SH Archive The Amazing City of Dubai, UAE

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Banta
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2019-10-08 18:18:43
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I'm sure many of you are familiar with the high strangeness going on in Dubai. I'm somewhat surprised that there isn't a thread about it here already, although the more overt anomalies have popped up over the last couple decades, so it isn't exactly stolen "history" yet... however, the themes present are more than a little in sync with the topic material on this site and it's entirely possible in my opinion that the huge construction project over the last 50 years has also been done in part to obfuscate the ancient city that was there before.

So, let's just wikiorient ourselves first:
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CollageDubai.jpg

Dubai is the largest and most populous city in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the capital of the Emirate of Dubai.
  • Located on the southeast coast of the Persian Gulf, Dubai is a global city and the business hub of the Middle East. It is also a major global transport hub for passengers and cargo. Oil revenue helped accelerate the development of the city, which was already a major mercantile hub. Today, less than 5% of the emirate's revenue comes from oil. A centre for regional and international trade since the early 20th century, Dubai's economy relies on revenues from trade, tourism, aviation, real estate, and financial services.
  • Dubai has attracted the attention of the world through large construction projects, opulent hotels and hosting major sports tournaments.
  • ...Many theories have been proposed as to the origin of the word "Dubai". One theory suggests the word was used to describe the souq, which was similar to the souq in Ba. An Arabic proverb says "Daba Dubai" (Arabic: دبا دبي‎), meaning "They came with a lot of money." According to Fedel Handhal, a scholar on the UAE's history and culture, the word Dubai may have come from the word daba (Arabic: دبا‎) (a past tense derivative of yadub (Arabic: يدب‎), which means "to creep"), referring to the slow flow of Dubai Creek inland. The poet and scholar Ahmad Mohammad Obaid traces it to the same word, but to its alternative meaning of "baby locust" (Arabic: جراد‎) due to the abundant nature of locusts in the area before settlement.
History
The earliest recorded mention of Dubai is in 1095 in the Book of Geography by the Andalusian-Arab geographer Abu Abdullah al-Bakri. The Venetian pearl merchant Gasparo Balbi visited the area in 1580 and mentioned Dubai (Dibei) for its pearling industry....



  • Al Fahidi Fort, built-in 1787, houses the Dubai Museum, which was opened in 1971 (the year the federation was formed), to be an official museum that displays the history of Dubai and its original heritage. In 1995, another underground museum was established and added to the old fort. (Dubai Museum and Al Fahidi Fort)
  • In 1841, a smallpox epidemic broke out in the Bur Dubai locality, forcing residents to relocate east to Deira. In 1896, fire broke out in Dubai, a disastrous occurrence in a town where many family homes were still constructed from barasti - palm fronds. The conflagration consumed half the houses of Bur Dubai, while the district of Deira was said to have been totally destroyed. The following year, more fires broke out. A female slave was caught in the act of starting one such blaze and was subsequently put to death...
  • In 1901, Maktoum bin Hasher Al Maktoum established Dubai as a free port with no taxation on imports or exports and also gave merchants parcels of land and guarantees of protection and tolerance....
  • ...The 'great storm' of 1908 struck the pearling boats of Dubai and the coastal emirates towards the end of the pearling season that year, resulting in the loss of a dozen boats and over 100 men. The disaster was a major setback for Dubai, with many families losing their breadwinner and merchants facing financial ruin....
  • ..Despite a lack of oil, Dubai's ruler from 1958, Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed Al Maktoum, used revenue from trading activities to build infrastructure. Private companies were established to build and operate infrastructure, including electricity, telephone services and both the ports and airport operators. An airport of sorts (a runway built on salt flats) was established in Dubai in the 1950s and, in 1959, the emirate's first hotel, the Airlines Hotel, was constructed....
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So, the official story for the expansion of Dubai was in part because they were floating in money after discovering oil, however, as indicated above, it appears that the building predated the discovery of oil:
  • After years of exploration following large finds in neighbouring Abu Dhabi, oil was eventually discovered in territorial waters off Dubai in 1966, albeit in far smaller quantities. The first field was named 'Fateh' or 'good fortune'. This led to an acceleration of Sheikh Rashid's infrastructure development plans and a construction boom that brought a massive influx of foreign workers, mainly Asians and Middle easterners. Between 1968 and 1975 the city's population grew by over 300%.
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Dubai 1950 (doesn't look quite as desolate as I expected, really...)

These old photos of Dubai show how much the UAE has changed

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Desert development: The Clocktower roundabout in the neighbourhood of Deira stands surrounded by sandy, undeveloped lots. Today (below) the clocktower is ringed by towering hotels but, for a time after it was built in 1964, the area was considered remote from the city centre

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Dubai, supposedly in the 1960s (Dubai before the boom: Staggering pictures show how emirate went from desert backwater to the Manhattan of the Middle East in just 50 years)

Here's a pretty good video highlighting the development since 1960:


Yes, they have several man-made islands.
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And of course, the tallest building in the world, Burj Khalifa:

Burj_Khalifa.jpg

I had been aware of Dubai, but it was really Chris Knowles at The Secret Sun who pointed out some of the more unusual aspects of it. Here's a pretty good article of his from 2016 which delves into more detail and also discusses another interesting feature of Dubai:

Enki's Playground, or the Domed City of Dubai

Knowles goes on to mention the opening ceremony of the Atlantis The Palm, Dubai.

800px-Atlantis,_The_Palm_Exterior_.jpg

(Reminds me a little of the Atlantic City hotel the Traymore that was recently posted about, 1906/1914 World’s Largest Resort Hotel “Fireproof” Traymore Atlantic City, NJ)

If you have the time, I highly suggest watching the whole ceremony, entitled "The Search for Atlantis". At least until they unveil "a new icon":


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There is more going on in Dubai than I can document here and all of it screams to me "WHY", in the way that many building projects of the past do. This one is obviously different... it would appear that these massive structures were built during the last few decades, but there are many aspects to this that do not seem to jive with the official story.

All of that, of course, qualifies Dubai to host an Exposition!
Expo 2020, Maintenance Page

Any thoughts on any of this? Beyond they're building a spaceport for aliens? Which may be true, but also seems to be the popular alternative theory and I have my reservations. I am also curious about old maps that may feature Dubai and any older pictures (at least pre-1960) of the city.
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Username: JWW427
Date: 2019-10-08 19:22:43
Reaction Score: 8
Dubai is fascinating and frankly a little scary. Apologies to anyone from Dubai or the UAE on the SH forum, but this is how I feel. Okay, a Disneyland for elite Arab princes, illuminati dill weeds, and masters of the world. I get that. But...

A Ferrari World?
  • A 1200 bhp $1.2M Bugatti cop car? (For chasing down all those thousands of downmarket Ferraris)
  • Underwater hotel rooms? (Aquariums are selfish. Zoos as well)
  • Domesticated Giraffes?
  • Private menageries? (That's another thread)
  • Cryptocurrency en masse?
  • Alcohol is served in many hotels, and I'll bet Artificial Intelligence 5G and cameras are everywhere.
Something does not add up. I wonder what's been built underground? DUMBS bases for international militaries?
Is this the best the human race can do?

We live in a sick world of dichotomy. While people starve, drown in debt, and wars saddle countries with death and genocide, here we have the perfect Elysium from which elites can thumb their noses at everyone deemed unfit. This is the movie "Elysium" come alive with no regrets, no morals, no rules. If you have enough billions, I'll bet you can do anything sick, selfish, and twisted you want in dubious ol' Dubai. Maybe you can anywhere, but this place has a concierge service for it.

Frankly, if I were an extraterrestrial delegation from Andromeda, I would be embarrassed to stay there.
"Happy" for who, exactly? Cyborg trans-humans? Jeffrey Epstein-loving Deep State kleptocrats?
Is everyone chipped, Elon Musk fans?

dubai.jpegdubai 2.jpegdubai car.jpegdubai ferrari.jpegatlantis h.jpegatlantis h2.jpeg


Dubai officialdom says: OUR VISION IS TO MAKE DUBAI THE HAPPIEST CITY ON EARTH!
  • OVER THE PAST 40 YEARS, Dubai’s rapid development in various economic sectors meant that traditional processes needed to be continuously updated to ensure efficiency and speed. Government effectiveness became increasingly imperative especially in Government to Consumer (G2C) and Government to Government (G2G) services.
LEVERAGING EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES AND INITIATIVES!
Leveraging emerging technologies and initiatives such as Blockchain, Artificial Intelligence, Internet of Things and Data Sharing, we are recreating everyday experiences for residents and visitors of Dubai, making them much more personalized, seamless, efficient and impactful.

• However....

BBC News: "Overextended"
On paper it was succeeding, as by 2008 over 95% of its GDP was made up by such sectors. But with the onset of the credit crunch much of this success began to come undone as foreign direct investment and appetite for these activities faded. Dubai had also badly overextended itself with most of its mega projects - including giant manmade islands - being financed by large debts.
With most of these needing to be refinanced in the near future, the emirate's government spent most of 2009 trying to attract international creditors but was largely unsuccessful.
With Abu Dhabi providing some limited financial assistance, both in February 2009 and earlier this week, Dubai managed to keep afloat.
But with Abu Dhabi's clear unwillingness to completely bail out Dubai, much attention has been placed on the relationship between the two emirates, especially since the recent default.
If Abu Dhabi does not provide more help, then the government of Dubai will soon be bankrupt.

Competition
Although the ruler of Dubai, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, recently told journalists to "shut up" and stop referring to Dubai and Abu Dhabi as being separate, and although the Al Maktoum family is of the same tribe as Abu Dhabi's ruling Al Nahyan family - the Bani Yas - the two dynasties nonetheless have a long history of rivalry.

Somehow I sincerely doubt Dubai will ever go bankrupt. Lots of hidden agendas, tons of money.
JWW
 
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Username: CitizenShip
Date: 2019-10-08 20:17:21
Reaction Score: 3
Nice find for the fort in Dubai, i had missed that one, there are two more very close that i did get.

The first just up the road in Sharjar, this is a nice 4 point with a bit of a walled citadel next to it.
Then just up the coast a bit is this good looking fort(although not from the air), that looks much older, more brutal in style.
So there was defo lots of history in this region, like said above, i bet there is so much underground!
 
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Username: wizz33
Date: 2019-10-14 21:37:22
Reaction Score: 0
it seems as 1 of the HQ of the technocratic that lead goog,fb, ect
 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2019-10-15 00:47:59
Reaction Score: 8
Let's leave contemporary Dubai alone and concentrate on its history. The general purpose source tells us:
  • ...tons of ancient gibberish precede everything
  • Records of the area where the emirate of Dubai is situated are very rare for any period before the 18th century.
  • The earliest recorded mention of Dubai is in 1095 in the Book of Geography by the Andalusian-Arab geographer Abu Abdullah al-Bakri.
  • The Venetian pearl merchant Gasparo Balbi visited the area in 1580 and mentioned Dubai (Dibei) for its pearling industry.
  • Dubai is thought to have been established as a fishing village in the early 18th century and was, by 1822, a town of some 700–800 members of the Bani Yas tribe and subject to the rule of Sheikh Tahnun bin Shakhbut of Abu Dhabi.
  • In 1833, following tribal feuding, members of the Al Bu Falasah tribe seceded from Abu Dhabi and established themselves in Dubai. The exodus from Abu Dhabi was led by Obeid bin Saeed and Maktoum bin Butti, who became joint leaders of Dubai until Ubaid died in 1836, leaving Maktum to establish the Maktoum dynasty.
  • Dubai signed the General Maritime Treaty of 1820 along with other Trucial States, following the British punitive expedition against Ras Al Khaimah of 1819, which also led to the bombardment of the coastal communities of the Persian Gulf. This led to the 1853 Perpetual Maritime Truce. Dubai also – like its neighbours on the Trucial Coast – entered into an exclusivity agreement in which the United Kingdom took responsibility for the emirate's security in 1892.
  • In 1841, a smallpox epidemic broke out in the Bur Dubai locality, forcing residents to relocate east to Deira. In 1896, fire broke out in Dubai, a disastrous occurrence in a town where many family homes were still constructed from barasti - palm fronds. The conflagration consumed half the houses of Bur Dubai, while the district of Deira was said to have been totally destroyed. The following year, more fires broke out. A female slave was caught in the act of starting one such blaze and was subsequently put to death.
Old Maps
Essentially we have this fishing village thought to have been established in the early 1700s. By 1822 the village became a town of Dubai, and had some 700-800 citizens.
  • Of course, in 1787 the villagers of the future town of Dubai had to build this Fort Al Fahidi. There was quite a few similar forts in the Persian Gulf area. Fishing villages needed protection, I guess.
General Position
dubai_map_1.jpg

Dubai Creek
dubai_creek.jpg

Anyways, let's see what we have for the older maps. The above ones is obviously for reference purposes.

Remember: Records of the area where the emirate of Dubai is situated are very rare for any period before the 18th century.

1665 - a bunch?
1665_map_dubai.jpg
Source
In reference to the above map... wondering if "redded out" cities also mean the cities which were recently annihilated. This is close to our approximate 1650-1700 time frame when certain events possibly took place.

And whatever it says below, and in the originating linked book. Sounds like we need to research the surrounding cities on the above map. There could be some history to be had.

baha_calba.jpg
1779 New Geography

1691-???
1691_map_dubai.jpg
Source

1790 - Julfar?
1790_map_dubai.jpg
Source

1836 - Seer?
1836_map_dubai.jpg
Source
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KD: It looks like our Dubai could be a bit more than a mere overdeveloped fishing village... Sounds like the area was destroyed by something.

Additionally they have an interesting neighbor, which combined with one of the above maps used to be a part of the same Ormus Empire.


Our future Dubai was a part of this Ormus Empire, or so it seems.
 
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Username: Banta
Date: 2019-10-15 01:10:29
Reaction Score: 3
Absolutely, I only included for context and the comparison to the expos, as far as an insane scale building project and seemingly for other occulted purposes, which again makes it fitting that they are hosting one next year. Even the video I linked about the Atlantis opening is grand but the story it's telling about history can be interpreted in a lot of alternative ways. I probably should have named the thread something else, actually...

I appreciate the maps and your insight into the area!
 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2019-10-15 01:12:12
Reaction Score: 5
I did not mean the OP. Trying to avoid the Ferrari and Lambo discussion here.

Those fishermen who started the city of Dubai were sure a different kind. Why would our historians forget to include something like this? There is more where I got it from: ormus + Ormus.
ormus_king.jpg
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Of course, they talk about 5,000 years ago, but it appears that it is about 500 years tops. Anyways...
  • It’s understandable that archaeology and antiquities are not things that most people associate with Dubai and the United Arab Emirates. Yet this desert kingdom has a surprisingly rich history. Far from being empty desert, the UAE has many lost cities and archaeological sites that are only now being explored, and which reveal an unexpected story of human development in the Arabian Peninsula – from over 100,000 years ago when humans first ventured ‘out of Africa’, through millennia of a nomadic hunter-gatherer existence, to developing farming and then becoming a major centre for a world-changing technology – bronze.
Map-sand-Kings-of-Oman.jpg
Map illustration from 'Sand Kings of Oman' published by Methuen in 1947.

Numerous buildings, tombs and sections of falaj watercourses dating from this time have been excavated over an area of about fifty acres at Hili just north of Al Ain, the UAE’s third largest city, and are the centerpiece of the UAE’s only UNESCO World Heritage site.
 
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Username: Banta
Date: 2019-10-15 02:48:08
Reaction Score: 1
Julfar is right on the money. The pearls give it away!

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The Book of Duarte Barbosa, An Account of the Countries bordering on the Indian Ocean and their Inhabitants

Translated from the Portuguese Text First Published in 1812 A.D. by the Royal Academy of Sciences at Lisbon, in Vol. II of its Collection of Documents regarding the History and Geography of the Nations beyond the Seas', edited and annotated.

The original author is from far before 1812 supposedly.
If he's even the real author. From another (maybe?) translation:
The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Description of the Coasts of East Africa and Malabar in the Beginning of the Sixteenth Century, by Duarte Barbosa.
 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2019-10-15 04:05:48
Reaction Score: 3
Well, it appears it was not hard to establish that the area was rather populated way before any Dubai came into picture. With the narrative choosing to omit the fact of prior cities occupying the same area, this could probably be something to research. At the same time with UAE being what it is, we are definitely limited to the texts only. How much truth survived the cleansing is unknown.
  • Hopefully, searching for the older cities mentioned on the maps could shed some light on some of this Dubai mystery.
At some point we start seeing ruins being mentioned on the related maps.

KD: I think "Baha" and "Calba" are the earliest city names pertaining to the Dubai region.
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Considering that on the below 1862 map they placed this Sharjas Tower, which is probably indicative of the city of Sharjah, we could make the following hypothesis:
  • Baha, later Julfar/Julphar - Dubai
  • Calba, later Seer - Sharjah
Sharjas_tower.jpg
dubai_4_1.jpg
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Username: CurvedBullet
Date: 2019-10-15 05:29:29
Reaction Score: 5
Really good post and I thought the exact same thing re: Atlantis looking like the Traymore! Meanwhile, these doomed buildings have a foreboding "Logan's Run" and "Zardoz" aspect to them. I wonder what's underneath the soil in the former desert near the roundabout.

As far as the funding for Project Dubai goes maybe there's a huge tax advantage a la the Opportunity Funds popular now in USofA Corp.
"Elysium" was the heads up for The Project but it was never going to be in space, it was always going to be right here on the plane/t....
 
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Username: OskarSnaefel
Date: 2019-10-23 20:14:24
Reaction Score: 1
Money laundering would be my guess
 
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Username: BrokenAgate
Date: 2019-10-25 19:37:55
Reaction Score: 6
These palm tree islands remind me of something....

The_universe.jpg

Oh...

facehugger0qf.jpg
 
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Username: Dielectric
Date: 2019-11-02 18:11:35
Reaction Score: 0
BrokenAgate is spot on.

Alien Face Hugger = Facial ID? Lays Eggs by shoving them down your throat? Hmm...sound a little familiar?
Here's a little collage I whipped up. That's the Ryugyong Hotel in the far right bottom corner in North Korea, aka Pedo Castle, and then the Denver Aiports blue radar screens seem to be reflected in the Dubai Skyline, maybe Space Farce's Space Fence, watching, listening, other? Oh, and yea, the triangles, alway the triangles.

Dubai-UAE-X3.png
 
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Username: nothingnew
Date: 2019-11-02 20:59:24
Reaction Score: 2
While we are in the region, let me point you to a very peculiar little island in the region named Hormuz island.

Map from 1746 shows us starforts and other buildings

1746.jpg

Now, lets see how it looks today shall we.
What happened there? Why does the ground look like its been melted? I have so many questions...
 
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