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'A handbook of Syria (including Palestine). London: Naval Staff Intelligence Department, June 1919' [‎114r] (232/738)

The record is made up of 1 volume (365 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. .

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RELIGION
221
tobacco, which the others enjoy. Of the ‘ intelligent ’ there are
two degrees; those who after two years’ probation are initiated,
but continue their ordinary occupations; and those who devote
themselves to sacred duties. The different degrees of initiation
are accompanied by ceremonies; that whereby a man is intro
duced into the order of ‘uqqal has as part of it the eating of figs.
They have a cosmogony of their own, wherein they make the
duration of the world 343 million years, divided into seventy
cycles, each of which has had seven ‘ speakers’, seven ‘ trustees
and seven £ sovereigns ’. The number seven has thus religious
importance, as has also the number five ; their religious
literature consists of the 111 treatises of Hamzah, the chief
missionary of their system. Some specimens of these have
been published ; the}' - are polemical in character, but contain
some historical matter, dealing with Hakim and his times.
The sect is identified in some of these with the Qarmatians,
who play a considerable part in the history of Islam in the
ninth and tenth centuries.
They adhere strongly to the idea of tribal revenge, and with
the inflexible resolve to take the life of an enemy for that of
a friend there coexists the equally binding duty to protect
a brother Druse who may have shed blood. In determined
courage, stubborn endurance and power of united action they
are superior to the Bedouin, who, however, excel them in
simple daring and personal intrepidity.
Before entertaining a visitor of whose religion they have no
previous knowledge, they will place two pots before him, one
empty, the other full of water. If the stranger pours the
water from the full vessel into the empty one, this is taken as
a sign that he is a believer in transmigration. To discover
whether a stranger is a true or false Druse, they ask: ‘ Are
there farmers in your part of the country who plant the seed
of the myrobalan ’ ? The true Druse replies : ‘ They plant it
in the hearts of the believers ’.
This sort of freemasonry is necessary, as like the Ansariyeh,
they maintain the propriety of taqiyah, i. e. concealing their
sect if confession is accompanied with risk.

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Content

Admiralty handbook regarding Syria (including Palestine) 'to as far north as the River Orontes and a line Antioch-Aleppo-Meskeneh. For details of the part of Syria beyond this line reference must be made to the Handbook of Asia Minor , Vol. iv, Part 2 (C.B. 847 C).'

'Contents. Chapters:

  • I. Boundaries and Physical Survey, p 9 (folio 7)
  • II. Climate, p 24 (folio 14v)
  • III. Minerals, Flora and Fauna, p 93 (folio 50)
  • IV. Military History, p 109 (folio 58)
  • V. Inhabitants, p 175 (folio 91)
  • VI. Turkish Administration, p 236 (folio 121v)
  • VII. Agriculture, p 252 (folio 129v)
  • VIII. Industry and Trade, p 276 (folio 141v)
  • IX. Currency, Weights and Measures, p 318 (folio 162v)
  • X. Jebel Ansarīyeh, p 325 (folio 166)
  • XI. Country East of Jebel Ansarīyeh, p 344 (folio 175v)
  • XII. Lebanon, Anti-Lebanon, and Damascus Plain, p 357 (folio 182)
  • XIII. River Systems of Northern Syria, p 395 (folio 201)
  • XIV. Judea and the Southern Desert, p 427 (folio 217)
  • XV. Samaria (including Carmel), p 472 (folio 239v)
  • XVI. Galilee, p 515 (folio 261)
  • XVII. Haurān and Jaulān, p 556 (folio 281v)
  • XVIII. 'Ajlūn and Northern Belqa, p 580 (folio 293v)
  • XIX. Southern Belqa and Ardh el-Kerak, p 612 (folio 309v)
  • XX. El-Jibāl and Esh-Shera, p 636 (folio 321v)
  • XXI. The Ghōr (Jordan and the Dead Sea); and Wādi 'Arabah, p 645 (folio 326)
  • Appendix: Conventional Spellings, p 668 (folio 337v)
  • Index, p 669 (folio 338)
  • Plates, p 725' [missing]
Extent and format
1 volume (365 folios)
Arrangement

The volume contains a contents page (folio 6) and an index (folios 338-365).

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence commences at the front cover with 1 and terminates at the inside back cover with 367; 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 also contains an original printed pagination sequence. The volume originally contained fourteen plates showing maps, bound into the back of the volume. These are now missing; details of the plates can be found at folio 5v.

Written in
English in Latin script
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'A handbook of Syria (including Palestine). London: Naval Staff Intelligence Department, June 1919' [‎114r] (232/738), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/MIL/17/16/15, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100033282270.0x000021> [accessed 19 December 2024]

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