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'GAZETTEER OF PERSIA. VOLUME I' [‎52r] (108/820)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (396 folios). It was created in 1910. 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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are also 13 villages, with a population of 1,200 households almost entirely
of Shadillu Kurds.
The valley of Maneh has 10 villages and hamlets, with 300 households
of Shadillu, and a few families of Turks.
The Simalqan plateau has 12 villages, with an aggregate of 400 houses
of Shadillu and Garili Turks.
Up to a compar tively recent date there were also in this portion of the
chiefship a number of nomads of the Guklan tribe ; but the acquisition
of Kara Kala, in such close proximity, by the Akhal Tekke, forced them
to descend to the Gurgan plain, where they still remain in political con
nection with the Ilkhani The paramount chief of certain tribes in south west Iran. of Bujnurd, who collects their revenue on the
part of the Government of Astarabad. The Guklans in the Gurgan number
about 2,000 families at present.
The Shaughan plain, with the hill-skirts about it, has five villages and
a number of hamlets or kalehs with about 400 houses. Jajarm, which
must formerly have been a place of some importance, is now in the last
stage of decay. A miserable village of 500 houses only remains amid the
ruins of what must have been a considerable town under Arab rule.
There are also 3 small hamlets, Juvar, Darreh and Garma, making a total
of about 900 houses. The people are entirely “ ’Ajam ” or Persian, which
is strange, as the name of the town and all the ruins visible are certainly
Arab, and there is in the neighbouring district of Bustam a large mixture
of Arab blood.
In Isfarain the principal village is Mianabad, containing about 700
families and about 50 small villages and hamlets.
The Chehar Deh Sankhas sub-division contains several villages. The chief
village, Sankbas, has some 300 families of Persian-speaking people.
The Shadillu Kurds were transported to this frontier from the west by
Shah ; Abbas at the end of the sixteenth century. The disastrous famines
of 1872 and several previous years that ruined the agriculture and dispersed
the population of other parts of Khorasan.
Condition ot the population. , , * i., n -j. a. j c
^ ^ brought wealth and prosperity to the Kurds of
Kuchan and Bujnurd. Their grain-crops, lying for the most part at a con
siderable elevation, and sheltered from the burning wind of the southern
deserts, are independent of irrigation. Though lighter by reason of the
want of seasonable rainfall, they were still sufficient to feed the people and
many thousands of immigi ants, and to leave a large balance for exporta
tion. The Ilkhani The paramount chief of certain tribes in south west Iran. of Bujnurd cited as an evidence of the improved condi
tion of his people, that the number of women in the town had been doubled
by importations during the famine. Young girls from the distressed dis
tricts were sold by their parents to the Kurds for a few loads of grain. The
peasants also of the outlying villages have laid by money and increased
their stock of household goods. There was certainly every appearance of
prosperity ; the villages teemed with infant life, and all classes were well
clothed, fed, and housed. The tracts lying south of the mountain chain
Isfaraln and Jajarm, had suffered somewhat, but there had been few
deaths, the destitute having found food and shelter among the Kurds.
With the exception of Isfarain and Jajarm, the valleys included in the
Chiefship are green and fertile, and would be capable of supperting a far
48 IB M
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About this item

Content

The item is Volume I of the four-volume Gazetteer of Persia (1910 edition).

The volume covers the provinces of Astarabad, Shahrud-Bustam, and Khorasan, or such part of them as lies within the following boundaries: on the north the Russo-Persian boundary; on the east the Perso-Afghan boundary; on the south and south-west, a line drawn from the Afghan boundary west through Gazik to Birjand, and the road from Birjand to Kirman, and from Kirman to Yazd; and on the west the road from Yazd to Damghan and thence to Ashraf.

The gazetteer includes entries on villages, towns, administrative divisions, districts, provinces, tribes, halting-places, religious sects, mountains, hills, streams, rivers, springs, wells, dams, passes, islands and bays. The entries provide details of latitude, longitude, and elevation for some places, and information on history, communications, agriculture, produce, population, health, water supply, topography, military intelligence, coastal features, ethnography, trade, economy, administration and political matters.

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

The volume contains an index map (from a later edition of the Gazetteer of Persia ), dated January 1917, on folio 397.

The volume also contains a glossary (folios 393-394); and note on weights and measures (folios 394v-395).

Prepared by the General Staff Headquarters, India.

Printed at the Government Monotype Press, India.

Extent and format
1 volume (396 folios)
Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the front cover with 1, and terminates at the inside back cover with 398; 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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'GAZETTEER OF PERSIA. VOLUME I' [‎52r] (108/820), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/MIL/17/15/2/1, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100037360147.0x00006d> [accessed 23 January 2025]

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