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'Selections from the Records of the Bombay Government' [‎615] (659/733)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (364 folios). It was created in 1856. 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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GULF OF PERSIA.
615
indigo, vice, sugar, British piece goods, and country chintz from Ben
gal and the Coromandel Coast; and though I have not now sufficiently
correct data, I believe at one time the exports from British India to
the Gulf were little short of eighty or ninety lakhs One lakh is equal to one hundred thousand rupees of rupees Indian silver coin also widely used in the Persian Gulf. . As the
place gets settled, this trade will revive. About fifteen hundred to
two thousand five hundred African slaves are brought into the Gulf
every year by the way of Muskat, besides which I believe two or three
hundred girls are brought from the Malabar Coast, Kutch, and even
Bombay—at least I have frequently been told so by Arabs and others.
A great portion of these are children.
Fruits are in their seasons very plentiful at the head of the Gulf,
particularly on the banks of the Euphrates, and at Bushire : they
consist of nectarines, peaches, apricots, apples, pears, grapes of various
sorts, plums, melons, quinces, and many others ; carrots, turnips, occa
sionally cabbages, beet, and various sallads, are also to be had in season ;
onions, cucumbers, and the usual native vegetables. The meat on the
Arabian Coast is mostly good ; on the Persian Coast only occasionally
so, and it is also dear. The poultry at the head of the Gulf is very
large and fine ; low down very indifferent. Fish in all parts plentiful,
and excellent.
WITHOUT THE GULF.—PERSIAN COAST FROM ORMUS
• TO RAS OR CAPE JASK.
Leaving the eastern anchorage of Ormus, course E. by S., along shore,
in soundings Measurements of the depth of a body of water. from ten to five and six fathoms, with the mouth of the
Minnow river bearing true NE. The coast from Ormus to this place
is long and jungly, with creeks and swamps, and a flat running off
a mile and a half.
M innae F ort.
Minnae Fort is situated on a hill fifteen miles inland, and the custom
house, up to which native boats of fifteen or twenty tons go, is seven
miles up the river. The eastern point of the entrance is in lat. 27° 6'
48 // N., long. 56° 47' lO" E. This is a place of some trade, particularly
in grain, and dried fruits from Kermaunshaw. Some large boats load
off the entrance of the river, but most of the produce is sent to Bunder
Abbas in smaller boats, and shipped off from thence. The port is
under the Iraaum of Muskat. Minnow itself is a large place, and
though only fifteen miles in a line inland, is nearly thirty by the
winding of the river; and this, from the circumstance of the boats beino-
obliged to come down with the tide, corroborates Patra de la Valles^'
account, in 1621, of its being two days' journey from the sea. This is

About this item

Content

The volume is Selections from the records of the Bombay Government , compiled and edited by Robert Hughes Thomas, Assistant Secretary, Political Department, New Series: 24 (Bombay: Printed for Government at the Bombay Education Society's Press, 1856).

Extent and format
1 volume (364 folios)
Arrangement

The volume contains an abstract of contents on p. iii, a detailed list of contents on pp. vii-xx, an alphabetical index on pp. xxi-xxvii, and a list of maps etc on p. xviii.

Physical characteristics

Pagination: two separate pagination sequences are present in the volume. The first sequence (pp. i-xviii) commences at the first page and terminates at the list of maps (p. xviii). A second pagination sequence then takes over (pp. 1-688), commencing at the title page and terminating at the final page. Both these pagination sequences are printed, with additions in pencil, and the numbers are found at the top (left, right or centre) of each page.

The fold-outs in this volume were not paginated by the publisher. As a result, these have been foliated using the nearest page number. For example, the fold-out attached to p.51 has been numbered as 51A.

Pagination anomalies: pp. 15, 15A; 45, 45A; 49, 49A; 51, 51A; 531, 531A.

The following pages need to be folded out to be read: 15A, 45A, 51A, 327-328, 531A.

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English in Latin script
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'Selections from the Records of the Bombay Government' [‎615] (659/733), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/R/15/1/732, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100022870194.0x00003c> [accessed 29 November 2024]

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