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Crossing the strait of the Gulf of Aden

Over 120,000 years ago, the first humans embarked on a journey from Africa’s horn, travelling via two distinct routes: north to Mesopotamia or south to the Arabian Peninsula, crossing the strait of the Gulf of Aden. From the Stone Age, the emirates lay at the heart of numerous exchanges with countries in the Gulf, Mesopotamia, India, and even China.

Despite numerous foreign occupations occurring during European power struggles to control maritime routes between Asia and Europe, the emirates’ pearling industry reached its pinnacle in the 19th century, declining only by 1930. The discovery of oil, first in Abu Dhabi in 1958 and then in Dubai in 1966, redefined the region. 1971 marked the establishment of the United Arab Emirates.

Shattering the stereotype of the UAE as a country without history,

This is the saga of a country that only 50 years ago would not have been identified on a map, but which now features on the global stage

 

A country that was formerly untouched has now transformed into one of the world’s greatest tourist destinations.

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THE BEGINNING: STONE AGE TO BRONZE AGE

Dating back over 120,000 years, the first steps of man on the Arabian Peninsula marked a monumental transition in Paleolithic history, an era evocative of chiseled stone tools.

This migratory movement, from the Horn of Africa, is attributed to an interglacial phase. This epoch was characterized by ocean levels significantly lower than those of today, while the Arabian Peninsula enjoyed a markedly more humid climate. Between the African continent and what is today Yemen, the straits, dotted with islets, only measured two kilometers compared to the current thirty kilometers, thus facilitating the passage of hominids to new lands, notably the United Arab Emirates.

These pioneers had preferences for mountainous regions or coastal zones to settle. The archaeological site of Mleiha, located in the emirate of Sharjah, is one of the many silent witness you can find in the UAE of a period expanding from the Stone Age to Pre-Islamic Era . An other site to visit is in the Oasis of Al Ain in the Emirate of Abu Dhabi at Hili archeological Park. Housing numerous graves dating from this era, the artifacts discovered – pottery from Iraq known as Ubaid, sea pearls, jewelry made with semi-precious stones from Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley – attest to the existence of exchanges with other regions, thus revealing their ability to navigate.

These early men were capable of crossing borders and maintaining sophisticated commercial relations.

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The Bronze Age: Copper’s Journey from Mountain to Sea, and onwards to the World

The Bronze Age, commencing around 5200 years ago, was a pivotal epoch in the history of the United Arab Emirates. Marked by a shift towards a hotter and drier climate, the era was particularly characterized by the crafting of copper, which later progressed to bronze.

This was also the time when human culture witnessed a grand leap from prehistory to history, courtesy of the invention of writing. Mere 300 years into its introduction, the Sumerians in Mesopotamia had developed a primitive form of this monumental innovation. Adopting a stylus, they engrave lines on clay tables — a technique fondly referred to as cuneiform writing.

These deciphered clay tablets reveal stories of a people known as the Magan. They were renowned providers of bronze and a soft stone labeled as steatite in French, revered for its sculpting proficiency. Furthermore, the Magan were portrayed as deft shipbuilders, enabling them to distribute their wares far and wide.

Archaeologists have traced the Magan civilization’s origins to the present-day territories of Oman and the UAE. They were adept in extracting ore from mountains, smelting and shaping it into ingots. Their mastery of maritime navigation further allowed them to trade their products extensively via the myriad ports bordering the UAE. Thus, their story encapsulates the remarkable journey of copper as it found its way from the mountains, through oceans, and beyond to foreign lands.

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A PAPER FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF GENEVA 

Between 1987 and 1994, a group of researchers from Geneva, led by Pierre Corboud, an archaeologist at the Department of Anthropology and Ecology of the Faculty of Sciences at the University of Geneva (Biology Section), conducted excavations in the valleys and the desert of Fujairah, a few months each year. Their goal: to understand the inhabitants of this region of the Arabian Peninsula during prehistory and more specifically the Iron Age period (from 1350 to 300 BC). The Geneva researchers established the archaeological map of Fujairah (approximately 77 sites with more than 500 archaeological structures). They excavated the remains of tombs and fortified villages and catalogued surrounding petroglyphs. The research was funded by the Swiss-Liechtenstein Foundation for Archaeological Research Abroad (FSLA).

In the stone desert of Fujairah, people engraved drawings onto rocky blocks several thousand years ago. It is difficult to date them precisely, but many clues suggest that they go back to the Iron Age, like the neighbouring graves and fortified camps. “These pre-Islamic populations would represent many potentates with a warrior vocation, having developed sophisticated irrigation systems, a dynamic exchange economy. It is in this context that engravers would have materialized their pantheon and recounted their military battles”, explains Grégoire de Ceuninck, who has taken a particular interest in their case. “However, let’s remember that this proposal remains as plausible as it is unprovable,” the researcher tempers. In total, 272 engraved motifs, grouped on 80 rocky panels scattered across nine sites, were described and photographed by the Geneva archaeologists. These petroglyphs can be found on the population’s passage axes. They were all carved in stone by pecking.

The impacts of the punch are often inaccurate and shallow. The designs never overlap. They are juxtaposed, even if several styles are present on the same panel. Their dimensions range between 10 and 30 centimeters each. “Their relatively modest size is compensated by their accumulation at strategic points. This accumulation gives the sites a spectacular effect,” confides Grégoire de Ceuninck. Half of the time, the drawings are abstract. Riders and stylized characters appear most often. Then, in order of frequency, horses, snakes, camels, and footprints follow. Camel drivers, hands, and quadrupeds are more rarely seen. Occasionally, entire scenes are depicted in stone. They show the confrontation of groups of riders armed with spears. And in the middle, feet of the same size have been engraved. According to the archaeologist, these markings could symbolize territorial control.

There is no shortage of evidence of military events in the region. Pierre Corboud and his team notably carried out excavations at the fortified camp of Husn Madhab. “It is the most interesting and spectacular Iron Age dwelling site known in Fujairah”, according to the archaeologist. Its enclosing wall, preserved in places around 1.50 meters high, encloses a diamond shape of 80 by 50 meters. Two doors, arranged within, provide access. The place resembles a “diamond” placed at the top of a hill (70 meters in altitude). The camp was likely occupied for relatively long periods, and not as an occasional refuge. “We think they are the counterpart of non-fortified villages in the plain”, says Pierre Corboud.

During the Iron Age, the region wasn’t as dry as today. The current climate was just beginning to form, marked by less significant wet periods (the last one around 675 BC). The Arabian Peninsula was about to experience a real revolution with the discovery of copper veins in its mountains (around 1000 BC). This led to the development of trade with neighboring populations. The meaning of the petroglyphs gradually faded, but their marks on the stones remain visible to this day.