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'Persian Gulf précis. (Parts I and II)' [‎4r] (7/120)

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The record is made up of 1 file (60 folios). It was created in 1913. It was written in English and French. 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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to Ali Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. , Viceroy of Egypt. Two expeditions were led and were so far
sin-cesstul that the Amirs intermittently paid a small tribute to Exypt and,
in order to he left undisturbed to pursue their designs of aggrandisement, they
ncknow lodged the Sultan of lurkey as their Suzerain, although the vassalage
wns merely nominal. Ihe Suzerain Power exercised no control over the
aggressive course pursued by these Nejd Amirs.. Numerous remonstrances were
addiessed to them by 15i'itain and only the appearance of a nMval armament at
• Bombay political Department, Vol. 106 a of 1860, Bahrain* (1859) and Maskat compelled
and A.tohi.on's awie,. Vol. xn. page 146. the retirement of the aggressive Sultan
±eysul, not however until he had extorted a tribute from Maskat, though not
Irom Bahrain.
. Eeysul, whom Colonel Pelly visited at Riadh with a view to enjoin on
him the necessity of maintaining general peace and commercial development
in the regions of the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. , died in 1865, and was succeeded bv his son,
who, in that year, entered into an engagement with the British Government
not to molest the tribes under British protection.
Ihe succession, however, was challenged and disturbances continued till
1S71 when Abdulla bin Feysul of the reigning Wahabi family being engaged in
a conflict for the throne of Nejd with his brother Saud, applied to Midhat Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. ,
the Turkish Vali of Baghdad, to co-operate in his restoration to power. The
opportunity of extending Ottoman sway was too good to be missed. An expe
dition under ^lidhat Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. was sent ostensibly to settle differences between
the two brothers but more probably to establish Turkish supremacy on the
coast. There was at the time, also, a rumour reported by Colonel Herbert, His
JVlajesty s Consul-General, Baghdad, "that if the Nejd expedition were success
ful, it would eventually be directed to the acquisition of Bahrain, Maskat
and the Arab Coast " and this rumour gained strength from a statement of
Midhat Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. , who asserted that Bahrain and its dependencies were countries
t Secret i., 1871. No 9 .581-655. of ^ 0ttom an dominions. The Porte
explicitly deniedf any intention of such
designs. The Turks never penetrated to Nejd, but the military occupation of
the district of Hasa involved the est iblishment of Turkish authority at Katif
and Ojair and the location of a Turkish post at El Bida on the Katar Penin
sula. Prom this expedition resulted the subsequent complications regarding
British and Turkish claims along the Arabian littoral from the Shat-el-Arab
to Odeid at the extreme southern corner of the Katar Peninsula.
6. It will perhaps be convenient here briefly to note the tribes and nilers
Tribes, &o., in occupation of the occupying the Arabian littoral mentioned
Arabian Coast line. ^ succeec ii n g chapters as a help to an
understanding of the whole.
The territory of the Sultan of Maskat extends along the Arabian coast
from Rakhiut in the south to Khor Kalba and from Dibba to Tibba. J he
coast between Khor Kalba and Dibba is under the Shaikh of Sharga. From
Shaam, adjoining Tibba, to Khor-el-Odeid at the extreme south of the
Katar Peninsula, the coast line is divided among the Trucial Chiefs of Oman
Ras-al-Khaimeh, Umm-al-Kowein, Ajman, Sharga, Debai and Abu Thabi.
From Khor-el-Odeid round to Dohat-as-Salwa is the Katar Peninsula with
Shaikhs of its own in the coast towns and villages. From Dohat to Ojair, the
sea-port of the Hasa Sandjaq which belongs to the Turks, the tract is desert,
while from Ojair to Has Tanura above Katif belongs to the Turks. The coast
from Has Tanura to Kuwait may be said to belong to the Shaikh of Kuwait,
who, however, claims jurisdiction down to Qasr-as-Subaih, while Jinnah and
Musallamiya, two islands off the coast, are perhaps under Turkish jurisdiction.

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Content

A printed précis of correspondence on various Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. subjects, prepared for the Foreign Department of the Government of India, Simla, in July 1911 (Part I) and July 1913 (Part II). The document is divided into two parts. Most subjects relate to Turkish claims to sovereignty in the region, including the presence of Turkish garrisons, and were chosen and prepared because of the negotiations between the British and Turkish authorities connected to the Baghdad Railway plans.

Part I (folios 2-35) covers various subjects and is organised into eleven chapters, each devoted to a different topic or geographical area, as follows: Chapter I, British interests in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. , Extent of Arabian littoral; Chapter II, Extent of Hasa and Katif [Qatif], Claims of the Turks to the whole of Eastern Arabia, Extent to which Turkish claims on the Arabian littoral are recognised by His Majesty's government, Proposed arrangement with the Turkish Government defining their sphere of influence on the Arabian littoral; Chapter III, Turkish occupation of El Bida [Doha], Extent of the Katar [Qatar] Peninsula; Chapter IV, Turkish designs on Katar, Policy of His Majesty's Government; Chapter V, Trucial Chiefs (Pirate Coast); Chapter VI, Maskat [Muscat] and Gwadar; Chapter VII, Kuwait; Chapter VIII, Um Kasr [Umm Qasr], Bubiyan and Warba; Chapter IX, Bahrain, Zakhnuniyeh [Zahnūnīyah] and Mohammerah [Korramshahr]; Chapter X, Proposed British action consequent on Turkish aggression; Chapter XI, Pearl fisheries. There are three appendices containing further correspondence relating to the main text.

Part II (folios 36-60) relates entirely to the Baghdad Railway and the negotiations between the British and Ottoman authorities that the proposal of the railway initiated. The negotiations covered several matters, including: the political statuses of Kuwait, Bahrain, and Qatar; the location of the railway's terminus; the ownership of the railway; and the creation of a commission for the improvement of navigation in the Chatt-el-Arab [Shaṭṭ al-‘Arab]. It opens with an introduction of the related issues (folios 37-41) followed by the relative correspondence (folios 42-53). It ends with the draft agreements (folios 53-60) - never ratified - drawn up by the two powers.

Extent and format
1 file (60 folios)
Arrangement

The document is arranged in two parts. The first part is then divided into chapters, each covering a different topic or geographical location. The correspondence section of the second part is in rough chronological order.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the 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.

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

Condition: folios 59 and 60 have both been torn in two corners, resulting in the loss of some text.

Written in
English and French in Latin script
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'Persian Gulf précis. (Parts I and II)' [‎4r] (7/120), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/20/C250, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023517380.0x000008> [accessed 16 April 2024]

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