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'IRAQ AND THE PERSIAN GULF' [‎169r] (342/862)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (430 folios). It was created in 1944. 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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In the
THE CLASSICAL PERIOD 233
northern Jazira and the adjacent foothills, principalities of ‘Arabs’,
as the Greeks called the pastoral Arameans, were developing around
Nisibis, Edessa, and Hatra. In the extreme south Mesene, the former
delta country of the Sea Land, now greatly extended into the gulf,
became the sub-kingdom of Charax Spasinu or Characene. Charax,
at the mouth of the Tigris, became the main port of Mesopotamia
and a cosmopolitan centre, where Greek and Semitic elements
predominated.
Elymais (Elam) likewise became a sub-kingdom under the Iranian
dynasty of Kamnoskires; its way of life was mixed Greek and Iranian.
The Greeks predominated in the city of Susa, renamed Seleucia-on-
Eulaeus, but the Iranian hill-folk were the main strength of the
kingdom, and the cult of the Semitic goddess Nana was wide
spread. Adiabene (Assyria) was another sub-kingdom, and within
it, at Ashur, a small community of temple priests carried on the
ancestral worship of their god Ashur, using Aramaic and untouched
by either Greece or Iran; in the third century a.d. one of them was
called Esarhaddon. The kings of Adiabene were at one time converted
to Judaism. Gordyene, a district of small principalities, corresponds
to modern Iraqi Kurdistan, and commemorates the consolidation
of the Kurdish peoples (Gordi, Carduchi) in their present localities.
At the nodal point of Mesopotamia the great Greek city of Seleucia,
the focus of Greek civilization, maintained its constitution, though the
Parthians built themselves a barrack town and winter capital on the
opposite bank of the Tigris at Ctesiphon and later sought to weaken
Seleucia by transfer of population. Another Parthian city, Volo-
gesocerta, was also founded near by to draw away some of Seleucia’s
trade. The Greek and semi-Greek cities retained sufficient life
to maintain schools of philosophy and produce men of letters during
the first two centuries of the Parthian era, including two geographers
from Charax and an historian from Artemita. The Greek way of
life was gradually undermined by Semitic and other influences,
but it was a sudden blow, the sack of Seleucia by the Roman general
Avidius Cassus in the campaign of a.d. 164, that fatally weakened
the Greek tradition in Mesopotamia.
Commerce and Trade Routes
The unifying factor amid this welter of political and cultural
diversity was trade. Commerce had ceased to be parochial ever
since the Achaemenid Empire had established a universal currency
and the protection of the trade routes. Through Mesopotamia

About this item

Content

The volume is titled Iraq and the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. (London: Naval Intelligence Division, 1944).

The report contains preliminary remarks by the Director of Naval Intelligence, 1942 (John Henry Godfrey) and the Director of Naval Intelligence, 1944 (E G N Rushbrook).

There then follows thirteen chapters:

  • I. Introduction.
  • II. Geology and description of the land.
  • III. Coasts of the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. .
  • IV. Climate, vegetation and fauna.
  • V. History.
  • VI. People.
  • VII. Distribution of the people.
  • VIII. Administration and public life.
  • IX. Public health and disease.
  • X. Irrigation, agriculture, and minor industry.
  • XI. Currency, finance, commerce and oil.
  • XII. Ports and inland towns.
  • XIII. Communications.
  • Appendices: stratigraphy; meteorological tables; ten historical sites, chronological table; weights and measures; authorship, authorities and maps.

There follows a section listing 105 text figures and maps and a section listing over 200 illustrations.

Extent and format
1 volume (430 folios)
Arrangement

The volume is divided into a number of chapters, sub-sections whose arrangement is detailed in the contents section (folios 7-13) which includes a section on text-figures and maps, and list of illustrations. The volume consists of front matter pages (xviii), and then a further 682 pages in the original pagination system.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the front cover with 1, and terminates at the inside back cover with 430; 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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'IRAQ AND THE PERSIAN GULF' [‎169r] (342/862), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/MIL/17/15/64, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100037366479.0x00008f> [accessed 22 March 2025]

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