'Southern Nejd: Journey to Kharj, Aflaj, Sulaiyyil, and Wadi Dawasir in 1918.' [28r] (60/100)
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
This transcription is created automatically. It may contain errors.
(
— 47 —
of low rough ridges and hills ; visibility was poor on account
of a perpetual dust haze and I never obtained a view of the
Asir mountains. To the north and north-west extends a regular
Nafudh, beyond which sections of a mountain range called
Hadhb Dawasir, noted by me from the neighbourhood of the
Shifa plain and Arq al Subai Nafadh on my journey to Taif,
could be seen at intervals. The most interesting feature of the
scene was, however, an apparently isolated mountain mass of
considerable dimensions called Raiyyaniya, which was pointed
out to me as the extreme upstream limit of
Wadi
A seasonal or intermittent watercourse, or the valley in which it flows.
Dawasir.
In the neighbourhood of Raiyyaniya, perhaps forty miles
north-west of the
wadi
A seasonal or intermittent watercourse, or the valley in which it flows.
oasis, lies, according to information
collected from all sources and sifted so far as possible, a vast
depression called Hajla bounded on the east by a broad band of
Nafudh, which, it seems to me, is not unlikely to be a continuation
of the Arq al Subai itself, being, as it is said to be, to the southern
drainage channels what the Arq is to the
Wadi
A seasonal or intermittent watercourse, or the valley in which it flows.
Subai—-namely,
an absorbent barrier seldom pierced.
The wadis of Tathlith, Bisha, and Ranya appear to run down
into the plain at some distance behind Raiyyaniya and travers
ing the intervening space along erratic courses now converging
on and now diverging from each other finally reach the hill.
From this point the first two named run round the southern end
and the last round the northern end of the barrier to empty
themselves one and all into the Hajla depression, which as a
matter of fact seldom actually receives any water at all owing
to the depredations of cultivation and sand tracts in the upper
reaches of the three streams. I think it may be accepted as
substantially correct that the three great wadis above mentioned
flowing respectively from south-west, west-south-west, and
west-north-west and draining the mountain barrier of Asir
come to a joint and final end in the Hajla of Raiyyaniya.
The Nafudh strip east of the Hajla may be anything from
ten to twenty miles thick, an inpenetrable barrier to the further
progress of floods—so at least it was thought until June, 1917,
when a terrific flood, causing widespread havoc and confusion,
came down the Tatlilith and burst through the sands into its
old channel, into
Wadi
A seasonal or intermittent watercourse, or the valley in which it flows.
Dawasir which for centuries had known
no water. The Amir of the
wadi
A seasonal or intermittent watercourse, or the valley in which it flows.
was sipping coffee in his parlour
when the news of the coming flood was brought to him. " Bring
me a cup " said he mocking " and I will drink it up '. But
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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'Southern Nejd: Journey to Kharj, Aflaj, Sulaiyyil, and Wadi Dawasir in 1918.' [28r] (60/100), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/20/C169, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023576000.0x00003d> [accessed 27 November 2024]
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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