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'Collection of journals and reports received from Captain the Hon G C Napier, Bengal Staff Corps, on special duty in Persia, 1874. Includes revised index. London: HMSO, 1876' [‎41r] (85/409)

The record is made up of 1 volume (201 folios). It was created in 1876. 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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69
Hi;
)U8 prej4
^k%
^tliesji
: ’l Arvatt
^ Ini
Tettali an
'eryfarft#
heinevitjHt
! kid oitli
Mble tkii
icmtoteii
lever siliii,
0 Mem, ml
! b DOtjS
ith Persia,}
ntiments ii
it tkt Sofls
id referred 6
cohiD,ra
1 had visitei
le hadlatelt
sians for i
its, carried ef
ohe Khanb
ini and Hi
'hat along th
He ®
is men a*
d require li
ffaspoweri.
f'riendljci'
through li
i, had bee®
at a very 1«
jf obtaining'
if conuni®'
j assist ffle®
a r upon h»
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r as Goof)
of his inability to comply with my request for guards on the Gurgan
route. This produced some hesitation, and he desired me to wait till
the next day when he would have reports as to the state of the roads.
This I of course agreed to. With reference to the rumour that
the Persian Government had made over the Attrek Yemoots to
Russia, I learnt that there was a certain amount of foundation for
it. The Russian Governor, Lamakyn, had visited Asterabad and Lamakyn’s
conferred with the Governor, Suleyman Khan, and had suggested '” sit to
the transfer of the Yamoots, but being met by refusal had referred Astera a ‘
to his own Government and there the matter rested. The Ye
moots live for the most part on the Russian side, and cultivate
lands on the Persian, paying tribute to neither party. With Eelkhani’s
regard to Tekkah politics I found the chief of opinion that it
was necessary for the Persian Government at once to take some question,
measures to secure them, and also believed that conciliation was
the most advisable policy, and he himself the best man to carry it
out.
17 th November. Bujnoord. — Further news regarding the
security of the roads being, as the Khan pretends, unsatisfactory,
he has sent me the required acknowledgment of his inability to
give me guards by the Gurgan route; sending me also the cus
tomary present of a horse which I declined to receive. Not that
I had any great cause to complain of his conduct, for he had acted
throughout, with slight exception, with the greatest frankness, and
could hardly be expected under the circumstances to comply with
my requests.
It would have been, I believe quite possible without the chief’s Objections to
assistance to obtain safe conduct either with or without payment anwngsuhe
from some of the Turkomans at Bujnoord, and I might have Turkomans,
visited both the Akhal and the Yamoot, but the difficulties increased an( i accepting
on a nearer approach, and having been left a clear discretion by taiTty^Tthis
Mr. Thomson, I deemed it advisable not to make the attempt, time.
By accepting their hospitality or even travelling amongst them, I
should have confirmed the Turkomans in the belief, which I found
they already had, that I had come charged with some mission to
them, or that my Government was prepared to sympathise with
and assist them against their European enemy. Every man of
them held the commonly entertained idea of the rivalry between
the two Governments, and the appearance among them of a
British officer would have been almost equivalent to the holding
out a distinct pledge of assistance. It seemed to me to be quite
beyond my instructions and the object of my journey to appear
in the character of an envoy or accredited agent among the tribes,
and as their guest I could only have appeared as such. The gain
too seemed to me comparatively trifling. I was already well in
formed as to the position and foreign relations of the tribes
from intercourse with the people themselves, and had acquired
a fair knowledge of the geography of the upper Attrek and
Akhal.
The language of the Turkomans themselves and their anxiety
for recognition, if not assistance, from the British Government

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Content

Reprint of Collection of journals and reports received from Captain the Hon. G C Napier, Bengal Staff Corps, on special duty in Persia. 1874, with a revised index at pp 348-355 (folios 181-185). A copy of the original index is present at folios 186-200.

A letter from the Under Secretary of State for India to the Under Secretary of State for War has been pasted into the front of the volume (folios 2-3), noting that two copies of the revised version have been forwarded for the use of the Intelligence Department.

The volume contains ten documents written by George Campbell Napier, and compiled by the Political and Secret Department of the 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. . The documents included are as follows:

1. Report of the proceedings in regard to the Khaff [Khvāf] raid;

2. Diary kept during tour in Khorassan [Razavi Khorasan];

3. Observations on the topography of the Eastern Alburz tract, with notices on a few places of interest on the Persian Border;

4. Memorandum on the condition and external relations of the Turkoman tribes of Merve [Mary];

5. Reports on events in Herat and Turkistan. Diary for March 1875;

6. Report on the present situation in Seistan [Sīstān] in relation to late arbitration;

7. Report on the Perso-Afghan border;

8. Notes on the political condition of the population of Eastern Khorassan;

9. Notes on the condition of the districts, chiefships, and tribes of the north-eastern frontier of Persia;

10. Memorandum on the relations of Russia and Persia with the Turkoman tribes of the Attrek Frontier.

At the back of the volume (folio 201) is a fold-out map of the northern frontier of Khorassan, with parts of Irak [Iraq] and Mazandaran [Māzandarān].

Extent and format
1 volume (201 folios)
Arrangement

A table of contents can be found at folio 5v.

The revised index is found at folios 181-185; a copy of the original index is also present at folios 186-200.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the inside front cover with 1, and terminates at the inside back cover with 203; 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 file also contains an original printed pagination sequence.

Written in
English in Latin script
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'Collection of journals and reports received from Captain the Hon G C Napier, Bengal Staff Corps, on special duty in Persia, 1874. Includes revised index. London: HMSO, 1876' [‎41r] (85/409), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/20/229, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100037551006.0x000056> [accessed 23 April 2024]

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