File of printed papers marked 'Egyptian negotiation' between Curzon and Adly Pasha and the Egyptian delegation [84v] (168/178)
The record is made up of 1 file (87 folios). It was created in 13 Jul 1921-4 Jan 1923. 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
This transcription is created automatically. It may contain errors.
20
The Sarwat group look upon themselves, and are regarded by the party, as a
detachment holding and consolidating a position until the proper moment arrives for
the main body of their friends to come to their support and to absorb them. They
have met with a fair measure of success. They inspire the respect which is associated
with fear, but not the veneration in which Zaghlui
Pasha
An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
is held by his supporters,
or the respect which Adly
Pasha
An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
enjoys for his probity and dignity. They have not
the qualities which command popular favour, and their equivocal and petty methods of
administration have alienated the personal sympathies of many of the p.oty, and
aroused discontent among the Government officials.
The moment when they will merge into the main body of the party has been
intended, if I rightly understand their plans, to be after the elections, though there is 4
a recent tendency to bedeve that a more opportune time might be upon the King’s
signature of the Constitution. What I have hitherto loosely termed a “ party ” is
intended to become more organic under the leadership of Adly
Pasha
An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
, who is already ^
maturing his plans, in association with such men as Mohammed Mahmud
Pasha
An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
,
Massan Abdul Razik
Pasha
An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
, Lutfi Bey-el-Sayed, Dr. Hafiz Atifi and Mohammed Ali
Bey, four of them members of the original Zaghlulist Wafu. They have founded a
newspaper, which, it is stated, already has 15,000 shareholders, and which is expected
to start publication on the 23rd October. The details cf the party programme will
then become known. I observe that in some quarters in England the assumption is
made that because Adly
Pasha
An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
is founding a party he is withdrawing bis support from
the Sarwat Ministry. I believe there is no ground for this assumption. The scheme,
I am given to understand, is for the party to make its electoral campaign in collabora
tion with the Government, and, if their anticipations are fulfilled, for Sarwat
Pasha
An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
to
resign after the elections, with a view to Adly
Pasha
An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
, as the leader of the victorious
party, becoming Piime Minister and presumably finding an important place in his
Ministry for Sarwat. They count, through the backing of the landed classes, upon the
election and support of the strong country candidate in all or nearly all the rural
constituencies, and upon a sweeping victory over the Zaghlulists.
They are, I sus. ect, over-confident ; and indeed Adly
Pasha
An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
himself, who is
always more prone to see his difficulties than the way out of them, seemed in a recent
conversation with me to be less happy than, for instance, the Ministers or Mohammed
Mahmud
Pasha
An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
, and was seeking for i-ome possible means of conciliating tiie more
moderate Zaghlulists. But, on the whole, unless any important new factor is
introduced, the omens seem favourable. 1 should here observe that Mohammed
Mahmud Pasha’s future attitude is open to some doubt. He is on the wing of the »
Adly P.irty and noticeably critical, in conversati on, of the Sarwat Administration.
The Zaghlulist Party is no longer what it was. Its men of mark are in exile and
their feebler successors are in prison. The existence of a ‘‘ Wafd ” is now hardly felt, {
and though money is found for engaging counsel in England to contest the legality of
Zaghlui Pasha’s detention, it is supposed that the party fum s aie much depleted. All
the hopes of the party are centred in the return of Zaghlul
Pasha
An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders.
to Egypt. He is
still tl ic idol of the populace, the beloved leader of a great part of the professional
classes, and to the wilder students a martyr. To most landowners, on the other hand,
he is still a bogey, and to the
fellaheen
Arabic for ‘peasant’. It was used by British officials to refer to agricultural workers or to members of a social class employed primarily in agricultural labour.
either a vague hero of their race or an ominous
destroyer of the foundations of their existence. And yet he is a little faded. To some
of his followers, such as Amin Bey Yusuf and M. Louis Fanous, it now seems desirable
to paint him in new colours as the true partisan of an understanding with Great
Britain ; but they have been disowned by the managers of the party in Egypt for
painting a picture which contrasts too violently with the hostility to Great Britain
unremittingly expressed by the party organs in Egypt.
There is evidence, however, of a tendency in the Zaghlulist Party to divide into
two wings—united by their veneration of Zaglilul and their animosity to the present
Ministry, but divided in their view of the relations of Egypt to Great Britain. A large
proportion of prominent Copts appear to remain faithful to Zaghlul, presumably on the
strength of the guarantees which he is believed to have personally given to them, and
many of these are to be found on the more modera e wing.
Not only has the party lost much of irs active force through the absence of its
leaders, but the public mind seems to have become gradually less responsive to irs
activities; even among the students the high political tension of the last four years
has appreciably relaxed. Annual occasions which the Zaghlulists are accustomed to
celebrate have this year been more tamely recognised; the majority of the telegrams
which poured out of Egypt when Zaghlul arrived at Gibraltar were signed, though
nominally sometimes on behalf of large bodies of people, by individuals of little
About this item
- Content
The file contains correspondence, minutes, and memoranda relating to negotiations between the British and Egyptian governments over Egyptian independence. Most of the file consists of minutes of conferences that took place at the Foreign Office during July and August 1921. These conferences involved an Egyptian delegation, led by Sir Adly Yeghen [Yakan] Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. , and the British, led by the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, Lord George Nathaniel Curzon. Matters covered in these meetings included: the termination of the British Protectorate, Britain's military presence, foreign relations, legislation, employment of foreign officials, financial and judicial control, Soudan [Sudan], the Suez Canal, communication rights, protection of minorities, retirement and compensation of British officials, and diplomatic relations between the two countries.
Also contained within the file are minutes by Ronald Charles Lindsay and John Murray, both Foreign Office officials, and correspondence between Curzon, Lindsay, Adly Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. , and Field Marshal Edmund Henry Hynman Allenby, High Commissioner for Egypt and Sudan. These papers all concern matters covered by the negotiations.
Documents of note include a copy of the Report of the Special Mission to Egypt, dated 9 December 1920 (folios 4-23), and a memorandum on the political situation in Egypt by John Murray, dated 4 January 1923 (folios 74-87).
- Extent and format
- 1 file (87 folios)
- Arrangement
The file is arranged in rough chronological order, from the front to the rear. On the inside front cover is a manuscript index with a numbered list of the file's contents.
- Physical characteristics
Foliation: the main foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the front cover with 1, and terminates at the inside back cover with 89; 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. An additional foliation sequence is present in parallel between ff 2-87; these numbers are also written in pencil, but are not circled.
Pagination: the file also contains an original printed pagination sequence.
- Written in
- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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File of printed papers marked 'Egyptian negotiation' between Curzon and Adly Pasha and the Egyptian delegation [84v] (168/178), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, Mss Eur F112/261, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100077019155.0x0000a9> [accessed 27 June 2026]
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Copyright: How to use this content
- Reference
- Mss Eur F112/261
- Title
- File of printed papers marked 'Egyptian negotiation' between Curzon and Adly Pasha and the Egyptian delegation
- Pages
- front, front-i, 2r:24v, 27r:40v, 46r:53v, 55r:59v, 62r:62v, 64r, 65r, 66r:67v, 71r:85v, 88r:88v, back-i, back
- Author
- East India Company, the Board of Control, the India Office, or other British Government Department
- Usage terms
- Open Government Licence
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