Historical Reference

On Journeys Between Herat, and Khiva by Goldsmid

Journal of the Royal United Service Institution
VOL. XIX. 1875. No. LXXX.

LECTURE.

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 passage from a remarkable article by Mr. Henry Lushington, reprinted some 30 years ago, with other papers, in a small octavo volume, under the title of "A Great Country's Little Wars." The author is treating of the relief of the British captives on the re-occupation of Kabul: — " The principal immediate agent in their recovery was, appropriately, " the same English Officer whose name was previously known as connected with a service to humanity more free from alloy, more purely " gratifying, than it can have often fallen to the lot of a military man " to effect—the rescue and safe conduct to St. Petersburg of the prisoners detained at Khiva. Sir Richmond Shakespeare, to whose “lot two such services have fallen, is indeed a man to be envied." Sir Vincent Eyre also speaking of that memorable month of September, 1842, says: '' On the 17th we were reinforced by Sir R. Shakespeare, who had “ridden out from Kabul with 600 Kizlbash horsemen, to our assistance. His aid was most timely; for Sultan Muhammad Khan, with 1,000 men, was hastening to intercept us." General Perovsky's narrative, written many years after these missions had been accomplished, while ignoring aught but political objects in the whole proceeding, confirms at least the arduous and adventurous character of the duties undertaken : —

 The English Agents," he states, "who were in central Asia during '' the years 1839 and 1840, were Abbott and Shakespeare. In May, 1840, Captain Abbott, of the East India Company's service, reached Novo- Aleksandrovsk Fortress from Khiva, and proceeded thence to Orenburg.

By the order of the Khan he was robbed and wounded on his route to the Caspian by a gang of Turkmen (who had even been instructed by the Khivans to kill him), and from; Orenburg he was sent in a suitable manner to Petersburg, whilst the Afghans that had accompanied him were sent back to their native country. Shakespeare, the other English Officer, reached Orenburg, Novo Alexandrovsk, with the Russian prisoners who had been " released from Khiva; he was immediately sent on to St. Petersburg." Oxus Route. — If we take routes actually traversed, with deviations and detours, the distance from Herat to Khiva, by the Oxus, may be reckoned roughly at a maximum of 700 miles. Of this route, the two termini and the intervening station of Merv, about 430 miles from Khiva, are really the only places which demand especial notice among centers of population. As the crow flies, the whole distance is less than 600, 1 or, according to one estimate,* little more than 500 miles; and Merv is nearly midway. Indeed, some modern geographers attribute the commercial importance of Merv to the circumstance that it "lies almost" in the centre of a region bounded by five large markets, Khiva, " Urganj, Bukhara, Balkh, and Herat, being 180 to 280 miles distant " from each " (Ritter). Mashhad, the capital of Russian Khorasan,

1 Abbott makes it less by his own route.  
2 Markham. History of Persia. Appendix D.

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