of the file contain two lists of file contents. The first list (ff.93-94) records the reference numbers 1 to 44 (with gaps) which have been written in pencil or blue crayon on most of the documents, starting at the front of the file. The second list (ff.94-95) records reference numbers that refer to papers at the end of the file. The reference numbers help to identify and locate these documents in the file.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: numbered 1 to 95 in pencil in the top right hand corner. The numbering starts at the front of the file, on the first file enclosure (f.1) and ends on the last file enclosure (f.95) at the back of the file. The front file cover is not foliated.

Written in
English in Latin script
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‘File 4/3 (1.a/51) Propaganda’ [‎43r] (87/194), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/R/15/2/927, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100022698519.0x000058> [accessed 24 April 2024]

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