December 1995, Pages 56-57
The United Arab Emirates Today
Long UAE Archeological Record Shows Links to
Earliest Civilizations
By Richard H. Curtiss
With the explosion of industrial, commercial and residential development
over the past three decades in the United Arab Emirates, archeological
expeditions often are rescue efforts just weeks or days ahead of
the bulldozers. In June of this year, archeologists visiting a site
at Abu Dhabi international airport where 7,000-year-old stone tools
previously had been found, discovered excavations for an extension
of the airport were in progress. The digging equipment was only
two meters away from mysterious stone cairns that dated to at least
5000 B.C. when the archeologists intervened to have the construction
project temporarily halted.
This was followed by an intensive month-long campaign to survey
and map what remained of the site, to collect all of the pottery,
flint tools and other artifacts, and then excavate the two cairns.
The entire rescue operation was carried out in the stupefying heat
and humidity of June and July, a time when archeologists in the
Arabian Gulf generally retreat to air-conditioned museums and university
laboratories to study, record and catalogue the treasures unearthed
under more temperate conditions during their winter expeditions.
The hardships endured by two professional archeologists and a crew
of volunteer excavatorsboth UAE citizens and expatriateswere
somewhat alleviated by on-site sandwiches and cold drinks donated
by the airport catering service, and cash donated by the duty-free
shops to pay for equipment required to complete the operation. The
Abu Dhabi municipality also supplied paid laborers to help with
the heavy shovel work. They were the same laborers originally engaged
to plant trees on the site as part of the development of a leisure
area by the civil aviation department. It is now planned that two
collapsed bronze-age stone structures uncovered by the rescue operation
will be reconstructed on the site in their original form and preserved
as part of the modern development underway in the area.
Another 7,000-year-old settlement contemporary with the Ubaid period
in Iraq has been almost miraculously preserved in a recently developed
portion of Abu Dhabi's offshore Dalma island. There, instead of
digging into the area to construct foundations for new buildings,
the local Women's Association had persuaded developers to build
a children's playground over the site before any of the local inhabitants
realized its archeological importance.
Despite (and sometimes because of) frequent interruptions for rescue
operations, the various archeological departments and offices in
the United Arab Emirates have compiled a fascinating record of human
occupation of the area that may have begun as early as 60,000 years
ago with the presence of Paleolithic hunters. During that period,
when glaciers covered much of northern Europe, the entire Arabian
peninsula probably enjoyed regular rainfall that turned it into
fertile savannah land. With the melting that accompanied the end
of the last glacial epoch, however, world-wide sea levels rose,
and much of the evidence of the earliest human occupation in the
vicinity presumably now lies beneath the waters of the Arabian Gulf.
However, there is clear evidence of the presence of nomadic hunters
living in a still fertile countryside in the Neolithic period of
20,000 to 7,000 years ago. Fine flint arrowheads (pictured below)
have been discovered on Abu Dhabi's Merawah island dating to 5000
BC and marking a camp-site probably used by hunters who used simple
boats to hunt dugongs and turtles.
Almost contemporary with the nomadic Merawah hunters were settlements
of people who had trading links with the early Ubaid culture in
Mesopotamia. That culture produced the earliest pottery found in
the area of southern Iraq which subsequently was inhabited by the
Sumerians. The Sumerians, by devising the world's first writing
system and building the world's first cities, generally are credited
with giving birth to civilisation. In their own writings the Sumerians
cite the holy land of "Dilmun" as the source of wisdom
and the land of immortality. Written evidence such as references
to pearls and fresh water springs points to the ports and islands
of the Gulf as that ancient land, with a culture perhaps centered
around the islands of present-day Bahrain.
Ubaid potsherds from Iraq (see lower picture on facing page) and
local imitations of Ubaid styles have been excavated at Jezirat
al Hamra in Ras al Khaimah and in a cemetery in Umm Al Qaiwain,
as well as in the extensive ancient settlement found under the children's
playground at Dalma island in Abu Dhabi.
Around 3000 B.C. the lifestyle of the people in the present UAE
changed, probably as the result of the discovery of copper in the
Hajar Mountains. With the copper came a new culture, relative prosperity,
and the beginnings of the local bronze age. In tombs of that period
in Al Ain are artifacts that closely resemble goods found in Mesopotamia
(modern Iraq) and in Baluchistan, in present-day eastern Iran and
Pakistan.
The oasis of Al Ain presumably was a way station for the overland
transportation of the copper from the mountains to ports on the
Arabian Gulf for export. Tombs at Jebel Emalah in Sharja show the
evolution of culture over the next 300 years in the area among people
who probably mined copper and also used the water from springs in
the foothills to cultivate nearby fertile plains.
By 2500 B.C. another culture, first identified on the island of
Umm an Nar in Abu Dhabi, appeared. At that site archeologists found
finely made stone tombs, including the one pictured below, and evidence
of a settled community that was trading with Mesopotamia.
Sumerian tablets from Ur and other Mesopotamian sites refer to
the import of copper from a land to the south called Magan. Archeologists
long assumed that Magan was some more distant site in Africa or
Asia. Now, however, with the discovery of ancient copper mining
sites, historians identify Magan with the UAE and Oman.
Evidence of the Umm an Nar civilization or its influence has been
found in Dubai, Sharjah, Ras Al Khaimah, Fujairah, Umm al Qaiwain
and in the Hili Garden at Al Ain, in Abu Dhabi.
The Umm an Nar site was abandoned around 2500 BC, perhaps as a
result of changing trade patterns or a change in the sea level.
However, Tell Abraq, a high mound near Umm al Qaiwain, has successive
layers of debris that point to continuous occupation from around
2600 B.C. to 500 B.C. At the base of the mound is an Umm an Nar-era
tomb, while 10-meter-high stone walls indicate it was a major fortress.
Excavations have produced goods from Mesopotamia, Iran, Pakistan,
India and even Uzbekistan at the site.
During the late Bronze Age between 2000 and 1000 B.C., the area
of the present-day UAE seems to have been extensively settled by
people whose lifestyles were affected not only by climate changes
but also by the rise and fall of the earliest civilizations. Sites
of the period in Al Ain, Ras al Khaima, Fujairah and Dubai as well
as from Tell Abraq in Umm al Qaiwain indicate that trade relations
were maintained with the Mohenjo-Daro and Harappa civilizations
in Pakistan, and with the Sumerian, Akkadian, Assyrian and Babylonian
civilizations in Iraq.
The Bronze Age blended into the Iron Age in the UAE between 1000
and 500 BC, to be followed by a civilization that was influenced
by the Hellenistic empires founded by successors to Alexander the
Great of Macedonia, who sailed down the Gulf in 324 BC.
By Roman times a new port had emerged on the Arabian Gulf coastline
at Ad Door in Umm al Qaiwain. In a cemetery at the site which is
estimated to contain as many as 40,000 graves, glass vessels and
oil lamps like the one pictured below indicate a substantial population
linked to Syria and other Mediterranean lands. A small temple of
the period was dedicated to Shams, a deity generally identified
with the sun.
Ad Door had declined by the third century AD, about the time that
Arab tribes began to migrate into the UAE. Among new settlements
that emerged during this period was one on Abu Dhabi's island of
Sir Bani Yas dating to the fifth century BC. Among the discoveries
there were pieces of plaster bearing Christian crosses, the only
evidence to date of the presence of Christianity in the area of
the UAE in the pre-Islamic period. The crosses seem to have decorated
a building laid out in the form of a monastery, which has not yet
been fully excavated. Interestingly, preliminary investigation indicates
that the building was never destroyed, but instead fell into disrepair
after it was abandoned. This is evidence that the advent of Islam
from nearby Saudi Arabia was a peaceful one in which the local population
voluntarily converted to the new religion.
It was during the pre-Islamic period that the Gulf reached its
highest levels, about 80 centimeters above the present coastline.
The sabkha salt flats along the present coast line were submerged
areas that have emerged as the sea level has fallen during the past
1,500 years.
With the coming of Islamic times and the arrival of indefatigable
Arab travelers and writers, the archeological record is replaced
by written records that document events in the UAE up to modern
times. However, prior to the beginning of archeological work just
over 30 years ago, virtually nothing was known of the pre-Islamic
periods in the United Arab Emirates, or their direct and sustained
links to the great civilizations that first arose in the valleys
of the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers of Mesopotamia, and the Indus
River of Pakistanall at the dawn of recorded human history.
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