‘Koweit [Kuwait]. A report compiled in the Intelligence Branch, Quarter Master General’s Department’ [2] (14/66)
The record is made up of 1 volume (33 folios), with 3 maps. It was created in 1903. 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.
3
Harbour. ^ remarkably fine bay some twenty miles long and ten
miles wide, stretching approximately east and west, forms
an excellent and flourishing harbour. The surrounding country
to the southward is low-lying, level, and of the ordinary desert
type, stretching away as far as the eye can see. The " Hill
Fort," shown on the charts, some seven and a half miles south
east of the town of Koweit, stands 180 feet above sea level, and
is a conspicuous object, when entering the bay from the sea. It
is a well -built square erection, with towers at the corners.
There is a small village to the south-east of this fort, on the
coast nestling among palms and other trees.
With the exception of some sand-hills immediately to the
south of the town, which are referred to in greater detail further
on, the general character of the country, along the southern
shore of the bay, is the same, i.e., an unbroken level plain of fairly
firm, whitish sand stretching away to the south and south-west.
The approach to the entrance to the bay, though it lies
through shoals and low-lying sand banks, is not difficult. At
present there are neither buoys nor lights, but with a lighthouse
on Raz-al-Arz the harbour could be entered, at night, with ease.
After reaching its most westerly point, in Duhat Kathama,
near the head of which lies the village Jehara, of which more
anon, the coast-line makes an abrupt turn to the north-east.
Along this northern side of the bay, about two miles from
the water's edge, there runs a line of heights, steep and cliff-
like on their sea face, having an elevation of about 200 feet.
These give valuable shelter from the prevailing and most import
ant wind, the "Shamal," which blows from the north-west.
Owing to this shelter, no sea, at all distressing to big ships, is
raised in the bay, even by a strong north-west gale. The gen
eral direction of the coast-line then trends eastwards until it
reaches the creek which separates the swampy island of Bubiyan
from the mainland.
Along this shore a mud flat extends some distance from the
beach, and increases in width to the eastward until it is nearly
five miles in breadth opposite to Ras-al-Arz.
The island Bubiyan which lies off the north-eastern entrance
to the Bay of Koweit, is a large low-lying island, about 25 miles
in length by 12 miles in width. It is quite barren |and is par
tially overflowed at high water. It is separated from the main
land by Khor Subiya which, with a creek which leads out of
it, is navigated as far as a place called Duweira, the port for
Zobeir, a large town ten or twelve miles south-west of Basrah.
Failaka island at the entrance to the Bay is about seven
miles long by three miles wide at its western end. It is all very
low lying, its highest point being only thirty feet above sea level.
On its western side is a small village with date groves and about
250 inhabitants. The island is unhealthy and the water indifferent
About this item
- Content
Intelligence report on Kuwait, compiled for the Intelligence Branch of the Quarter Master General’s Department by Captain Henry Harris Hewitt Dowding of the Essex Regiment, and printed at the Government Central Printing Office in Simla, 1903.
The contents of the volume are as follows:
- Introductory remarks;
- Harbour, anchorages;
- History of Kuwait (of the Wahabis, the Ibn Rashid family, the war between Nejd and Kuwait);
- Political (relations between Kuwait and Great Britain, the situation in 1901-02, foreign relations with Russia, Germany, Turkey, events during 1902);
- Military forces, including their strength, arms and equipment, organisation, standard of efficiency and tactics;
- Towns: Kuwait, its population and defences; Jehara [Al-Jahrah], its importance, population and defences;
- Administration, government, free trade, currency;
- Resources, commercial, not agricultural;
- Climate;
- Communications
Four appendices follow the main text: A. routes; B. the Wahabi family; C. the Ibn Rashid family; D. the Shaikhs of Kuwait. The volume also contains three illustrations: the foreshore at Kuwait (folio 3); Mobarek-bin-Subah [Mubarak bin Ṣabāḥ Āl Ṣabāḥ] and his youngest son Naser (folio 9); the Shaikh’s residence in Kuwait (folio 17). The volume also contains three maps: a map of Kuwait and the surrounding country (folio 30); a map of Kuwait harbour (folio 31); and a rough diagram of Jehara (folio 32).
- Extent and format
- 1 volume (33 folios), with 3 maps
- Arrangement
The volume is arranged into a number of sections, with major headings in the text and subheadings indicated alongside the text in the outer margins. A contents page (folio 6) lists these major headings and subheadings, along with the volume’s illustrations and maps, and refers to the volume’s original pagination system. Four appendices follow the main text. An alphabetical index (folios 26-28) also refers to the volume’s original pagination system.
- Physical characteristics
Foliation: The foliation sequence commences at the first folio and terminates at the last folio; these numbers are written in pencil, are circled, and are located in the top right corner of the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. side of each folio.
Pagination: The booklet contains an original typed pagination sequence.
- Written in
- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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‘Koweit [Kuwait]. A report compiled in the Intelligence Branch, Quarter Master General’s Department’ [2] (14/66), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/20/153, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100023870553.0x000010> [accessed 7 July 2026]
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Copyright: How to use this content
- Reference
- IOR/L/PS/20/153
- Title
- ‘Koweit [Kuwait]. A report compiled in the Intelligence Branch, Quarter Master General’s Department’
- Pages
- front, front-i, i-r:ii-v, 1:6, 1:4, 4a:4b, 5:18, 18a:18b, 19:23, 32, 25:31, 24, 33:34, 1:14, back-i, back
- 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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