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‘Gazetteer of Persia, Part III, including Fārs, Lūristān, Arabistān, Khūzistān, Yazd, Karmānshāh, Ardalān, Kurdistān’ [‎186r] (376/686)

The record is made up of 1 volume (336 folios). It was created in 1885. 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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349
KAZ—KAZ
and vines are cultivated on the slopes of the neighbouring mountains.
“ The climate is less enervating and drier, though in the spring and
early summer heavy dews fall: the summer is, however, very trying
to Europeans, especially during July and August, when hot winds
blow every afternoon. Eor two months during the winter there is
occasionally a slight frost at night, and the rainfall there is greater
than in most parts of Persia.
“ In the Kazrun district the principal diseases are intermittent fever,
enlarged spleen, hepatitis, dyspepsia, costiveness, pertussis, smallpox,
paralysis, gonorrhoea, syphilis, periostitis, disease of joints, together
with thickening of neighbouring bones, necrosis, diseases of the eye,
especially ophthalmia and opacities of cornea, cataract, and strumous
diseases of children, and a few cases of stone in the bladder. Here
one sees fewer blind people, and these are more often the result of small
pox. Until 1876, diphtheria was, I believe, unknown in Persia ; early in
that year a severe epidemic broke out in Kazrun, causing many deaths;
shortly afterwards it reached Shiraz and quickly travelled north. In
July of that year I saw several cases in Tihran; since that time I
have not heard of any cases at Kazrun. A severe epidemic of small
pox occurred in Kazrun in 1883 and was fatal to children, of whom
about 200 died.—Probably it is never altogether absent.”

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Content

The third of four volumes comprising a Gazetteer of Persia. The volume, which is marked Confidential, covers Fārs, Lūristān [Lorestān], Arabistān, Khūzistān [Khūzestān], Yazd, Karmānshāh [Kermānshāh], Ardalān, and Kurdistān. The frontispiece states that the volume was revised and updated in April 1885 in the Intelligence Branch of the Quartermaster General’s Department in India, under the orders of Major General Sir Charles Metcalfe Macgregor, Quartermaster-General in India. Publication took place in Calcutta [Kolkata] by the Superintendent of Government Printing, India, in 1885.

The following items precede the main body of the gazetteer:

The gazetteer includes entries for human settlements (villages, towns and cities), geographic regions, tribes, significant geographic features (such as rivers, canals, mountains, valleys, passes), and halting places on established routes. Figures for latitude, longitude and elevation are indicated where known.

Entries for human settlements provide population figures, water sources, location relative to other landmarks, climate. Entries for larger towns and cities can also include tabulated meteorological statistics (maximum and minimum temperatures, wind direction, remarks on cloud cover and precipitation), topographical descriptions of fortifications, towers, and other significant constructions, historical summaries, agricultural, industrial and trade activities, government.

Entries for tribes indicate the size of the tribe (for example, numbers of men, or horsemen), and the places they inhabit. Entries for larger tribes give tabulated data indicating tribal subdivisions, numbers of families, encampments, summer and winter residences, and other remarks.

Information sources are provided at the end of each gazetteer entry, in the form of an author or source’s surname, italicised and bracketed.

Extent and format
1 volume (336 folios)
Arrangement

The gazetteer’s entries are arranged in alphabetically ascending order.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence commences at the inside front cover with 1 and terminates at the inside back cover with 341; 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 volume has two printed pagination systems, the first of which uses Roman numerals and runs from I to XIII (ff 3-10), while the second uses Arabic numerals and runs from 1 to 653 (ff 12-338).

Written in
English in Latin script
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‘Gazetteer of Persia, Part III, including Fārs, Lūristān, Arabistān, Khūzistān, Yazd, Karmānshāh, Ardalān, Kurdistān’ [‎186r] (376/686), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/MIL/17/15/1, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100033249832.0x0000b1> [accessed 9 March 2025]

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