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‘Seistan Persia & Seistan’ [‎222r] (451/617)

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The record is made up of 2 volumes (301 folios). It was created in 22 Jun 1896-3 Mar 1900. 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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[ V ]
during the summer at the capital of the province, which is within his official
area of jurisdiction, should be given a further trial. Colonel Wilson in 1895
and Colonel Meade in 1898 spent the summer months at Shiraz, hut were
compelled to hire house accommodation at their own expense. If these visits
are made recurrent, we are inclined to think that, as no suitable house appears
to he open either to purchase or to rent, a site should he purchased and a house
erected thereon. To this suggestion also we will revert. Shiraz is a place of
considerable importance; and were it not for the great influence that has for
long been exercised there by the officials of the Indo-European Telegraph
Department, British interests must have suffered from the neglect to which
they have hitherto been exposed.
19. The districts lying to. the east of Ispahan and Shiraz contain the
important cities and trade-centres of Yezd and Kerman, connected by one of
the principal postal and caravan tracks of Persia. Both of these towns and
districts lie south of the natural line of division between Northern and Southern
Persia; and in both British commercial and political influence has, in recent
years, been actively vindicated. In September 1893, Mr. Pergusson, the
Manager of the local branch of the Imperial Bank, was appointed unpaid
Vice-Consul/ Sir M. Durand now suggests that a Vice-Consul, if appointed to
Bunder Abbas, might pass his summer at Yezd, where it is no doubt intrinsi
cally desirable that British commercial interests should be represented by some
one not engaged in business or trade. We will for the moment reserve our
comments upon this suggestion. At Kerman, which is the capital of an
important province, and the seat of a Governor-General, the appointment of
a British Consul, which was first sanctioned under exceptional circumstances
in the case of Captain Sykes in 1891, has at frequent intervals since, the
latest being our despatch of August 10th, 1898, been the subject of discussion
between Her Majesty’s Government and the Government of India. The
present position is this, that for 5 years the Government of India have expressed
their willingness to contribute one-half of the cost of the Kerman Consulate up
to a limit of Rs. 6,000 per annum. The views of the Foreign Office upon
this proposal, which was communicated to it by Your Lordship on September
21st, 1898, have not yet been received by us. Sir M. Durand now proposes
that this Consulate should be made permanent, and that possibly a native
agent under its orders should he sent to Bampur. Before discussing these pro
posals, we think it advisable to analyse the larger issues raised by the questions
of Seistan and the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. .
20. Concerning Seistan, its importance and the present position there, we
refer Your Lordship to a Minute which has been written by the Viceroy, who
has made a special study of the question, and which is enclosed with this
despatch. The facts enumerated by him are, we think, sufficient to show that
Seistan is, by reason of its geographical position in relation both to North
Khorasan, to Western Afghanistan, to British Baluchistan, and to the Persian
Gulf, a position of no small strategical importance. Seistan is the present
meeting point of the advanced pioneers of British and Russian influence.
Perhaps on the whole, owing to recent activity on our pait, the British position
and chances are the more hopeful. It is essential in the future, for reasons
which have been argued in the Viceroy’s Minute, that Seistan should he retained
in the British zone. It is fortunately not too late to secure that consummation.
The steps which should be taken with that object will be examined when ne
formulate our final recommendations at the close of this despatch.
21. South of Seistan lies the still imperfectly known district of Persian
Baluchistan. Every year this province is being brought into closer contact
with British associations, partly from the visits of British officers, partly from
the wide-spreading influence exercised by the Nushki-Seistan Trade route,
still more from the close connections, political and racial, prevailing between
the inhabitants of the two sides of the Perso-Baluch border—a condition of
affairs which is likely to be confirmed by the inevitable increase of British
influence in the dominions of the Khan of Kalat.
[ 7 ]
during the summer at the capital of the province, which is within his official
area of jurisdiction, should be given a further trial. Colonel Wilson in 1895
and Colonel Meade in 1898 spent the summer months at Shiraz, but were
compelled to hire house accommodation at their own expense. If these visits
are made recurrent, we are inclined to think that, as no suitable house appears
to be open either to purchase or to rent, a site should he purchased and a house
erected thereon. To this suggestion also we will revert. Sturaz is a place of
considerable importance; and were it not for the great influence that has for
long been exercised there by the officials of the Indo-European Telegraph
Department, British interests must have suffered from the neglect to which
they have hitherto been exposed.
19. The. districts lying to. the east of Ispahan and Shiraz contain the
important cities and trade-centres of Yezd and Kerman, connected by one of
the principal postal and caravan tracks of Persia. Both of these towns and
districts lie south of the rmtural line of division between Northeimand Southern
Persia; and in both British commercial and political influence has, in recent
years, been actively vindicated. In September 1893, Mr. Pergusson, the
Manager of the local branch of the Imperial Bank, was appointed unpaid
Vice-Consul/v^Sir M. Durand now suggests that a Yice-Consul, if appointed to
Bunder Abbas, might pass his summer at Yezd, where it is no doubt intrinsi
cally desirable that British commercial interests should be represented by some
one not engaged in business or trade. We will for the moment reserve our
comments upon this suggestion. At Kerman, which is the capital of an
important province, and the seat of a Governor-General, the appointment of
a British Consul, which was first sanctioned under exceptional circumstances
in the case of Captain Sykes in 1891, has at frequent intervals since, the
latest being our despatch of August 10th, 1898, been the subject of discussion
between Her Majesty’s Government and the Government of India. The
present position is this, that for 5 years the Government of India have expressed
their willingness to contribute one-half of the cost of the Kerman Consulate up
to a limit of Rs. 6,000 per annum. The views of the Poreign Office upon
this proposal, which was communicated to it by Your Lordship on September
21st, 1898, have not yet been received by us. Sir M. Durand now proposes
that this Consulate should be made permanent, and that possibly a native
agent under its orders should be sent to Bampur. Before discussing these pro
posals, we think it advisable to analyse the larger issues raised by the questions
of Seistan and the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. .
20. Concerning Seistan, its importance and the present position there, we
refer Your Lordship to a Minute which has been written by the Viceroy, who
has made a special study of the question, and which is enclosed with this
despatch. The facts enumerated by him are, we think, sufficient to show that
Seistan is, by reason of its geographical position in relation both to North
Khorasan, to Western Afghanistan, to British Baluchistan, and to the Persian
Gulf, a position of no small strategical importance. Seistan is the present
meeting point of the advanced pioneers of British and Russian influence.
Perhaps on the whole, owing to recent activity on our part, the British position
and chances are the more hopeful. It is essential in the future, for reasons
which have been argued in the Viceroy’s Minute, that Seistan should be retained
in the British zone. It is fortunately not too late to secure that consummation.
The steps which should be taken with that object wdll be examined when we
formulate our final recommendations at the close of this despatch.
21. South of Seistan lies the still imperfectly known district of Persian
Baluchistan. Every year this province is being brought into closer contact
with British associations, partly from the visits of British officers, partly from
the wide-spreading influence exercised by the Nushki-Seistan Trade route,
still more from the close connections, political and racial, prevailing between
the inhabitants of the two sides of the Perso-Baluch border—a condition of
affairs which is likely to be confirmed by the inevitable increase of British
influence in the dominions of the Khan of Kalat.

About this item

Content

The volumes contain papers relating to Persia [Iran], including Seistan, and the tract of land south of the Baluch-Afghan boundary between Nushki and Persia, which had become British territory following the demarcation of the Afghan-Baluch border.

The papers largely consist of printed copies of correspondence between the Governor General of India in Council (Government of India Foreign Department) and the Secretary of State for India (Lord George Francis Hamilton), and enclosed correspondence and papers.

Letters from the Governor General of India in Council to the Secretary of State for India include:

  • Number 170, 16 September 1896, relating to the opening up of a trade route between Nushki and the Persian frontier, crossing the tract of British territory south of the Baluch-Afghan boundary, and the protection of the newly-demarcated frontier, with enclosed memorandum by Captain Arthur Henry McMahon, British Commissioner, Baluch-Afghan Boundary Commission, containing his proposals for the management and administration of the tract and for the protection of the trade route
  • Number 58, 31 March 1898, concerning the trade route between Baluchistan and Persia, including the suggestion that Consular Agents should be appointed at central points along it between Seistan and Meshed, with enclosures including a report by Lieutenant Frank Webb-Ware, Political Assistant at Chagai, on his visit to Seistan at the beginning of 1896, and the measures introduced for the development of trade between Baluchistan and Persia (which includes a blueprint map, Mss Eur F111/350, f 33)
  • Number 163, 15 September 1898, forwarding copies of papers regarding the situation in Makran and Panjgur, following recent ‘disturbances’ in Makran.

The file also includes:

  • Copies of Government of India Foreign Department papers numbered 40-58 relating to the Kerman Consulate and British interests in Southern Persia, including correspondence between the Government of India Foreign Department and the Secretary of State for India
  • A letter from the Secretary of State for India to the Governor General of India in Council, with enclosed despatch from Sir (Henry) Mortimer Durand, HM Minister at Tehran, to the Foreign Office, dated 12 February 1899, in which he gives his opinion on suggestions for the appointment of additional consular officers in Persia (this includes a map titled ‘Skeleton Map of Telegraph Lines in Persia.’ Mss Eur F111/350, f 187)
  • A letter from Durand to the Secretary to the Foreign Department of the Government of India, 24 February 1899, enclosing a copy of his memorandum (with appendices) drawn up in 1895 on the situation in Persia, and the steps he proposed should be taken to improve the British position there
  • Copies of a draft despatch from the Governor General of India in Council, 2 September 1899, regarding relations between Great Britain and Persia, including improving the British Political and Consular service in Persia, and the extent of the share of responsibility for Persia that should be devolved upon the Government of India, followed by printed comments upon the draft
  • Copies of a minute by George Nathaniel Curzon, Viceroy of India, on Seistan, dated 4 September 1899, including the question of a railway connection between India and Seistan
  • Handwritten pencil notes by Curzon relating to Persia and the ‘Seistan Question’.

In addition to the two maps noted above, the file also includes the following maps: map of the area south of the border between Afghanistan and Baluchistan (Mss Eur F111/350, f 300); map of the area west of the border between Persia and Afghanistan (Mss Eur F111/350, f 301); and ‘Route Plan of Robat Nala’ (Mss Eur F111/350, f 302).

Extent and format
2 volumes (301 folios)
Arrangement

Most of volume A is arranged in reverse chronological order from the front to the rear of the volume (from folios 6 to 76); volume B is arranged is rough chronological order from the front to the rear of the volume.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: this file consists of two physical volumes. The foliation sequence commences at the inside front cover of volume one (ff 1-150) and terminates at the inside back cover of volume two (ff 151-304); 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.

Written in
English in Latin script
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‘Seistan Persia & Seistan’ [‎222r] (451/617), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, Mss Eur F111/350, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100072740555.0x000034> [accessed 19 July 2026]

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