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'ABSTRACT OF LETTERS FROM INDIA 1871' [‎42v] (91/792)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (393 folios). It was created in Dec 1870-Dec 1871. 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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80
provisions of Clause 2 of Government General Order No. 1168 of
1868 which authorises, in exceptional cases, the payment as a military
charge to an Officer in Civil or Staff employ of the difference
between the consolidated salary of his appointment and his substantive
military pay, when the latter exceeds the former.
(Para. 4.)
Extension to W^arrant Officers not holding Commissions of per
mission TO PROCEED TO ENGLAND ON IVIeDICAL CERTIFICATE UNDER
Eight Years’ Service.
We forward copy of a General Order, notifying that the provisions
of Government General Order No. 22, dated 6th January 1870, under
which Officers are allowed, although they may not have completed
eight years’ actual service in India, to proceed to England on medical
certificate, with retention of appointment, and allowance prescribed in
Rule Y. of the Furlough Regulations of 1868, will be applicable to
Warrant Officers not holding commissions. In issuing this Order,
we believe we have rightly apprehended your intentions, as the
General Order No. 627 of 1870, adverted to in your Despatch of
20th October, of necessity applies to those Warrant Officers who hold
veteran or honorary commissions, and to them only.
(Para. 12.)
Report on Soldiers’ Industrial Exhibition at Meean Meer.
(See p. 479 of 1869.)
We forward the report of the Central Committee on the Soldiers’
Industrial Exhibition held at Meean Meer during the past cold
season, together with copy of correspondence, from which it will be
seen that general satisfaction has been expressed at the results shown
by the Committee.
The private subscriptions amounted to Rs. 1,512, as against Rs.287
in 1869, which may be considered as proof that the value of these
Exhibitions is rising in general estimation. One gratifying mark of
progress is the great improvement in the quality of the goods exhibited,
in which not only was excellent workmanship displayed, but con
siderable taste and skill in design. The proportion of articles returned
unsold is much smaller than on previous occasions.
No. 2.
Extension of Retiring Regdlations of 1837 to the Staff Corps
generally.
We have received your Despatch, dated 31st October 1870, de-
smng our opinion as to the advisability of ruling that, in extension of

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Content

Confidential printed abstracts of letters received by the 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. from the Government of India, and from senior officials in certain areas outside India, during the year 1871. The letters are dated December 1870-December 1871. The abstracts each have one of the following titles:

  • Abstracts of Letters received from India
  • Abstracts of Military Letters received from India
  • Abstracts of Letters received from Aden
  • Abstracts of Letters received from Bushire [Bushehr]
  • Abstracts of Letters received from Aden and Bushire
  • Abstracts of Letters received from Bushire and Aden
  • Abstracts of Letters received from Zanzibar
  • Abstracts of Letters received from Zanzibar and Bushire
  • Abstracts of Letters received from Zanzibar, Bushire and Aden
  • Abstracts of Secret Letters received from India.

Each abstract contains summaries of one or more letters from the specified source, each with a title giving the subject of the letter. Letters from India are divided within each abstract by the branch or department of the Government of India they originated from. The correspondence covers issues including:

  • Pay, pensions, recruitment, and other personnel issues in the Indian Civil and Military establishments
  • Revenue, expenditure, and taxation
  • Public works, including: roads; railways including proposed railways to Persia [Iran] and the head of the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. ; prisons; barracks; irrigation; canals; harbours; and land reclamations
  • Issues concerning Princely States, including: debts; allowances; internal administration; and police action on the borders of Marwar and Serohi [Sirohi]
  • Land issues, including land revenue settlements and forestry
  • Telegraphy
  • Issues concerning emigration from India to British Guiana [Guyana], Grenada, Penang, and French colonies
  • Military affairs, including: the reorganisation, supply, accommodation, and discipline of military units; naval deployments; and harbour defences in Aden and Bombay
  • Education
  • Banking
  • Affairs on the Northwest Frontier, including raids by the Wuzeerees [Wazīrī tribe] and frontier policy in Beloochistan [Baluchistan]
  • Affairs on the Eastern [Northeast] Frontier, including: defensive arrangements; frontier defences in British-occupied Arracan [Rakhine] and Tenasserim [Tanintharyi] in Burmah [Myanmar/Burma]; raids on tea plantations in Cachar, Sylhet, Tipperah [Tripura], and Munnipore [Manipur] by members of the Looshai [Mizo] tribes; and arrangements for a military expedition against the Looshai
  • Affairs in Persia, including: frontier relations with Turkey [Ottoman Empire] and with Afghanistan concerning Seistan [Sistan]; trade issues in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. ; famine and prohibitions on grain export
  • Affairs in the Sultanate of Muscat and Oman, in particular civil conflict leading to the accession of Syud Toorkee [Turkī bin Sa’īd Āl Bū Sa’īd] to the throne and potential threats to Syud Toorkee’s power
  • Affairs in the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. and Arabian Peninsula, including: conflict in Nejd [Emirate of Najd, also written here as Nujd] between Saood [Sa’ūd bin Fayṣal Al Sa’ūd] and Abdullah [‘Abdullāh bin Fayṣal Al Sa’ūd]; a Turkish [Ottoman] expedition to Nejd, the Turkish occupation of Lahsa [Al Hasa], and the raising of the Turkish flag in Guttur [Qatar]; and the settlement of Odeyd [Khor al-Udayd], claimed by Aboothabee [Abu Dhabi], by an independent tribe
  • Affairs in and around Aden Settlement, including: the capture of Hodeida [Al Hudaydah] by the Aseeris [Emirate of ‘Asir]; relations with neighbouring polities, in particular Lahej [Laḥij Sultanate] and the Foodlees [Faḍlī Sultanate]; the security of roads; and suspected Turkish designs in Yemen
  • Affairs in Zanzibar, including the accession of Syud Burgash [Sayyid Barghash bin Sa’īd Āl Bū Sa’īd] to the throne and his relations with Britain and Muscat and the slave trade
  • Affairs in East Africa, including suspected Turkish designs on Berbera and an attack on a British ship by the Majerteen [Mājertīn Sultanate]
  • Civil conflict in Affghanistan [Afghanistan] between Yakoob Khan [Muḥammad Ya’qūb Khān] and the Ameer [Amīr Shīr ‘Alī Khān], the flight of refugees to India, and Russian overtures to the Ameer
  • Relations with Burmah, including trade relations, proposed routes to China, and arms imports
  • Exploration of the route from Ladak [Ladakh] to Yarkund [Yarkant].

The primary correspondents are:

Extent and format
1 volume (393 folios)
Arrangement

The abstracts are arranged in roughly chronological order. A detailed index of subjects, places and people mentioned in the correspondence is included on folios 381-391.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the front cover with 1, and terminates at the inside back cover with 393; 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 foliation sequence does not include the front and back covers.

Written in
English in Latin script
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'ABSTRACT OF LETTERS FROM INDIA 1871' [‎42v] (91/792), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/20/CA11, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100133326060.0x00005c> [accessed 6 October 2024]

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