Page 538 - PERSIAN 1 1873_1879 Admin Report1_Neat
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22    ADMINISTRATION REPORT OP TIIE PERSIAN GULP POLITICAL

                   It is now a thriving and busy place, and a contrast to' the rest of the
                   province. I have heard the present population of Shushtcr variously
                   estimated at from 6,000 to 20,000 souls. From personal observa­
                   tion I should think that the former number is moro nearly correct,
                    for, although tho town is large and the. houses numerous, many
                    of them are in mins and uninhabited. Dispul has from 15,000 to
                    20,000 inhabitants. The Prince Governor makes it his head-quarters
                    when in the low country, and leaves a lieutenant there when he retires
                    to Khorarodlrid. Every third or fourth man one meets in the streets
                    of Shush ter and Dispul is a Scyyid, and their authority and insolence
                    arc  great. Telegraph communication between Tehran and Shuster vid
                    Dispul has just been completed,’but I understand that the line is badly
                    made and unlikely to last.
                       Arabs and Persians,—The Arabs of Khuzisldn strike one as being
                    exceptionally intelligent, which they probably owe to contact with the
                    subtle and witty Persians. They have adopted various Persian ways and
                    customs, such as bowing instead of raising the hand to the forehead, which
                    is the ordinary Arab salutation. Their manners on ceremonious occasions
                    are altogether rather Persian than Arab, and tbeir dress, with the excep­
                    tion of the head-dress, is often Persian. Persian women, being excellent
                    cooks, are highly esteemed by them as wives. But although the upper
                    classes mix familiarly and the Arab learns from the Persian, their mutual
                    dislike and contempt are inwardly strong, the Persian looking on the
                    Arab as a dull fellow ouly fit to be mulcted and cozened, and the Arab
                    regarding the Persian as a cowardly rogue who has got the better of
                    him by stratagem and intrigue. The Arabs firmly believe that if they
                    could but combine, the expulsion of the Persians would be an easy
                    matter, but they know that for them combination is impossible, for no
                    man can be sure of the members of his own family, far less of the
                    Chiefs of other districts and tribes. Between the lower classes of Arabs
                    and Persians the hostile feeling is undisguised.
                        Tribes.—The following list of the tribes of Persian Arabia contains
                    all these which are still of importance and some which are no longer of
                    any. Of the 72 tribes which composed the K&b nation some have
                    emigrated to Turkish territory; others have died out, and of others mere
                    fragments remain. The K5b tribes which are still influential are the
                     Muhacsen of Mohamrah and the Han&firah Asakirah, Mujeddem and
                     Al-Bughbaish of Felkhiyah.
                        In the Hawaezah district many of the tribes are Muntafik, which
                     have crossed the Tigris to escape the exactions of the MuntafikgShaiks.
                     When the Mola of Hawaezah is strong, they pay him tribute, and when
                     he is weak they decline to do so.
                       .The subdivisions or branches of tribes are innumerable. Only those
                     wbicb have cjuite separated from the parent stem and become independent
                     of it appear in this list.
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