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‘Military report on the British Protectorate of Aden and the Amir of Dala’s territories, with special reports on certain other tribes and adjoining border districts’ [‎168r] (340/490)

The record is made up of 1 volume (243 folios). It was created in 1905-1908. 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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249
The Sub-tribes of Ghanemi are :—
The Basiri.
The Mansuri.
The Huseni.
The Radmani.
The Kairi.
The Sirhani.
The Sare.
Mansuri Villages — Sara, Mansam, Damahat, Sid, Masai.
Other Villages —A\ Abl, Khamam.
Huseni. —Shekh ’ Amr Abd Ahmad.
Villages. — Koz, Hajaji, Aukaba, Ahl Abu Badawi, ’ Ark Selan (in Wadi A seasonal or intermittent watercourse, or the valley in which it flows. Sharf.)
Kairi or Wadi A seasonal or intermittent watercourse, or the valley in which it flows. al Gharra and Sirhan —Contain 60 or 70 fighting
men each. The two districts are said to be situated in the same vallejj
have many wells and are very fertile.
Kairi Shekhs .—Hizam Alawi and Al Khadr Alawi.
Kairi Villages — A\ Makhnal, Al Khadra, An Najden.
Sirhani Shekfis.—Ab& 3 i\'rabo Salim, Salim Sirhan.
Sirhani Villages.—W Kharaba, Al Abali, An Nukom, Al Musen’a, Kadda, Hamah
Monkata, Hajt.
Amid —is a small distrct numbering about 200 fighting men which
was lormerly under the Beda Sultans to whom they furnished soldiers in
war-time. They appear now 7 to have fallen under the influence of Kaid
Jabri Nasir, but pay no tribute, and by some accounts are on bad terms
with him.
The country is level, wdth numerous w 7 ells and very fertile, jowari,
wheat, and barley, as w-ell as fruits of various kinds, being grown.
Head Shekh .—Ahmad Nasir.
CVrttts. —Sharajiba, 60 fighting men.
Al Omar, 30 fighting men.
Al Eisa, 40 fighting men.
Al Wahab, 20 fighting men.
Al Tahir, 30 fighting men.
Villages. —Hamuma, Safia, Karifen, Zanabe. Al Butera, Al Badi, An Nagrl, Al
Ekhria, Al Hamra, Al Ashar, An Nakira, An Nahr, Akhrita, Haria, Janib, Amdan,
Roda, Al Milah, Kharaba, Wa’il, Hizian.
II.—DISTRICTS UNDER BEDA.
Beda or Bilad ad Dahir (the plateau country).
The district of Beda and its dependencies forms a collection of small
tribes in the nature of a confederacy, under the Om Rassas Sultanate of
Beda. The Beda Sultans were formerly a very powerful factor, exercis
ing a wide-spread and effective influence, involving the payment of tribute,
and the performance of military service by the tribes subject to the
central authority. Their influence has waned considerably of late years,
some tribes having fallen under Turkish influence and others more parti
cularly to the north w r est, becoming independent.

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Content

The volume, a military report compiled in the Intelligence Branch of the QMG’s [Quartermaster General’s] Department and published at the Government Central Printing Office, Simla, is comprised of several sections, as follows:

  • section I, a Military Report on the British Protectorate of Aden , prepared by Captain Ernest Arthur Frederick Redl (ff 10-52), and including chapters on: geography; ethnography, with details of the different tribes living in the Protectorate; climate and health; natural resources; harbours and anchorages; communications; fortresses; history; native inhabitants’ administration; the military organisation and strength of native inhabitants; and political relations. A handwritten note is included in the report (f 49), and concerns the entitlements of Protectorate Chiefs to salutes, and issue to them of arms and ammunition, 1906;
  • section II, a Report on the Amir of Dala’s [Ad Dali’] Territories , prepared by Major J K Tod (ff 54-118), and including chapters on: geography; ethnography; climate and health; resources; communications; forts and fortified posts; history; administration, and military. Following the report is a gazetteer providing greater detail of the sixteen districts in Dala, including: topography; ruling families and allegiances; villages and population figures, including numbers of fighting men; water resources; agricultural and industrial activities;
  • section III, Reports on Haushabi, Subehi and Yafa’i Tribes, Turkish and North Western Border Districts and the River Tiban , divided into chapters, all prepared by Captain Redl unless otherwise specified, on: 1) the Haushabi [al-Ḥawshabī] (ff 120-130), and including a handwritten note, dated December 1905 (f 122), noting that the Sultan of Haushabi has agreed to abide by an agreement of 1895; 2) the Subehi tribes near the Turkish border (ff 130-144); 3) the districts of Turkish Yemen adjoining the British boundary (ff 144-165); 4) Tribes of the north-west frontier Region of British India bordering Afghanistan. (ff 165-172); 5) a memorandum of the Yafa’i [Yāfi‘] tribe, prepared by Captain Gonville W Warneford (ff 172-183); 6) The Wadi A seasonal or intermittent watercourse, or the valley in which it flows. Tiban (ff 184-185);
  • section IV, Routes (ff 186-228), detailing numerous routes between key points in Aden province, noting: distances; stages; nature of the terrain and its suitability for different modes of transport; available resources en route; territories crossed. A (duplicated) confidential memorandum, written by Captain G A F Sanders of the Aden Brigade, dated 24 August 1905, containing additional information for stages 5 and 6 of route 5 has been added to the volume (ff 195-198);
  • appendix I, a brief statement on inland trade between Aden and the Arabian mainland, 1903 (ff 229-230).

The volume is extensively illustrated throughout with fold-out maps, plans and illustrations, prepared by the Intelligence Branch (I.B.) and all of which describe the topography and terrain of the region. There are three maps included in a pocket at the end of the volume: a map of the Aden Protectorate (f 242); a view from the ruined village of Lakmat Magharam about one-and-a-half miles west of Sanah [Ṣanʻā'] (f 240); and a road sketch from Khalla through Awabil [‘Awābil] to the upper plateau of the Rubiatein [Ar Rubay‘atayn] tribe (f 241).

Extent and format
1 volume (243 folios)
Arrangement

The volume is arranged in four sections (numbered I-IV), with a single appendix. Sections I-III are arranged in numbered chapters while section IV is arranged in twenty-three numbered routes. The volume’s contents page (ff 6-8) lists the sections and their respective chapters/routes, with page numbers referring to the volume’s printed pagination system. A general index (ff 231-238) lists placenames referred to in the volume in alphabetically ascending order, also with page numbers referring to the volume’s printed pagination.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the main foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the front cover with 1 and terminates at the back cover with 243; 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 file contains an original printed pagination sequence.

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English in Latin script
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‘Military report on the British Protectorate of Aden and the Amir of Dala’s territories, with special reports on certain other tribes and adjoining border districts’ [‎168r] (340/490), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/20/59, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100034845248.0x00008d> [accessed 4 April 2025]

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