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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[ 28 ]
distribution of the Telegraph subsidies, is vested in the Director-General of the
Indo-European Telegraph Department at Karachi, to whom a special salary
of £120 is paid by the Government of India for the purpose. It. has been
proposed to us that this charge should be transferred to the
Political Agent
A mid-ranking political representative (equivalent to a Consul) from the diplomatic corps of the Government of India or one of its subordinate provincial governments, in charge of a Political Agency.
at Maskat; and for the present we reserve our opinion as to the advantages
of such a change. It would be eminently desirable that Maskat should be
connected by cable with Jask, since at jwesent there is no telegraphic communi
cation with any part of Oman. But this too is a question that must wait for
a later solution.
85. Sir M. Durand has proposed that all British Consular officers in Persia
should have a small guard of Indian troopers similar to those now maintained
at Meshed. We are not clear that such a proposal is at present desirable, and
are apprehensive that it might lead to movements on the part of Itussia, for
which not even the necessities of a plague cordon could be pleaded in justifi
cation, and which would scarcely be distinguishable from armed occupation.
In this respect we re-echo the opinion which the Government of India expressed
to Your Lordship as recently as August 10th, 1898, to the effect that Indian
interests are sufficiently involved to justify us in furnishing protective detach
ments, as we are now doing at Jask and Charbar, for Telegraph stations on the
coast; but that our military provision must, for the present, be limited to this
service.
86. Her Majesty’s Minister also recommends the grant of a supply of
travelling tents to every British officer in Persia. As the majority of these,
under the proposed arrangements, will be upon the Indian list, the suggested
outlay would require in such cases to be met from Indian funds. W T e do not
think that any general rule is required. We are in the habit of including
camp equipment in the outfit of any officer whose duties require him to travel.
We may observe, however, that tents are more likely to be required in out-of-
the-way parts of the country than they are along the main roads, where the
existing chapar or postal service, although destitute of almost every superficial
merit, is nevertheless more rapid and therefore as a rule more convenient than
travelling by caravan.
87. Lastly, Sir M. Durand makes certain recommendations with regard
to the improvement and better organisation of the Telegraph service in Persia
both native and European. We concur with his suggestion that no oppor
tunity should be lost of getting the Persian wires, which are abominably
mismanaged, transferred to our control. He then revives a suggestion, of which
much has been heard during the last 20 years, that we should << organise for
political purposes” the existing establishment of the Indo-European Telegraph
Department; although we do not gather very clearly from his despatch°what
are the precise measures recommended for that purpose. The last occasion
on which a somewhat similar proposal appears to have been made was in 1887
wlien a Memorandum, dated April 27th of that year, was drawn 'up by Sir
Murdoch Smith, who was despatched on a semi-political Mission to Persia' and
who recommended that capable military officers should be scattered about the
country nominally m charge of the Telegraph stations, but in reality as
political agents In a despatch, dated June 24th, 1887, the Government of
India expressed a general, but guarded, approval of the scheme. In our opinion
there are two sides to the question, for each of which much can be said 1 THs
surprising to us that an institution and a service that have exercised s'uch an
influence and are so generally popular in Persia, as the Indo-European Tele-mnh
Department, should not have been attended with more visible political effect
On the other band, m proportion as the working of the line has become svstem-
atiscd, so there has been less call for the tvue of EnoW™ ( 0me ^ vstem
required during earlier and more troubled days The^woA aftbe m‘° T
of the stations does not admit of much leisure on the part o/ the «m J n y
and line inspectors. At the more important posts we beheve L a
able, though unobtrusive, influence is already exerted by the sLorfnr nffL 6 '’’
and we are not convinced that the appeamnee upon The IneTa numW
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
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- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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'Seistan' [336v] (674/782), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, Mss Eur F111/352, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100069721606.0x00004d> [accessed 28 June 2026]
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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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