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'Seistan' [‎388r] (777/782)

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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. .

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But-S T 1 hpHplp 7 •f 6 ?”i! 1 UP ° n thG st ^ te g lcal im P°rtance to India of Seistan.
it will ho J f G ^ 0W . g T ral . ly reco ^ ized here and in England,
Pii M t0 that a Russi 1 an railwa y through Eastern Persia to the
LT+on G ^ eans neit her more nor less than the final loss to Great Britain of
feeistan and that the recent declarations of the British Government as to our
interests in that quarter forbid me to believe that they would acquiesce in any
such calamity, lor my own part, if Persia were to hypothecate to Russia the
revenues of Seistan (a move which has recently been under contemplation,
but which I should regard as not less insulting to ourselves than would be to
Russia the hypothecation of the revenues of Meshed to Great Britain), or to
cede to Russia a commanding political position on that section of the border, I
should not hesitate to advise that the Persian Government be compelled to
cancel the arrangement. Such a peril can, however, be more opportunely
averted by a plain declaration of our views and intentions in advance, than by
threats or military movements afterwards.
15. Should a Russian naval port be constructed in the Gulf, and should
a Russian fleet (most likely in connection witli the French) be called into
existence in the Indian Ocean, it is impossible, either for the protection of our
trade, or for the safety of our own shores, that we could remain content with
the existing strength of the East India squadron. We should have to place
the ports on the eastern coasts of India in a state of more finished defence
than is at present the case. Our military and naval responsibilities would be
more than doubled in that direction.
16. The question would next arise how far Russia would find it compa
tible with her newly acquired political ascendency, that the main lines of
telegraphic communication between Great Britain and India should run through
Persian territory or beneath the waters of the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. . Even if she were
ready to leave them intact, should we be prepared to acquiesce in the control,
at a time of emergency, of these lines by a foreign and probably a hostile
power ?
17. It has been argued that, if Russia cannot in prudence be allowed a
port at the south-eastern end of the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. , owing to its close proximity
to Indian shores, and its patent challenge to Indian interests, we need entertain
no such scruples about a port nearer to the upper end. As I have previously
argued, a commercial port, as the terminus of a commercial railway, may be
rendered equally innocuous anywhere in the Gulf. But if it is to be a political
port, and the terminus of a political railway, then it is equally objectionable
wherever it be placed, and the mere geographical distance of a few hundred
miles, or one or two days steam, makes no difference in the situation. Political
control over Southern Persia can equally be disseminated from lines termi
nating at Mohammerah, Bushire, Bunder Abbas, or Chahbar. Whichever be
the naval base, the ships that lie there can equally menace Indian commerce,
Indian shipping, and Indian interests. Moreover, while at the near end of
the Gulf, a Russian railway to the sea would have the drawbacks already men
tioned of invading the British sphere of interest in Seistan and Persian Baluch
istan, of destroying British influence in those regions, and of directly menacing
the British-protected territories of the Khan of Kalat—a Russian railway to
the upper end, e.g., to Mohammerah on the Karun, would similarly traverse a
region (that inhabited by the Lur and Bakhtiari tribes) in which British
influence has hitherto remained uncontested, and where British enterprise has
established an adventurous and successful foothold, and would terminate in
a port which is owned by an Arab Sheikh whose family has been uniformly
friendly to the British power, and which commands the main channel of the
Shat-el-Arab or combined estuary of the Tigris and Euphrates. To concede such
a position to Russia would place the approach to Baghdad within her power,
and would extinguish the influence of Great Britain in Turkish Arabia A term used by the British officials to describe the territory roughly corresponding to, but not coextensive with, modern-day Iraq under the control of the Ottoman Empire. .
18. The international aspect of the acquisition by Russia of a port at
either end of the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. cannot be ignored. Such an incident could not
possibly stand alone. Under instructions from the Home Government, we

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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
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'Seistan' [‎388r] (777/782), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, Mss Eur F111/352, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100069721606.0x0000b4> [accessed 14 May 2024]

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