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'Diary of a Tour in the Persian Gulf and in Turkish Arabia December 1906, by Lieutenant-Colonel Malleson Assistant Quarter Master General, Intelligence Branch, Division of the Chief of the Staff.' [‎17r] (33/46)

The record is made up of 1 volume (23 folios). It was created in 1907. 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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27
Babylon.
The excavations.
At one in the afternoon we arrived on the
hanks of the Euphrates, where we put up
with the German savants who are employed
on the excavations of Babylon. They
have been working away here for eight
years, and the professor in charge says
that there is enough work for another
thirty years. They have accordingly built
themselves a very comfortable house, which
looks like a small fortress—to guard against
predatory Arabs—and have settled down
here for what is practically their life’s
work. Later on we had an opportunity
of seeing what that work was, as we were
conducted all over the excavations. What
has been done at present is the uncover
ing of the palace and temples of Nebuchad
nezzar and of an older palace built by that
monarch’s father. The remains, after being
covered up for some 2,500 years, are really
in a wonderful state of preservation, but
on the whole I was somewhat disappointed.
One reads such marvellous accounts of
the greatness and size of the Babylonian
buildings that it comes as a surprise to find
that they were somewhat mean in appear
ance and restricted in area. Most of the
information regarding them comes to the
multitude from the Bible, and that perhaps
explains why the Jews thought so much
of buildings which to us appear almost
insignificant. When we remember that
the greatest building of the Chosen People,
the Temple of Solomon, was little larger
than the dissenting chapel to be seen in
an ordinary English village, one can realize
how the considerably larger edifices of
Nebuchadnezzar must have struck them,
thereby giving rise to an exaggeration
which is somewhat misleading. It is evi
dent, too, in the opinion of the savants,
that the account given by Herodotus
of the greatness of Babylon is much
exaggerated. Visiting the place a hundred
years after its destruction by Cyrus the
Great, he must necessarily have depended
largely on hearsay. If his accounts were
true, Babylon, with its walls 380 feet high
and its other marvellous features, must not
only have contained engineering feats im
possible to our ideas but have been ac
tually larger as regards population than
the combined cities of London and Paris
as we know them to-day. Our German
iconoclasts have swept away many pre
vious myths and fictions. What is certain
is that a highly civilised community exist
ed in this region from an extremely early
period. Not in Babylon itself, but some
way to the south, there are remains which
testify to a civilization dating back to at
least 3,800 B.C., if not earlier. It is known
that there has been from the earliest times

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Content

The diary, written by Lieutenant-Colonel Wilfrid Malleson, comprises daily entries and accounts of his travels from 3 to 29 December 1906.

The diary commences on his arrival at sea off Maskat [Muscat] before recounting the journey to Basra via Bushire and Koweit [Kuwait] and on to Baghdad, Babylon, Seleucia [Minţaqat as Salūqīyat al Atharīyah] and Ctesiphon.

Each entry contains descriptions of places visited and notes on trade, climate and local customs along with accounts of conversations with people; in addition, there are observations on other matters such as quarantine arrangements, pilgrimages and local shortages of labour.

Printed at the Government Monotype Press, Simla 1907.

Extent and format
1 volume (23 folios)
Arrangement

The report comprises daily entries arranged chronologically by date.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence commences at the front cover with 1, and terminates at the inside back cover with 23; 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 an original printed pagination sequence.

Written in
English in Latin script
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'Diary of a Tour in the Persian Gulf and in Turkish Arabia December 1906, by Lieutenant-Colonel Malleson Assistant Quarter Master General, Intelligence Branch, Division of the Chief of the Staff.' [‎17r] (33/46), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/20/66, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100025648363.0x000022> [accessed 6 June 2024]

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