Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor's Preface
- Introduction and Analysis
- Editions of Books quoted by the Editor
- Errata
- List of Imâms, Seyyids, etc., with references to the pages where they are treated of, q.v.
- Author's Title and Preface
- Beginning of the History
- Appendix A On the Title of “Imâm”
- Appendix B The Ibâdhiyah
- Appendix C Murder of the Khalîfah 'Aly-ibn-Abi-Tâlib
- Appendix D Dynasty of the Âl-Bû-Sa'îd
- Postscript: On the Islands of el-Kais and el-Kishm, and the situation of Sîrâf in the Persian Gulf
- Index
Postscript: On the Islands of el-Kais and el-Kishm, and the situation of Sîrâf in the Persian Gulf
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Editor's Preface
- Introduction and Analysis
- Editions of Books quoted by the Editor
- Errata
- List of Imâms, Seyyids, etc., with references to the pages where they are treated of, q.v.
- Author's Title and Preface
- Beginning of the History
- Appendix A On the Title of “Imâm”
- Appendix B The Ibâdhiyah
- Appendix C Murder of the Khalîfah 'Aly-ibn-Abi-Tâlib
- Appendix D Dynasty of the Âl-Bû-Sa'îd
- Postscript: On the Islands of el-Kais and el-Kishm, and the situation of Sîrâf in the Persian Gulf
- Index
Summary
At p. iii of the Introduction I assumed that the island of el-Kishm was identical with el-Idrîsy's Kîsh or Kaish, but lighting subsequently upon the following note in Yule's Cathay and the Way Thither, p. cxv, I deemed the subject worthy of further investigation:—
”I have fallen into an error in the notes on Oderic (p. 52), and again at p. 400, in confounding the large island of Kishm, near the mouth of the Persian Gulf, with the much smaller Kais or Kísh, about a hundred niiles further up, which last was the real terminus of Indian trade for several ages, and the seat of a principality, Quisoi of Polo. At least two modern editors of Polo seem to have made the same mistake. Tet Marco, I see, shows the true approximate position of Quisci as two hundred miles further up the Grulf than Hormuz. Kish, in the map before me, (Steiler's Hand Atlas), is termed Ouase or Kena.”
The passage in Polo referred to (the latter clause of which is omitted both by Ramusio and Marsden) I conceive to be the following, as given at p. 195 of Pasini's edition:—“Leaving the city of Calatu [Kalât, on the coast below Maskat, see ante, p. 37], and proceeding three hundred miles, between north-west and north, the city of Oormos [Hormûz] is reached, and five hundred miles from Calatu, between north-west and west, Chisi is found.”
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- History of the Imâms and Seyyids of ‘OmânFrom A.D. 661–1856, pp. 409 - 420Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1871