ABSTRACT

First Published in 1998. Harold Ingrams is an officer of the Colonial Administrative Service who has had a varied career. In the war of 1914--18 he served for five years with the King's Shropshire Light Infantry and was wounded in Belgium in 1916. He entered the Colonial Service in 1919 and held appointments in Mauritius and Zanzibar, descriptions of which appear in this book. In Zanzibar Ingrams came into contact with Arabs from southern Arabia, and he learnt from Hadhrami visitors of their native land, so close to the activities of the outer world, and yet so remote from them, so prosperous and so poor, so civilized and so savage. The Hadhranlaut is indeed a country of contrasts, with its wealthy Seyyids and its impoverished peasants, its handsome towns, country houses and estates, and its turbulent tribes, banditry and blood feuds. Although part of the British Protectorate of Aden, the wide valley of the HadhranIaut had claimed isolated by its natural barriers of mountains on the south and desert on the north.

chapter |3 pages

Author's Foreword to First Edition

chapter |1 pages

Author's Foreword to Second Edition

chapter |2 pages

Prelude

part |1 pages

Part I

chapter I|9 pages

The Erythraean Sea

chapter II|14 pages

A Pooh Bah in Pemba

chapter III|14 pages

The Green Island: Men of Oman

chapter IV|7 pages

Men of Shihr

chapter VI|21 pages

Mauritian Interlude and Oriental Encounters

chapter VII|7 pages

Aden Town

chapter VIII|9 pages

The Aden Protectorate

chapter IX|9 pages

Lahej, Museimir and the Qāt Trade

chapter X|20 pages

Troubled Waters

part |1 pages

Part II

chapter XII|7 pages

The Gateway of the Hadhramaut

chapter XIII|10 pages

Travel in the Hadhramaut

chapter XIV|5 pages

Wadis and Jōls to Du'an

chapter XV|12 pages

In the Valley of Du'an

chapter XVI|7 pages

A Peace-making Patriarch

chapter XVII|8 pages

Into the Wadi Hadhramaut

chapter XVIII|7 pages

The Tomb of Salih and the Sei'ar Country

chapter XIX|11 pages

Seiyun and Tarim

chapter XXII|4 pages

Last Days in Shihr and Mukalla

part |1 pages

Part III

chapter XXIII|8 pages

Return to the Hadhramaut and the First Move

chapter XXIV|7 pages

Over the Hills to Tarim

chapter XXV|7 pages

Tribal Warfare and Seiyid Bubakr

chapter XXIX|16 pages

The Signing of the Truce

chapter XXX|8 pages

The New Road

chapter XXXI|12 pages

Trouble With the Sei'ar and Other Tribes

chapter XXXII|6 pages

The Social Round

part |1 pages

Part IV

chapter XXXIII|6 pages

Retrospect

chapter XXXIV|25 pages

The Incense Road

chapter XXXVI|6 pages

Thoughts at a Journey's End