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'File 61/11 V (D 95) Hejaz - Nejd, Miscellaneous' [‎222r] (460/530)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (261 folios). It was created in 12 May 1932-28 Dec 1933. 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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I vy,\
THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPERTY OF HIS BRITANNIC MAJESTY'S GOVERNMENT
EASTERN (A rabia).
September 15, 1933
CONFIDENTIAL, , i* iUBH.W
"V
[E 3422/759/25] No. 1. ^
,, , c> . , . \ FtiKHOiiT Ui"
M r . CdLvevt to S it John Siiuon,—(R t h hi b^r 15.)
(No. 275.)
^ r ' T1 , T . . . Jedda, August 29, 1933.
IJS continuation of my despatch No. 273 of to-day's date and with reference
to my telegram Tso. 161 of the 24th August, relative to the possibility of the
outbreak of hostilities between King Ibn Saud and the Imam of the Yemen, I
have the honour to report that Sheikh Abdullah Suleiman, who has been in Jedda
since my meeting with him on the 24th August, vesterday requested a further
interview with me. I accordingly called on him in the afternoon at the Khuzan
Palace.
2. He produced a sheaf of telegrams which, he explained, he had just
received from the Amir Feisal with instructions to read them over to me. I was
not offered copies of these telegrams, as on previous occasions, but perused them,
with the Minister of Finance, sentence by sentence. As the telegrams were six
in number and, of these, four were long and not a little involved, it may be that
the following summary may not be in every respect complete, but I believe, in the
main, the contents of the telegrams, particularly in regard to the more important
points, have been adequately retained.
3. The telegrams were prefaced by a short note, also in the form of a
telegram. It was carefully read by Sheikh Abdullah Suleiman and stated that,
from information received in Eiyadh, it appeared that Imam Yahya was
mobilising his forces in the Yemen and that therefore Ibn Saud had ordered
the Saudi forces on the north-east of Nejd to proceed to the south-west, i.e., to
Asir, as a reinforcement to the troops already there. Sheikh Abdullah Suleiman
here explained that the military forces of Saudi Arabia are divided into three
zones, or commands, the north-western (which had dealt with the Ibn Eifada
rebellion), the north-eastern and the south-western. He described this measure
as a purely precautionary one, and, in reply to a question, informed me that the
orders had been issued three weeks ago. He added that he had heard, but not
officially, that, should the situation deteriorate and the use of force become
inevitable. Amir Saud, the King's eldest son, would probably be appointed to
command the troops operating in Asir. He was unaware whether the troops
of the North-Eastern " Command " had yet arrived in Asir, but thought not.
4. Sheikh Abdullah Suleiman did not enlighten me as to the address to
which this telegram, if telegram it was, had been sent, but I inferred that it
had been sent by the King to Amir Feisal at Taif. Sheikh Abdullah Suleiman
then proceeded to read five telegrams, all of which, he informed me, had been
sent by Ibn Saud to Imam Yahya. It would appear, although the Minister of
Finance himself was not clear on the point, that the Imam's letter to Ibn Saud,
entrusted to the delegation who wirelessed the contents to Riyadh (as reported
in my telegram No. 158 of the 19th August), and to which Ibn Saud replied at
length, had, indeed, elicited a reply from the Imam in which he stated that he
was quite unable to grasp the meaning of Ibn Baud's telegram or understand
the demands he was putting forward. To this, Ibn Saud rejoined, in the first
of the five telegrams read by Sheikh Abdullah Suleiman, that, although he
considered his position perfectly understandable, yet for the sake of clarity he
would put each of his mam points in a separate telegram. In this rather lengthy
introductory telegram he recalled the measure of agreement reached previously
and embodied in the treaty between them, and called attention to the signal
gesture of conciliation, affording proof of his desire for a permanent settlement,
in his action over the Arwa mountains dispute.
5. Of the four telegrams embodying his desiderata, the first dealt with the
Tihamat Asir, a question which Ibn Saud regarded as concerning himself and
the Imam only and one which had been definitely settled by their treaty. The
[907 p—1]

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Content

The volume consists of letters, telegrams, and memoranda relating to the Hejaz and Najd. Much of the correspondence is from the British Legation in Jeddah, with regular reports on the situation in that region sent to Sir John Simon, the Foreign Secretary in London. The rest of the correspondence is mostly between the Political Residency An office of the East India Company and, later, of the British Raj, established in the provinces and regions considered part of, or under the influence of, British India. in Bushire, the Political Agencies in Kuwait, Bahrain, and Muscat, the Colonial Office, and the Government of India.

The main subjects of the volume are:

  • the change in name from 'The Kingdom of the Hejaz-Nejd and its Dependencies' to 'The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia';
  • the announcement of Ibn Sa'ud's eldest son, Prince Sa'ud, as the heir apparent to the throne;
  • the territorial dispute between Yemen and Saudi Arabia after the latter's absorption of the 'Asir region into its kingdom.

A copy of the 23 September 1932 issue of the newspaper Umm al-Qura is contained in the volume (folios 57-58). It features the Royal Order proclaiming the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Other miscellaneous subjects covered in the volume include:

  • relations between Italy and Saudi Arabia;
  • a dispute between Ibn Sa'ud and his agent in Bahrain, al-Quasaibi [‘Abd al-‘Azīz al-Qusaibi], over a debt the former owes the latter;
  • a revolt against Ibn Sa'ud by tribes loyal to ex-King Hussein coming from Sinai;
  • a request for a loan made by Ibn Sa'ud to the British Government;
  • relations between the Soviet Union and Saudi Arabia;
  • relations between the USA and Saudi Arabia, including the visit of a Mr Gallant looking for oil concessions;
  • concessions for the building of the railway between Mecca and Jeddah;
  • the prospect of Saudi Arabia joining the League of Nations;
  • the case of two slave girls seeking refuge at the British Legation in Jeddah.

Other documents of note contained in the volume are:

  • a copy of a new customs tariff for Saudi Arabia (folios 122-134)
  • a 'Who's Who' of Saudi Arabia, produced by the British Legation in Jeddah and covering all those deemed important to know by the British (folios 183-200);
  • an envelope containing the torn-out pages of an article in the International Affairs journal (Vol. 12, No. 4, Jul., 1933, pp 518-534) entitled 'Ibn Sa'ud and the Future of Arabia.'

At the back of the volume (folios 245-251) are internal office notes.

Extent and format
1 volume (261 folios)
Arrangement

The volume is arrranged chronologically.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: The sequence starts on the first folio and continues to the inside back cover. The numbers are written in pencil, circled and 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. Note that following f 1 are folios 1A, 1B, 1C, and 1D. The sequence then continues as normal from folio 2. There are two other foliation systems present but both are inconsistent and neither are circled.

Written in
English and French in Latin script
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'File 61/11 V (D 95) Hejaz - Nejd, Miscellaneous' [‎222r] (460/530), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/R/15/1/568, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023520518.0x00003d> [accessed 16 April 2024]

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