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—Faisal, with Iraq Cabinet approval, appoints GLB Honorary Director of Antiquities for Iraq

 

—Air Marshal Sir John Salmond takes command of British forces; RAF tasked with controlling tribal dissension in Iraq

 

Dec.—Sir Henry Dobbs arrives as prospective High Commissioner, in charge while Cox visits London; GLB asked to continue as Oriental Secretary; Cox signs treaties with Ibn Saud

1923

Feb.—Organic Law (constitution) approved

 

Apr.—Cox signs treaty reducing British advisory occupation of Iraq to four years

 

May—Cox retires, leaves Iraq

 

—Transjordan declared independent under Amir Abdullah by treaty with Britain

 

July–Aug.—GLB travels to England via Haifa, stays with Sir Herbert Samuel, High Commissioner for Palestine; John Singer Sargent draws her; corresponds with Lawrence on publication of
Seven Pillars of Wisdom

 

July—League of Nations ratifies Turkish Peace Treaty at Conference of Lausanne

 

Sept.—GLB amends her will, leaving £6,000 to the British Museum for a British School of Archaeology in Iraq

 

Oct.—Initiates the Iraq Museum

1924

Jan.—Ramsay MacDonald forms first Labour government in coalition with Liberals; Charles Trevelyan in Cabinet as President of Board of Education

 

Feb.—First national elections in Iraq

 

Mar.—Dorman Long wins contract to build Sydney Harbour Bridge

 

—King Faisal opens Iraq National Assembly

 

—King Hussain of the Hejaz proclaims himself Caliph of Islam following abolition of the appointment by Ataturk, but without pan-Islamic acclamation

 

Sept.—British–Iraq Treaty accepted by League of Nations as meeting the League's covenant

 

—Ibn Saud's Wahabis raid the Hashemite summer palace of Taif in the Hejaz; townspeople massacred

 

Oct.—Mecca falls to Ibn Saud; King Hussain abdicates in favour of his son Ali

 

Dec.—George V and Faisal ratify the British–Iraq Treaty

1925

Jan.—GLB briefs League of Nations' Turkish Boundary Commission

 

July–Oct.—GLB's last visit to England; returns to Baghdad via Beirut with Sylvia Henley

 

Autumn—Sir Hugh, Dame Florence, and Maurice move to Mount Grace Priory to economize; Rounton Grange closed

1926

Jan.—Ibn Saud ousts Faisal's brother Ali as King of the Hejaz; annexes the territory

 

2 Feb.—Half-brother Hugo dies of pneumonia

 

Mar.—Vita Sackville-West stays with GLB in Iraq

 

May—British General Strike; seven-month miners' strike cripples steel industry

 

14 June—First room of Iraq Museum opened

 

July—Treaty between Britain, Iraq, and Turkey defines borders of Mosul district

 

12 July—GLB dies; military funeral; buried in British Cemetery, Baghdad

 

July—Memorial service at St. Margaret's Church, Westminster; ministers pay tribute to GLB in British parliament

1927

Oil struck in Kirkuk

 

Dame Florence holds pageant at Mount Grace Priory in presence of Queen Mary, partly financed by sales of signed editions of Dickens's works and letters to the family

 

Apr.—Tributes paid to GLB at Royal Geographical Society, London

 

Aug.—Publication of
The Letters of Gertrude Bell
by Dame Florence, who gives celebratory dinner inviting Faisal, Prime Minister Jafar, the Dobbses, the Coxes, and the Richmonds

1928

Window dedicated to GLB in St. Lawrence's Church, East Rounton

1930

Commemorative bronze plaque unveiled by King Faisal; bust of GLB identifies the Gertrude Bell Principal Wing of the Iraq Museum

 

Dame Florence Bell dies

1931

Sir Hugh Bell dies; Maurice succeeds to baronetcy

1932

British School of Archaeology in Iraq founded in London (£4,000 donation from Sir Hugh)

 

Iraq joins League of Nations as independent state

1933

King Faisal dies; succeeded by son Ghazi

1939

King Ghazi dies in motoring accident, succeeded by son Faisal II

1940

Rounton Grange used as a home for Second World War evacuees and for Italian prisoners of war

1947

British Treasury grant enables formation of the British Archaeological Expedition to Iraq under auspices of the School of Archaeology; permanent base in Baghdad established

1950

Rounton Grange demolished

1958

Faisal II of Iraq assassinated in coup; Iraq declared a republic

1991

Jan.—National Museum of Iraq closed during the First Gulf War

2000

Apr.—Iraq Museum reopened

2003

Apr.—Following invasion of Iraq by Americans and British, the museum was looted of some ten thousand items and closed

NOTE ON MONEY VALUES

The following notes bring some of the amounts mentioned in this book and other, related amounts up to today's values in sterling, by adjusting for the changes in the U.K. Retail Price Index to 2004 (with the U.S. dollar equivalent of $1.80 to the £). Amounts for wages and salaries are also adjusted for the changes in U.K. average earnings.

Around 1900, when Florence Bell was compiling
At the Works
, a family with two to three children on the lowest wage spent about £50 a year on rent, a limited diet, heat and clothing, insurance and tobacco, but had nothing to spare. A skilled ironworker was paid in basic wages about the same as a clerk in an office, on average £100 a year. This could be increased by overtime pay for working more than eight hours per day, plus bonuses, to above £150. That gives an RPI-adjusted purchasing power today of £9,600 ($17,300). If adjusted by the rise in average earnings that would be £50,000 ($90,000), reflecting the very different standard of living enjoyed by similar workers in developed countries today.

In 1904 Hugh Bell inherited £750,000 from his father's estate; £45 million ($81 million), RPI-adjusted.

Gertrude budgeted her journey to Hayyil in 1913 at £601 (including the cost of travelling back through the Syrian desert); this is £35,000 ($59,477), RPI-adjusted. Her seventeen camels with their equipment at £13 each cost £221, but this was recoverable when they were sold after the journey—about £13,000 ($23,400) today. She described the cost of the journey, a net £23,000 ($40,000) today, as practically the whole of her income for the following year. This income derived from investments and proceeds from her books as well as an allowance from her father.

Lawrence's offer of £2 million to the Turkish army commander to lift his siege of Kut would be about £100 million ($180 million) today and was about the same amount as Churchill arranged for the British Admiralty to pay for 51 per cent of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company in 1914. In 1921, Churchill aimed to reduce British military expenditure in Iraq from £20 million to £7 million a year, in today's terms a reduction of £287 million ($517 million), RPI-adjusted. By 1921 the British administration of Iraq had spent £8
million governing and developing the country, all raised from local taxes: £200 million ($360 million), RPI-adjusted.

Gertrude's government salary in 1925 was £835 a year: £69,000 ($124,000), RPI-adjusted, but £120,000 ($216,000) if inflated by the change in U.K. average-earnings. Her bequest of £6,000 to found a British School of Archaeology in Iraq would be £208,000 ($374,000) today.

NOTES

ABBREVIATIONS USED IN SOURCE NOTES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY

DUL

Durham University Library

RL

Robinson Library, University of Newcastle upon Tyne

Extracts have been taken from Gertrude Bell's letters to her family, held in the Robinson Library, University of Newcastle (RL); these extracts are identified as “GLB letters.” “Gertrude hardly ever dated her letters except by the day of the week, sometimes not even that,” wrote her stepmother, Florence, when she was compiling
The Letters of Gertrude Bell
(London: Ernest Benn, 1927) after her death. A great many of the letters can be found in Lady Bell's book.

Extracts are also taken from Gertrude Bell's diaries, identified as “GLB diary,” also held by the University of Newcastle.

Copies of Gertrude's papers are littered with crossed-out pencilled dates and question marks, evidence of the many attempts by curators to determine their sequence.

The letters and diaries are available at
www.gerty.ncl.ac.uk

Occasionally, to make a point more forcefully, two or more quotations from different letters or texts of Gertrude Bell have been brought together in the narrative and occasionally brought forward.

PREFACE

xviii
“She was, I think, the greatest woman of our time”: Janet E. Courtney,
An Oxford Portrait Gallery

1. GERTRUDE AND FLORENCE

3
“Sharif's son Faisal offers hope”
: Janet Wallach,
Desert Queen
, p. 297

4
“from a needle to a ship”
: From Sir Hugh Bell's speech of 10 Jan. 1910, during his campaign for a Liberal parliamentary seat

5
Lowthian wrote several scientific books
: Papers on Sir Isaac Lowthian Bell discovered at Mount Grace Priory

5
a comprehensive and logical assessment
:
The Iron Trade of the United Kingdom
, Literary and Philosophical Society, Gallery, 669–1/13: 1875

6
An illustrated family alphabet:
In the possession of Dr. William Plowden

6
“Your scones are lovely”
: Anecdote about Margaret Bell, in conversation with Mrs. Susanna Richmond

8
“Free Trade is like the quality of mercy”
: From Hugh Bell's campaign speech of 10 Jan. 1910

10
They met the twenty-two-year-old Florence
: Biographical details about Florence Bell from Kirsten Wang, “Deeds and Words: The Biography of Dame Florence Bell, 1851–1930,” unpublished MS in the possession of Dr. William Plowden

11
“looking beautiful, but very sad”
: Florence's daughter Elsa, Lady Richmond, reporting a conversation with her mother, in Wang, “Deeds and Words”

11
One biographer of Gertrude
: Anne Tibble,
One Woman's Story

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