Page 142 - Gertrude Bell (H.V.F.Winstone)_Neat
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                                         Hail






                In the winter of 1909 Lt-Colonel Percy Cox, die Indian Govern­
                ment’s Resident in the Persian Gulf, was on leave in England and
                a mutual friend, Richmond Ritchie, arranged for Gertrude to
                meet him so that she could discuss with him her long-entertained
                plan to journey into central Arabia. She wanted to start at one
                of the Gulf states, presumably Kuwait or Ujair on the A1 Hasa
                coast, and make her way through the territory of Najd to Hail
                in Jabal Shammar at its northern extremity. Cox declared that
                tribal conditions in that area were too unstable to allow of such
                a journey and so she reconciled herself to taking the northern
                route from Damascus. It was a sensible decision from many
                points of view. Not even Charles Doughty had been able to face
                the rigours of southern Najd and the dangers posed by its wild
                and fanatical tribesmen. The greatest of all Arabian explorers,
                Charles Huber, turned back on his tracks only to be murdered by
                his own guides. The Austrian Baron Nolde was driven to suicide
                by the attempt. Things had improved since early 1902 when Ibn
                Saud or, to give him his full name, Abdul Aziz bin Abdurrahman
                al Saud had returned to Riyadh from his enforced exile in Kuwait
                and set out to restore the kingdom of his forefathers, the Wahhabi
                empire, which once embraced almost the entire peninsula of
                Arabia. But his territory was closed to the outside world. Two
                men  had visited Riyadh from the outside in the intervening
                years, the Dane Raunkiaer and the Englishman Gerald Leachman,
                but they had been taken under escort to the Saudi capital and
                were  lucky to escape with their lives. More importantly, Britain
                was  engaged in delicate negotiations with Turkey in 1913 with
                the object of strengthening Ottoman authority in its Asian
                dominions, especially in central Arabia, and Ibn Saud  was
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