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Show at Sharjah museum offers a glimpse into the history of Oman

- Maan Jalal

Sharjah Archaeolog­y Museum’s current exhibition, Omani Civilisati­on: History and Developmen­t, offers a fascinatin­g look at the country’s ancient artefacts and its significan­ce in the region.

The show, held in cooperatio­n with the National Museum – Sultanate of Oman, is enlighteni­ng and enthrallin­g in equal measure.

With many pieces displayed for the first time outside Oman, the collection includes fishing gear, weapons, clay and stone pots, ornaments, personal jewellery and other artefacts, which reveal the stories of Oman’s inhabitant­s dating back to the Stone Age (125,000 – 4000BCE).

“We hope that people will learn about the history of Oman,” Mohamed Yousif Al Zarooni, curator assistant at museum, tells The National.

“We want them to see the similariti­es there are when it comes to these ancient objects that were in Oman and the ones that were found here [in Sharjah]. People will see that all of us were connected and not isolated,” he says.

The exhibition displays Oman’s diverse history, which is not widely known in the region, through the three time periods.

The Stone Age collection includes a set of stone tools, including fishing gear, which date back to 125,000 BCE. A standout piece in this section is an ancient axelike tool made of stone. The tool, which dates between 125,000 and 75,000BCE, is clearly shaped and has clean facets. It would have been used for hunting and protection.

In this same section there is a collection of shell beads and other adornments that were found in a woman’s grave, from 6,000–4,000BCE in the Early Neolithic period.

There is a shell bracelet, a soft stone earring, shell beads and a number of other types of shells. These items were worn or buried alongside a woman

who would have been between 18-25 years old when she died.

The second time period is the Bronze Age (3100-1300BCE), with fishing gear, axes, personal jewellery including rare golden beads, stamps and soft stone pots on display.

Particular­ly enlighteni­ng to discover in this section is that Oman, or Magan as it was known in ancient times, was a trade point for ancient civilisati­ons.

Copper was a major resource mined in Oman at the time and the region became a focal point for the export of the material to many civilisati­ons throughout the Middle East and South Asia.

On display is a replica of a cuneiform tablet found in Mesopotami­a, modern day Iraq, which dates back to about 2,000BC. The tablet lists materials needed to build a fleet of boats which could sail from the Sumerian city-state of Ur in Mesopotami­a to Oman.

On the list are various kinds of wood, animal skins, special kinds of reeds, and bitumen

– a thick, black type of oil. This trade project would have been a costly venture, and was commission­ed by the governor of Girsu, an ancient city in Sumer, suggesting the importance of the project.

This type of trade would have affected the growth of many heavily populated centres and what the exhibition describes as semi-independen­t cities in the region, where architectu­re, writing and crafts were developed as part of the evolving culture.

The third and final time period is the Iron Age (1200 BCE-600AD) that includes a rare collection of stone artefacts that show the evolution of the soft stone industry, along with a rare collection of short daggers, bronze arrowheads and axes.

A collection entitled A Warrior’s Last Stand features an iron sword, a dagger and a quiver filled with 27 arrows dated from the late Iron Age. At the time, a person with high status would be recognised in death through the items buried with them.

The exhibition is curated in an accessible and informativ­e way for visitors of all ages to gain a clear understand­ing of the items, their context and how the various time periods fit into Oman’s rich and numerous archaeolog­ical sites.

And while each time period reveals something interestin­g about Oman’s history, what’s evident throughout the exhibition is how people interacted with their landscapes and environmen­ts.

The collection includes fishing gear, weapons, clay and stone pots, personal jewellery and other artefacts

 ?? Photos Leslie Pableo / The National ?? Left, weapons from a burial site from the late Iron Age; below, the artefacts have been displayed outside Oman for the first time
Photos Leslie Pableo / The National Left, weapons from a burial site from the late Iron Age; below, the artefacts have been displayed outside Oman for the first time
 ?? ?? The Omani Civilisati­on: History and Developmen­t exhibition will be running until June 7 at the Sharjah Archaeolog­y Museum
The Omani Civilisati­on: History and Developmen­t exhibition will be running until June 7 at the Sharjah Archaeolog­y Museum
 ?? ?? Soft-stone vessels from the Bronze Age are on display
Soft-stone vessels from the Bronze Age are on display

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