'Précis of the Affairs of the Persian Coast and Islands, 1854-1905 By J A Saldanha, BA LL B' [85v] (170/212)
The record is made up of 1 volume (106 folios). It was created in 21 Mar 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. .
Transcription
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■58
right in landed property in Persia, namely, the crown, the proprietor and the cultivators of
the soil, and that in case the proprietor should wish to mortgage his village in order to
avoid dispute, he must previously obtain permission from the Royal Divan and the cultiva
tors of the soil. This rule would appear to have been inserted more with a view to prevent
dispute?, than with the object of making the legal transfer of landed property depend
upon the fulfilment of the conditions named.
The statement contained in this clause is, however, altogether erroneous. No such
conditions have ever been observed in the transfer of property amongst natives, the law
being that the owner of house or landed property is free to dispose, as he thinks fit, of all
that legally belongs to him, without the permission of the sovereign being asked, or the
villagers being consulted in the matter. The only formality required to establish the
legality of the transaction is that the title deeds, or deed of transfer or mortgage, should
be countersigned by one of the Moojteheds, or chief priests.
These fraudulent bankruptcy regulations have now been in force since 1843, an d the
conditions specified in the supplementary clause of that agreement in respect to the
acquisition of real proj erty by foreigners have never been observed. In Azerbaijan, as well
as in other parts of Persia, Russian subjects, mostly natives of Georgia and the Russian
provinces on the Caspian, have acquired possession of villages and estates, without any
question havino-been raised as to the fulfilment of these conditions; and British Indian
subjects have also been allowed in like manner to own lands and villages, the lega'ity of
their titles never having been called in question by the Persian authorities. The Persian
Government do not apparently, therefore, propose that the application of the condition in
question should be made retrospective ; and with regard to the future, it is extremely
doubtful if the Russian Government would now permit any arrangement made by tkeir
subjects with the owners of real property to be set aside, because it had not been autho
rized by the Shah or by the cultivators of the soil.
The Russian Charge d'Affaires has informed me that no reply was sent from his
Legation to the circular addressed on this subject by the Persian Minister for Foreign
Affairs to the Foreign Representatives here, copy of which was enclosed in my despatch
No. 39 of the 9th of March, it having been considered preferable to deal with individual
cases which might require official intervention as they occurred.
584. In 1885, the Foreign Office Agent at Shiraz informed the British Agent
Sect F.. Ma, .885, No.. 553-999. that orders had been issued by the Prime
Minister that in accordance with the holy
treaty, the subjects and dependents of friendly powers should not be owners of
landed property, in the Persian territories, except under the permission and
sanction of the Persian Minister for Foreign Affairs,
(Ixxxii) Alleged misconduct of certain inhabitants of the island of Kish or Kais. The
claims of the Al-ali Arabs of Um-el-Kowein to certain interests in the island, 1880.
585. The island of Kais had been until the year 1879 under the Arab Sheikhs
of Charak. About the year 1849, oppressive rule of Sheikh Mahomed bin
Political a., January 1880, Nos. 231-237. Khalifa, then C hief of Bahrein, led to the
emigration of several merchants of good
standing from Bahrein, most of whom settled for a time at Lingah. Among others
one Mashari bin Mahomed-el-Mashari, with others of his family, came toljngah
and later on settled in El Kais, which island they gradually developed by
collecting divers and importing goods direct from India for sale to the increased
population. Since the murder of the late Sheikh of Lingah by Sheikh Yusuf
(see Section XII), the whole of the coast districts to the north of Lingah had
been the scene of complicated intrigue and confusion, and the island of Kais had
first attracted the attention and then the cupidity of certain officials. The
representative of the Mashari family, Mashari bin Abdul Latif, was probably
chiefly aimed at by the Persian officials (see Colonel Ross's letter No. qq dated
20th December 1879). '
586. In April 1879, the Persian Government complained to the Minister
Political a ., March 1880, Nos. 12 a6. that certain British subjects, living in the
island of Kish, harboured Persian refugees.
Colonel Ross, however, showed that the only British subjects in the island
were four Hindu banyas and khojahs, and their servants, that these men did not
harbour any Persian refugees, and that they had been carefully warned against
interfering in any political matters.
About this item
- Content
This volume is a collection of correspondence about the Persian Coast, selected by Jerome A Saldanha and printed in Simla in 1906.
The volume is divided into twelve chapters:
- Internal Affairs, with list of officials and events (folios 7-16);
- Claims of the Imam of Maskat [Muscat] to the islands of Kishm, Angaum and Ormuz and the town of Bandar Abbas and its dependencies (folios 17-30);
- Anglo-Persian War of 1856-57. British Expedition to the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. and Karun River (folios 31-34);
- Various attempts made to establish Persian influence in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. , 1887-1905 (folios 35-39);
- 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. appointments, establishments, and guards and buildings on the Persian Coast and Islands (folios 40-49);
- British extra-territorial jurisdiction on the Persian Coast and Islands (folios 50-62);
- Questions of Status (folios 63-69);
- Claims of British subjects and protegés against the Persian Government and Officials and Persian subjects (folios 70-80);
- Certain miscellaneous affairs with regard to British relations with Persia (folios 81-87);
- Infringement of British Commercial Rights (folios 88-94);
- Introduction of Belgian Customs Administration and new Tariff, 1900-1905 (folios 95-100);
- Persian interference with the British Postal arrangements (folios 101-103).
- Extent and format
- 1 volume (106 folios)
- Physical characteristics
Foliation: the sequence commences at the front cover, and terminates at the inside back cover; 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. The volume also contains an original printed pagination sequence.
- Written in
- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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- Reference
- IOR/L/PS/20/C248
- Title
- 'Précis of the Affairs of the Persian Coast and Islands, 1854-1905 By J A Saldanha, BA LL B'
- Pages
- front, front-i, 2r:34r, 35r:50r, 51v:56r, 57r:86r, 87r:91v, 92v:105v, back-i, back
- Author
- East India Company, the Board of Control, the India Office, or other British Government Department
- Usage terms
- Open Government Licence