File 301/1921 'MESOPOTAMIA: INTELLIGENCE REPORTS' [84v] (179/586)
The record is made up of 1 volume (289 folios). It was created in 15 Nov 1920-31 Oct 1921. 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
This transcription is created automatically. It may contain errors.
For the Constitutional Assembly.
1.
Writer
The lowest of the four classes into which East India Company civil servants were divided. A Writer’s duties originally consisted mostly of copying documents and book-keeping.
desires “ indirect suffrage ” with the division of the country
into electoral colleges, provided that no college shall be bound to elect its own
representatives only from among its inhabitants, i.e., any college may elect any
subject of ‘ Iraq in whom the required conditions are fulfilled.
But for the election of the Kuler, Universal Suffrage, i.e., Referendum.
Writer
The lowest of the four classes into which East India Company civil servants were divided. A Writer’s duties originally consisted mostly of copying documents and book-keeping.
suggests also that the number of representatives in the Constituent
Assembly should be comparatively more than would be the case in a House of
Parliament because its duties are more important.
Account of the Naqib’s Dinner Party—Speech of Ra‘ruf Rasafi.
“The hand of God is with those who gather together.
Yesterday I was talking with a highly educated man who said that people
in union are better than if they stand alone. This gained my approval for I
knew that national character is only to be discerned in union. We are now like
people rising from their graves.
. (Poem.)
1 saw my hope fulfilled, the pleasing rays of light
In the house of our Lord the Naqib and in the face of our Lord the Amir,
How should anyone fear when the two lights are married together
From the face of our Lord the Naqib and the face of our Lord the Amir
The Naqib has stretched out the hand of support to the Amir,
And every intriguer will be put to shame.
Long live our Lord the Naqib, long life to our Lord the Amir.
(Prose.)
tw 6 Ca " pe °P le T w , ant Wheu they see these two bating hands on the
‘it, tv, t f, n .y ers ! I T . know 110 one more worthy to represent the whole
inl and birth 6 ^ aq ti “ 1S ex P erieneed and has attained glory by his learn-
N™?h I th ' there aoyone more careful of the interests of ‘Iraq than the
JNaqvb who is the greatest property owner, more even than the Naoib of the
itkeftha vvho was cailed the Father of Eighty. And when T.H., oh Amir,
sembles the I take the hand of aI1 ‘ Ira< J and th is house re-
oS h t Wh °! e co ™ try of Ira h- We cannot see the future, but we pray
ttank vou Xn olhT 6 y0l ‘i lt Wlli be made plahl t0 us ' The future will
. , . - y . ’ 01 ^ 01 y° ur endeavours in uniting the nation Lone 1 live H H
the Am.r, Long bve the Naqib and ‘Iraqis and all Arabs
The Elections.
1. Again insisting on the referendum for the election of the kinfr Thp
function of the Congress subsequently will be to draw ufthe Organic ffw.
11 an q j2 aec0lin ^ m eeting in the Ja‘fariyah school—see Dijlah July
‘Ald 2 3 ulIah. amadhaU a ‘ Shallash is now at ‘Amman, the guest of the Amir
haa sailed for Italy ^e^XotiiXnf' 18 tlla t Taufiq al '' az ih tlle famous
writer
The lowest of the four classes into which East India Company civil servants were divided. A Writer’s duties originally consisted mostly of copying documents and book-keeping.
,
y- ne IS t0 Geneva to attend the Syrian Congress.
M ‘Iraq No. 341. July 12.
The I krone and the Crown.
we also believe ^thaAll 6 IraqiXviXaert °' batke .|ummoning of the Congrei
matter of taking po^esioTofThe thro™ ^fmlf^otT COnSUlted ^ “
allegiance to him and installing him on the twXX 1 ln , sw f ann
ation stone of the ‘Iraq Arabian Kingdom n i,' ther eby laying the fount
referendum.— (Signed) Al ‘Asami ^ ° these conditions we favour
2. The Mosul deputation thanks the neonlp i n •
reception. P eo P le ol Baghdad for their gooi
About this item
- Content
This volume contains the Intelligence Reports of Sir Percy Cox, High Commissioner for Mesopotamia [also written as Iraq in this volume], based in Baghdad, covering the period 15 November 1920 to 15 September 1921. They largely relate to: the political situation in Mesopotamia and the surrounding region; the formation and proceedings of the provisional government; the events leading up to the creation of Mandatory Iraq [also known as the Kingdom of Iraq under British Administration] and the election and appointment of Faisal [Fayṣal bin Ḥusayn bin ‘Alī al-Hāshimī] as the first King of Iraq [Fayṣal I].
The Intelligence Reports are numbered and appear to have been issued at two-week intervals. This volume contains the reports numbered 1-3, 9-19 and 21. There is no explanation in the volume regarding the reason for the absent reports. The format of the reports is a mixture of printed and copy typescript. Each report is preceded by a covering circular issued by the office of the High Commissioner indicating the British Government departments and the officers and departments in the Middle East to which the report was copied.
Report Nos. 1-3 are preceded by an assessment of the political situation described in the Intelligence Report, written by Major R Marrs.
The reports generally comprise the following sections:
- A summary of the report (from report No. 14 onwards only)
- An account of the proceedings of the Council of Ministers
- Analysis of current public opinion and allegiances, (notably an analysis of public opinion on the Amir [Emir] Faisal and his arrival in Mesopotamia, including a reference to his 'personal magnetism', f 88), in report Nos 16-19
- Notes on provincial affairs
- Notes on the situation at the frontiers
- Extracts of 'Iraq Police Abstracts of Intelligence' (reports No. 9-14 only).
Other subjects notably covered in various reports include:
- Assyrian, Armenian and Urumiyan [Urmian] refugees (report Nos. 2 and 19)
- Perceived foreign influences in Iraq (report Nos. 2 and 3)
- The withdrawal of Saiyid [Sayyid] Talib Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. [Sayyid Ṭālib bin Rajab al-Naqīb] from the Government and Baghdad (report No. 12)
- Kurdistan (report Nos. 12-14)
- Turkish and Kurdish Frontiers (report No. 12)
- Dair al Zor [Deir ez-Zor] (report Nos. 1 and 12)
- Notes on 'Internal Affairs' (Nos. 18 and 19)
- Analysis of the referendum result which confirmed the election of Faisal as Iraq's first monarch (report No. 19)
- The formation of King Faisal's first cabinet (report No. 21).
Appendices are included with some reports, usually comprising copies of the High Commissioner's proclamations or communications 'to the people of Iraq' or documents relevant to the particular report (notably 'Provisional scheme for the re-organisation of the law courts' and 'Report of the committee constituted for studying the irrigation problem in Mesopotamia' in report No. 9).
Each report is concluded with a Supplement or Press Bureau Report, comprising extensive summaries and extracts of newspaper articles published in the local and 'foreign' (local region mainly) press. Notable publications cited are: Al 'Iraq , Al Fallah Arabic for ‘peasant’. It was used by British officials to refer to agricultural workers or to members of a social class employed primarily in agricultural labour. , Al Dijlah , and (Syrian publication) Lissan al 'Arab.
The volume includes a divider which gives the subject number, the year the subject file was opened, the subject heading, and a list of correspondence references by year. This is placed at the end of the correspondence (front of the volume).
- Extent and format
- 1 volume (289 folios)
- Arrangement
The reports are arranged mostly in numerical/chronological order from the rear to the front of the volume. Report No. 18 is followed by Report No. 21 and then Report No. 19 which is the last report in the volume.
- Physical characteristics
Foliation: the foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the first folio with 1 and terminates at the last folio with 284; 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 foliation sequence does not include the front and back covers, nor does it include the two leading and two ending flyleaves. The sequence contains one foliation anomaly: f 267a.
- Written in
- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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Copyright: How to use this content
- Reference
- IOR/L/PS/10/962
- Title
- File 301/1921 'MESOPOTAMIA: INTELLIGENCE REPORTS'
- Pages
- 191r:192r, 174r:176r, 172r:174r, 151r:154r, 126r:127r, 112v:113r, 104r:104v, 95r:97r, 84r:85r, 62v:64v, 50r:50v, 16r:17r
- Author
- al-Iraq xx Al-'Iraq
- Usage terms
- Public Domain
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