Page 349 - PERSIAN 1 1873_1879 Admin Report1_Neat
P. 349

TKAR 187C-77.     101
                    AND  Ml'SCAT POLITICAL AGENCY FOR TIIK



              year on
              way  back from Mecca.
                  S'ini(<i(i‘>n.—Considering- the general character of the people, their
              ignorance of some of the simplest and most essential hygienic laws, and
              their «neat aversion to innovations of any kind, it is not to be wondered
              at that there exists no public system of sanitation in Muscat or the neigh­
              bouring towns and hamlets. Notwithstanding this, most of the largo
              stn-ots'gencrally present a respectable appearance, are clean and free from
              any offensive odour, which is to be attributed eutircly to the practice which
              ol/tains amongst the Arabs principally, both inside and outside the town,
              of cleaning the portions of the streets in the immediate neighbourhood of
              their houses. The licloochecs, on the contrary, would 6ecm to take a
              delight in raising mounds of dirt and filth of all kinds in the imme­
              diate vicinity of their habitations, and as all their little hamlets are
              built within an easy reach of large and open graveyards, for which
              they seem to have a particular liking, the air around and inside
              their lints is extremely vitiated, and the stench almost unbearable,
              csjiecially in close weather. The conservaucy outside the town is of the
              most primitive nature, but owing to the great heat of the sun and its
              power of rapidly drying up the excreta, it does not seem to affect tho
              health of the people in any particular way. Inside the town tho
              system of cess-pits exists, the stink from which, when the air is stag­
              nant, is offensive and injurious. They arc occasionally opened up for
              the purpose of cleaning and disinfectants, such as common salt and lime,
              pul in. In some houses a large quantity of ashes and salt are thrown
              into the pits every or every other morning. This large accumulation
              of decomposing cxcrcmcntalious matter in the subsoil would lead oue
              to supjKjse that it would ho a fertile source of disease inside the town,
              hut that such is not the ease is due in a great measure to the wells,
              which supply the drinking water, being situated outside the town, and
              also to the fact of tho ground-floor rooms of most of the houses in the
              t'»wn being generally uninhabited. In Muttrah this cess-pit system does
              n«»t exist; conservancy there is either of the primitive nature’mentioned
              before, or the close proximity of the sea renders the immediate removal
              of excreta more practicable.
                  Population.—Owing to the maritime position and importance of
              Muscat, and its being the modern capital of the province ot Oman, its
              Imputation presents great variety and fluctuation. Politically and com­
              mercially speaking, Muscat may be supposed to include tbe lnrre town of
              Muttrah, with its spacious harbour and the villages and hamlets in ita
              neighbourhood, and the small towns of Kalbu, Itiam and Sadab. There
              are no means of determining tho exact population, but it may be roughly
              guessed to be about 40,000. This number may be considered to be the
              nxctl population, but there is a constant fluctuation which is principally
              observed amongst Bedouin-Arabs and Indian and other pilgrims.
              II... ?/■ U‘U fixC<1 P°H?tion. V   largest portion is composed of
                 ' mean races, and the mixed race of Africans and Arabs, the former
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