PERSIA FACTORY RECORDS: LETTERS FROM BASRA, 1753-1773, PT 2 [253v] (146/358)
The record is made up of 1 item (178 folios). It was created in 20 Apr 1765-24 Aug 1766. 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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This item contains correspondence sent to and received from the East India Company Factory An East India Company trading post. at Bussora [Basra] from 20 April 1765 to 24 August 1766. It contains correspondence relating to the following:
- The displeasure of Carim Caun [Karīm Khān Zand] with the Mussaleem During the eighteenth century this was the third most powerful official in Ottoman Iraq (after the Pasha and the Kiya). The title was given specifically to the Governor of Basra. [ Mutasallim During the eighteenth century this was the third most powerful official in Ottoman Iraq (after the Pasha and the Kiya). The title was given specifically to the Governor of Basra. ], Solliman Aga [Sulaymān Āghā], for the latter’s tardiness in joining his expedition against the Chaub [Banū Ka‘b], and Carim Caun’s ‘ungenteel reception’ of the envoys from Bussora and their dismissal without any presents
- The progress of the Mussaleem’s army, supported by the fleet of the Captain Bashaw An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. [Kapūdān Pāshā] and the Company ship The Fanny , down the Shatt al-Arab and their skirmishes with the Chaub
- The complaints of Shaik Soliman Chaub [Shaikh Salmān bin Sulṭān al-Ka‘bī] against Mr Shaw for taking his date trees at Magyl [Al-Ma‘qil] and Silik [al-Sikk?] and keeping many of his subjects as ‘Hamalls’ [porters]
- The surrender of Souja Dowla [Jalāl al-Dīn Ḥaydar Khān Shujā‘ al-Dawlah Nishāpurī, Nawwāb An honorific title; an official acting as a provincial deputy ruler in South Asia; or a significant Muslim landowner in nineteenth century India. of Awadh] to Lord [Robert] Clive [1st Baron Clive of Plassey] near Allahabad
- The defeat of the fleet dispatched by Shaik Sadoon [Shaikh Sa‘dūn bin Madhkūr Abū Muhayrī of Bushehr] and the Dutch from Karreck [Kharg] by the men of Meer Mahanna [Mīr Muḥannā, also written as Meer Manna] ‘clothed with Coats of Mail’ on the Island of Corgo [Khargu]
- The negotiations conducted by Siad Mahomed [Sayyid Muḥammad] and Abdulla Beg [‘Abd Allāh Beg] with Shaik Soliman on behalf of the Bashaw An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. of Bagdat [Pāshā of Baghdad]
- Carim Cawn’s ‘disgust’ with the Company’s lack of assistance against Meer Mahanna, and reversal of his ‘High Opinion’ of the English, as a result of the Chaub’s capture of several English vessels
- The siege and capture of the fortress of Karreck by Meer Mahanna, the escape of the Dutch Resident to Bushire [Bushehr], and his request for assistance from the East India Company
- The threats of the Company against Shaik Soliman to persuade him to enter negotiations towards the release of the captured English vessels
- The demand of the Mussaleem During the eighteenth century this was the third most powerful official in Ottoman Iraq (after the Pasha and the Kiya). The title was given specifically to the Governor of Basra. and Shaik Dervis [Shaikh Darvīsh] that the Company join them in their war against Shaik Soliman, on account of his deceitfulness and potential for undermining the reputation of the English with the Grand Signor at Constantinople
- The victory of Captain Lesley Baillie against the fleet of the Chaub, and Benjamin Hollamby’s request from Carem Caun not to offer asylum to Shaik Solyman
- The arrival of Zakey Caun [Zakī Khān Zand], brother of Carem Caun, with an army at Ginova [Bandar-i Ganaveh, also written as Ginouva], on a mission aimed at the ‘destruction’ of Meer Mahanna
- The proposal of Shaik Sadoon to the Company for a joint naval attack against Shaik Soliman, the success of Zaki Caun’s campaign against Meer Mahanna at Ginova, and the suggestion that Shaik Sadoon and the Company assist in transporting Carim Caun’s troops to Karrack
- A parley between Shaik Anum [Shaikh Ghānim bin Salmān al-Ka‘bī] and Captain Andrew Nesbitt, during which the latter, suspecting an ambush, decided to attack first, ‘dangerously’ wounding the Shaik, and killing three of his ‘Most Principal Men’.
- Extent and format
- 1 item (178 folios)
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- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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PERSIA FACTORY RECORDS: LETTERS FROM BASRA, 1753-1773, PT 2 [253v] (146/358), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/G/29/20/2, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100151045765.0x000084> [accessed 3 July 2026]
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- Reference
- IOR/G/29/20/2
- Title
- PERSIA FACTORY RECORDS: LETTERS FROM BASRA, 1753-1773, PT 2
- Pages
- front-a-i, v-r:vi-v, 181r:186r, 187r:202r, 203r:210r, 211r:212v, 213v, 214v:216r, 217r:221v, 222v:230r, 231r:231v, 232v:251r, 252r:258r, 259r:259v, 261r:266r, 267r:272v, 274v:278v, 280r:280v, 281v:283r, 284r:334v, 336v:341v, 343v:358v, vii-r:viii-v, back-a-i
- 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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