Zubarah, the Gulf and local and international trade

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal article

Standard

Zubarah, the Gulf and local and international trade. / Simonsen, Jørgen Bæk.

In: World Heritage Series, Vol. 72, 06.2014, p. 32-37.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal article

Harvard

Simonsen, JB 2014, 'Zubarah, the Gulf and local and international trade', World Heritage Series, vol. 72, pp. 32-37. <http://whc.unesco.org/en/review/72/>

APA

Simonsen, J. B. (2014). Zubarah, the Gulf and local and international trade. World Heritage Series, 72, 32-37. http://whc.unesco.org/en/review/72/

Vancouver

Simonsen JB. Zubarah, the Gulf and local and international trade. World Heritage Series. 2014 Jun;72:32-37.

Author

Simonsen, Jørgen Bæk. / Zubarah, the Gulf and local and international trade. In: World Heritage Series. 2014 ; Vol. 72. pp. 32-37.

Bibtex

@article{8d459bfc2f5344119de94cf65e658604,
title = "Zubarah, the Gulf and local and international trade",
abstract = "The deeply etched tracks of human achievement in the Gulf region since prehistory reflect a dynamic interplay between local, neighbouring and inter-regional agencies. Geography, resources, the exchange of commodities and the transfer of ideas elevated the status of the Gulf to that of a major regional player; a busy conduit in which peoples from diverse backgrounds lived fully and communally, and soon attracted the direct intervention of neighbouring empires.In the study of the vibrant historical events that marked the subsequent emergence of a post-colonial Gulf from the 18th century onwards, archaeology isnow making a significant contribution to documenting and explaining the principle social, political and economic factors that came to shape that period of fundamental change. Of the many social transformations that occurred between the later 18th and mid-20th centuries, none was more significant than the foundation and development of the modern emirate states along the south coast. The yoke of imperial control – real or threatened – was cast off and replaced with an indigenous political, cultural and economic independence;a transforming achievement, attained through astute leadership by the coast{\textquoteright}smain ruling families in a strategic response to the rapidly changing global realities of the time.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Qatar, al Zubarah, Islamic Archaeology, Social History, Economic Archaeology, Modernity",
author = "Simonsen, {J{\o}rgen B{\ae}k}",
note = "Special issue World Heritage in Qatar ",
year = "2014",
month = jun,
language = "English",
volume = "72",
pages = "32--37",
journal = "World Heritage Series",
issn = "1999-4745",
publisher = "UNESCO Publishing",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Zubarah, the Gulf and local and international trade

AU - Simonsen, Jørgen Bæk

N1 - Special issue World Heritage in Qatar

PY - 2014/6

Y1 - 2014/6

N2 - The deeply etched tracks of human achievement in the Gulf region since prehistory reflect a dynamic interplay between local, neighbouring and inter-regional agencies. Geography, resources, the exchange of commodities and the transfer of ideas elevated the status of the Gulf to that of a major regional player; a busy conduit in which peoples from diverse backgrounds lived fully and communally, and soon attracted the direct intervention of neighbouring empires.In the study of the vibrant historical events that marked the subsequent emergence of a post-colonial Gulf from the 18th century onwards, archaeology isnow making a significant contribution to documenting and explaining the principle social, political and economic factors that came to shape that period of fundamental change. Of the many social transformations that occurred between the later 18th and mid-20th centuries, none was more significant than the foundation and development of the modern emirate states along the south coast. The yoke of imperial control – real or threatened – was cast off and replaced with an indigenous political, cultural and economic independence;a transforming achievement, attained through astute leadership by the coast’smain ruling families in a strategic response to the rapidly changing global realities of the time.

AB - The deeply etched tracks of human achievement in the Gulf region since prehistory reflect a dynamic interplay between local, neighbouring and inter-regional agencies. Geography, resources, the exchange of commodities and the transfer of ideas elevated the status of the Gulf to that of a major regional player; a busy conduit in which peoples from diverse backgrounds lived fully and communally, and soon attracted the direct intervention of neighbouring empires.In the study of the vibrant historical events that marked the subsequent emergence of a post-colonial Gulf from the 18th century onwards, archaeology isnow making a significant contribution to documenting and explaining the principle social, political and economic factors that came to shape that period of fundamental change. Of the many social transformations that occurred between the later 18th and mid-20th centuries, none was more significant than the foundation and development of the modern emirate states along the south coast. The yoke of imperial control – real or threatened – was cast off and replaced with an indigenous political, cultural and economic independence;a transforming achievement, attained through astute leadership by the coast’smain ruling families in a strategic response to the rapidly changing global realities of the time.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Qatar

KW - al Zubarah

KW - Islamic Archaeology

KW - Social History

KW - Economic Archaeology

KW - Modernity

M3 - Journal article

VL - 72

SP - 32

EP - 37

JO - World Heritage Series

JF - World Heritage Series

SN - 1999-4745

ER -

ID: 137761395