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Books > History > Asian / Middle Eastern history
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Captain Shakespear - Desert exploration, Arabian intrigue and the rise of Ibn Sa'ud (Hardcover)
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Captain Shakespear - Desert exploration, Arabian intrigue and the rise of Ibn Sa'ud (Hardcover)
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Two years before T E Lawrence received orders to travel to the
Hejaz to liaise with the leader of the Arab Revolt, other British
officers had already roamed the Arabian Peninsula's unforgiving
Nejdi desert, to rally tribal support for the British war effort.
The first was Captain William Henry Irvine Shakespear, a political
agent from the Government of India's Political Department. Born in
October 1878 in India, Shakespear spent much of his childhood away
from his Anglo-Indian parents, schooling in Portsmouth and later in
the Isle of Man, before entering Sandhurst as a British Indian Army
Officer Cadet. On his return to India, Shakespear spent six years
in military service before he joined the Political Department in
1904, serving twice in Bandar Abbas and briefly in Muscat.
Shakespear's next mission was as a political agent in Kuwait,
arriving at the coastal Sheikhdom in the spring of 1909. For the
next four years, he travelled extensively into the Nejdi desert,
providing both London and Delhi with valuable intelligence about
the vastly unknown interior as well as cultivating a personal
relationship with Ibn Sa'ud, the Emir of Riyadh. At a time when
London and Constantinople were negotiating the Anglo-Ottoman
treaty, Shakespear almost became persona non grata for advocating
the need to back the emir after his tribal warriors had expelled
the Ottoman garrisons in al-Hasa in 1913. When war was declared in
July 1914, Shakespear was one of the first to try to join the
British Army to fight in France, but when the Ottoman Empire looked
set to ally with Germany, the powers that had previously shunned
him now needed his unique knowledge of Central Arabia and
relationship with Ibn Sa'ud. That October, as many of his peers and
countrymen crossed the English Channel to reinforce those already
in the trenches, Shakespear set sail for Kuwait on special duty to
rendezvous with the emir. It was a mission that T E Lawrence would
later commend, acknowledging the crucial role that the political
agent played during the early stages the Middle Eastern theatre of
war. Shakespear was a pioneer in exploring the Nejd, capturing many
firsts with his camera, although there were a few other equally
intrepid British officials who preceded him into the desert. From
the late-18th century, the East India Company collided numerous
times with the House of Sa'ud as both attempted to understand the
intentions of the other, before the political agent finally laid
the foundations for formal diplomatic relations with Ibn Sa'ud, and
later with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
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