The record is made up of 1 file (388 folios). It was created in 17 Jan 1899-4 Apr 1904. 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. .
Transcription
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9
DEH
The villagers are of Gurgich and Sinjaram tribes.
—Three ploughs of cultivated land, 3 horses, 50 cattle, 24Q
sheep and goats, 9 camels, and 20 donkeys.
DEH BAKHTAL—
A village of 65 wattle and daub huts, situated on the Nahr-i»Alamdar in
the Mahal-i-Nahrui, and belonging to the Mahal of Sherifabad.
Resources .—Five ploughs of cultivated land, 50 cattle, 120 sheep and
goats, 4 camels, and 30 donkeys.
DEH BOZI, or BUZZL-
A village of 40 houses in the north of the Mahal-i-Sharaki, obtaining its
water-supply from the Rud-i-Hassinki.
Resources .— Four ploughs of cultivated land, 2 horses, 50 cattle, 1,000
sheep and goats, 5 camels and 15 donkeys.
DEH CHAKUL.—
A village of 70 wattle and daub huts in the north of Miankangi, belong
ing to the Mahal of Burj-i-Mirgul, and obtaining its water-supply from the
Nahr-i-Burj-i-Mirgul.
Resources .—Thirteen ploughs of cultivated land, 60 cattle, 120 sheep and
goats, and 20 donkeys.
DEH DIWANA.—
A village of 50 houses in the north-west of Sheb-i-Ab on the Nahr-i-
Landaki, close to the edge of the Naizar or Hamun.
The villagers are of the Sufi and Suri clans.
Resources .—Four ploughs of cultivated land, 30 cattle, 30 sheep and
goats, and 80 donkeys.
DEH DOST MOHAMMED.—
Is a village situated close to the frontier in the Miankangi district, and was
originally built by Ali Khan, father of the present Katkhuda, Dost
Mohammed, Chief of the Saruui Baluchisj but has been much extended and
improved by the latter.
Some excellent fruit gardens and fine willow trees give the village a
pleasing appearance, but it suffers from receiving its canal water-supply
rather late in the season. Originally the canal leading to Dek Dost
Mohammed was cut from the old Halmand, but of late years, owing to that
branch of the river bringing only a small supply, it has been connected with
another canal cut from the Rud-i-Parian.
There are a few merchants in the village, through which a fair amount
of trade passes into Afghan territory, making it one of the most prosperous
villages in Seistan.
Deh Dost Muhammad makes a good camping ground when the canal
water has reached the district.
Resources .—ploughs of cultivated land, 29 horses, 50 cows, 600
sheep and goats, and 60 donkeys.
DEH GAZMA.—
A village of 80 wattle and daub huts, belonging to the Mahal of Sherif
abad in the Nahrui district.
ihe inhabitants are of the Gurgich, Ushtarak, Allahdo and Shahuzai
clans.
Resources. —Four ploughs of cultivated land, 30 cattle, 180 sheep and -
goats, 6 camels, and 50 donkeys.
About this item
- Content
The file contains papers relating to Seistan [Sistan] and Persia [Iran].
The file includes printed copies of despatches from the Agent to the Governor-General of India and HM Consul-General for Khorasan and Seistan (Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Martindale Temple), to the Secretary to the Government of India Foreign Department, with enclosed despatches from Captain Percy Molesworth Sykes to the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (the Marquis of Salisbury). Skyes’s despatches regard matters including: Seistan; trade routes into South-East Persia; the boundary between Persia and Afghanistan, in relation to the River Helmund [Helmand] changing its course (in despatch No. 5, which includes four sketch maps, folios 12, 13, 14 and 15); Sykes’s journey to Birjand (in despatch No. 7, which includes a sketch map on folio 20); the ruling family of Kain, which also governed Seistan, Tabbas and Tun; Sykes’s journey from Seistan to Kerman [Kirman] (in despatch No. 11, which includes a sketch map); and the direct Kerman-Quetta caravan trade that Sykes was trying to establish.
The file also includes copies of the following papers:
- A despatch from Temple to the Secretary to the Government of India Foreign Department, enclosing a letter from Temple to Sir Henry Mortimer Durand (HM Minister, Tehran), with copies of enclosures, regarding the establishment of a Seistan and Kain consulate
- A letter from Charles Edward Pitman, Director General of Telegraphs, to the Secretary to the Government of India Public Works Department, enclosing a copy of a ‘Report on the Preliminary Survey of the Route for a Telegraph Line from Quetta to the Persian Frontier’ by H A Armstrong, Assistant Superintendent, Indian Telegraph Department, which includes six photographs of views along the route [Mss Eur F111/352, f 52; Mss Eur F111/352, f 53; Mss Eur F111/352, f 54; Mss Eur F111/352, f 55; Mss Eur F111/352, f 56; and Mss Eur F111/352, f 57], and a map showing the proposed route of the telegraph line [Mss Eur F111/352, f 59]
- Letters from Hugh Shakespear Barnes, Agent to the Governor-General in Baluchistan, to the Secretary to the Government of India Foreign Department, enclosing copies of the diary of the Political Assistant, Chagai, for the weeks ending 16 February, 28 February, and 8 March 1900
- Diary No. 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11 and 12 of Major-General George Frederick Chenevix-Trench, HM Consul for Seistan (Diary No. 6 includes a sketch map, folio 86)
- A copy of a ‘Report on Reconnaissances Made while Attached to the Seistan Arbitration Commission’ by W A Johns, Deputy Consulting Engineer for Railways, Bombay
- A copy of the report ‘Notes on Persian Seistan’, compiled by Captain Edward Abadie Plunkett, and issued by the Government of India Intelligence Branch, Quarter-Master General’s Department
- Two copies of map signed by Plunkett titled ‘Persian Seistan-Cultivated Area’ [Mss Eur F111/352, f 270]
- A booklet entitled ‘Notes on the Leading Notables, Officials, Merchants, and Clergy of Khorasan, Seistan, Kain, and Kerman.’
- Printed copies of letters from the Government of India Foreign Department to the Secretary of State for India (Lord George Francis Hamilton), relating to the maintenance of British interests in Persia, dated 4 September 1899 and 7 November 1901 (the former with an enclosure of a minute by the Viceroy on Seistan).
- Extent and format
- 1 file (388 folios)
- Arrangement
The papers are arranged in approximate chronological order from the front to the rear of the file.
- Physical characteristics
Foliation: the foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the front cover with 1, and terminates at the inside back cover with 390; 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. The file contains one foliation anomaly, f 301A
- Written in
- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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Copyright: How to use this content
- Reference
- Mss Eur F111/352
- Title
- 'Seistan'
- Pages
- front, front-i, 2r:51v, 58r:58v, 60r:112r, 113r:125v, 147r:218r, 218r, 219r:269v, 271r:301v, 301Ar, 301Av, 302r:388v, 389v:390r, 389r, back
- Author
- East India Company, the Board of Control, the India Office, or other British Government Department
- Usage terms
- Open Government Licence
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