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'ROUTES IN PERSIA. SECTION III' [‎142v] (289/739)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (367 folios). It was created in 1898. 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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£80^
No. UZ—contdl
Kum to Burujird, via Sultanahad,
No.
of
■tage.
D istances
in miles.
&EMAEKa.
Names of stages.
Interme
diate.
Total.
7
DOJITFT
18i
usi
Cross an 8-arch bridge over the Doab river ; 2
miles village of Parr or Farr; on the opposite 1
side of the stream Hissar, 3| miles Tare ; large
village caravansarai, mosque, and 5-arch bridge
over the stream which flows south, here a gorge
between Mt. Rasthend (?) on left ami Shah-
zindah on right ; 8| miles village of Harun
(6,290 ')i Thence to 15 miles in valley of Kezzaz -
(?); 16| miles village of Salian ; 40 houses
(7,250'). Off road from Dojuft village of l>eh-
i-Kasim Khan.
8
Burujied
5,430'.
19f
133i
Pass village Khushkidar. Ridge (7,490') and
village of Saranjah. Beyond, road crosses ridge"
7,450', a stream, and passes villages Gawnis-Khun
(F), Komar (?), Khun and Kala. Road then
passes villages Darah, Nakdi, Kala Sheni, and'
Kala Madiyar. At miles village of Sar-
darah (7,100'), situated on a rivulet flowing to
Malair. Beyond this pass 4 ridges (7,150',
7,100', 6,510', and 6,150'). At 17| miles vil
lage G a wale (?),-
The following account gives a clearer idea of the
last 32 miles of the road, viz., from Hissar
(Schindler)
Immediately on leaving Hissar, we struck into tlie hills on th& '
left for 3 farsakhs, and then ascended a short steep hill, and"
2 miles beyond began ascending a very high hill by a winding
road. Prom its summit extensive view of villages and -
cultivation in all directions, the latter reaching to the very
tops of the hills. We then moved on to the opposite hillg»-
and from the top of the last one got a sight of Burujird, ■
distant 12 or 14 mites. After this the road winds round a
number of small hills and terminates by leading into the level
and well cultivated plain below, in which the large and popu
lous city Burujird is built.
Anotlier account of tbe route from stage 5 is as follows
Leave town and cross river by stone bridge (100'
long by 8' broad). Road through fertile valley
of Kallaru ; ascend from latter by stony gorge
to water-shed of valley at 7 miles : at 12 miles pass
Miniku, large village. 3 miles distant to right ;
then descend passing several villages, the country
becoming somewhat less barren, road hard and
good. Road then goes along 1 the Ab-i-Tola
valley, the stream being crossed by a bridge (10'
wide and 200' long). Ford anotlier stream to Tola
in cultivated country.

About this item

Content

The volume is a Government of India official publication entitled Routes in Persia. Section III. Compiled in the Intelligence Branch of the Quarter Master General's Department in India (Simla: printed at the Government Central Printing Office, 1898).

The volume contains details of all land routes (numbered 1-247) in Persia starting from Russian territory and extending south as far as a line drawn from Karmanshah [Kermānshāh] south-eastwards through Burujird [Borūjerd], Isfahan [Eşfahān] and Yazd to Karman [Kermān], and thence north-east to Khabis [Khabīş] and Neh to Lash Juwain [Lāsh-e Juwayn].

The information given for each route comprises:

  • number of route;
  • place names forming starting point and destination of route;
  • authority and date;
  • number of stage;
  • names of stages;
  • distance in miles (intermediate and total);
  • remarks (including precise details of the route, general geographical information, and information on smaller settlements, local peoples, agriculture, condition of roads, access to water, supplies of wood, and other routes).

An appendix within the volume (folios 356-359) and two separately-stored sets of loose sheets (containing routes numbers 77 (a) and 140-A, folios 363-369) give information too late for incorporation in the body of the work.

The volume also contains pockets attached to the front and back inside covers for maps. These consist of an index map showing the limits of each of the three sections of Routes in Persia (folio 2) and an index map to the routes in Section III (folio 361). There is also a fold-out map of the route from Seistan [Sīstān] to Mashad on folio 232.

An ink stamp on the front cover records the confidential nature of the publication and that it was being transmitted for the information of His Excellency the Viceroy (Victor Alexander Bruce, 9th Earl of Elgin and 16th Earl of Kincardine) only.

Extent and format
1 volume (367 folios)
Arrangement

The volume contains an alphabetical cross index (folios 6-17), and an alphabetical index to names of places (folios 18-25).

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence commences at the front cover and terminates on the last page of the loose supplementary sheets (found in the small grey folder within the main folder); these numbers are written in pencil, are circled, and are 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.

Pagination: the volume also contains a printed pagination sequence.

Written in
English in Latin script
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'ROUTES IN PERSIA. SECTION III' [‎142v] (289/739), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, Mss Eur F111/371, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100024054421.0x000058> [accessed 29 March 2024]

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