Social Sciences, asked by sound3856, 11 months ago

Give an evidence to prove there was a cultural relation between the uae and the external world

Answers

Answered by meesalagmanoz
1

Answer:

Since the establishment of the United Arab Emirates on 2 December 1971, the UAE adopted a balanced foreign policy based on adoption of dialogue, respect of international conventions, commitment to the United Nations Charter and non-interference of other country's internal affairs, and the settlement of disputes by peaceful means

One of the main anchorers of the UAE’s foreign policy has been building cooperation-based relations with all countries of the world. Substantial development assistance has increased the UAE's stature among recipient states. Most of this foreign aid (in excess of $15 billion) has been to Arab and Muslim countries.

See India–United Arab Emirates relations UAE enjoys close economic and cultural relations with India. Close maritime contact between India and the Arabian Peninsula date back to 3rd and 2nd millennium BC.and textile and spice trade between the two countries flourished during most of 1st millennium AD.

The discovery of oil allowed the UAE to increase and diversify its trade relations with India. UAE and India are each other's main trading partners. The trade totals over $75 billion (AED275.25 billion).During the first half of 2010, non-oil trade between India and the UAE stood at US$20.4 billion.UAE is home to more than 1.75 million Indian expatriates, making Indians the second largest ethnic group in the nation.

Answered by smartbrainz
0

The UAE's cultural exchange has a rich and ancient past. This country has long been home to a diverse and friendly community, from merchants in Bronze Age to Indian goldsmiths.

Explanation:

  • During this Year of Tolerance we will hear more about the unwavering welcome from the United African States for the different foreign communities, which make up the overwhelming majority of citizens. They come from some 200 countries, from around the globe and bring various languages, cultures and customs to this country in keeping with the many religions that they contribute to building the United Arab Emirates today.
  • The appreciation of the importance of this extraordinary diversity stems directly from the state ideology founded by late Sheik Zayed, the nation's founding father. Nevertheless, it goes back far further than this than in so much of the world today. Looking back on the past of the nation that now constitutes the United Arab Emirates, one can track back to the earliest days of human settlement the welcoming of goods, ideas, customs and citizens from other nations.
  • As long as 7,500 years ago, traffic on ships from Mesopotamia-today's Iraq-arrived here on the Arab Gulf, almost certainly crewed by foreign-born mariners. Relevant evidence can be found in an item on display at Louvre Abu Dhabi, a pottery vessel from Obaid culture in Iraq, excavated on the western island of Abu Dhabi in the village of Marawah many decades ago.
  • Then, in the Bronze Age, that began some five thousand years ago, the Emirate ports traded with the Indus Valley empires, even with goods from Central Asia. We may conclude that the Emirates were also entered by merchants from those far-flung lands who carried their languages and ideas. Of course religious beliefs entered from other geographic locations, for example, in the AlQusays, in Dubai, and in Bithna and Masafi, Fujairah, there is a cult creed connected with snakes which has been identified in large parts of the Emirates.
  • Approaching the pre-Islamic sun god Shams, revered in Arabia, the Ed-Dur temple in Umm Al Quwain had been dedicated six centuries prior to the advent of Islam. We know that Christianity had entered the AU at the beginning of the seventh century AD when a Sir Bani Yas monastery was established. Meanwhile, in Ras Al Khaimah an early medieval Jewish tombstone was dug out.
  • It was not just the arrival of commodities and ideas that involved a cultural and economic exchange. Within the country people didn't only come as merchants; they came to settle too. In the 15th century the Kingdom of Hormuz residents of Ras al Khaimah now include merchants from Venice, to the west, and from Russia, China, India, East Africa and elsewhere, not only from the Middle East.
  • Hormuz was described as "the vast emporium where cultures and goods of all kinds were from all parts of the world" in 1472, decades before the first European imperial power, the Portuguese, entered the area. Some would have definitely interacted with Emirates people.
  • While the existence of foreign communities in the Emirates during the Medieval period is difficult to assess, at the beginning of the 19th century the picture begins to become clearer. According to a British study in 1823, some Indian "traders and goldsmiths," the founders of the vast population of today's UAE, were inhabitants of the growing city Abu Dhabi, founded half a century ago. Dubai was inspired by families from southern Iran at the early part of the century. In Dubai's Bastakiya district, new arrivals from the town of Bastak brought with them new architectural innovations, barjeel or wind tower.

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