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Getting
Around Dubai - Abu Dhabi |
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Abu Dhabi is the largest of the
seven emirates that comprise the United Arab Emirates and was also
the largest of the former Trucial States. Abu Dhabi is also a city
of the same name within the Emirate that is the capital of the country,
in north central UAE. The city lies on a T-shaped island jutting into
the Persian Gulf from the central western coast. An estimated 1,000,000
lived there in 2000, with about an 80% expatriate population. Abu
Dhabi City is located at 24.4667° N 54.3667° E. Al Ain is
Abu Dhabi's second largest urban area with a population of more than
200,000 and located 150 kilometres inland.
Abu Dhabi occupies an area
of 26,000 square miles. Its long coastline - the shallow waters
of the Southern Persian Gulf, extending from the base of the Qatar
Peninsula in the west to the border of the emirate of Dubai on the
north east, was once the world's best waters for pearling. When
the pearling industry declined, oil discovery in the offshore oilfields
of the Southern Persian Gulf revived the economy of Abu Dhabi.
Abu
Dhabi was also the first emirate to export oil from the Umm Shaif
offshore field in 1962. On the land, it stretches south to the oases
of Liwa where some of the world’s largest sand dunes can be
found , and east to the ancient oasis of Al Ain. This makes Abu
Dhabi the largest as well as the most populated of all the emirates.
The rise of British naval power in
the Persian Gulf in the mid-18th century coincided with the rise
of two important tribal confederations along the coast of the lower
Gulf. These were the Qawasim, whose descendants now rule Sharjah
and Ras al-Khaimah, and the Bani Yas, whose descendants are now
the ruling families of modern Abu Dhabi and Dubai.
The Bani Yas were originally based in
Liwa, an oasis on the edge of the Empty Quarter desert, but moved
to Abu Dhabi in 1793. They engaged in the traditional Bedouin activities
of camel herding, small-scale agriculture, tribal raiding and extracting
protection money from caravans passing through their territory.
The Bani Yas divided into two main branches in the early 19th century
when Dubai split from Abu Dhabi.
After the collapse of the world pearl
market in the early 20th century, the entire coast was plunged into
abject poverty. In 1939, Sheikh Shakhbut, the ruler of Abu Dhabi,
granted the first of several oil concessions on his territory. It
was not until 1958, however, that oil was found in the emirate.
With a population at the time of only 15,000, Abu Dhabi was on its
way to becoming very rich.
Britain's 1968 announcement that it
would leave the Persian Gulf in 1971 came as a shock to most of
the ruling sheikhs. Negotiations eventually resulted in independence
for Bahrain and Qatar and the creation of a new federal nation:
the United Arab Emirates. The UAE, with Abu Dhabi as its capital,
came into existence on 2 December 1971. When oil revenue started
pouring in, the reed and mud-brick huts were rapidly replaced by
banks and boutiques.
In recent years, the settlement has
spread to occupy virtually all of Abu Dhabi island. It's been remodelled
in less than 40 years to become the classic Arabian petrodollar
city, a wealthy metropolis filled with gardens and tall mirror-glassed
buildings. |
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