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‘Administration report of the Persian Gulf Political Residency and Muscat Political Agency for 1887-88.’ [‎7r] (11/72)

The record is made up of 1 volume (34 folios). It was created in 1888. 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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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. and muscat political agency An office of the East India Company and, later, of the British Raj, headed by an agent. for 1887-88.
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29. At the given signal the Bedouin Arabs of the vicinity entered the bazaar o£ El-Bidaa
and plundered the shops o£ the Persian dealers residing there, driving them all from the place.
The British Indian traders on this occasion were protected by Shaikh Jasim's relatives, but
their turn was to come.
30. In the month of August two Indian traders were wantonly and cruelly wounded bv
the Bedouins in El-Bidaa, and immediately afterwards piracies commenced off the coast of
Katr.
31. In the summary of Bahrain affairs it has been stated how these disorders were
eventually checked, and it is only necessary here to remark that compensation to the wounded
Indians was included in the amount levied from Shaikh Jasim.
32. No redress has been obtained by the Persians for the losses sustained by them during
the plunder of El-Bidaa, when all the Persian traders were forced to remove from the place;
but an appeal on the subject was made by the Persian to the Turkish Government.
33. The Wali of Busrah, Nafiz Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. , visited El-Bidaa in the corvette Zohaff in the
month of February and promised Shaikh Jasim a title and decorations. A supply of coal also
has been sent to El-Bidaa by the Turkish authorities, and the Turkish guard at that place is
about to be strengthened.
34. The usual petty and desultory warfare has occasionally been kept up between Shaikh
Jasim's adherents in El-Katr and the Monasir and other Bedouins of the border land of ^Oman.
5.—NEJD AND EL-HAS A.
35. Subordinate to the Turkish "Wilayet" of Busrah is the somewhat pretentiously
Ne j d termed Government of " Nejd."" The Mutaserrif holding
this post has his head-quarters at Hoofoof, the capital of El-
Hasa, and his charge is really restricted to the province bearing the latter name. To the
westward between El-Hasa and Nejd (or the "uplands") intervene the "Dahna" or
" Nafood," the great red sand dunes, and at present these mark the limit of Turkish authority.
To the north-west of Riadh, the capital of Central Nejd, is the flourishing province of "the
mountain," Jebel Shammer, ruled by Muhammad ibn Hashed, who more or less owns alle
giance to Turkey. The Wahabee Amirs of Riadh have long been weakened by family dis
sensions and isolation from the seaboard owing to the Turkish occupation of El-Hasa.
36. Up to last year, Abdullah bin Feysal was recognised as Amir, or head of the Al-
Su^ood family, but his authority was limited to Riadh itself.
37. Last autumn intelligence was received that his nephews, the sons of Su'ood bin
Eeysal, had seized and imprisoned Abdullah, and there were rumours of an intended assem
blage of tribes in view to an attack on the Turks in El-Hasa.
38. Letters were written by Muhammad bin Su^ood to the Chief of Bahrain and to the
various Arab Shaikhs of ■'Oman, announcing his accession as Amir of Nejd. But the triumph
of Muhammad bin Su^ood was short-lived, for the more powerful Amir of Jebel Shammer,
Muhammad bin Rashed, speedily marched against him up to the gates of Riadh, which
place capitulated after a short defence. Abdullah bin Feysal was then released and re-instated,
and Muhammad bin Su'ood retired to El-khorj. It seems, however, to have been arranged
that Abdullah should accompany Muhammad bin Rashed back to Jebel Shammer, his younger
brother Muhammad bin Feysal acting as Governor of Nejd, assisted by an Agent of Ibn
Bashed.
39. Thus, the authority of Muhammad bin Rashed has apparently been extended over a
large portion of Central Arabia, and is now supreme from the confines of Syria to the great
red sand desert east of Nejd.
40. The forces of Ibn Rashed are too formidable and well appointed to allow of any suc
cessful resistance on the part of the adherents of the Wahabi Amirs, and it is of some
importance to note that the Shammer Chieftain is, nominally at least, the vassal of Turkey.
He at once communicated the news of his victory to the Turkish authoritieSj by whom it was
received with the utmost satisfaction.
B

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Administration Report on the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. 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. and Muscat Political Agency An office of the East India Company and, later, of the British Raj, headed by an agent. (no 245, Foreign Department serial no 20) for the year 1887-88, published by Authority and printed by the Superintendent of Government Printing, Calcutta [Kolkata]. A copy of a letter from Colonel Edward Charles Ross, Political Resident A senior ranking political representative (equivalent to a Consul General) from the diplomatic corps of the Government of India or one of its subordinate provincial governments, in charge of a Political Residency. in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. and Her Britannic Majesty’s Consul-General for Fars, to Henry Mortimer Durand, Secretary to the Government of India (Foreign Department), dated 14 June 1888, is included in the report (folio 4), the original of which submitted the report to Government, under the following headings:

Part 1 (General Summary), submitted by Ross (folios 5-11), containing numbered summaries of local political affairs, and incidents or events of particular note for: 1) Muscat state; 2) Oman pirate coast; 3) El-Bahrain (referred to as Bahrain in the text); 4) El-Katr [Qatar]; 5) Nejd, El-Hasa [Al-Hasa]; 6) Fars and the Persian Coast, including Shiraz, Bushire and its districts, Lingah [Bandar-e Lengeh] and Bunder Abbas [Bandar-e ʻAbbās]; 7) Persian Arabistan; and 8) Persian Baluchistan. The report also includes summaries for: 9) Climatic observations, recorded by the observatory at Bushire, and 10) British actions against the slave trade. Appendix A contains tabulated meteorological data for the year, supplied by the Bushire observatory.

Part 2 ( Administration Report of the Muscat Political Agency An office of the East India Company and, later, of the British Raj, headed by an agent. for the year 1887-88 ), submitted by A. S. Jayakar, Surgeon Major in Charge of the Political Agency An office of the East India Company and, later, of the British Raj, headed by an agent. (folios 12-18), containing a summary of affairs at Muscat, under the headings: political affairs, official changes, and slave trade. Appendix A to Part 2 is a sketch of the career of Seyyid Sultan bin Ahmed, the Imam Muscat, written by Colonel Samuel Barrett Miles.

Part 3 ( Report on the trade of South Persia for the year 1887-88 ), submitted by Ross and dated 15 April 1888 (folios 18-30). The report comprises a short summary of the year’s trade, with notes on: exports (opium, tobacco, cereals); imports (Manchester [cotton] goods, sugar, metals and rice); shipping; exchange; custom; and notes supplied by Lieutenant Vaughan on the economic state at Yezd [Yazd], where Ross advocates the establishment of a British agent. Appendix A comprises tabulated data on import, exports and revenue, in the Gulf ports of Bushire, Bandar-e Lengeh, Bandar-e ʻAbbās, Bahrain and the Arab (Oman) coast. An index to the trade tables can be found at folio 20.

Part 4 ( Muscat trade report for the year 1887-88 ), submitted by Jayakar (folios 30-36), comprising a brief summary of the year’s trade at Muscat, and also containing tabulated data on imports and exports at Muscat (listed by commodity), and the nationality and average tonnage of vessels visiting Muscat.

Extent and format
1 volume (34 folios)
Arrangement

The report is arranged into four numbered parts, with lettered appendices containing further reports and statistical data coming after each part. The General Summary is further organised into numbered sections, and further divided into paragraphs which are also numbered, from 1 to 99.

Physical characteristics

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, on number 3, and ends on the last folio, on number 36.

Pagination: The volume contains an original typed pagination sequence.

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English in Latin script
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‘Administration report of the Persian Gulf Political Residency and Muscat Political Agency for 1887-88.’ [‎7r] (11/72), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/V/23/53, No 245, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023626725.0x00000d> [accessed 24 April 2024]

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