Lot

541

The General Service Medal for South Persia awarded to Clerk Salamuddeen, South Persia...

In Orders, Decorations, Medals and Militaria

This auction is live! You need to be registered and approved to bid at this auction.
You have been outbid. For the best chance of winning, increase your maximum bid.
Your bid or registration is pending approval with the auctioneer. Please check your email account for more details.
Unfortunately, your registration has been declined by the auctioneer. You can contact the auctioneer on +44 (0) 20 7016 1700 for more information.
You are the current highest bidder! To be sure to win, log in for the live auction broadcast on or increase your max bid.
Leave a bid now! Your registration has been successful.
Sorry, bidding has ended on this item. We have thousands of new lots everyday, start a new search.
Bidding on this auction has not started. Please register now so you are approved to bid when auction starts.
The General Service Medal for South Persia awarded to Clerk Salamuddeen, South Persia...
Interested in the price of this lot?
Subscribe to the price guide
London
The General Service Medal for South Persia awarded to Clerk Salamuddeen, South Persia Rifles General Service 1918-62, 1 clasp, S. Persia (Clerk Salamuddeen.) small test cut to reverse, very fine, rare to unit £200-£240 --- Salamuddeen is recorded upon the UK, Military Campaign Medal and Award Roll, 1793-1949, as serving as 'Clerk, No Unit, M.E.S., attached to the South Persia Rifles, working in the financial Adviser's Officer, Shiraz (substantive), from 6-5-18 A.N. to 12-5-1919 A.N.' Likely a Persian, Baluch or Arab man from the earliest and most loyal recruiting ground of Bandar Abbas, he served as part of a native Middle East secretariat who acted as the intermediaries between the British officer class and the rank and file troops and local tribesmen - with the ability to converse and write in both English and Farsi. The work was particularly specialist and dangerous, involving a constant flow of backhanders to maintain loyalty, often in the face of increasingly successful espionage operations led by Captain Wilhelm Wassmus - a former consul in Shiraz, later compared as the 'German Lawrence of Arabia'. It also risked the wrath of his own tribal leaders who grew increasingly unhappy with Britain's attempts to protect its own interests via a subjugation by stealth. The South Persia Rifles Established with the agreement of the Persian Government in August 1916 under the command of Brigadier-General Sir Percy Sykes, the Rifles were initially tasked with challenging the German and Ottoman threat to British interests in the Middle East. This mostly focused upon the Anglo-Persian Oil Company oil fields at Khuzistan, whose output was crucial for the 'new breed' of dreadnought battleships. From a British perspective, the best policy was to 'keep Persia quiet' so that attentions could be targeted elsewhere; the Central Powers however desired the exact opposite by creating disturbances in Persia, Afghanistan and the N.W. Frontier of India, jockeying Persia into a war on their side. By attempting to exploit the weakness and corruption within the Persian Army, Germany hoped to threaten the security of British India, backed by German arms and money: ‘The Germans offered gold, promises of victory and liberation, with the aim of creating a large force in Persia to co-operate with Turkish forces.’ (F. Safiri, The South Persian Rifles, refers).  In order to gather the most recruits and local influence, the British and Germans were compelled to offer cash; subsidising tribesmen became a means of recruitment, facilitated by intermediaries such as Salamuddeen who knew that the enemy were offering exactly the same thing and had to be outbid for loyalty; many local men joined the Rifles not due to any sentimentality towards the Crown, rather soldiery offered a more reliable livelihood than farming.  The period from 1917-early 1918 resulted in considerable success for the Rifles; when hostile tribes, enemy agents and bandits attacked the villages of allied tribes and officials, they responded with force, rescuing hostages and retrieving stolen goods and cattle - a type of warfare familiar to the British officers who has previously served on the unruly N.W. Frontier. Yet, the influence of nationalist agitators soon began to undermine the force, notably the garrison mutiny at Abadeh; the British were forced to bring in Indian troops to suppress the mutineers, but not before bribes had been paid by Salamuddeen's office to several tribal leaders. Despite the threat of the death penalty, desertions became more frequent. In May 1918, the Fars Brigade at Shiraz was reduced to a third of normal strength - with Indian troops of Sir Percy Sykes's bodyguard forming a defensive ring around headquarters, including Salamuddeen's office. On 6 July 1918, fourteen native soldiers of the Rifles were found guilty of taking part in murder and mutiny at Kana Zenya; all were executed by their former comrades in a heavy-handedness which stoked the rebellion by 3,500 Qashqai tribesmen at the gateway to Shiraz. With the men of the Rifles refusing to fight against fellow countrymen and with the gold sovereign reserves all 'spent', Sykes was forced to leave Persia; it fell to Dunsterforce and Indian units to fill the security vacuum and protect the oil fields. In 1921, the Treasury and India Office finally agreed to cease the funding of £100,000 per week to the South Persia Rifles and they were disbanded at Shiraz. According to Winston Churchill at the time: ‘Fancy spending the whole cost of a British Territorial Army on a weak and futile interference in the affairs of Persia!’ Salamuddeen survived the campaign and ongoing tribal conflicts and is named upon the medal roll taken at Mhow on 11 February 1929, one of an extremely small band of eligible loyalists who served in the South Persia Rifles during their 5 years of operation. According to the recipient's MIC, he was not awarded any medals for the Great War.
The General Service Medal for South Persia awarded to Clerk Salamuddeen, South Persia Rifles General Service 1918-62, 1 clasp, S. Persia (Clerk Salamuddeen.) small test cut to reverse, very fine, rare to unit £200-£240 --- Salamuddeen is recorded upon the UK, Military Campaign Medal and Award Roll, 1793-1949, as serving as 'Clerk, No Unit, M.E.S., attached to the South Persia Rifles, working in the financial Adviser's Officer, Shiraz (substantive), from 6-5-18 A.N. to 12-5-1919 A.N.' Likely a Persian, Baluch or Arab man from the earliest and most loyal recruiting ground of Bandar Abbas, he served as part of a native Middle East secretariat who acted as the intermediaries between the British officer class and the rank and file troops and local tribesmen - with the ability to converse and write in both English and Farsi. The work was particularly specialist and dangerous, involving a constant flow of backhanders to maintain loyalty, often in the face of increasingly successful espionage operations led by Captain Wilhelm Wassmus - a former consul in Shiraz, later compared as the 'German Lawrence of Arabia'. It also risked the wrath of his own tribal leaders who grew increasingly unhappy with Britain's attempts to protect its own interests via a subjugation by stealth. The South Persia Rifles Established with the agreement of the Persian Government in August 1916 under the command of Brigadier-General Sir Percy Sykes, the Rifles were initially tasked with challenging the German and Ottoman threat to British interests in the Middle East. This mostly focused upon the Anglo-Persian Oil Company oil fields at Khuzistan, whose output was crucial for the 'new breed' of dreadnought battleships. From a British perspective, the best policy was to 'keep Persia quiet' so that attentions could be targeted elsewhere; the Central Powers however desired the exact opposite by creating disturbances in Persia, Afghanistan and the N.W. Frontier of India, jockeying Persia into a war on their side. By attempting to exploit the weakness and corruption within the Persian Army, Germany hoped to threaten the security of British India, backed by German arms and money: ‘The Germans offered gold, promises of victory and liberation, with the aim of creating a large force in Persia to co-operate with Turkish forces.’ (F. Safiri, The South Persian Rifles, refers).  In order to gather the most recruits and local influence, the British and Germans were compelled to offer cash; subsidising tribesmen became a means of recruitment, facilitated by intermediaries such as Salamuddeen who knew that the enemy were offering exactly the same thing and had to be outbid for loyalty; many local men joined the Rifles not due to any sentimentality towards the Crown, rather soldiery offered a more reliable livelihood than farming.  The period from 1917-early 1918 resulted in considerable success for the Rifles; when hostile tribes, enemy agents and bandits attacked the villages of allied tribes and officials, they responded with force, rescuing hostages and retrieving stolen goods and cattle - a type of warfare familiar to the British officers who has previously served on the unruly N.W. Frontier. Yet, the influence of nationalist agitators soon began to undermine the force, notably the garrison mutiny at Abadeh; the British were forced to bring in Indian troops to suppress the mutineers, but not before bribes had been paid by Salamuddeen's office to several tribal leaders. Despite the threat of the death penalty, desertions became more frequent. In May 1918, the Fars Brigade at Shiraz was reduced to a third of normal strength - with Indian troops of Sir Percy Sykes's bodyguard forming a defensive ring around headquarters, including Salamuddeen's office. On 6 July 1918, fourteen native soldiers of the Rifles were found guilty of taking part in murder and mutiny at Kana Zenya; all were executed by their former comrades in a heavy-handedness which stoked the rebellion by 3,500 Qashqai tribesmen at the gateway to Shiraz. With the men of the Rifles refusing to fight against fellow countrymen and with the gold sovereign reserves all 'spent', Sykes was forced to leave Persia; it fell to Dunsterforce and Indian units to fill the security vacuum and protect the oil fields. In 1921, the Treasury and India Office finally agreed to cease the funding of £100,000 per week to the South Persia Rifles and they were disbanded at Shiraz. According to Winston Churchill at the time: ‘Fancy spending the whole cost of a British Territorial Army on a weak and futile interference in the affairs of Persia!’ Salamuddeen survived the campaign and ongoing tribal conflicts and is named upon the medal roll taken at Mhow on 11 February 1929, one of an extremely small band of eligible loyalists who served in the South Persia Rifles during their 5 years of operation. According to the recipient's MIC, he was not awarded any medals for the Great War.

Orders, Decorations, Medals and Militaria

Sale Date(s)
Venue Address
16 Bolton Street
London
W1J 8BQ
United Kingdom

General delivery information available from the auctioneer

If you are successful in purchasing lot/s being auctioned by us and opt for the item/s to be sent to you, we will use the following methods of shipment:

Within the UK
If you live within the UK, items will be despatched using Royal Mail Special Delivery. This service provides parcel tracking (via the Royal Mail website) and next weekday delivery (betwen 9am and 1pm). Items delivered within the UK are covered by our insurance company. Heavy and bulky lots will be sent by courier, in discussion with the client.

Outside of the UK
If the item/s being sent are worth under £1000 in total they are sent using Royal Mail’s Signed For International service. This ensures the item must be signed for when it is delivered.
If the item/s being sent are valued at over £1000 in total they will be sent using FedEx. This service allows next day delivery to customers in many parts of the US and parcels are fully trackable using the FedEx website.

Shipping Exceptions
Certain lots such as those containing glass or sharp implements, etc., may not be suitable for in-house shipping within or outside of the UK. Please contact Noonans with any queries.

Important Information

Auctioneer's Buyers Premium: 24% (+VAT)

There is an additional charge of 4.95% (+VAT/sales tax) 

Terms & Conditions

See Full Terms And Conditions

Tags: Deutsch, Rifle, Military Medal, Badges, Medals & Pins, Militaria, Antique Arms, Medal