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Persian Gulf Administration Reports 1883/84 - 1904/05 [‎226v] (457/602)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (299 folios). It was created in 1884-1906. 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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26
ADMINISTRATION EEPORT ON THE PERSIAN GULF The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. POLITICAL
whilst in one case, which also ended fatally and in which the evacuation stage was immediately
followed by a severe febrile stag^e, the temperature a few hours before death rose to 106*6 P
Suppression of urine in a more or less degree was a very common symptom, but was rapidly
overcome in the majority of the cases thai came under treatment.
The epidemic may, upon the whole, be considered to have been one of only a moderate
severity, for whilst, on the one hand, the incidence of attacks in proportion to the general
population of Maskat and Matrah together was in as high a ratio as 5*3 per cent, which was
enough to stamp it as one of a very grave nature, on the other it never attained that great
degree of intensity as indicated by the rate of mortality, which was its most prominent charac
ter in its advance through the Simail valley. At Suroor alone the first place of any importance
in the interior it visited, it carried away 470 persons out of a population of 1,000 and at Simail
nearly a thousand persons out of a population of about 5,000.
The total number of attacks in both Maskat and Matrah together may be approximately
Attaeks. stated to have been 1,339. Of these 449 took
place in Maskat alone, giving a ratio of 4*5 per
cent, to the population. Viewed in a racial point of view the greatest incidence of attacks was
among Baluchis with whom I have also grouped Jotgals who, though racially distinct from
them, are socially and in their domestic habits so much like them, that the two cannot be
easily separated. Their habitations are mostly in the filthiest localities and themselves most
regardless of the commonest rules of personal hygiene, so that it is no wonder that they suffered
most from the epidemic. A little more than half the total number of attacks, namely, 240,
occurred among them alone. The next in order to suffer were the Africans among whom
there were 111 attacks, and next to them were the Arabs who are proportionately a small com
munity in Maskat and who had 95 attacks among them. The least of all to suffer were the
Indians among whom there were only three attacks, two being among the Muhammadans and
one among the Hindus, whilst the Indo-Portuguese, who are, however, a very small commu-
nity, had no attacks among them at all. This remarkable instance of the almost absolute
immunity of the whole Indian community may be attributed partly to the fact of many of
them having adopted prophylactic measures and partly to the fact of all their habitations,
which are situated inside the town of Maskat, being far away from the greatest centres of
infection.
Considered in relation to age and sex, adults suffered considerably more than children, the
total number of attacks among the former being 406, whilst among the latter only 43, and
males suffered slightly more than females, though the ratio of deaths to attacked was much
greater among the latter than among the former. There were 214 attacks among males
against 192 among females.
The localities that were most severely visited by the epidemic were such as contained
closely packed and overcrowded huts with the most unsanitary surroundings and as were
inhabited entirely by Baluchis or Jatgals or both. Many such spots exist in both the
suburbs of Maskat, and it was there that the disease was most rife. Whilst the whole
town of Maskat contributed only 99 cases, there were 205 in Tuyan and 83 in Takia. The
total number of attacks in Matrah may be approximately stated to have been 890, giving
a ratio of nearly 6 per cent, to the population. This ratio was slightly higher than in
Maskat partly on account of the larger population and partly on account of Matrah being
more exposed to sources of infection, as explained above. The greatest incidence of attacks
was, as in Maskat, among the Baluchis who alone had among them 335 attacks, being more
than a third of the total number. The Arabs come next in order, having had 290 attacks
among them, or nearly a third of the total number. There were 166 attacks among the
Africans and o9 among the Persians, The remaining 40 attacks were distributed among
the three Indian communities—Khojas, other Indian Muhammadans and Hindus. Of these
the Khojas, though now domiciled here, live aloof from the rest of the population in a
separate place of their own, called the Khoja fort and may be estimated to be about 1,000
persons; there were altogether 31 attacks among them giving a ratio of a little more than
^ ® en ^* number here given is slightly different from that shown in statement
-^ 0 *J^lj > aS0rie attacks having occurred in the person of a Khoja who lived outside
the l^hoja iO l "t, is excluded from it, whilst two attacks which occurred among the Africans
m the Khoja fort are included in it. The other Indian Muhammadans who are principally
goldsmiths, carpenters, memons, etc., also live inside the town amidst better sanitary
surroundings than those found in the Baluchi and Arab quarters; they had only 7 atta«ks
among them. The smallest number of attacks, namely, two, was among the Hindus, and
it may be noticed here as a strange coincidence that they were the very last two attacks
in the epidemic.
Examined in relation to age, the attacks in Matrah were about five times and a half
more in adults than in children, the total number among the former being 752 against 138
among the latter. As regards sex, from an early stage of the epidemic there was a general
impression among the people that women were suffering more than men, which is now seen
to have been rightly formed, from the statistics the attacks among females, namely, 456,
being nearly double of those among males (296). This great preponderance of attacks
among temales occurred principally among the Baluchis and Arabs in localities almost en
tirely occupied by them, and m ay partly be accounted for by the fact that the duty of
nursing the sick generally devolved on the fair sex. It would be needless to reiterate the

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Content

The volume contains printed copies of Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. Administration Reports. The Reports are incomplete (according to the introductory letters and lists of contents). Some of the Reports bear manuscript corrections. The following Reports are represented :

The Reports include a general summary by the Political Resident A senior ranking political representative (equivalent to a Consul General) from the diplomatic corps of the Government of India or one of its subordinate provincial governments, in charge of a Political Residency. (covering the constituent agencies and consulates that made up the Residency An office of the East India Company and, later, of the British Raj, established in the provinces and regions considered part of, or under the influence of, British India. , and topics such as the slave trade, piracy, the movements of Royal Navy ships, official appointments, and the weather); meteorological tables; separate reports on Muscat (also referred to as Maskat); reports on trade and commerce; and a number of appendices on special topics, such as supplementary notes on the care and culture of date trees and fruit (Report, 1883-84), historical sketch of the Portuguese in eastern Arabia (Report, 1884-85), notes on a tour through Oman and El-Dhahireh [Al Dhahirah] by Lieutenant-Colonel Samuel Barrett Miles (Report, 1885-86), notes on cholera in Persia (Report, 1889-90), report on the cholera epidemic in Maskat, Matrah, and Oman (Report, 1899-1900), and information on individuals and tribes.

Extent and format
1 volume (299 folios)
Arrangement

The Reports are arranged in chronological order from the front to the rear of the volume. There is an introductory letter/table of contents at the front of each Report, but these show that the Reports are not complete.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation system in use commences at 3 on the second folio after the front cover, and continues through to 299 on the back cover. The sequence is written in pencil, enclosed in a circle, and appears in the top right hand corner of the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. page of each folio.

Written in
English in Latin script
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Persian Gulf Administration Reports 1883/84 - 1904/05 [‎226v] (457/602), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/R/15/1/709, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023373227.0x00003a> [accessed 1 December 2024]

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