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'Selections from the Records of the Bombay Government' [‎445] (487/733)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (364 folios). It was created in 1856. 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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WAHABEES.
445
500 loot, with 12 guns and 4 mortars ; but such was the terror inspired
by the Pacha's name, that nothing like determined resistance appears
to have been offered, although Fysul stood generally high with the
Bedouins of Nnjd.
This effectual subversion of the authority of Fysul, and approach of
the Egyptians, created great alarm in the mind of the Uttoobee Chief,
who had apparently just grounds for supposing that their ulterior
objects were not, as at first conjectured, directed towards any part of the
Turkish territories, but to the conquest of Bahrein, in which their aid
and co-operation had been secured, it was reported, by the Imaum, in
a secret agreement, whereby it was stipulated that he should be main
tained in possession of the island, and of the districts of Lahsa and
Kateef, and in return pay an annual tribute of 300,000 crowns.
Korshid Pacha now arrived with a reinforcement of regular troops,
a. d . 1838. and commenced his march upon Hiaz, Lahsa,
and Kateef. He used every means to conciliate
the Arab Tribes, and despatched emissaries to Bahrein for the purpose
of procuring grain, provisions, and necessaries for his force, against its
arrival. An attempt at treachery, on the other hand, amongst the
Amayii Tribe at Lahsa, having been discovered, it was severely dealt
with by Ameer bin Oofeysan, Ameer Fysul's General, who put to death
three of their chief people.
Ameer Fysul was shortly after compelled to fly to Dillum, which was
immediately besieged by three bodies of troops, under the respective
commandants of Ameer Khalid, Korshid Pacha, and the Shaikh of the
Moojariba Arabs, and, being very hardly pressed, to deliver himself up.
Lahsa and Kateef thereon surrendered, and the Wahabee General
Omer bin Oofeysan, took refuge in Bahrein.
Fysul^ was sent a prisoner to Egypt in December 1838, and his sue-
cessor Khalid, the Egyptian tool, called upon the Uttoobees to resume
the payment of the annual tribute which had formerly been exacted by
Toorkey. The Egyptian General now threw off his disguise as the
auxiliary of Khalid, openly declared Nujd a possession of his master
and avowed his intention to improve and extend his conquests.
On the defeat and surrender of Ameer Fysul, Korshid Pacha, with
the whole of the regulars and artillery, which, including the irregular
Mughnbee and horsemen, amounted to about 3,000, fixed his head
quarters at Sulimeah (distant from two hundred to two hundred and
fifty miles from the coast), garrisoned Lahsa with 300 irregulars as ikn
Kateef, Sohat, and Ajeer, and only awaited the arrival of rdnforce!
ments to carry into effect his meditated attack'upon Bahrein. With
this view, he expected the co-operation of four armed vessels from the
Red Sea, with a supply of arms and ammunition. Emissaries were

About this item

Content

The volume is Selections from the records of the Bombay Government , compiled and edited by Robert Hughes Thomas, Assistant Secretary, Political Department, New Series: 24 (Bombay: Printed for Government at the Bombay Education Society's Press, 1856).

Extent and format
1 volume (364 folios)
Arrangement

The volume contains an abstract of contents on p. iii, a detailed list of contents on pp. vii-xx, an alphabetical index on pp. xxi-xxvii, and a list of maps etc on p. xviii.

Physical characteristics

Pagination: two separate pagination sequences are present in the volume. The first sequence (pp. i-xviii) commences at the first page and terminates at the list of maps (p. xviii). A second pagination sequence then takes over (pp. 1-688), commencing at the title page and terminating at the final page. Both these pagination sequences are printed, with additions in pencil, and the numbers are found at the top (left, right or centre) of each page.

The fold-outs in this volume were not paginated by the publisher. As a result, these have been foliated using the nearest page number. For example, the fold-out attached to p.51 has been numbered as 51A.

Pagination anomalies: pp. 15, 15A; 45, 45A; 49, 49A; 51, 51A; 531, 531A.

The following pages need to be folded out to be read: 15A, 45A, 51A, 327-328, 531A.

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English in Latin script
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'Selections from the Records of the Bombay Government' [‎445] (487/733), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/R/15/1/732, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100022870193.0x000058> [accessed 20 April 2024]

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