H. R. P. Dickson

Lieutenant Colonel Harold Richard Patrick Dickson (4 February 1881 14 June 1959) was a British colonial administrator in the Middle East from the 1920s until the 1940s, and author of several books on Kuwait.

H. R. P. Dickson in Kuwait in 1919.

Life

H. R. P. Dickson was one of six children of John Dickson, a diplomat in the Levant from 1872–1906, and Edith Wills.[1] He was born in Beirut, Lebanon and was taken at a young age to Damascus, Syria where his father was Consul. There his mother's milk failed and Shaikh Mijwal al Mazrab, the husband of Lady Jane Digby, provided the young child with a wet nurse from the 'Anizah tribe. Islamic law lays out the permanent family-like relationships that are created by wet nursing, and this "blood affinity" between Dickson and the 'Anizah meant he was treated as a member of the tribe. He stated that this blood tie 'in later life has been of assistance to me in my dealings with the Badawin [bedouin] of the high desert and around Kuwait'. Following the death of Lady Jane Digby, the Dickson family rented her house in Damascus, and Dickson recalled that he 'spent my childhood days rambling about the lovely garden that had once been [her] pride and happiness.'.[2]

Dickson met his wife Dame Violet Dickson née Lucas-Calcraft (1896 1991) in Marseilles, France, shortly after the end of World War I, where she was working in a bank. She travelled out to meet him in India, where he was stationed and where they were married. Shortly afterwards he was posted to Iraq.[3]

Dickson served as British Political Agent in Bahrain from 1919-1920.[4] He also served in Persia (present-day Iran). In 1929 he was appointed British Political Agent to Kuwait, and served in this role until 1936. He briefly held this role again in 1941.[5]

Some of his reports have been published in Political Diaries of the Arab World: Persian Gulf 1904-1965. The publishers' description of this volume reads in part: "Perhaps the most idiosyncratic [contributor to the volume] was Lt. Col. H. R. P. Dickson who wrote voluminously in the 1920s and 1930s on his trips into the Saudi hinterland, his meetings with rulers and all the machinations and gossip that sometimes go into political intelligence-gathering."[6]

After retiring from his political career he worked for the Kuwait Oil Company,[3] for which company he had been the first Chief Local Representative in Kuwait.[7]

Dickson had a detailed knowledge of bedouin life and customs, and produced two books which are considered valuable chronicles of a now-threatened way of life. These books, The Arab of the Desert: A Glimpse into Badawin Life in Kuwait and Sa'udi Arabia, first published in 1949, and Kuwait and her Neighbours, first published in 1956, have been described as 'monumental',[8] and are now sought-after collector's items.

Dickson had a son, diplomat Hanmer Yorke Warrington Saud ("Dickie") Dickson, MBE (who died in May 2005),[9][10] and a daughter (Irene) Zahra Freeth (née Dickson, died in 20 May 2015 after a short illness),[11] who was also an author on Middle Eastern topics and who co-edited and abridged the third edition of The Arab of the Desert.

The Dickson House Cultural Centre, Kuwait City

The British Political Agency in Kuwait was based in a house that had been built in 1870 for a Kuwaiti merchant. The Dicksons moved into the house in 1929, and the building served as the British political agency until 1935. Dickson lived there until his death in 1959 and Dame Violet until the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990, when she was evacuated to Britain. Dame Violet died before the liberation of Kuwait. The house was ransacked during the invasion, but has since been restored by the Kuwaiti National Council for Culture, Arts and Letters, and is now a tourist attraction. It is one of few surviving examples of nineteenth century Kuwaiti architecture, with thirty rooms on two floors.[12]

H. R. P. Dickson archive

Papers by and relating to H. R. P. Dickson are held at the Middle East Centre Archive, St Antony's College, Oxford University (MECA reference: GB165-0085) web address http://www.sant.ox.ac.uk/mec/meca.shtml

The Catalogue for the Harold Dickson Collection is available online as a pdf file at https://web.archive.org/web/20110609081705/http://www.sant.ox.ac.uk/mec/MEChandlists/GB165-0085-HRP-Dickson-Collection.pdf

A few papers are held by the Faculty of Oriental Studies, Cambridge University (FOS reference: BT C/8 and BT C/22).

Books and articles by H. R. P. Dickson

  • "Migration and methods of bird snaring in North East Arabia" Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 40, 740-744 (1939)
  • The Arab of the Desert: A Glimpse into Badawin Life in Kuwait and Sa'udi Arabia London: George Allen & Unwin (1949)
  • Kuwait and her Neighbours London: George Allen & Unwin (1956)
  • "The tent and its furnishing" in Peoples and Cultures of the Middle East (Editor: A. Shiloh) New York: Random House (1969) 136-156

Other sources

gollark: Maybe it's a closure issue, hm.
gollark: Possibly, yes.
gollark: The challenge specifies it's to be done in python 3 however and I do not wish to work out how to download GHC into the execution container.
gollark: This is true.
gollark: Not exactly.

References

  1. "John Dickson Collection" (PDF). Middle East Centre Archive, St Antony's College, Oxford University. Retrieved 27 February 2007.
  2. H. R. P. Dickson (1951). The Arab of the Desert: A Glimpse into Badawin Life in Kuwait and Sa'udi Arabia (2nd ed.). London: George Allen & Unwin. p. foreword.
  3. William Tracy (Nov/Dec 1972). "A Talk with Violet Dickson". Saudi Aramco World. Archived from the original on 19 February 2007. Retrieved 27 February 2007.
  4. Anon. "Bahrain: British political agents". Retrieved 27 February 2007.
  5. Anon. "Kuwait: British political agents". Retrieved 27 February 2007.
  6. Anon. "Political Diaries of the Arab World: Persian Gulf 1904-1965". Archived from the original on 10 June 2007. Retrieved 27 February 2007.
  7. Fiona Venn (2000). A Struggle for Supremacy? Great Britain, the United States and Kuwaiti Oil in the 1930s (PDF). Exeter University Department of History Working Paper Series. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 27 February 2007.
  8. Louise E Sweet (editor) (1971). The central Middle East: a handbook of anthropology and published research on the Nile valley, the Arab Levant, southern Mesopotamia, the Arabian peninsula, and Israel. New Haven: HRAF Press. p. 247.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  9. http://announcements.telegraph.co.uk/deaths/26119/dickson
  10. Warsidaha Ururka Ingiriiska Iyo Soomaalida (Journal of the Anglo-Somali Society), collected vols. 33-40, The Anglo-Somali Society, 2003, p. 63
  11. Creating the Arabian Gulf: The British Raj and the Invasions of the Gulf, Paul Rich, Lexington Books, 2009, p. 216
  12. "Dickson House". Kuwaitin Embassy in Amman, Jordan. Archived from the original on 7 March 2007. Retrieved 27 February 2007.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.