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Archaeological research has revealed that Umm Al Quwain is 700 years old

Mon 21 Feb 2022    
EcoBalance
| 3 min read

UMM AL QUWAIN: Today’s town of Umm Al Quwain has a history that dates back at least 700 years, new archaeological research on the island of Siniya has shown.

The research, directed by Shaikh Majid bin Saud Al Mualla, Head of the Tourism and Archaeology Department of Umm Al Quwain (TAD-UAQ), has identified two coastal settlements on Siniya, opposite today’s town, the oldest of which dates back to the 13th or 14th Century.

Umm Al Quwain was previously thought to have grown up around the fort established by Shaikh Rashid bin Majid Al Mualla in 1768. The new discoveries, therefore, push back the history of settlement by as much as 500 years.

“I am delighted by these discoveries,” Shaikh Majid said. “We knew that the Al Mu‘alla family first established itself in the area of present-day Umm Al Quwain around 250 years ago. These new finds on Siniya now add another 500 years to the history of our Emirate.”

Siniya Island is situated between the peninsula of Umm Al Quwain and the Gulf coast of the Emirates, protecting the Khor al-Beida lagoon. This mangrove-fringed lagoon is the best surviving example of its type in the Northern Emirates. Around its shores is evidence of occupation over a period of at least 6,000 years, including sites from the Neolithic and Bronze Age periods as well as the major site of ed-Dur, a port settlement that traded with the Roman Empire 2,000 years ago.

Shaikh Majid has assembled a team from leading institutions to ensure that the work conforms to international best practices. These include the United Arab Emirates University, the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World at New York University, and a specially-created Italian Archaeological Mission.

The work is supported by the Federal Ministry of Culture and Youth, a reflection both of the outstanding cultural significance of the archaeology of Siniya Island, and the commitment of the United Arab Emirates to protect and promote its heritage.

The recent archaeological work on Siniya Island has identified two neighbouring historic settlements. They are characterised by low mounds covered by potsherds, representing the remains of collapsed stone buildings or oyster shell middens (rubbish heaps).

The first town flourished between the 13th / 14th and 15th centuries. It can be dated by the presence of green-glazed pottery exported from China under the late Yuan and early Ming dynasties. This settlement is contemporary with the peak of Julfar in Ra’s al-Khaimah, the leading pearling centre of the Lower Gulf during the later Middle Ages.

This first settlement is the larger of the two recently identified on Siniya Island. It seems to have had an urbanised core of stone buildings surrounded by suburbs of palm-frond houses. A large oyster shell midden was found to the west of the settlement, pointing to the importance of the pre-modern pearling industry.

Occupation subsequently shifted to another area nearby, with this new second settlement then flourishing from the early 17th to early 19th century. The occupation can be dated by the presence of blue-and-white porcelains exported from China during the late Ming and early Ching dynasties, including possible Kraak Ware and Batavian Ware. This settlement was probably established around the time Julfar declined, as part of the decentralisation of the early modern pearling industry.

Interestingly, the oyster shell middens next to the second settlement are much larger than those of the first. This may reflect the progressive erosion of the earlier middens. But it might alternatively reflect the tremendous growth of the pearling industry that began in the 18th century. This pearling boom was fundamentally important to the emergence of the Emirates.

This second town was destroyed on 18th January 1820 by a naval squadron despatched to the Arabian Gulf by the British East India Company to deal with the issue of Qasimi ‘piracy,’ as they termed it. A rare coin of Shaikh Sultan b. Saqr al-Qasimi, the powerful ruler of Ras Al Khaimah, has been discovered on the site. He signed the General Maritime Treaty of 1820 that brought hostilities to a close and laid the foundation for the modern United Arab Emirates.

The ruins of the second town were described by a British naval survey in 1822, which noted that it had been abandoned in favour of the present site of Umm Al Quwain town, situated on the mainland immediately opposite Siniya Island. This constitutes the third town, which prospered between the 19th and mid-20th century, before the focus of settlement once more shifted, this time to the extensive suburbs of the modern city.

The three historic towns of Umm Al Quwain can now be shown to belong to a single occupational sequence lasting from the 13th or 14th century to the present day. This sequence is exceptional since the archaeological remains of the historic towns of the Gulf coast of the Emirates have in virtually all cases been obscured by massive modern development.

Archaeological excavation of the first and second towns of Umm Al Quwain will continue over the winter months under the leadership of Shaikh Majid bin Saud Al Mualla. The work will focus on finding the public buildings – forts and mosques – at the heart of the historic community. These will ultimately be opened to the public, who will be invited to explore the remarkable history of Umm Al Quwain that is now emerging.

WAM


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