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'Selections from the Records of the Bombay Government' [‎446] (488/733)

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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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446
WA.HABEES.
despatched to Koweit, Mohumrah, and other places, for the purpose of
collecting grain and provisions.
Strong remonstrances, however, with His Highness Mahomed Ali
Pacha, from the British Ministry at home, as well as those of the
British authority in the Gulf with Korshid Pacha, had the effect of
inducing the Egyptian Government to postpone, and eventually actual-
ly abandon, the fulfilment of its plans of aggrandisement.
Syud bin Mootluk, who during the lifetime of Ameer Toorkey re-
a. d. 1839. Sided at Br y raee ' as his Naib or deputy, and who
possessed great personal influence among the
Arabian Tribes, as also a perfect knowledge of their various and
conflicting interests, having been removed by Fysul bin Toorkey, the
now deposed Wahabee Chief, joined the Egyptian commander, and
was by him despatched to Ras-ool-Khyma, to persuade the chiefs on the
Coast of Oman to acknowledge the authority of Mahomed Ali in reality,
but ostensibly that of his tool Khalid, the now nominal head of the Waha-
bee sect. This individual contrived, by a mixture of threats and promises,
to persuade the Joasmee Chief to unite with him in requiring the Beni
Naeem, who had lately got possession of Brymee, to surrender it to the
Nujdees; but these nobly replied that they would rather bury them
selves in its ruins than give it up, and lost no time in applying to the
Beniyas Chief, as also Syud Humood bin Asan of Sohar, for support to
meet the common enemy. This call was immediately responded to by
the latter, who instantly sent his brother Ghes, with two hundred men,
to reinforce the garrison of Brymee,
The perseverance and resolution displayed by the Agents of Maho
med Ali Pacha in forwarding his schemes of conquest, and the constant
success which had hitherto attended the progress of his General, began
to exercise a powerful influence over the tribes in this quarter,—an in
fluence which nothing less than a positive assurance of protection from
the British Government against his further encroachments could suffice
to counteract. A protest in form was therefore entered by the British
authorities, against the agreement between the Bahrein Shaikh and the
Agent, as having been formed in direct opposition to the
assurances given by His Highness Mahomed Ali to Her Britannic
Majesty's Government, and the several Maritime Chieftains of Oman
were invited to certify in writing their determination to cultivate more
sedulously their relations with the British Government, to abide by its
wishes and instructions, and to resist to the last extremity all attempts of
Korshid Pacha to subjugate them.
Shaikh Sultan bin Suggur was called to account for his extraordinary
and vacillating conduct with reference to Syud bin Mootluk. He in
icply urged that hq had been earnest in his promises, but that his

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' [‎446] (488/733), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/R/15/1/732, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100022870193.0x000059> [accessed 19 April 2024]

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