Historical Reference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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 the night's camping ground, Abbott tracked hence the Khushk rivulet until its valley was lost in that of the Murghab. We have now come upon one of the most important rivers of Central Asia south of the Oxus; rising in the Hazara mountains, or northern slopes of the Paropamisus, it flows in a north-westerly and northerly direction past the town of Merv, until it expends itself in a desert swamp.

How far Shakespeare and Abbott followed the same road, or at what point the former fell into the track of the latter it is hard to say; for Shakespeare mentions few places, and these few do not always agree with Abbott's. But it is tolerably certain that they both reached the Murghab, by following the bed generally of the Khushk. Shakespeare gives no account of the junction of the two. Abbott is more precise, probably from having been the only traveler to whom ocular demonstration was allowed. When the two valleys became one, or near the apex where the two streams flow together, Abbott moved over from the right bank of the Khushk to the " Khail," or camp of Panjdeh, on the left bank of the Murghab, " passing the ruined vineyard and deserted fields of a once populous and cultivated district." Here he found 300 black tents of nomads, in the form of two hollow squares. Proceeding along the left bank of the Murghab until the valley had narrowed in breadth from nine miles to three-quarters of a mile, he crossed by a bridge the dry channel of the Khushk just at the point of junction. Hence to Merv, the route of both travelers must have been, more or less, along either bank of the Murghab; in fact, practically, to all intents and purposes, one and the same.

Shakespeare found the Murghab, on first acquaintance, “a muddy" rapid stream, the banks thickly fringed with tamarisk." During the
night he moved twenty-two miles along its narrow, sand-hill enclosed valley, on a generally good road, with some steep sandy ascents, and f abounding in wood and grass. Cultivation, however, had not been kept up as in the good old times, and as the fine soil would warrant. His next march after sunrise, during which he passed a place called “Sanduk Kuchan," I estimate at 24 miles, taking the figures wanting to fill the one gap in the whole recorded distance to Merv. The next night march was of 22 miles, still along the Murghab, and amid very heavy jungle, to near the "Band-i-Talatun," or " bank which throws " the water of the Murghab into the canal of Talatun ; " an arrangement which had failed in that particular year, owing to a destructive flood. This was followed by a short march at sunrise, in oppressive heat, of 10 miles. The progress of the next night and morning, reckoned in one combined march of 27 miles, was to Yalatun, where was a Governor and Kadhi. The same process repeated in the following twenty-four (hours, for a total of 22 miles, brought the party to the fort and town of Merv.

Abbott's description of the Murghab shows it to be "a deep stream of very pure water, about 60 feet in breadth, and flowing in” a channel, mined to the depth of 30 feet in the clay soil of the " valley; banks precipitous, and fringed with tamarisk and a few “reeds." The valley, once well cultivated, he found, from Panjdeh to Yalatun, utterly deserted, owing to late distractions of the country.

JBOC Note: Panjdeh was the site of the 1885 Russian invasion of Afghanistan. It almost lead to war with England but the Afghans were far less upset about it than the British. The Russians kept that area establishing the city of Kushka. This was the closest they got to India until the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. In which the Russian troops massed at Merv and entered Afghanistan near Kushka.
The Murghab river is the river running north from Afghanistan that disappears in the desert past Merv. The Jungle mentioned was home to the Central Asian or Turanian Tiger well into the 19th century:

"The Central Asian tiger has a shaggier coat than his Bengal relative, and his disposition is less truculent. He never molests human beings or shows fight unless attacked. About a year ago one strayed during the noonday heat into a kibitka near the Sir Darya, pushed aside the occupant, a woman who was spinning at the door, and coiled himself up in a dark comer for a nap. Alas for outraged hospitality ! Information was given at the nearest post, and a party of riflemen soon arrived and did the poor beast to death."
The Heart of Asia: A History of Russian Turkestan and the Central Asian Khanates from the Earliest Times
By Francis Henry Bennett Skrine, Francis Henry Skrine, Edward Denison Ross Published by Methuen & co., 1899
Tiger Habitat Shrinking

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