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‘Military report on Persia. Vol IV, part I. Persian Baluchistan, Kerman and Bandar Abbas.’ [‎17r] (42/166)

The record is made up of 81 folios. It was created in 1923. 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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29
i' te ^19* to the quarters. The second well has been given over for
0 ; the use of the garrison, whose supply has to be brought
f ■ t:1 ' ^ % i n daily by mules and stored in tanks, of which there are
i? 0 ^: three, each of 400 gallons capacity. The third well is
1161 J™ apptit private property. These three wells are soon exhausted,
® J %aph: but rapidly refill, and their capacity should meet the re-
ed quirements of a battalion. Other wells could probably be
a garter of n gunk close by. The remaining wells in Chahbar are
¥' staff din, brackish, and the supply barely suffices for the village.
There are no tugs, launches, skilled labour nor European
firms, and no defences nor local forces.
The town lies round a ruined fort standing 300 yards
from the shore at the head of a small bay. Close to the
south are gardens, with a few fruit trees and date palms,
extending for half a mile inland in a valley lying inside
the coast hills. At a short distance to the north-east of the
fort is a large white tomb, the dome of which is a land
mark at sea.
There is an official of the Persian Customs Department
here.
The population is mixed, and numbers about 3,000 chiefly
Baliichls with a few negroes. There are about 300 Hydera-
badis and 200 Khujar merchants and shop-keepers, in
whose hands is a very large portion of the tode of the
place. The chief exports are sharks' fins, ghi of excellent
quality, barley and cotton, though the quantity of all except
the first named has greatly diminished in recent years owing
to continual droughts. Imports are chiefly piece goods,
silks and foodstuffs. There is a British and a Persian
post office here. The former is in charge of one of the
clerks of the Indo-European Telegraph Department, and
the latter in charge of the Customs official.
The B. I. Company's slow mail steamers running between
Bombay and Basrah call in here each way, normally once a
fortnight.
Tw.—Is a small village consisting of some 15-20 reed TIz -
huts inhabited by fishermen. It is situated at the opening
fit a valley, north of the tableland, and hills separate it

About this item

Content

Military report on Persia (volume IV, part I, covering Persian Baluchistan, Kermān and Bandar Abbas [Bandar-e ʻAbbās]), dated 1922, and published by the Central Government Press at Simla in 1923. The report’s chapters cover:

  • History , including: Persia’s recent political history; a recent history of Persian Baluchistan, and military operations in Persia Baluchistan, notably the operations at Dizak in 1901-02, operations against maritime arms trafficking in 1909, an expedition against Makrān in 1911 to check arms trafficking, and operations against the Dāmānīs in East Persia in 1916, to protect British interests in Persia; b) a brief history of Kermān; and c) a brief history of Bandar-e ʻAbbās.
  • Geography for Persian Baluchistan; Kermān; and Bandar-e ʻAbbās, with headings for boundaries, administrative districts, and the principal villages for each region, as well as sections on rivers, lakes, mountains, harbours and deserts as appropriate. The section on Bandar-e ʻAbbās includes a description of buildings, water supply, camping grounds, roads and local industry. There are also descriptions of the principal islands off the Persian Baluchistan coast: Qishm [Qeshm], Henjam [Hengam] and Hormuz.
  • Ethnography , including: general characteristics; notes for intelligence officers; sections on the population and tribes of Persian Baluchistan, Kermān Bandar-e ʻAbbās.
  • Climate and Health , including details of medical facilities.
  • Resources , including: transport (camels, mules, donkeys, horse and oxen); and supplies, chiefly of agricultural crops, by region and village.
  • Military , including: British garrisons and South Persia Rifles; the Persian Army; the fighting strength of the Persian tribes, organised by region and village; military notes on Persian Baluchistan, including the arms traffic in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. .
  • Communications , including: the railway line between Mirjāwā [Mīrjāveh] and Duzdāp, its facilities (water, rolling stock, telegraph), and risks of damage to the line; other proposed lines between Bandar-e ʻAbbās and Kermān, and Gwadar and Kermān; cable, wireless, telephone lines, and visual signalling stations.
  • Political , including an outline of administration in Persian Baluchistan, Kermān and Bandar-e ʻAbbās, and information on currency, weights and measures.

Appendix A is a list of the nomadic tribes of the Kermān province, listed by district and the number of families in each tribe. Appendix B is a list of the annual subsidies paid to chiefs in Persian Baluchistan by the Indo-European Telegraph Department, for the protection of lines passing through their district. Appendix C is a table of resources (livestock, agricultural produce), with figures indicating the requirements for local consumption in each district. Appendix D is a distribution statement of the Sarhad Levy Corps as of 1 July 1922.

The maps and plans include: a map of Persian Baluchistan (folio 78); a map of Kerman and its environs (folio 77); a diagram of the Mīrjāveh station yard (folio 74); a diagram of Duzdāp station yard (folio 76); a sketch map showing signalling and heliograph posts between Chahbar and Geh (folio 75); and a sketch map showing communications between Kerman and Saidabad (folio 79).

Extent and format
81 folios
Arrangement

The volume is arranged into eight chapters (labelled I-VIII), followed by four appendices (A-D), and finishing with six maps and plans, as set out on the volume’s contents page (f. 2). Each chapter is arranged by a series of headings and subheadings. The volume also has an alphabetically arranged index (ff. 65-71). The contents and index pages use the report’s pagination system.

Physical characteristics

Pagination: The report has a printed pagination sequence. Page numbers appear at the top and centre of each page.

Foliation: There is a foliation sequence, which is circled in pencil, in the top-right corner of the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. of each folio. It begins on the first folio with text, on number 1, and ends on the last of the various maps and plans that are inserted at the back of the volume, on number 79. Total number of folios: 79. Total including covers and flysheets: 81. Note that the foliation sequence on the maps and plans does not follow the order that the maps and plans are listed on the volume’s contents page (f.2). The plan of Bandar Abbās, listed on the report contents page, is missing from the volume.

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‘Military report on Persia. Vol IV, part I. Persian Baluchistan, Kerman and Bandar Abbas.’ [‎17r] (42/166), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/20/C201/1, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023622764.0x00002b> [accessed 12 May 2024]

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