Untold lives blog

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21 October 2024

Celebrating Ten Years of the Qatar Digital Library: Memorable Highlights – Part 1

Launched on 22 October 2014, the Qatar Digital Library (QDL) was developed as part of a longstanding partnership between the Qatar Foundation, the Qatar National Library, and the British Library.  The partnership includes the digitisation of a wide range of material from the British Library’s collections, aimed at improving understanding of the modern history of the Gulf, Arabic cultural heritage, and the Islamic world.

Since the QDL’s launch, nearly two and a half million images have been published, mainly deriving from two collections held by the British Library: the India Office Records (IOR) and Private Papers, and the Library’s Arabic manuscripts collection.  A small selection of items held by the Qatar National Library also features on the website.  Published alongside all these images are detailed catalogue descriptions, available in English and Arabic.

In the following passages, members of the team of experts working on the QDL reflect on memorable material that they and former colleagues have encountered during the last decade.

  • The General Treaty with the Arab Tribes of the Persian Gulf, and the importance of looking beyond appearances – IOR/L/PS/10/606 and others

Printed copy of the 1820 General Treaty with the Arab Tribes of the Persian GulfPrinted copy of the 1820 General Treaty with the Arab Tribes of the Persian Gulf – IOR/L/PS/10/606, f. 131r

The General Treaty with the Arab Tribes of the Persian Gulf is central to understanding the modern history of the Gulf and Britain’s role within it.  It is perhaps, then, no coincidence that it was given a rather vague and innocuous-sounding title, as this belied the force that lay behind it and the unbalanced relations it established with the rulers who signed it.

Front cover of an Indian Expeditionary Force ‘D’ War Diary  covering 1-15 August 1917Front cover of an Indian Expeditionary Force ‘D’ War Diary, covering 1-15 August 1917 – IOR/L/MIL/17/5/3282

The War Diaries of the Indian Expeditionary Force ‘D’ – a British Indian army dispatched to Ottoman Mesopotamia (modern-day Iraq) during the First World War – are an excellent introduction to the fascinating complexity of the IOR collection.  They describe the day-to-day activities of a large military as it steadily advanced against its Ottoman opponents, allied with local populations, and laid the groundwork for post-war imperial ambitions to keep Mesopotamia under British control.  The volumes also contain wonderful individual stories, ranging from a disastrous journey made by German aviators to the efforts of a lone Frenchman to stay one step ahead of the British authorities and take up a diplomatic post in occupied Baghdad.

  • Royal letter dispatching in late 19th century Afghanistan – Mss Eur F111/361

A kharita sent in January 1899 by Abdur Rahman Khan Barakzay  Amir of Afghanistan  to Lord George CurzonA kharita sent in January 1899 by Abdur Rahman Khan Barakzay, Amir of Afghanistan, to Lord George Curzon – Mss Eur F111/361, ff. 2r, 3r, and 4r (the silk pouch does not have a folio number)

This very small file consists of two letters, dated 1895 and 1899 respectively, from Abdur Rahman Khan Barakzay, Amir of Afghanistan (reigned 1880-1901) to Lord George Curzon (Viceroy of India, 1899-1905).  The second letter is a kharita, a type of letter that was usually sent in an elaborate textile pouch, and which for centuries was dispatched as part of the royal correspondence of Muslim rulers.  The kharita is interesting not only for its contents but also for the way in which its various parts were made and arranged, as covered in this QDL expert article.

  • A letter requesting plant specimens for the new Botanical Garden in Bengal – IOR/R/15/1/1

Letter dated 3 October 1787  from Samuel Manesty  Resident at Basra  to Edward Galley  Resident  and Charles Watkins  Factor  at BushehrLetter dated 3 October 1787, from Samuel Manesty, Resident at Basra, to Edward Galley, Resident, and Charles Watkins, Factor, at Bushehr – IOR/R/15/1/1, f 50-50v

This short letter to Bushehr, containing a list of plants and a request that specimens be searched for, collected, and sent to Bengal, illustrates the Gulf being integrated into an expanding scientific endeavour, one that was becoming increasingly facilitated by British and European imperial expansion, to which it also contributed, as discussed in this QDL expert article.

IOR Cataloguing Team, British Library/Qatar Foundation Partnership

 

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