S.E. Of Dhami
Half An Hour Is Deir Dhami [Arabic], Another Ruined Place, Smaller Than
The Former, And Situated In A Most Dreary Part Of The Ledja, Near Which
We Found, After A Good Deal Of Search, An Encampment Of Arabs Medledj,
Where We Passed The Night.
November 30th.--These Arabs being of a doubtful character, and rendered
independent by the very difficult access of their
Rocky abode, we did
not think it prudent to tell them that I had come to look at their
country; they were told, therefore, that I was a manufacturer of
gunpowder, in search of saltpetre, for at Dhami, and in most of the
ruined villages in the Ledja, the earth which is dug up in the court-
yards of the houses, as well as in the immediate vicinity of them,
contains saltpetre, or as it is called in Arabic, Melh Baroud, i.e.
gunpowder salt.
The Ledja, which is from two to three days journey in length, by one in
breadth, is inhabited by several tribes of Arabs; viz. Selman [Arabic],
Medledj [Arabic], Szolout [Arabic], Dhouhere [Arabic], and Siale
[Arabic]; of these the Szolout may have about one hundred tents, the
Medledj one hundred and twenty, and the others fifty or sixty. They
breed a vast number of goats, which easily find pasturage amongst the
rocks; a few of them also keep sheep and cows, and cultivate the soil in
some parts of the Ledja, where they sow wheat and barley. They possess
few horses; the Medledj have about twenty, and the Szolout and Dhouhere
each a dozen.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 154 of 870
Words from 41605 to 41869
of 236498