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Annotated Copy of Persia and the Persian Question by George Curzon, with Inserted Papers [‎600r] (1214/1814)

The record is made up of 2 volumes with inserts (898 folios). It was created in 1892-1924. It was written in English, Urdu and German. 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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197
Descent
by rock-
ladders
CHAPTER XXII
FROM SHIRAZ TO BUSHIRE
yvr yip eVrr^fo dMy V y Ka l rairyy Tpr, X e m .
Herodotus, lib. ix. 122.
From a contemplation of the vast but ruined handiwork of man
I return to the record of my journey, and to an experience of the
more stupendous freaks of nature. We are now about
to descend from the central plateau of Iran, i.e. from a
mean elevation of from 4,000 to 6,000 feet, to the level
o the sea. In the course of this advance, we must first climb to
a height of 7,400 feet, from which it may be imagined that the
descent on the far side, which is accomplished within a tract of
country only thirty-five miles in width, and occupied for the most
part by upland plains, must be one of extraordinary steepness •
while the atmospheric change through which it passes, and which
is reflected m the vegetation no less than in the temperature is
not less abrupt than that from a smart winter’s frost in England
to a summer hotter than is ever known in our northern latitudes.
ns descent is only effected by a series of rocky inclines, four in
number, which have aptly been compared to ladders, accessible to
no baggage animals but camels, mules, and donkeys, and constitu
ting, in their succession and severity, what may be described without
hesitation as the roughest and least propitious highway of traffic
m the world. That such a route should ever have been selected as
a mam avenue either of passage or of commerce is creditable,
perhaps, not to the sense, but at least, to the resolution of the
ersians.. That it should be persevered in, without protest, and
almost without effort for improvement, is characteristic at once
o Oriental conservatism, and of a nation smitten with moral
ecline. Ovei such a tract of country, in which horses, though
sometimes ridden, are commonly exchanged for the more sure-
looted and little less rapid mule, it will easily be understood that
no chajjur service is, or could be, maintained. The post-horses

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Content

These two volumes are George Curzon's own personal annotated copies of both volumes of his book Persia and the Persian Question , which was published in 1892. Alongside the volumes are various loose papers relating to Persia [Iran], consisting of the following: received correspondence; newspaper cuttings; publishers' press releases; cuttings from various booksellers' catalogues; various journal and magazine articles; two items of printed official British correspondence; several prints of photographs and sketches; and a few handwritten notes by Curzon.

In most cases these papers, which range in date from 1892 to 1924, relate to the chapters in the book where they were originally inserted, suggesting that they were kept by Curzon with the intention of using them to inform a revised edition of the book.

Of particular note among the small amount of correspondence are two letters received by Curzon in 1914 and 1915 from retired schoolmaster and Islamic scholar Sayyid Mazhar Hasan Musawi of Saharanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India (ff 5-9 and ff 44-53). These letters, which are written in Urdu and are accompanied by English translations, discuss in detail several inaccuracies found in the Urdu version of Persia and the Persian Question .

The various prints of photographs and sketches, which were originally inserted into volume two, are of different locations in the Gulf region. Several of these appear to have been produced in preparation for the publication of the second volume of John Gordon Lorimer's Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. , Oman and Central Arabia (i.e. the 'Geographical and Statistical' section) in 1908, as they are identical to the versions found in that volume.

Also of note among the loose papers are an illustrated article from Country Life dated 5 June 1920, entitled 'The People of Persia' (ff 36-37), and a printed family tree of the Shah of Persia [Aḥmad Shah Qājār], produced in preparation of his visit to Britain in 1919 (f 233).

Volume one of Persia and the Persian Question contains a map of Persia, Afghanistan and Beluchistan [Balochistan], which is folded inside the front cover (f 1).

The German language material consists of a publisher's press release for two books authored by German archaeologist Ernst Emil Herzfeld (ff 29-30).

Extent and format
2 volumes with inserts (898 folios)
Physical characteristics

Foliation: this shelfmark consists of two physical volumes. The foliation sequence commences at the first folio of volume one (1-463), and terminates at the last folio of volume two (ff 464-898); 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. Each volume contains a large number of loose leaves, which have been foliated in the order that they were inserted into the volume; for conservation reasons, these loose folios have been removed from the volume and stored separately. The foliation sequence does not include the front and back covers of the two volumes.

Pagination: the file also contains an original printed pagination sequence.

Written in
English, Urdu and German in Latin and Arabic script
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Annotated Copy of Persia and the Persian Question by George Curzon, with Inserted Papers [‎600r] (1214/1814), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, Mss Eur F111/33, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100157213848.0x00000f> [accessed 9 June 2026]

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