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'Military Report on South-West Persia, Including the Provinces of Khuzistan (Arabistan), Luristan, and Part of Fars' [‎70] (105/466)

The record is made up of 1 volume (390 pages). It was created in 1885. It was written in English. The original is part of the British Library: Printed Collections.

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70
collected. Cold is felt towards the end of September^ and snow falls In Beeem.
ber, January^ and February [Kenneir), Snow sometimes falls in April (1884);
but it is considered most unusual. For eight months the climate of the
districts about Hamadan, Bdrujird, and Karmanshah is delightful. The cold
of the winter months is severe and firewood is scarce. Hamadan was the
favourite summer residence of the Persian monarchs [see page* 13, 18, 826).
The large towns of Irak are surrounded by mud walls of no thickness,
„ . n- ? and generally in a bad state of repair, flanked at close
Towns,dwellings, &c. intevvzh. They are probably not meant for defence, a!
banquettes, loopholes, &c., do not exist, but simply as a means of keeping
out Bakhtian raiders, who, within recent years, carried their forays thus far.
In both towns and villages the streets are narrow and dirty; wood is so
scarce to the south of Kum that the roof of the houses are generally domed
(see pages 15, 239, 246).
The houses are low and are constructed of mud; a few are built of brick
or stone. Stone abounds everywhere, but is not used [see page 16),
To each house is attached a small courtyard surrounded by a blank wall
A few of the better class of houses are two-storied with handsome recep-
tion-rooms, the sides of which, facing the court-yard, are closed in with large
sash windows of painted glass. Their walls and ceilings are adorned with
paintings, rich patterns in plaster, and are inlaid with small looking glasses.
Such a house will cover considerable area, and be divided off into its pub
lic and private apartments, each with its separate court-yard ornamented with
jets d'eau and parterres, generally wanting in flowers.
As this report only touches upon Irak Ajami in so far as it borders South-
West Persia to the north, and in that the roads travelled between Burujird and
Kum, Kum and Gulpaigan, Gulpaigan and Bdrujird and Isfahan traverse it,
no further mention will be made of it.
L uristan.
Details,
The great range, distant thirty miles from the Shustar-Dizful road, the
hills of Luristan, attain an elevation of eight or twelve thousand feet above the
Geology sea ^ an( ^ ^ ear a general direction towards the north-west
and south-east. Its rocky masses belong entirely to the
cretaceous and lower tertiary series, rising in huge, elongated saddles of
compact, altered limestone parallel to each other. At intervals, where tbe
elevating force, which produced the present configuration of this region, has
acted with extreme intensity, the continuity of the beds became broken, and
masses of rock were left standing isolated, with precipitous escarpments,
presenting retreats accessible only to its inhabitants. <c Diz 33 is the name
applied to natural fortresses of this kind, which frequently bear on their
summits acres of rich grass, and springs of delicious
water, whither a native chief with his adherents can
retire in safety in times of need, and defend their difficult passes with a hand
ful of men against the whole power of the Persian Government itseli.
Superimposed on the harder limestone rocks are beds of a softer nature—marls,
rivalling the coloured sands of our own Isle of Wight in their brilliant
and variegated aspect,—vast piles of amorphous gypsum dazzling the eye with
its excessive whiteness,—and successive layers of red sands alternating witu
gravel. These formations follow the contortions of the harder crystalline
limestones, lie at extraordinary angles on the slopes of the saddles, and ni
up the hot, feverish valleys between them.

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Military Report on South-West Persia, Including the Provinces of Khuzistan (Arabistan), Luristan, and Part of Fars by Major and Bt. Lieut-Col. Mark S. Bell, V.C., R.E.

Publication Details: Simla: Government Central Branch Press, 1885. Prepared in the Intelligence Branch of the Quarter Master General's Department in India.

Physical Description: 3 maps in end pockets. 41 plates.

Extent and format
1 volume (390 pages)
Arrangement

This volume contains a table of contents giving chapter headings and page references.

Physical characteristics

Dimensions: 245mm x 150mm

Written in
English in Latin script
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'Military Report on South-West Persia, Including the Provinces of Khuzistan (Arabistan), Luristan, and Part of Fars' [‎70] (105/466), British Library: Printed Collections, V 8685, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023694939.0x00006a> [accessed 29 March 2024]

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