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‘Military report on south-west Persia, including the provinces of Khúzistán (Arabistan), Luristán and part of Fars.’ [‎49r] (102/470)

The record is made up of 1 volume (231 folios). It was created in 1885. 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
summits of these hills are usually tabular; their sides furrowed by innumer
able torrents, which sweep down with irresistible violence during the rainy
season. They are consequently precipitous, and frequently inaccessible to
heavily laden-animals (see pages 42 8f 43).
The country rising from the coast in a succession of tablelands, it follows
that the southern and western slopes of these hills are longer than the northern
and eastern.
They are seldom inhabited to any considerable extent, except during the
winter, when rain water accumulates in the bottoms, and the hills are then
clothed with grass and flowers. The soil is favourable to the growth of corn
and barley.
To the south and west of the low hills are those vast plains known by
the Persians as Arabistan, stretching in one almost
c»ul plains. interrupted flat to the Tigris, the Shatt-al-Arab, and the
sea (see pages 40, 48 ).
Detailed descriptions of the inhabitants of the above hilly country, of their
villages, productions, cultivation, &c., are given later on.
The coast plains and their inhabitants have already been described.
Irak Ajami*
To the north of Luristan lies Irak Ajami, on the line traversed between
Hilly country north Khoramabad and Kum, a more or less mountainous prov-
of Luristan. ince consisting generally of huge rounded undulations,
reaching to heights of 700' to 1,000'above the general elevation of the plateau
(5,800 to 6,000'). The Roswand range is an exception to this rule.
Pew of the peaks are within the range of perpetual snow. In the valley
the soil is often a rich clay or a shaly clay ; the chief rock met with is shale.
The range extending from Khonsar to Mount Alwand is granitic; that to its
south from Karmanshah, by the Shuturun-Kuh, Kuh-Zard, Kuh-Sabz, to Kuh-
Dina is cretaceous.
The mule tracks across the undulations present few difficulties (see
Road Reports No. 1, 2, 3, and 3a).
The general run of the hills is north-west and south-east.
To the north of the fertile valleys described on page 14 as stretch
ing between Burujud and Isfahan lies a mountainous but fertile region
composed of the huge rounded undulations of shale and clay above described,
and beyond them to the north lies the Roswand range (see pages 226 to 233)\
To the north of this lower and barren range are spacious and fertile valleys,
bounded in their turn by other mountains of lesser altitude, and separated from
each other by spurs of hills which shoot from the Roswand across the valleys.
These latter, taken in succession form north-west to south-east, form the
districts of Kazzos, Kamarah, and Gulpaigan; while to the north of them,
beyond the third range of hills, are Malair, Chaharru, Sultanabad, Faraghan,
and MahaNut (see pages 233 to 245). This'successive lowering of the moun
tain chains northwards is repeated southwards between the main kernel, i.e.,
Shuturun Kuh, Sabz-Kuh, Kuh-i-Dina, and the Gulf.
For climate (seepages 13, 237, and Road Reports No. 2, 3, 3a).
The spring is a delightful season of the year, but cold towards itscommence-
Climate ment, as the snow melts late and a keen north wind blovrs
from the mountains. The heat sets in towards the
middle of June, and lasts till the middle of August, when the harvest is
* The ancient Media, originally peopled by the Turanian Scyths, an important people 1,500
years B.c.

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Content

Report marked strictly confidential, prepared in the Intelligence Branch of the Quarter Master General’s Department in India, by the Assistant Quarter Master General, Major and Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel Mark Sever Bell, Royal Engineers. The volume was published by the Government Central Branch Press, Simla, 1885.

The contents of the volume are as follows:

  • part I, a narrative description of a journey from India to Muhammerah [Khorramshahr], through to the Luristán [Lorestān] hills, to Kúm [Qom]; from Kúm to Gulpaigán [Golpāyegān ], Chaman-i-Sultán [Chaman Solţān], Ali-Gúdar [Alīgūdarz], Imámzádá-Ishmail [Emāmzādeh Esmā‘īl], and the Zaindarúd River [Zāyandeh Rūd] to Isfahán; from Isfahán through the Kúhgehlú [Kohgīlūyeh] hills to Behbahán and Bandar-Dilám [Bandar-e Deylam]; from Bandar-Dilám to Bushire
  • part II, a detailed account of southwest Persia, compiled from Sever’s own observations and other available sources
  • part III, commercial considerations. A further section in this chapter on strategic observations, which is mentioned on the contents page and marked as secret, is not present in the volume
  • part IV, detailed road reports
  • appendix A, road reports, Isfahan to Shústar [Shūshtar], Shústar to Shíráz [Shīrāz], compiled in 1881 by Captain Henry Lake Wells, Assistant Director of Persian Telegraphs, with additional annotations by Bell
  • appendix B, a list of plant specimens collected in Luristán during April and May 1884
  • appendix C, extracts of a paper on the geology of the Turko-Persian frontier, written by William Kennett Loftus, June 1854
  • appendix D, meteorological observations at Bushire, from 20 March to 20 June 1885

The volume includes eight maps, two photographic plates, and illustrations throughout (topographical, architectural, anthropological). The two photographic plates and some of the maps are of an earlier date than the volume’s publication date of 1885.

Extent and format
1 volume (231 folios)
Arrangement

A contents page (f 7) and index (ff 222-226) refer to the volume’s original printed pagination.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the front cover with 1, and terminates at the inside back cover with 233; 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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‘Military report on south-west Persia, including the provinces of Khúzistán (Arabistan), Luristán and part of Fars.’ [‎49r] (102/470), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/MIL/17/15/9, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100048990082.0x000067> [accessed 24 April 2024]

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