‘GAZETTEER OF PERSIA VOL. I Comprising the Provinces of ASTARÁBÁD, SHÁHRUD-BÚSTAN, KHÚRÁSÁN, AND SÍSTÁN’ [74r] (152/722)
The record is made up of 1 volume (384 folios). It was created in 1886-1895. 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.
off into hopeless slavery. The price for which a man can he ransomed is
from 25 to 5U tumans—a sum far beyond the reach of the ordinary
villager.
The Atak villages pay no revenue, but they are valuable as an outer
line of defence, and serve also to keep the enemy at a greater distance.
Beyond these to the west are some Turkman camps, which pay a small
tribute to the Khan of Daraghaz for immunity from attacks, and are useful
in furnishing information of projected allamans, and in negotiating for
the ransom of prisoners.
For the first few miles from the foot of the hills the soil of the Atak is
poor and sandy. It is in many parts also saline and covered with saline
efflorescence. Further out it becomes more fertile. The fertile belt extends
from or 5 to 16 and 20 miles, and is then lost in a sandy waste that
extends to the Caspian and Aral.
The Atak of Daraghaz has always belonged to Persia, and has always been
ruled by the Persian Governor of Daraghaz without interruption, and cer
tainly has been very strongly held since Lutf Ali Khan built Lutfabad
about the commencement of the present century. Previous to 1832 the
Atak of Daraghaz was, as were most of the outlying provinces of Khurasan,
more or less independent of Kajar rule ; but in that year Abbass Mirza forced
it to submit, and since then it has, though very subject to Turkman raids,
formed a portion of Persia, as fully under Persian dominion as any part
of Persia. In 1882, however, the Russian Governor of Askabad pro
claimed that all the Sum villages in the Atak belonged to Russia, and that
they were notin future to pay any revenue to the Persian Government; and,
as a matter of fact, this has been actually carried out, the Shiah villages
alone paying revenue to Persia. It is believed that this was done under
orders from Tehran. Under these circumstances, the Shiahs, finding the
Sdnfs pay no revenue, are very anxious also to become Russian
subjects.
'Mountains .—The principal peaks of the enclosing mountains are the
Zarin Kuh, north-north-west of the chief village (about 6,000 feet); the
Kuh Kuchan, standing isolated at the west end of the valley, about 4,000
feet; Kuh Asalman, west of the valley, standing far up on the north side
of the river; Kuh Ala Dagh, also to the west, on the south side of the river;
and the Kfih Duz a little to the south of west. These last three are not
less than 8,000 feet in height. The lower hills and hill skirts are of
soft marls, and shales weathered into easy slopes; the higher masses of
limestones and slates. There are no forest trees, and even the chaiacteristic
juniper is rarely seen; but the pasturage herbage are more luxuriant
on the southern face of the chain ; and the ravines are well filled with thickets
of barberry, dwarf maple, and other deciduous shrubs. <
Daraghaz This river, also called the Durangar river, is the largest
of the streams flowing north from the Atak range. It rises in the junction
of the Alburz and Damanu-Kuh between Daraghaz and Kuchan, and drains
the plateau north-west of Kuchan, flows west through the glen of Shorak
Darbudam, and through a narrow defile enclosed by cliffs of great neight mto
the glen of Durangar, past the first Daraghaz villages, and thence winding
between rugged hills enters the basin of Daraghaz, and traversing it in an
easterly direction for 13 or 14 miles, bends north to the Atak. Its whole
course is about 80 miles, and where unreduced by irrigation, it has a depth
of 21 feet and a width of 20 feet about 16 miles from the Darband or
About this item
- Content
This volume is Volume I of the four-volume Gazetteer of Persia (1886 edition). It was compiled for political and military reference by Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Metcalfe MacGregor, Assistant Quarter Master General, in 1871, and brought up to 31 July 1885 by the Intelligence Branch, Quarter Master General’s Department in India. It was printed by the Government Central Branch Press, Simla, India in 1886.
The areas of Persia [Iran] covered are Astarabad, Shahrud-Bustan, Khurasan [Khorāsān], and Sistan. The boundaries of the areas covered by Volume I are as follows: the Afghan border from the River Helmand to Sarakhs in the east; and from there a line north-west to Askhabad, due west to the Atrak, which it follows to the Caspian Sea; then along the sea coast to Ashurada Island; then in a straight line to Shahrud; and from the latter south-east to Tabas hill, Sihkuha, and the Helmand, from where the river first meets the south-east border of Sistan.
The gazetteer includes entries on human settlements and buildings (forts, hamlets, villages, towns, provinces, and districts); communications (passes, roads, bridges, canals, and halting places); tribes and religious sects; and physical features (rivers, streams, springs, wells, fords, valleys, mountains, hills, plains, and bays). Entries include information on history, geography, buildings, population, ethnography, resources, trade, agriculture, and climate.
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 includes the following illustrations: ‘VIEW OF AK-DARBAND.’ [Mss Eur F112/376, f 12v]; ‘PLAN OF AK-KALA.’ [Mss Eur F112/376, f 14]; ‘ROUGH SKETCH OF ASTARÁBÁD, FROM AN EYE-SKETCH BY LT.-COL. BERESFORD LOVETT, R. E., 1881.’ [Mss Eur F112/376, f 24]; ‘ROUGH PLAN OF BASHRÚGAH’ [Mss Eur F112/376, f 40v]; ‘ROUGH PLAN OF BÚJNÚRD’ [Mss Eur F112/376, f 48]; and ‘BUJNURD, FROM THE S. W.’ [Mss Eur F112/376, f 49v].
It also includes the following inserted papers (folios 51 to 60): a memorandum from the Office of the Quartermaster General in India, Intelligence Branch to Lord Curzon, dated 6 December 1895, forwarding for his information ‘Corrections to Volume I of the Gazetteer of Persia’, consisting of articles on the Nishapur district of the province of Khorasan, and the Shelag river.
- Extent and format
- 1 volume (384 folios)
- Arrangement
The volume is arranged as follows from the front to the rear: title page; preface; list of authorities consulted; and entries listed in alphabetical order.
- Physical characteristics
Foliation: the foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the front cover with 1, and terminates at the inside back cover with 388, 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.
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- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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‘GAZETTEER OF PERSIA VOL. I Comprising the Provinces of ASTARÁBÁD, SHÁHRUD-BÚSTAN, KHÚRÁSÁN, AND SÍSTÁN’ [74r] (152/722), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, Mss Eur F112/376, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100107690761.0x000099> [accessed 28 November 2024]
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- Reference
- Mss Eur F112/376
- Title
- ‘GAZETTEER OF PERSIA VOL. I Comprising the Provinces of ASTARÁBÁD, SHÁHRUD-BÚSTAN, KHÚRÁSÁN, AND SÍSTÁN’
- Pages
- front, back, head, tail, spine, edge, front-i, 2r:12r, 13r:13v, 15r:23v, 25r:40r, 41r:47v, 49r, 50r:195v, 196ar:196av, 196r:357v, back-i
- Author
- East India Company, the Board of Control, the India Office, or other British Government Department
- Usage terms
- Open Government Licence