Kuwait, Sheikhdom of
State | Defunct
1756 CE to 1899 CE
Kuwait, officially the State of Kuwait, is a sovereign Arab state situated in the northeast of the Arabian Peninsula in Western Asia.
It is bordered by Saudi Arabia to the south at Khafji, and Iraq to the north at Basra.
It lies on the northwestern shore of the Persian Gulf.
The name Kuwait is derived from the Arabic ākwāt, the plural of kūt, meaning a fortress built near water.
The country covers an area of 17,820 square kilometers (6,880 sq mi) and has a population of about 3.5 million.
Historically, the region was the site of Characene, a major Parthian port for trade between Mesopotamia and India.
The Bani Utbah tribe are the first permanent Arab settlers in the region, and lay the foundation of the modern emirate.
By the 19th century, Kuwait comes under the influence of the Ottoman Empire.
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The Great Crossroads
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The Near and Middle East (1684 – 1827 CE)
Empires in Decline, Pilgrimage Routes in Turmoil, and the Return of Reforming Powers
Geography & Environmental Context
The Near and Middle East spanned the eastern Mediterranean, the Arabian Peninsula, Mesopotamia, Persia, and the Caucasus—a crossroads from the Nile to the Hindu Kush. Its three interlocking subregions—the Near East(Egypt, Hejaz, Yemen, Levant, Sudan, southwestern Turkey, and Cyprus), the Middle East (Iraq, Iran, Syria, Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan, eastern Arabia, and most of Anatolia), and Southeast Arabia (southern Oman, eastern Yemen, and Socotra)—together formed a vast zone of deserts, deltas, plateaus, and pilgrimage corridors. Major anchors included the Nile, Tigris–Euphrates, and Zagros–Caucasus uplands; the Red Sea, Persian Gulf, and Arabian Seacoasts; and the high valleys of Yemen and Oman that bridged Africa and Asia.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
The late Little Ice Age imposed alternating drought and flood.
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Mesopotamia and Iran endured erratic rains and destructive river floods.
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Egypt oscillated between low- and high-Nile years; plague and famine shadowed poor floods.
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Hejaz and Yemen suffered water scarcity punctuated by torrential storms.
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Caucasus winters grew harsher; earthquakes at Tabriz (1721), Shiraz (1824), and along the Levantine Riftreshaped towns.
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Dhofar and Hadhramawt relied on fickle khareef monsoons, while Socotra was struck by periodic cyclones.
Despite volatility, canal maintenance, terrace farming, and nomadic mobility preserved regional resilience.
Subsistence & Settlement
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Mesopotamia & Iran: Irrigated grains, dates, and silk; qanats and canals remained vital to subsistence and taxation.
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Caucasus & Anatolia: Pastoralism and mountain farming—wine, fruit, and grain—supported caravan towns like Tiflis, Yerevan, and Aleppo.
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Levant & Egypt: Terrace agriculture (olives, vines, citrus) complemented Nile wheat, barley, and sugar.
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Arabian littoral: Date groves, pearling, and fishing from Basra to Muscat linked desert to sea.
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Yemen & Oman: Terraced grains, coffee, and frankincense; mixed herding in uplands.
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Sudan: Millet and sorghum in river belts tied to Egypt’s provisioning system after Muḥammad ʿAlī’s conquest (1820–1821).
Urban centers—Cairo, Baghdad, Isfahan, Damascus, Tehran, Muscat, Sanaʿa, and Tiflis—functioned as nodes of governance, trade, and craft.
Technology & Material Culture
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Agrarian infrastructure: Qanats, canals, and dikes remained the hydraulic spine; terrace systems in Yemen and Palestine embodied millennia of continuity.
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Crafts & manufactures: Persian silks and carpets; Aleppine cottons; Damascene soap; Cairene brassware; Georgian and Armenian metallurgy.
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Architecture: Ottoman domes, Safavid and Qajar mosques, Armenian churches, and Yemeni tower-houses defined skylines.
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Maritime innovation: Omani dhows and Red Sea sambuks maintained oceanic trade; firearms and artillery modernized gradually through Ottoman and Persian reforms.
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Printing & learning: The French expedition to Egypt (1798–1801) introduced presses and surveying; by the 1820s Muḥammad ʿAlī’s workshops were producing cotton gins, arms, and canal plans.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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Caravan arteries: Aleppo–Mosul–Baghdad; Isfahan–Tabriz–Yerevan–Baku; Basra–Shiraz–Hormuz–Muscat.
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Pilgrimage routes: Cairo and Damascus caravans converged on Mecca until disrupted by Wahhabi–Saʿūdī control (1803–1812); Egyptian forces restored Ottoman sovereignty (1811–1818).
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Maritime spheres: Omani fleets projected power across the Indian Ocean to Zanzibar; Hadhrami merchants spread to Gujarat, Southeast Asia, and the Swahili coast.
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Caspian & Black Sea fronts: Russian expansion brought forts and commerce, drawing Persia into treaties (Gulistan 1813, Turkmenchay 1828).
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Nile & Sudan corridors: River convoys moved grain and troops; Khartoum and Sennar became extensions of Cairo’s fiscal reach.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
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Ottoman provinces: Sunni institutions, Sufi lodges, and urban guilds organized civic life; Coptic, Armenian, Greek, and Jewish communities sustained schools and trade.
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Persia: Shiʿism remained the ideological core from Safavid through Qajar eras; Isfahan and Tehran mosques, gardens, and miniatures embodied Persian identity.
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Caucasus: Islamic and Christian traditions coexisted; oral epics preserved frontier memory.
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Arabian coasts: Poetry, pearling songs, and mosque schools reflected maritime Islam.
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Hejaz & Yemen: Pilgrimage festivals, Sufi orders, and coffee rituals intertwined devotion and commerce.
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Egypt: Al-Azhar scholars debated governance; after 1798, the Arabic press and translation offices of Muḥammad ʿAlī inaugurated modern intellectual life.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
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Nomadic transhumance adjusted to drought belts from Arabia to Iran.
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Oasis and terrace restoration maintained food security.
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Maritime adaptation: Oman’s sea routes and Gulf pearling offset inland disruption.
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Pilgrim provisioning: Waqf-funded cisterns, markets, and bakeries sustained caravans.
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Irrigation renewal: In Egypt, canal repair and proto-barrage planning sought to stabilize Nile floods and expand cotton cultivation.
Political & Military Shocks
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Safavid collapse (1722): Afghan incursions toppled Isfahan; Ottoman and Russian invasions followed.
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Nader Shah (1736–1747): Restored Persian power, campaigned in India and the Caucasus.
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Qajar consolidation (1794–1827): Centralized Iran but ceded territory to Russia.
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Ottoman strain: Frontier wars with Russia; Wahhabi revolt in Arabia; provincial autonomy in Syria and Egypt.
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Muḥammad ʿAlī’s rise (1805): Eliminated Mamluks (1811), reformed army and monopolies, annexed Sudan (1820–1821).
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Omani revival: The Al Bu Saʿid dynasty (from 1749) rebuilt fleets, expelled Portuguese remnants, and dominated Gulf trade.
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European encroachment: Consuls, treaties, and naval patrols—French in the Levant, British in the Gulf and Red Sea—tightened economic dependence though not yet direct rule.
Transition
Between 1684 and 1827 CE, the Near and Middle East transformed from a network of venerable Islamic empires into a patchwork of reforming provinces and maritime powers under growing Eurasian pressure. The Safavids vanished, the Qajars struggled with Russia, and the Ottomans faced internal revolt and European diplomacy. Oman extended Arab reach to East Africa, while Muḥammad ʿAlī’s Egypt pioneered modern bureaucratic reform.
By 1827, caravan and monsoon still ordered daily life, yet behind their continuity loomed the industrial powers of Europe—ready to recast these crossroads into the geopolitical heart of the nineteenth-century world.
The Middle East (1684–1827 CE): Ottoman Decline, Safavid Collapse, and the Rise of New Powers
Geography & Environmental Context
The Middle East includes Iraq, Iran, Syria, Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Qatar, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, most of Turkey (except the European part and southwest Anatolia), eastern Jordan, all but southernmost Lebanon, eastern Saudi Arabia, and northern Oman. Anchors include the Tigris–Euphrates basin (Mesopotamia), the Zagros and Caucasus ranges, the Iranian Plateau, the Caspian littoral, the Syrian Desert, and the Persian Gulf and Caspian Sea coasts. This geography spans irrigated river valleys, steppe corridors, semi-arid plateaus, and mountain enclaves linking Anatolia, Persia, and Arabia.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
The period fell within the late Little Ice Age, producing cooler winters in Anatolia, Armenia, and the Caucasus, alongside recurrent droughts in Mesopotamia and Iran. Floods along the Tigris and Euphrates periodically devastated farmlands, while earthquakes struck Tabriz (1721) and Shiraz (1824). Pastoral nomads in Arabia, Iran, and the Caucasus moved widely to buffer drought, while irrigation in Mesopotamia and northern Iran faltered under war and neglect but revived when political stability returned.
Subsistence & Settlement
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Mesopotamia: Date groves, rice paddies, and cereal fields along the Tigris–Euphrates remained staples; tribal confederations dominated countryside around Ottoman Baghdad.
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Iranian Plateau: Dryland farming (wheat, barley) and oasis gardening (fruit, melons) sustained populations; silk in Gilan and rice in Mazandaran anchored Caspian subsistence.
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Caucasus (Armenia, Georgia, Azerbaijan): Pastoralism, viticulture, and orchards flourished in upland valleys; caravan towns like Tiflis and Yerevan mediated exchange.
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Anatolia & Syria: Grain, olives, and vines in uplands; Aleppo and Damascus remained provisioning and craft centers despite periodic crises.
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Persian Gulf & Oman: Fishing, date cultivation, and pearling dominated, with maritime trade sustaining settlements from Basra to Muscat.
Technology & Material Culture
Agriculture relied on qanats, canals, and animal-powered irrigation. Fortresses and caravanserais dotted plateau routes; mosques, madrasas, and Armenian and Georgian churches anchored towns. Persian silk textiles, Azerbaijani carpets, and Aleppine cottons were prized. Gunpowder weapons, artillery, and fortress improvements spread, though unevenly. Maritime craft ranged from Ottoman galleys to Omani dhows controlling Indian Ocean lanes.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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Caravan routes: Linked Aleppo to Mosul and Baghdad; Isfahan to Tabriz, Yerevan, and Baku; Basra to the Gulf; Shiraz and Yazd to Hormuz/Muscat.
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Persian Gulf: Omani seafaring extended across the Arabian Sea; Basra exported dates and grain; pearl fisheries tied Bahrain and Qatar to Indian and European markets.
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Caspian trade: Connected Gilan’s silk and Astrakhan’s markets; Russian expansion brought new garrisons and merchants.
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Imperial contest zones: Anatolia and the Caucasus saw repeated wars; Iraq oscillated between Ottoman and Persian control.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
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Ottoman provinces: Islam anchored society through mosques, Sufi lodges, and guilds; Armenian and Syriac Christians maintained schools and churches; Jewish communities thrived in Aleppo and Baghdad.
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Safavid Iran: Shi‘ism remained state religion; Isfahan’s mosques and gardens expressed grandeur, though after the Safavid collapse, Qajar art and architecture reshaped Persian identity.
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Caucasus: Christian Orthodoxy (Georgian, Armenian) coexisted with Islam; mountain oral epics and shrine pilgrimages preserved memory.
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Arabian littoral: Tribal poetry, pearl-diver songs, and Omani mosque schools expressed maritime identity.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
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Nomadic strategies: Tribal migrations across steppe and desert balanced drought and grazing.
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Oasis and qanat systems: Managed water for cereals and orchards; local repair after war was critical.
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Silk, carpet, and date economies: Offered export resilience when crops failed.
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Maritime trade: Oman and Gulf ports buffered against inland disruption by maintaining Indian Ocean routes.
Transition
Between 1684 and 1827, the Middle East was a contested imperial borderland. The Safavid dynasty collapsed (1722); Afghans, Ottomans, and Russians fought over Iran and the Caucasus. Nader Shah briefly restored Persian power (1736–1747), raiding into India and the Caucasus. The Qajar dynasty (from 1794) consolidated Iran but conceded land to Russia in treaties (Gulistan 1813, Turkmenchay 1828). The Ottoman Empire faced Russian expansion in the Black Sea and Caucasus and Wahhabi revolts in Arabia. Oman emerged as a naval power, dominating the Gulf and East Africa. By 1827, the region was still a mosaic of caravans, mosques, and fortified towns, but the balance of power had tilted toward European and Russian pressures—foreshadowing the 19th-century age of colonial rivalry and reform.
The Al Qasimi tribes that have controlled the area since the eighteenth century adapt Wahhabi ideas and transfer the movement's religious enthusiasm to the piracy in which they had traditionally engaged.
Whereas Wahhabi thought opposes all that is not orthodox in Islam, it particularly opposes non-Muslim elements such as the increasing European presence in the Persian Gulf.
The increased European presence results in large part from commercial competition between Al Qasimi merchants and British merchants for the lucrative trade between India and the Persian Gulf in the early nineteenth century.
British merchants enlist the British navy to assist them by launching attacks on Al Qasimi strongholds in the present-day UAE as early as 1809.
The navy does not succeed in controlling the situation until 1819, in which year, the British send a fleet from India that destroys Ras al Khaymah, an Al Qasimi port at the eastern end of the gulf.
From Ras al Khaymah, the British fleet destroys Al Qasimi ships along both sides of the gulf.
The British have no desire to take over the desolate areas along the gulf; they only wish to control the trading cities.
The British decide to leave most tribal leaders in power and conclude a series of treaties with them.
As a result of these truces, the Arab side of the gulf comes to be known as the "Trucial Coast."
This area had previously been under the nominal control of the sultan in Oman, although the Trucial Coast tribes are not part of the Ibadi imamate.
The area has also been referred to as "Trucial Oman" to distinguish it from the part of Oman under the sultan that is not bound by treaty obligation.
The British in 1820 seem primarily interested in controlling the Al Qasimi, whose main centers are Ras al Khaymah, Ajman, and Sharjah, which were all small ports along the southeastern gulf coast.
The original treaties, however, also involve Dubai and Bahrain, which are entrepôts.
The inclusion of these ports bring two other extended families, the Bani Yas and the Al Khalifa, into the trucial system.
To the southeast, the Al Said of Oman are extending their influence northward, and from Iraq the Ottoman Turks are extending their influence southward.
From the east, both the Iranians and the British are becoming increasingly involved in Arab affairs.
The most significant development in the region, however, is the Wahhabi movement.
The name Wahhabi derives from Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab, who dies in 1792.
He had grown up in an oasis town in central Arabia where he studied Hanbali law, usually considered the strictest of Islamic legal schools, with his grandfather.
While still a young man, he had left home and continued his studies in Medina and then in Iraq and Iran.
When he returns from Iran to Arabia in the late 1730s, he attacks as idolatry many of the customs followed by tribes in the area who venerate rocks and trees.
He extend his criticism to practices of the Twelve Imam Shia, such as veneration of the tombs of holy men.
He focuses on the central Muslim principle that there is only one God and that this God does not share his divinity with anyone.
From this principle, his students begin to refer to themselves as muwahhidun (sing., muwahhid), or "unitarians."
Their detractors refer to them as "Wahhabis."
Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab considers himself a reformer and looks for a political figure to give his ideas a wider audience.
He finds this person in Muhammad ibn Saud, the emire of Ad Diriyah, a small town near Riyadh.
The two swear a traditional Muslim pledge in 1744 in which they promise to work together to establish a new state (which will later become present-day Saudi Arabia) based on Islamic principles.
The limited but successful military campaigns of Muhammad ibn Saud cause Arabs from all over the peninsula to feel the impact of Wahhabi ideas.
The Wahhabis become known for a fanaticism similar to that of the early Kharijites.
This fanaticism helps to intensify conflicts in the gulf.
Accordingly, in the nineteenth century Wahhabi tribe under the leadership of the Al Saud move at various times against Kuwait, Bahrain, and Oman.
The Wahhabi faith creates internal dissension in Oman as well as an external menace because it proves popular with some of the Ibadi tribes in the Omani interior.
Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab's ideas prove popular among many of the peninsula tribes, including the Al Thani, before the Al Khalifa attempt to take over the area from Bahrain at the beginning of the nineteenth century.
As a result, Wahhabi beliefs motivate Al Thani efforts to resist the attempt of the Al Khalifa, who reject Wahhabism, to gain control of the peninsula.
Wahhabism will distinguish Qatar religiously from its neighbors in the early twenty-first century.
The Middle East: 1756–1767 CE
Expansion of the Saudi-Wahhabi State
From 1756 to 1767, the Saudi-Wahhabi alliance, forged by Muhammad ibn Saud and Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab, continues to strengthen and expand its influence throughout central Arabia. Driven by the militant interpretation of Wahhabism, Saudi forces successfully annex surrounding tribes and settlements, spreading their austere version of Islam. Muhammad ibn Saud, alongside his son Abdul Aziz, vigorously leads armies into Najdi towns and villages, eradicating popular and Shia practices and unifying the tribes under their banner. By 1765, Wahhabi authority is established firmly over most of Najd, significantly threatening regional powers such as the Ottoman Empire and its local allies. Abdul Aziz continues this aggressive territorial expansion and ideological consolidation following Muhammad ibn Saud's death in 1765.
Stabilization and Economic Growth in Oman
In Oman, Ahmad bin Said al-Busaidi consolidates his rule, firmly establishing internal control after decades of instability. Ahmad emerges as undisputed ruler following the death of rival Imam Bal'arab bin Himyar in 1749. He distances himself from traditional Ibadi centers by moving the capital from Ar Rustaq to the bustling commercial port of Muscat, significantly reviving maritime trade. Under his leadership, Oman experiences notable economic rejuvenation, asserting its maritime influence in the Persian Gulf and Indian Ocean. His reign sees Muscat revitalized as a pivotal trading hub, marking a strategic shift towards commercial prosperity.
Persian Fragmentation and Regional Impact
The fragmentation of Persian authority following Nader Shah's assassination continues to severely impact regional stability. Mohammad Hasan Khan, leader of the Qajar tribe, extends his influence over Astarabad, Mazandaran, and Gilan amidst weakening central Persian authority. These internal divisions exacerbate instability across neighboring territories, creating opportunities for tribal and regional authorities in Iraq and the Persian Gulf to assert their autonomy. This declining Persian influence reshapes Gulf politics, fostering increased local governance and autonomy.
Ottoman Control and Tribal Independence
Ottoman authority remains compromised as local tribal autonomy increasingly challenges central governance. Tribes such as the Muntafiq and Bani Lam in southern Iraq, and the Kurdish Baban Dynasty in the north, further entrench their independence. Ottoman attempts to reassert control over these autonomous regions largely fail, reinforcing fragmented and decentralized rule throughout their Arab territories. This dynamic encourages local governance structures that resist Ottoman administrative centralization.
Prosperity and Tribal Settlement in the Persian Gulf
Economic prosperity continues in the Persian Gulf due to robust pearl harvesting, agriculture, and trade. The Al Khalifa and Al Jalahima sections of the Bani Utub tribe migrate from Kuwait to Qatar's northwest coast, establishing the prosperous trading and pearling settlement of Az Zubarah in 1766. Meanwhile, tribes such as the Al Thani further transition from nomadic life to settled communities involved in fishing, pearling, date cultivation, and trade. The popularity of Wahhabism among tribes such as the Al Thani heightens tensions, particularly with the Al Khalifa, who reject the movement. This tribal migration and settlement enhance the Gulf region's economic and social landscape, reinforcing its importance as a vibrant commercial and cultural crossroads.
Legacy of the Era
Between 1756 and 1767, the Middle East experiences profound political consolidation and economic rejuvenation, particularly in central Arabia and Oman. The Saudi-Wahhabi alliance expands its territorial and ideological reach, significantly reshaping regional religious and political dynamics. Oman stabilizes and economically prospers under Ahmad bin Said, emerging as a vital maritime power. Persian fragmentation deepens regional decentralization, while persistent tribal autonomy increasingly challenges Ottoman rule. These transformative developments lay critical foundations for subsequent political, economic, and social evolutions across the Middle East.
The Al Khalifa and the Al Jalahima sections of the Utub tribe migrate from Kuwait to Qatar's northwest coast in 1766 and establish a settlement at the new town of Az Zubarah.
The Bani Utub maintain important trading connections with Kuwait and are close to the rich oyster banks; therefore, Az Zubarah becomes a thriving center of trade and pearling, despite hostilities between the Al Khalifa and the Al Jalahima.
The exact origins of the Al Thani clan, the leading family from another tribe that, like the Bani Utub, had recently moved into the area, are unknown, but they are already in Qatar when the Al Khalifa arrive.
Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab's reformist ideas have proved popular among many of the peninsula tribes, including the Al Thani clan.
As a consequence, Wahhabi beliefs motivate Al Thani efforts to resist the attempt of the Al Khalifa, who reject Wahhabism, to gain control of the peninsula.
The town of Kuwait had been founded in modern-day Kuwait City in 1613.
The ancestors of the Bani Utub had been expelled from Umm Qasr in Iraq by the Ottomans due to their predatory habits of preying on caravans in Basra and trading ships in Shatt al-Arab.
The Bani Utubs settled in 1716 had in Kuwait, which at this time was inhabited by a few fishermen and primarily functioned as a fishing village.
Kuwait has prospered in the eighteenth century, and has rapidly become the principal commercial center for the transit of goods between India, Muscat, Baghdad and Arabia.
By the mid 1700s, Kuwait had already established itself as the major trading route from the Persian Gulf to Aleppo.
The Al Jalahma and Al Khalifa clans, both belonging to the Utub federation, migrate to Zubarah in modern-day Qatar around the 1760s, leaving the Al Sabah as the sole proprietors of Kuwait, operating semi-autonomously under Ottoman rule.
Abdul Aziz musters a large army of Wahhabis with British forces in 1788, attacks Kuwait and occupies it, then offers Kuwait as a gift to Britain who had failed in their 1755 and 1767 attempts to wrest Kuwait from Ottoman control.