Coll 6/9 'Jeddah Reports Jany 1931–' [274v] (549/802)
The record is made up of 1 file (399 folios). It was created in 1 Jul 1931-31 Mar 1938. 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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III .—Relations with Powers outside Arabia.
67. There is little of interest to record under this heading. The pilgrimage
and the predominant importance of the negotiations in regard to re a i° ns e
Saudi -Arabia and
Transjordan
Used in three contexts: the geographical region to the east of the River Jordan (literally ‘across the River Jordan’); a British protectorate (1921-46); an independent political entity (1946-49) now known as Jordan
prevented any important subjects other than the
latter from being pursued between His Majesty s Government am e au . 1*
Government. The French Charge d’Affaires has been almost invisible but is saia
to have taken a strong line on behalf of the lady mentioned m paragrap / e 9. *
The Netherlands representative has been kept busy, despite the smallness ot this
year’s pilgrimage from Java, by arrangements for the repatriation ot over ,
destitutes, who have been accumulating for some time past and are now being
sent home at the joint cost of private contributors to a charitable tund and the
Government of the Dutch East Indies. The Persian Charge left Jedda, with his
usual joy in terminating his short spells there, on the 25th April. Afghanis an
has been in evidence owing to the large percentage of Afghans in a small o\eiseas
pilgrimage and the presence among them of several diplomats beside the Atghan
Minister for Foreign Affairs. An Afghan consulate has been established m
principle in Jedda, and it was announced on the 14th April that Silahuddm fGm 11
Saljuqi had obtained a Saudi exequatur with effect from the 11th April. I is
gentleman is also consul at Bombay, and the present intention seenis to be merely
to detail him for work at Jedda during the pilgrimage season. He arrived on
the 16th March and left for India on the 25th April.
IV.— Miscellaneous.
68. Sir Andrew Ryan cleared up with Fuad Bey on the 1st April the affair
of the visit of H.M.S. Penzance to the Farsan Islands, which, it proved on a review
of previous correspondence, ought either not to have taken place or ought to have
been notified to the Saudi Government. I he latter seem to be contemplating t e
adoption of general regulations for the visits of foreign warships to other ports.
Meanwhile the Farsan Islands’ affair cast no shadow over the visit of Penzance
to Jedda from the 1st to 8th April. Several of her Somali ratings made the
pilgrimage. j .e ^
69. The Imperial Airways Hanno, one of the large aeroplanes used tor the
Indian service, made a forced landing near Jubail, after having lost its way in
thick weather, on the 31st March and got into difficulties in the sand. It was
fortunately possible to inform the Saudi Government without delay and their
subsequent remonstrance was comparatively mild, but the incident has drawn
attention to the difficulty of avoiding at least occasional flying o\er and even
landings of a kind which they resent as being violations of territory. The local
authorities behaved w T ell and helped to extricate the Hanno from its predicament
without awaiting instructions, so that she reached Bahrein safely on the 1st April.
70. Mr. A. S. Calvert arrived in Jedda on the 22nd April and took up his
duties as head of the Chancery of the Legation, in succession to Mr. Hope Gill.
71. Lady Evelyn Cobbold returned from the Mecca pilgrimage on the
7th April, exhausted^ and not having met Ibn Saud, but happy in the illusion that
she was the first European of her sex to accomplish the pilgrimage. She left for
England on the 9th April. A certain relief was perceptible in various quarters,
but it was doubtless due to ignorance only that a local paper transformed her name
into “ the Lady Zeynab Awful Bubble.”
72. Lady Evelyn had a potential rival in the person of a Frenchwoman with
a singular past in Syria, who had conceived the idea of getting to Mecca and
obtaining copy for a book by marrying ad hoc a Nejdi sojourner in Syria. The
couple were foiled by French authorities in Syria, but were united, it is said, by a
Qadhi at Haifa. When they got to Jedda the husband was unable to get per
mission for the lady to go to Mecca. Shortly afterwards he died in Jedda, in
circumstances which convinced the Saudi authorities that she had poisoned him.
Meanwhile the lady had contracted an intimacy with the handsome but ne'er-do-
well son of the French Charge dAffaires. This young man has been wafted away,
but at the end of the month the lady was still in durance pending a decision as to
whether she should be put to death or merely deported.
About this item
- Content
This file consists almost entirely of copies (forwarded by the Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs to the Under-Secretary of State for India) of printed reports sent either by the His Majesty's Minister at Jedda (Sir Andrew Ryan, succeeded by Sir Reader William Bullard), or, in the Minister's absence, by His Majesty's Chargé d’Affaires (Cecil Gervase Hope Gill, succeeded by Albert Spencer Calvert), to the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. Most of the reports cover a two-month period and are prefaced by a table of contents. The reports discuss a number of matters relating to the Kingdom of the Hejaz and Nejd (later Saudi Arabia), including internal affairs, frontier questions, foreign relations, the Hajj, and slavery.
The file includes a divider, which gives a list of correspondence references contained in the file by year. This is placed at the back of the correspondence.
- Extent and format
- 1 file (399 folios)
- Arrangement
The papers are arranged in approximate chronological order from the rear to the front of the volume.
- Physical characteristics
Foliation: the foliation sequence commences at the inside front cover with 1, and terminates at the last folio with 400; 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 leather cover wraps around the documents; the back of the cover has not been foliated.
A previous foliation sequence, which is also circled, has been superseded and therefore crossed out.
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Coll 6/9 'Jeddah Reports Jany 1931–' [274v] (549/802), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/12/2073, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100037351183.0x000097> [accessed 5 April 2025]
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- Reference
- IOR/L/PS/12/2073
- Title
- Coll 6/9 'Jeddah Reports Jany 1931–'
- Pages
- front, front-i, 2r:47r, 48r, 49r:61r, 62r:89r, 91r:334r, 336r:398v, 400r:400v, back
- Author
- East India Company, the Board of Control, the India Office, or other British Government Department
- Usage terms
- Open Government Licence