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cities dubai
Dubai is the part of the 7
states that comprises the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the
second largest of all. Dubai's total area is around 3,885sq km
and is situated on the banks of the Dubai Creeks off the
Persian Gulf.
It has a sub tropical, arid climate. Rainfall is infrequent
and irregular. Temperature rises from a low of about
100°Celsius to high up to 40°in july. The mainly desert area
with sand dunes ranging from near white along the cost to a
deep orange inland near the mountain and places dotted with a
scrub if desert bushes and large trees.

The major part of the Dubai
emirate consists of rolling sand dunes lapping the foothills of
the arid Hajar mountains in the east. Until a decade or two ago,
the dunes were inhabited by nomadic Bedouin roaming with their
flocks and herds. Today the nomads have all settled, in villages
in the few fertile oases or valleys, or else in the city.
Modern Dubai is the product of
the past 20 years of intensive development. Prior to that, Dubai
was a small trading port, clustered around the mouth of the
Creek.
It had grown gradually from a
fishing village inhabited in the 18th century by members of the
Bani Yas tribe. Its origins, however, go back into the far more
distant past. The towns museum displays a rich collection of
objects found in graves of the first millennium BC at nearby Al-Qusais,
while a caravan station of the sixth century AD was excavated in
the expatriate suburb of Jumairah.
The village really began to
grow in the early 19th century, when some 800 members of the
Bani Yas tribe, the Al Bu Falasah, moved north and settled in
Dubai.
Dubai lacked the productive
hinterland of Abu Dhabi, with its fertile oases of Liwa and Al
Ain - its inhabitants were committed to life on the coast, and
looked to the sea for their living. They based their livelihood
on fishing, pearling and sea trade.
By the turn of the 20th century
Dubai was a sufficiently prosperous port to attract settlers
from Iran, India and Baluchistan, while the souk on Deira side
was thought to be the largest on the coast, with some 350 shops.
The facilities for trade and free enterprise were enough to make
Dubai a natural haven for merchants who left Lingah, on the
Persian coast of the Persian Gulf, after the introduction of high customs dues there
in 1902. They continued to trade with Lingah, however, as
do many of the dhows in Dubai Creek today, and they named their
district Bastakiya, after the Bastak region in southern Persia.

Meanwhile a flourishing Indian
population had also settled in Dubai and was particularly active
in the shops and alleys of the souk. The cosmopolitan atmosphere
and air of tolerance began to attract other foreigners too: by
the 1930s, nearly a quarter of the 20,000 population was
foreign, including 2,000 Persians, 1,000 Baluchis, many Indians
and substantial communities from Bahrain, Kuwait and the Hasa
province in eastern South Arabia. Some years later the British
also made it their center on the coast, establishing a political
agency in 1954.
The international trade which
flowed from Dubais cosmopolitan contracts was the basis of
rapidly increasing prosperity. This gave the city an early start
in development before the beginning of oil production in the
late 1960s. Like the other towns along the coast, Dubai had been
severely affected by the decline of the pearling industry, due
to competition in the 1930s from Japanese cultured pearls, and
by the drop in trade in the Second World War. But Dubai contacts
and mercantile skills increased resilience and the ability to
profit from favourable conditions for entrepot trade with Persia
and India after the 1939-45 war.
The successful early
development was due in large part to the foresight of Dubai?s
rulers. During the 20th century the city has benefited from the
stabilizing influence of two exceptionally long rules: that of H
H Shaikh Saeed Bin Maktoum from 1912 to 1958, followed by that
of his son, H H Shaikh Rashid Bin Saeed al-Maktoum. For many
years prior to his father?s death in 1958 Shaikh Rashid has
played a leading role in directing the state. Since then he has
guided Dubai in its expansion from a small, old-world town to a
modern state with excellent communication, and industrial
infrastructure, and all the comforts of contemporary life. Since
1980 Shaikh Rashid has played a background role due to ill
health but his four sons have continued his policies in exactly
the same mould.

While this development has been
greatly facilitated by the discover of oil and its production
from the 1960s, oil revenues in Dubai have always been a
fraction of those in Abu Dhabi, so Dubai?s growth has always
depended partly on the inhabitants? own entrepreneurial
abilities.
Unlike Abu Dhabi or Sharjah,
Dubai has only one substantial town. While the emirate of Dubai
covers 3,900 square kilometers, the population (estimated at
889,518 in 1990) is largely concentrated in Dubai town. This has
enhanced the popularity of a number of oases which provide a
welcome break at weekends from the competitive commercial life
of the city. The emirate is mainly desert, with sand dunes
ranging from near white along the coast to a deep orange inland
near the mountains, and in places dotted with a scrub of desert
bushes and even some large trees.
A one-and-a-half hour drive
along a good asphalt road leads to Hatta, most easterly of
Dubai?s territories. This pleasantly green valley, is a small
enclave in the dramatic, arid Hajar mountains and is completely
surrounded by land belonging to Oman, to Ajman and to Ras al-Khaimah.
Here, the charming Hatta Fort Hotel in its beautiful gardens
gives a warm welcome to visitors.
Nearer to Dubai, and only about
20 kilometers inland, are the twin oases of Khawanij and Awir.
These oases, which can be reached in 25 minutes from the town
center, lie in attractively wooded dune lands. They have been
extensively developed over the past 20 years and boast fine
country houses with superb gardens for some of Dubai?s leading
families. The district?s ample water supply has enabled local
enthusiasts to create garden so lush and colourful that the
visitor finds it hard to believe that this is still Arabia.

The emirates largest urban
development outside Dubai city is, however, the industrial
complex of Jebel Ali, 20 kilometers southwest along the coast.
The government has built the largest man-made harbour in the
world, with a dredged deepwater approach channel stretching far
out to sea, and to create a complete industrial complex it has
established such major undertakings as an aluminium smelter and
gas separation plant, as well as a residential village of more
than 300 houses.
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