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'A Précis of the Relations of the British Government with the Tribes and Shaikhs of Arabistan' [‎36v] (72/134)

The record is made up of 1 volume (68 folios). It was created in 1912. 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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58
In return, the Shaikh grants to such tribesmen as live in his lands in
Turkey, and such men are very numerous, the customary tribal exemptions
from grazing taxes " vergi " or " miri " taxation, and from other
imposts of a minor character, but important in the aggregate. Many of
them, too, even though actually in possession of Turkish certificates of
nationality (which documents are considered by Arabs as purely administra
tive documents having no bearing on tribal questions) have the right, handed
down from father to son, to cultivate wheat lands in the Ahwaz district, and
Arabs of the Kaab and Muhaisin tribes living in Abulkhasib and Zain will
be found in December and January ploughing their lands as far north as
W £113.
We thus have the quaint anomaly of Arab tribesmen, in possession of
certificates of Turkish nationality and liable to Turkish military service,
training for which they may have actually undergone, acknowledging simul-
taneously liability to service under the Persian Flag, and proceeding annually
i • ^ ? s an< ^ more from their homes in Turkey to cultivate lands in Persia
w Inch they and their forefathers have tilled for generations.
Questions of reciprocity seldom arise between Persia and Turkey, in
regard to this frontier at all events, in connection with the treatment of
Arab, tribes, since no Arab tribes subject to Turkey reside in Persian terri
tory, though, as has been shown, the reverse is very extensively the case.
The Shaikh as a landowner.
The Shaikh of Mohammerah exercises, and it is inevitable and natural
tnat he should exercise, influence in Turkish territory in virtue of the fact
that he is by far the largest holder of cultivated land in Basrah district.
Jno serious estimate of the value of the lands he owns can be attempted,
but it has been greatly enhanced in recent years by the general improvement
^ values and half a million sterling is probably not too high a figure,
although were his lands to be thrown on the market at present, they would
piobably not find a buyer at any thing like this price. Many of the lands he
owns were purchased by Shaikh Haji Jabir in the sixties and seventies, when
land was cheap, and when the Turkish authorities in Basrah had to depend
e\ en more than at present on the good-will of the Shaikh of Mohammerah for
the peace and safety of the district. 1
Sir Khaz'al Khan, K.C I.E., has also invested largely in property in the
Basrah nilayat during the last ten years.
The main reasons which led him and his predecessors to invest their
money m Turkey rather than Persia no longer apply with the same force as
lormerly and it is probably^ from habit rather than from necessity that the
fenaikn has purchased land in Turkey during the last few years.
. , ® about 1903, the Shaikh of Mohammerah and his tribes held no
title trom the Persian Government to the date groves and other lands
occupied by them and they were therefore disinclined to invest money and
labour m them as the possibility of dispossession was always before their
eyes. The Turks were weak, not less friendly disposed than the Persian
Government; it was then desirable in their eyes to have lands in Turkish
territory in which they could settle if need arose.
When reproved for by the Persian Governors of 'Arabistan for favour-
mg this policy, the Shaikh of Mohammerah used to reply that he did so
rom patriotic motives and with the strategical object of securing from
hostile influences areas of Turkish territory adjacent to that of Persia.
The acquisition of lands of Umm-ar-Rassas and Umm -al-Khassasif
opposite Mohammerah and Failiyeh, respectively, and of the Diaji lands on
the Turko-Persian frontier was used to illustrate this point of view which

About this item

Content

The volume is Lieutenant A T Wilson, IA, Acting Consul for Arabistan, A Précis of the Relations of the British Government with the Tribes and Shaikhs of Arabistan (Calcutta: Superintendent Government Printing, India, 1912).

The volume is a compilation of historical, economic and political information about Arabistan [Khuzestan] and its relations with the British, by Lieutenant Arnold Talbot Wilson, Indian Army, Acting Consul for Arabistan.

The contents of the volume are as follows:

  • List of Officials in Arabistan;
  • I British Interests in Arabistan, 1635-1800;
  • II Arabistan - Internal Politics up to the death of Haji Jabir and genealogical table of Shaikhs of Mohammerah [Khorramshahr], 1527-1881;
  • III Shaikh Miz'al's Rule, 1882-1897;
  • IV Shaikh Khaz'al's Rule, 1897-1910;
  • V Shaikh Khaz'al and the Persian Customs;
  • VI Shaikh Khaz'al - Political Relations with British Government;
  • VII Piracies;
  • VIII Turko-Persian Frontier Question;
  • IX Shaikh of Mohammerah and Turks;
  • X Irrigation in Arabistan (I Karun; II Karkhah; III Dizful);
  • XI Acquisition and Tenure of Land in Arabistan, with Annexes;
  • Sixteen appendices, numbered I-XVI (supplemented with a later additional appendix, IXa) each containing a transcription (one in French, others translated into English from Persian) of relevant firmans, agreements, concessions, and other documents from the period 1844-1910.
Extent and format
1 volume (68 folios)
Arrangement

A list of contents appears on folio 4, and a schedule of appendices on folio 7.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation system commences at 1 on the front cover and terminates at 68 on the back cover. The numbers are written in pencil, are circled, and appear in the top right hand corner of the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. page of each folio. This is the system that has been used to determine the order of pages.

Pagination: the volume also contains an original printed pagination sequence, numbered 2-115 (ff 8-66).

Written in
English and French in Latin script
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'A Précis of the Relations of the British Government with the Tribes and Shaikhs of Arabistan' [‎36v] (72/134), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/20/C108, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023545054.0x00004a> [accessed 26 May 2024]

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