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'Kurdistan and the Kurds' [‎6v] (12/122)

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The record is made up of 1 file (59 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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10
About 6,500 Kurdish families live round it; they have been debased and
spoilt by contact with the surrounding Arabs, and retain few national
characteristics; they affect Arab dress and Arab customs; and their
correspondence is conducted in Arabic. Its importance lies in the fact
that it is the centre for the Tayy Arabs and the Dakshuri, Tamiki, and
other Kurds ; their chiefs are noted for the protection which they have
always extended in times of persecution to the Christians, who possess
seven villages in the surrounding country, mostly to the north of the
town. The Tayy Arabs, who number about 3,000 families, occupy 35
villages, chiefly to the south-west; all these Arabs owe allegiance to one
sheikh only, and are more than a match for the Kurds.
Other places of moderate importance in Northern Kurdistan are
Samsat on the Euphrates, Severek between Uriah and Diarbekr, and
Derek between Uriah and Mardin, Itas-el-‘Ain down in the plain, Challek
at the bend of the Tigris above Jezirat-ibn-‘Omar, and Sairt on the Bohtan
Su. None of these places, however, deserve special mention, being for
the most part only local centres for trade. The great drawback to all
commerce in the country is the lack of railways; the sole main line is
the Baghdad Railway, which only reaches Nimatli, 10 kilometres east of
Nisibin; a branch-line runs up from near Ras-el-‘Ain to Mardin, but it
goes no further; other sectors of the line, though commenced, remain
unlinished. Mardin is connected by a line of narrow gauge with Izzet
Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. and Ba’ Dina, a village containing 30 Kurdish huts, and situated on a
high, well-wooded mountain to the west-south-west of Mardin ; other
incomplete decauvilles exist. These were all built by the German
engineers during the war, whose intention it doubtless was to extend
the system. Thus Kurdistan is linked up with Asia Minor by one main line
only, whereas with Mesopotamia and Southern Kurdistan on the other
side it is unconnected; internally, also, the country has hardly been opened
up at all. With these limits, therefore, commercial enterprise is necessarily
very restricted.
§ 3 .—Southern Kurdistan.
Southern Kurdistan’is that part of the country which runs roughly
from Lake Van along the east bank of the Tigris on the one side, and the
Persian hills on the other side, from Lake Urmiyah down to Mendali and
the Pusht-i-Kuh. Below Lake Urmiyah the main ridge changes to sand
stone and broadens out into “ a wide highland swell, the rolling home of
the Persian Kurds, rich in flocks and grain ” (Hogarth), in which the Lesser
Zab and the Diyala Shirwan rise. This country, which is the original
home of the Kurds" has yielded the first place in importance now to
* The modern Kurds are probably descendants of the Cordueni, who are described
by Pliny and Strabo as being a warlike, marauding people, practically independent
of any control; these latter are generally identified by commentators with the
Carduchi, who hampered the march of the Ten Thousand under Xenophon through the
mountains which lay to the south of Armenia and to the east of the Tigris (Xen.
A nab. hi. 5, iv. 1, v. 5, and vii. 8).

About this item

Content

The file consists of a publication concerning Kurdistan and the Kurds. Produced and published by the General Staff, India, and printed in Mount Carmel, Palestine. It provides an edited collection of information based on the reports of military and political officers Captain C F Woolley, and Major Edward Noel (dated c 1919), and a paper written by Sir Mark Sykes in 1908.

It is divided into the following sections:

  • Kurdistan and the Kurds - including boundaries, topography, and its inhabitants;
  • the Kurdish tribes - including their locality, rough numbers, character, prominent families, and allegiances;
  • Kurdish tribes outside Kurdistan - between Erzingan [Erzincan] and Sivas and in the neighbourhood of Marash [Kahramanmaraş], in Anatolia Peninsula that forms most of modern-day Turkey. , and in Syria;
  • the Kurdish Movement for independence - history, origins, and causes;
  • additions and corrections.

Also includes one map on folio 61: 'KURDISTAN AND THE KURDISH TRIBES'.

Extent and format
1 file (59 folios)
Arrangement

The file consists of a single publication. A contents page is at the front of the volume (f 2).

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the front cover with 1, and terminates at the last folio, with 61, which is a folded map attached to the outside 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. Pagination: the file also contains an original printed pagination sequence.

Written in
English in Latin script
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'Kurdistan and the Kurds' [‎6v] (12/122), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/MIL/17/15/22, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100035251755.0x00000d> [accessed 31 March 2025]

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