'Southern Nejd: Journey to Kharj, Aflaj, Sulaiyyil, and Wadi Dawasir in 1918.' [15r] (34/100)
The record is made up of 1 volume (46 folios). It was created in 1919. 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
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©
— 21
on both positive and negative evidence which seems to me
irrefutable. In the first place by no stretch of the imagination
can the Aflaj district be described as barren and savage {vide
Vol. 2, p. 76): it is fertile and civilized. In the second place
Palgrave professes to have reached Kharfa in two days from
Riyadh: no route between the two places can be less than 140
miles in length—a distance to traverse which in so short a time
would have required an effort nearly if not quite beyond the power
of man or beast ;* yet one is left to gather from his account that
he experienced no great difficulty in performing the feat. Thirdly,
the " villages " of Safra and Meshallah are fictions of Palgrave's
imagination and neither has ever had any existence in fact.
Fourthly, the oasis of Kharfa lies in a broad plain as flat as
the palm of one's hand and in no sense can the road to it be
said to lie in a " gorge of some depth " {vide Vol. 2, p. 80), the
rest of this passage being too absurd to need discussion. Fifthly,
the governor of the province does not and did not reside at
Kharfa, his seat always having been in the Laila oasis, formerly
in Mubarraz and now in Laila itself. Sixthly, Palgrave could
not possibly have visited Kharfa without seeing the other oases
scattered far and wide over the plain, yet he ignores them;
and finally, nobody resident in the Aflaj district could have told
him that
Wadi
A seasonal or intermittent watercourse, or the valley in which it flows.
Dawasir lay a " moderate day's journey south
of Kharfa " {vide Vol. 2, p. 81), nor yet that Sulaiyyil lay three
day's journey south of Bisha beyond
Wadi
A seasonal or intermittent watercourse, or the valley in which it flows.
Dawasir.
Further criticisms might be levelled at his account without
end, but the above will suffice to shew the crushing nature of the
negative evidence against the admission of his claim; the
positive evidence that he obtained his information about the
district from the lips of a casual visitor from the south, pre
sumably his friend of the unfortunate name, " Bedaa of Nejran ",
is less voluminous but no less crushingly convincing. Leaving
aside the hopelessly muddled account of the geography of the
country south of Aflaj as unworthy of detailed criticism, we may
suppose that Bedaa came up from the direction of Sulaiyyil
via Aflaj to Riyadh. Travelling more by night than by day it
would be quite possible for him to have passed by Badia without
seeing it. He would. then quite naturally group the three
contiguous oases of which Kharfa is one under the collective
* An express messenger from Ibn Saud reached me at
Wadi
A seasonal or intermittent watercourse, or the valley in which it flows.
Dawasir (300 miles from
Riyadh) in seven days, and this was considered a wonderful performance.
About this item
- Content
Harry St John Bridger Philby's account of his journey in the southern regions of the Najd, published for the Arab Bureau by the Government Press in Cairo, 1919.
The journey was taken in May to June 1918 while the author was in Riyadh for the purpose of maintaining relations with Ibn Sa‘ud [‘Abd al-‘Azīz bin ‘Abd al-Raḥman bin Fayṣal Āl Sa‘ūd], ruler of Najd, on behalf of the British Government. Travelling 640 miles from Riyadh to Wadi A seasonal or intermittent watercourse, or the valley in which it flows. Dawasir [Wādī al-Dawāsir] and back along a different route, he reports any geographical, meteorological, agricultural, demographic, and historical information that he deems of use to the British government. Included are notes on the tribes and wells of the area.
Folio 46 is a foldout map of the route taken.
- Extent and format
- 1 volume (46 folios)
- Physical characteristics
Foliation: the sequence is circled in pencil, in the top right corner of the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. of each folio. It begins on the front cover, on number 1, and ends on the inside of the back cover, on number 48.
Pagination: there is also a printed pagination sequence that begins on the first page of the account proper and continues through to the last page of the account.
- Written in
- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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- Reference
- IOR/L/PS/20/C169
- Title
- 'Southern Nejd: Journey to Kharj, Aflaj, Sulaiyyil, and Wadi Dawasir in 1918.'
- Pages
- front, back, spine, edge, head, tail, front-i, 2r:47v, back-i
- Author
- East India Company, the Board of Control, the India Office, or other British Government Department
- Usage terms
- Open Government Licence