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‘PERSIA. BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF MEMBERS OF THE ROYAL FAMILY, NOTABLES, MERCHANTS, AND CLERGY, COMPILED BY LIEUTENANT-COLONEL H. PICOT, Military Attaché at Teheran .’ [‎49v] (103/126)

The record is made up of 1 volume (60 folios). It was created in Dec 1897-8 Jul 1898. 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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90
KHORASSAN.
17. HAJJI HUSAIN—
Aichitect in charge of the shrine buildings of IMeslied, and general
building contractor.
Age 65.
18. HAJJI ISMAIL—
Architect in charge of the shrine buildings at Meshed, and general
building contractor.
Age 30.
19. JAMSHIDI TRIBE OF KHORASSAN—
During the reign of Shah Kamran, the Jamshidi tribe numbered
about 12,000 families and were settled, under their chief Zaman
Khan, son of Karah Khan, in the Badghis district of Herat.
Zaman Khan’s cousins, Mir Ahmad Khan, Abdullah Khan and
Mehdi Kuli Khan (sons of Jabbar Khan, son of Mahmud Khan),
who were also Jamshidi Khans, were inimical to him. From
Badghis the tribe migrated to Merv and afterwards to Urganj ;
about 2,000 families, however, remained and settled at Kurrukh,
and Khan Hazrat, the Amir of Urganj, appointed Mir Ahmad
Khan as chief of the tribe settled in that district, Abdullah
Khan was appointed chief of the Jamshidis in Herat, but he tied
to Maimenah, whereupon Allahyar Khan, son of Zaman Khan,
took his position. About this time disputes arose between the
Urganj and Yamut tribes, and during these disputes Mir Ahmad
Khan was killed. The Khan of Urganj then appointed Mehdi
Kuli Khan chief of the Jamshidis, and conferred upon him the
title of Khan Aka. During the disturbances in Urganj, Mehdi
Khan, who was anxious to return to his former residence, escaped
and went to Andkhui.
Herat was, at tills time, being besieged by the Persians under
Hisam es Saltaneh, Sultan Murad Mirza, who, acting under the
orders of his government, persuaded 2,000 families of Jamshidis
to migrate to Khorassan, under their chief Allahyar Khan, and
settled them in the Sar i Jam district.
After Hisam es Saltaneh’s return from Herat, the Jamshidi
families in Andkhui came back to Herat and settled in Badghis,
under their chief Mehdi Kuli Khan, Khan Aka, who was after
wards murdered by Sardar Leader of a tribe or a polity; also refers to a military rank or title given to a commander of an army or division. Ayub Khan at Herat. His son
Yalangtush Khan, who succeeded him, was killed by Amir Abdur
Rahman Khan. The Jamshidis who had migrated to Khorassan
remained in Sar i Jam for six months, but, as the Turkomans
frequently raided that district, they migrated to Kanagushah and
Karrabukhah, near Meshed, whence a large number of the families
were sent back to Herat by their chief; and on this becoming

About this item

Content

Printed collection of biographical notices, as well as comments on élite dynasties and tribes of Persia [Iran], written over a period of twelve months and completed in December 1897 by Lieutenant-Colonel Henry Philip Picot (Military Attaché, Teheran [Tehran]), then Acting Oriental Secretary in Her Majesty’s Legation. Amendments were added up until 23 January 1898. The author presented the manuscript to Charles H Hardinge (First Secretary, Foreign Office, London), 27 January 1898. The latter forwarded it to the Marquis of Salisbury (Prime Minister), 28 January 1898, who received it a month later (28 February 1898). The title page (f 1) is stamped as having belonged previously to the Government of India’s Library of the Foreign Office, Simla, where this copy was received with two other copies (two for Simla and one for Calcutta [Kolkata], three copies in total) and a letter from the Secretary of the Political and Secret Department, dated 8 July 1898 (location not disclosed). The contents are marked secret (originally ‘confidential,’ crossed out), and specified as, ‘For the use of Officers in Her Majesty’s Service only.’

The printed work comprises two ‘inclosures’ [enclosures]: firstly, Picot’s letter of presentation to Hardinge (f 2v), prefaced by Hardinge’s letter of presentation to the Marquis of Salisbury (f 2); secondly, the treatise proper (ff 3r-60v). The contents page (f 3v) lists four main sections, but without corresponding page references. Following a brief introduction (f 4), an alphabetic register [index] of names (ff 4v-11v), and a glossary of titles and terms (ff 12r-13v), the work is divided into eight chapters comprising numbered entries. The first four chapters deal with the royal family in Teheran (forty-five entries over ff 14r-19v), the notables of Teheran (ninety-seven entries over ff 20r-32v), the merchants of Teheran (twenty-eight entries over ff 33r-35v), and the clergy of Teheran (eleven entries over ff 36-37). The remaining four chapters focus on the provinces of Fars (thirty-eight entries over ff 37v-44v), Ispahan [Isfahan] (eleven entries over ff 45-47), Khorasan (fifty-nine entries over ff 47v-57v), and Tabriz (twenty-two entries over ff 58-60).

Extent and format
1 volume (60 folios)
Arrangement

The entries are recorded in chronological order from the front to the rear of the volume. Contents page (folio 3v) and indices (folios 4v-13v) are included towards the beginning.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the first folio with 1 and terminates at the last folio with 60; 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 volume also contains an original pagination sequence.

Written in
English in Latin script
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‘PERSIA. BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES OF MEMBERS OF THE ROYAL FAMILY, NOTABLES, MERCHANTS, AND CLERGY, COMPILED BY LIEUTENANT-COLONEL H. PICOT, Military Attaché at Teheran .’ [‎49v] (103/126), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, Mss Eur F112/400, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100149427188.0x000068> [accessed 22 December 2024]

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