Khiva is an ancient town, now in Uzbekistan, on Afghanistan's northern border. A Vakeel was a Deputy - a commissioner - one who acts or negotiates for another. Kiva was subject to Russian paranoia in the early 1830s as they were aware that the agents of the East India Company were continually appearing in the town and thus dispatched their agent, Ivan Vitkevitch, to both assess the situation and ally Russia to the Afghan leaders. Thus the "Great Game" began. James Atkinson, doctor, journalist and artist of the Afghan Campaign, became superintendent of the Government Gazette in 1818, and of the Press from 1823. In 1833, he became surgeon to the 55th native Infantry and between 1838 and 1841 served in Kabul. The present sketches are original drawings made by Atkinson on the spot and relate to his publications Sketches in AfghanistanandThe Expedition into Afghanistan. The drawings are inscribed with references to the artist’s journal, and the artist’s notes explain where in his planned publication the various illustrations should appear. Clearly Atkinson intended many more drawings to be published than in fact appeared. His sketches in fact contain 25 drawings plus the original frontispiece (the original drawing for which is in this collection); 16 of the remaining original drawings are in the India Office Library. At the time when Atkinson was travelling Afghanistan was a little-known country. Atkinson took drawing lessons from the artist George Chinnery. He probably first met Chinnery in 1805 when he was appointed assistant surgeon at Backergunge, to the south of Dhaka, soon after Chinnery was in Dhaka from 1808. His wife became a student of the artist and Atkinson himself is known to have executed a number of copies after Chinnery in addition to his own original watercolours.
J. Atkinson, Sketches in Afghaunistan, lithographed by Louis and Charles Haghe, published by Henry Graves & Company, London 1842