Page 3 - Belgrave Diaries(N)_Neat
P. 3

Belgrave Diaries






                  Papers of Charles Dalrymple-Belgrave, 1926-1957






               Charles Dalrymple-Belgrave (b 1894) took up the post as Personal and Financial Advisor to
               Shaikh Hamad of Bahrain in 1926, as an experienced British colonial officer. The island was
               thought by the British to be particularly politically unstable in the early 1920s, a period when
               Iran had claims on ownership of the country. During the 1830s, Bahrain had signed the first
               of many treaties with Britain, who offered Bahrain naval protection from Ottoman Turkey in
               exchange for unfettered access to the Gulf. This arrangement kept the British out of Bahrain's
               internal affairs until a series of internecine battles prompted the British to install their own
               choice for emir in 1869, the Al-Khalifa ruler Sheikh Isa bin Ali, ending a period of fiefdom
               rule and inter-tribal feuding. In 1923, Britain intervened to replace Sheikh Isa bin Ali with his
               son Sheikh Isa Hamad bin Isa.After a succession of Political Agents it became apparent that a
               permanent administrator should be found who would ensure some political continuity. Sheikh
               Hamad agreed to appoint a Personal Adviser employed by himself and not by the British
               Government, who would help him to modernise the state. There were no readily available
               candidates and the post was advertised in The Times in August 1925. Charles Dalrymple
               Belgrave was eventually appointed with an annual salary of £720. During the war he had
               served with the Frontiers Districts Administration Camel Corps and had spent two years in
               the oasis of Siwa. At the time of his appointment he was on leave after two years in the
               Colonial Service in Tanganyika. He brushed up his Arabic at the School of Oriental and
               African Studies in London and arrived in Bahrain in March 1926. He became Advisor to the
               Government of Bahrain in 1933, a position which he held until 1949. He helped create the
               country's educational system, overseeing much modernisation and reforms of Bahrain's
               infrastructural development. When Emir Isa bin Salman Al-Khalifa ascended the throne in
               1942, he further capitalised on Bahrain's superior level of development to take advantage of
               the oil boom happening in Saudi Arabia and other neighbouring countries, making Bahrain
               the Gulf's main entrepôt.Belgrave remained in Bahrain until 1957 when British involvement
               in Bahrain was under heavy criticism. At this point, British troops had been brought into the
               country as part of the Suez crisis of 1956. Britain announced its intention to leave the Gulf 15
               years later, prompting Bahrain to proclaim its independence on 14 August 1971.
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