Page 219 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 219

Chap I or Five                                                     '

                they made little else but the large trays covered with zinc on which
                food is placed. The copper cooking-pots, up to a metre in diameter,
                which were also covered with zinc, were usually imported from Iran.
                Other items of daily use were made of brass, such as the mortar and
                                                                                   i
                pestle used to grind coffee and spices. Blacksmiths, who were found
                in the suqs of the ports and also in the Buraimi oasis, made chiefly
                locks, nails and tools which were needed for building and repairing
                                                                                   I
                boats.
                  Jewellery, most of which was made of silver, played a very
                important role in the life of women, as part of (he marriage price. In
                the 19th century, Maria Theresa Dollars became the only accepted
                currency among both the settled people of Inner Oman and the
                nomadic population of Eastern Arabia, because they could rely on
                the high silver content being consistent. The dollars (Thaler) were
                also melted down to make large arm-bangles, anklets, necklaces, hair   I
                ornaments and rings. In some of the traditional necklaces the dollars
                themselves were attached to chains in the same way as was common
                with other coins throughout the Middle East. Much of this traditional
                silver jewellery was imported into the Trucial Slates from the age-old
                craft centres in Nizwa, Bahlah and elsewhere in Oman.55 There were
                also some silversmiths in the ports of the Trucial States, whose
                number, particularly in Dubai, increased when the pearling industry
                was prosperous. Khanajr were made in Ra’s al Khaimah; the blades
                for these curved daggers, which were carried by most men, were
                imported from India and Iran.

                Woodwork
                Apart from the boat builders there were few carpenters in the towns
                of the Trucial States. The locally-obtainable wood from the date palm
                or acacia is unsuitable for carving and shaping. Most items of
                furniture such as four poster beds, cooking stands, kitchen cup­
                boards, large chests for dresses and small chests used by pearl
                merchants were all imported. These items were almost exclusively
                used by the section of the population which came into close contact
                with India through trade and had adopted certain fashions which
                were otherwise uncommon in the majority of households in the
               Trucial States.
                  Wood for making doors also had to be imported. These doors,
                which were decoratively carved, frequently have sentimental value,
               and if people construct a new  house they may well take with them a

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