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1. General Charte der Laender Zwischen dem Schwarzen und Caspischen Meere
- Description:
- Nach Russischen und and Handschriften entworsen Strasburg bey Joh. Georg Treuttel ; I. P. Kremer delin ; B. F. Leizelt sc.Relief shown by hachures and pictorially.Prime meridian: Ferro.Includes ill.Map in German and French.
2. Papers of Sir John Malcolm relating to his diplomatic missions in Persia and to the country and history of Persia
- Description:
- Abstract: The papers relate to British relations with and diplomatic missions to Persia [Iran], notably John Malcolm’s missions of 1799-1801, 1808 and 1810, Anglo-Persian relations 1812, and the geography and history of Persia as affecting Britain’s position in India.The contents of the three volumes are covered by one list of contents (in the Volume Part 1), which includes the document number stamped at the commencement of each document (1-72), the date, name of correspondent and (in most cases) the subject. The letters are originals unless otherwise stated.Although not bound in this order, the five rough groups of papers are described here below in chronological order for purposes of narrative clarity, followed by the historical surveys.Captain John Malcolm’s letters to Sir George Barlow,with related correspondence,16 January 1801-4 April 1802. (Documents stamped numbers 1-40, ff 8-99.)During this period Malcolm was Private Secretary to Lord Mornington [Richard Wellesley, later Marquess Wellesley], Governor-General of the (Bengal) Presidency of Fort William, at Calcutta [Kolkata], and Barlow was a member of the Supreme Council of Bengal (appointed Provisional Governor-General in 1802). Malcolm’s letters were written during and after his return from his Mission to Persia [Iran] having arrived at Tehran in December 1799 and negotiated political and commercial treaties with the King of Persia [Fath-‘Ali Shāh Qājār] (signed January 1801).The letters notably relate to:Malcolm’s journeys to and across IndiaAdministrative and financial mattersA tiger hunt Malcolm joinedLetters of introduction for patronageAffairs of the merchants at PatnaInstructions from Wellesley for BarlowThe recently ratified treaty with PersiaFinancial relief for the indigo contractors at CalcuttaA request for C Buchanan’s position as Chaplain to the Residency at Calcutta to be made official so that Buchanan can draw allowancesArrangements for the return of Lord Clive (Edward Clive, Governor of Madras) to Europe by seaArrangements for couriers and shipping of Wellesley’s official dispatches to EnglandCommendation for the recent army and navy action against Egypt.General Malcolm’s letters, to Barlow, George Buchan, Secretary to the Governor of Madras, and Lord Minto, Governor-General of the Bengal Presidency at Fort William, Calcutta, 16 April 1808-9 January 1809, and 6 October 1810. (Documents stamped numbers 41-52, ff 100-209.)During this period Malcolm undertook two diplomatic missions to Persia, as envoy appointed by Lord Minto. Arriving at Bushire in May 1808 he did not get any further due to the predominating influence of the French at the Persian Court. After returning to India Malcolm travelled to and gathered a force at Bombay in readiness to either bolster or attack Persia or Turkey if either enabled the French to invade India through their territories. In March 1809, owing to the change of situation in Europe with France occupied in Spain, the British under Harford Jones’s embassy were able to conclude successful political and commercial preliminary treaties. Lord Minto re-appointed Malcolm in 1810 but although he was received by King he made no substantial progress.The letters up to January 1809 cover:Malcolm’s preparations for potential military action against Persia from the Gulph [Persian Gulf], including personnel and escort, and his journey to BombayBritish policy towards the PersiansBritish policy towards the French regarding their apparent ambitions in IndiaNews of French military advances and Napoleon Bonaparte’s plansFranco-Persian relationsProgress of the Russo-Persian warDispatches for Lord MintoActivities and dispatches of Sir Harford Jones, regarding his more successful mission in Persia promoting Anglo-Persian alliances and military collaboration against Russia.Followed by Malcolm’s lengthy account to Lord Minto on Persian affairs, dated 6 October 1810, (sent to Lord Minto from Bagdad [Baghdad]). It incorporates his analysis and opinion of the state of the Persian Empire, its history, geography, ruling dynasty (including character sketches of the King and major princes), the Persian Court, economy, society and culture. Particular attention is paid to: the territories between and routes through Persia and India; background to the current Russo-Persian war; the state of the Persian Army; the King’s policy towards his sons and chief ministers; political prospects for Persia after the King’s death; British and Persian policy towards each other since 1798 with particular reference the campaigns of Napoleon Bounapart [Bonaparte], and Russia and Turkey; diplomatic missions and Anglo-Persian agreements and alliances concluded by Malcolm and Harford Jones; Malcolm’s plan to attack Persia or Turkey from the Gulf, with a small force amassed in Bombay in January 1809, in the event of a French invasion of either country. Malcolm concludes with his suggestions for Britain’s future policy towards Persia, including a proposal to transform the irregular Persian Army into a standing army with British advisors and commanding officers as a means of repelling any invasion of India via Persia. He hints at the possibility of having to make Persia a dependency of Britain in the long-term. (Document 52, ff 142-209)Copy official letters from Charles Pasley, Political Agent, Abushahr [Bushire], to Neil Benjamin Edmonstone, Chief Secretary to the Government of India (numbered 1-7, ff 396-460), and to Brigadier-General John Malcolm (numbered 1-10, ff 461-504), 17 January-7 April 1810, with related intelligence and translated Persian letters from members of the Persian Royal family and Persian ministers. (See also volume IOR/H/733 for related material). (Documents stamped numbers 71-72, ff 396-504.)The letters relate to:Pasley’s journey from Bushire to Shirauz [Shiraz] to see Prince Hassan Ally Meerza [Ḥusayn ‘Alī Mirzā], Governor of FarsThe progress of Sir Harford Jones’s Mission to TehranMalcolm’s departure from Bombay on a parallel Mission to PersiaRelations between the two different embassiesPolicy of the Prince at Shirauz and Persian Court towards MalcolmMalcolm’s activities and preparations at Bushire for advancing towards the King’s Court and uncertainty over whether or not to take valuable giftsSir Harford Jones’s successful negotiations with the King and Crown Prince Abbas Meerza [Abbās Mīrzā Qājār, Crown Prince of Persia] and arrangement for a subsidy to the Persians to be funded from the Residency at BushireConfusion regarding instructions from HM Government, the Court of Directors and Lord Minto, Governor-General of India, to Harford Jones and Malcolm, the collision of authority and the impression given of the Government of IndiaSir Harford Jones’s establishing of his overriding authority over Malcolm’s embassy and the Bushire ResidentProgress of the Russo-Persian War and relations between Turkey and with Persia.Additional correspondents: John Briggs, Assistant; Jaafur Ali Khan [Ja‘afar ‘Alī Khān], Native Agent at Shiraz, providing intelligence from Shirauz; HE Meerza Shuffeea [Mirza Muhammad Shafi’ Mazandarani, Sadr-i A’zam (Prime Minister)]; HE Hajee Mahomed Hoossein Khan, Ameen ud/oo Dowlah [Hāji Muḥammad Ḥusayn Khān Isfahāni Amin al-Dawlah], a senior minister of state; Mahomed Nebbie Khan [Muḥammad Nabī Khān Shirāzī], Governor of Bushire; HRH Hoossein Ally/Ali Meerza [Ḥusayn ‘Alī Mirzā], at Shirauz, Governor of Fars; Prince Abbas Meerza, heir apparent (to his brother in Shirauz); Dr Andrew Jukes, East India Company official travelling with Pasley and subsequently onwards to Tehran acting for Malcolm; Sir Harford Jones, HM Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.Includes copies of Harford Jones’s renewal of his September 1807 authority from HM Government as Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at the Court of Tehran, 6 November 1809 (f 494) and account of expenses in relation to the subsidy of 60,000 tomans to be provided to the Persian government (f 497)Copy letters from Sir Gore Ouseley, HM British Ambassador to Persia, to Marquis Wellesley [Richard Wellesley, 1st Marquess Wellesley], Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (officially he had very recently resigned that post), Sir George Barlow, Governor in Council, and William Ouseley, with related documents, 15-26 March 1812. (Documents stamped numbers 53-56, ff 210-238.)During this period the British Government directed diplomatic relations directly from London via their ambassador in Tehran.The letters relate to the definitive (i.e. detailed) political treaty between Britain and Persia, notably background, motivation, difficulties met, role of Hartford Jones in concluding the initial preliminary treaties (political and commercial), reasoning behind each treaty article, its ratification by the Persian King (see f 227) and the supply of 30,000 English muskets (from India and England) for the standing army of 50,000 disciplined troops under Crown Prince Abbas Mirza, Heir Apparent. A copy of the political treaty of twelve articles to be ratified by the Heir Apparent is included (ff 228-238)Document 53 (ff 210-211) comprises a letter from Ouseley to British Orientalist William Ouseley, 15 July 1812, instructing him, on behalf of Fateh Ali Shah [Fath-Ali Shah Qajar, Shah of Iran ‘the King’] and the East India Company, to examine the Persian shore of the Caspian Sea for suitable sites to build docks in which to construct a flotilla of war vessels, to examine the forests in the adjacent area for types of timber, the large harbours and rivers connecting to the Caspian Sea, iron and coal mines in Mazenderan [Mazandaran], local geography, and the state of ship building and commerce in the ports visited.Copies of historical, geographical, socio-cultural, economic and political papers on Persia, compiled by British officials of the East India Company. (Documents numbered 57-70 and 72, ff 239-394, 505.)‘An account of Futty Aly Khan [Fath’ ‘Ali Khan Qajar, Ilkhani of Qajar Tribe], great grand-father of the present majesty, Futty Aly Shah [Fath-Ali Shah Qajar], and of his actions’ (wars) with a history of the dynasty’s territorial acquisitions and losses and conquest of Mazenderan, c 1798-1810, author not identified (ff 239-243)Report on Trade between Bombay and Persia, P S Maister, Custom Master, Bombay, and H Fawcett, for Jonathan Duncan, President and Governor in Council, Bombay, 3 December 1799 (ff 244-257)Report on the ‘Persian Gulf pirates’, history and religion, customs, of the Whabee [Wahabis], Turkish copper, and French trade, by Harford Jones, for G C Osborne, Political Secretary to Governor of Bombay, 1 December 1799 (ff 258-269)‘Sketch of the History of Georgia during the last ten years to elucidate the rise and progress of the Russian connection with that country’, chronological account covering 1795-1804, by Charles Pasley, Political Agent, Abushahr, dated 20 Jan 1805, sent to Samuel Manesty, Resident at Bussora [Basra], 1 February 1805 (ff 270-289)Letter from Malcolm to Neil Benjamine Edmonstone, Secretary to the Governor, Bengal, 12 August 1807, setting out his sentiments on a ‘proposed attack of the Turkish Empire by an expedition fitted out from India against Bussorah [Basra] and Bagdad [Baghdad]’, a preventive policy in the Middle East to deter attacks on India from European powers (ff 290-306)‘Rough Memoir respecting The Political Intercourse of France with Persia. [Taken from the correspondence]’, covering 1805-07, notably the French Mission in April 1805 under Envoy Antoine-Alexandre Romieu (who reached Tehran in September 1805 but died shortly after meeting the Shah) followed by the Mission led by Claude Mathieu de Gardane (1807-09), by unidentified author, c 1808-1812 (ff 307-333)Extract of a letter to the Governor-General at Fort William, containing information on the Persian Royal Family, with fold-out ‘Genealogical Table of the family of Kureem Khan of Persia [Karīm Khān Zand]’, by unidentified author, 7 May 1808 (ff 334-337)Letters from Captain Monier Williams, Surveyor-General, Bombay, to Malcolm, Osborne and Duncan, 13 Apr 1808-23 January 1810, containing geographical and topographical information relative to the countries between Persia and British possessions in India, particularly the southern part of Sind [Sindh] to the western frontiers of Goojerat [Gujarat] and Jhodpoor Territory (Jodhpur, also known as Marwar), i.e. where military operations were likely to take place should a French invasion occur, noting the strength of their armed forces in those areas (ff 338-365)‘Memoir of the Construction of a Map of Persia and Countries lying between the Araxes [also known as Aras], Tigris, and Indus extending from Latitude 230 400 North and Longitude 440 to 700 East’, by William Wilke, Assistant Surveyor, 1 January 1812 (ff 366-379)Account of a visit to the ruins of Babylon, including historical background, undated and author not identified c 1800-1812 (however see W B Selby, Memoir of the Ruins of Babylon, 1859) (ff 380-394)Statement of the ‘Superficial content of each province [of Persia] in English square miles’ (f 505, Paper No. 72).Physical description: Foliation: this file consists of three physical volumes. The foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the front cover of volume one (ff 1-200), through volume two (ff 200-350), and terminates at the inside back cover of volume three (ff 351-509); these numbers are written in pencil, are circled, and are located in the top right corner of the recto side of each folio.Pagination: the original pagination sequence dating from the 1920s is also present in parallel; these numbers are also written in pencil and some are also circled, but as they have been superseded are therefore crossed out. This sequence correlates to the description found in Samuel Charles Hill's Catalogue of the Home Miscellaneous Series of the India Office Records(London: HMSO, for the India Office, 1927).
3. The Ottoman Empire north of 33°N
- Description:
- Abstract: Printed sheet covering the Ottoman Empire as far south as Damascus and Baghdad. Includes all, or at least significant parts, of present-day Turkey, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Georgia, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon and Syria. Portrays hydrology, railways, settlements, place names, and international and internal boundaries; there is also a 'key to names of places denoted by figures'. The sheet bears the imprints 'Malby & Sons, Lith.' and '5708.35,000.10/16'.The verso bears the annotation 'Armenia & Asia Minor'.Physical description: Materials: Printed in colourDimensions: 326 x 617mm, on sheet 337 x 654mm
4. Reports from Georgia
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- Abstract: A record of the interrogation of an Armenian named Stephan who had recently been in Tiflis [Tblisi] by Harford Jones, Resident in Bagdad [Baghdad], on 8 January 1802.The interrogation relates to the state of affairs in Georgia under Russian occupation, the activities of members of Georgia’s royal family, a Russian embassy to Persia [Iran], and the threat of a Russian attack on Persia.Physical description: 1 item (2 folios)
5. Report on Georgia
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- Abstract: Information on Georgia received by Harford Jones, Resident in Bagdad [Baghdad], on 6 September 1801 from a merchant who arrived in Bagdad from Tiflis [Tblisi].The merchant reports: an attempt by Alexander, the brother of the Ruler of Georgia Goorgeen Khan [King Giorgi XII of Kartli-Kakheti], to take over the country with support from Baba Khan [Fatḥ-‘Alī Shāh Qājār, Shāh of Persia]; Georgeen Khan’s subsequent turn to Russia for support; the arrival of Russian forces in Georgia; and Goorgeen Khan’s pledge of allegiance to the Emperor [Tsar] of Russia.Attached is a record of Jones’s interrogation of the merchant.Physical description: 1 item (2 folios)
6. Northern Persia and Caucasia: map fragment
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- Abstract: North-east segment of a larger, unidentified printed map. Covers northern Persia [Iran] and present-day Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia with significant parts of Iraq, Turkey and Turkmenistan. Portrays hydrology, railways, settlements, place names and international boundaries. Date derived from railway information.A printed scale bar has been pasted to the sheet, and manuscript additions highlight water bodies and three categories of place names.Physical description: Materials: Printed, with manuscript additions in coloured ink and crayonDimensions: 207 x 328mm, on sheet 209 x 339mm
7. Enclosure in Letter from Henry Willock to the Secret Committee of 8 Jan 1824
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- Abstract: A copy of a letter from Henry Willock, HM Chargé d’Affaires in Persia [Iran], to George Canning, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, sent from Tabriz and dated 24 November 1823.Following a visit to Georgia, Willock reports on the state of affairs in the Caucasus where Russia is extending its control. Subjects covered include:The condition of the Georgian nobles and populationThe flight of nobles from Shervan [Şirvan] and Carabagh [Karabakh] to PersiaThe estimated strength of the Russian forces in the region under General Yermoloff [Alexey Petrovich Yermolov]Conflict between Russian forces and the Lesghis [Lezgins] and CircassiansCommunications and supply routes between Russia and GeorgiaSettlement projects in GeorgiaCommerce and construction in GeorgiaCultural changes enforced by the Russian occupation, including naming customs and clothingGeneral Yermoloff’s supposed designs on the Caspian Sea and Khorasan.The letter was enclosed in Willock’s letter to the Secret Committee of the Court of Directors of the East India Company dated 8 January 1824 (IOR/L/PS/9/69/140).Physical description: 1 item (8 folios)
8. Enclosure in Letter from Henry Willock to the Secret Committee of 8 Jan 1824
- Description:
- Abstract: A copy of a letter from Henry Willock, HM Chargé d’Affaires in Persia [Iran], to George Canning, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, sent from Tabriz and dated 6 December 1823.The letter concerns frontier relations between Persia and the Russian Empire.The letter was enclosed in Willock’s letter to the Secret Committee of the Court of Directors of the East India Company dated 8 January 1824 (IOR/L/PS/9/69/140).Physical description: 1 item (6 folios)
9. Enclosure in Letter from Henry Willock to the Secret Committee of 8 Jan 1924
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- Abstract: A copy of a letter from Henry Willock, HM Chargé d’Affaires in Persia [Iran], to George Canning, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, sent from Tabriz and dated 8 January 1824. The letter forwards a translation of a letter from the Prince Royal [‘Abbās Mīrzā, Crown Prince] of Persia to General Yermoloff [Alexey Petrovich Yermolov], Governor-General of Georgia, dated 31 December 1823, enclosed.The enclosed letter concerns efforts to delineate the border between Persia and the Russian Empire in the Caucasus and proposes a meeting to settle the issue.The letters were enclosed in Willock’s letter to the Secret Committee of the Court of Directors of the East India Company dated 8 January 1824 (IOR/L/PS/9/69/140).Physical description: 1 item (6 folios)
10. Copy of a Letter from Sir Harford Jones, Envoy to Persia, to Lord Minto, Governor-General of Bengal
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- Abstract: A copy of a letter from Sir Harford Jones, British Envoy Extraordinary to Persia [Iran], to Lord Minto, Governor-General of Bengal, sent near Sultania [Soltanieh] and dated 3 July 1809. Subjects covered include: Jones’s arrival at the Royal camp and meetings with the King [Shah] [Fath-‘Ali Shāh Qājār] and Persian ministers; Persia’s relations with France and Turkey [Ottoman Empire]; Persian military preparations and innovations in the Russo-Persian War (1804-1813); Jones’s payment of a six-month subsidy via Hajee Mohammed Hossein Khan Ameen ed Dowlah [Hājī Muhammad Husayn Khān Amīn al-Dawlah] in accordance with the Preliminary Treaty; and appeals made by the King to the people of Georgia under Russian occupation.The letter was enclosed in Jones’s letter No. 14 to Sir Robert Dundas, President of the Board of Control, received 1809.Physical description: 1 item (8 folios)
11. Copy of a Letter from Sir Harford Jones, HM Envoy to Persia, to Robert Adair, British Ambassador in Turkey
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- Abstract: A copy of a letter from Sir Harford Jones, British Envoy Extraordinary to Persia [Iran], to Robert Adair, Ambassador to Turkey [Ottoman Empire]. The letter acknowledges receipt of a letter from Adair dated 17 May 1809, and discusses the war between Turkey and the Russian Empire and military operations in Georgia.Physical description: 1 item (4 folios)