Page 220 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 220

The Traditional Economics

        door from I lie old house. The doors are usually made of two equal
        parts dividing vertically in the centre. A small door with an arched
        opening is often built into one pari of the main door. On forts the
        doors are particularly splendid, made of thick wood, studded with
        large iron spikes and fitted with intricate locking devices. A verse
        from the Koran may well be carved into a panel above the door.
        Weaving
        Very little cotton grew locally; the yarn, which was mostly imported
        from India, was dyed locally with indigo and other natural dyes.86 In
        Buraimi, Ra’s al Khaimah, and possibly some of the larger settle­
        ments, there used to be professional weavers. The weaver sat in a pit
        in the open air in a courtyard with a wooden weaving frame at a
        convenient level above the knees.57 The finished product was sold to
        customers in the vicinity and also found its way into the local suqs.
        As mentioned earlier, the other locally-woven items such as tents
        made of goat hair and sheep wool were not made by professional
        weavers and were not for sale but were woven by the women as
        required.
          According to the Gazetteer, an industry of weaving fine sheep wool
        'obci ah, presumably with gold braid, had been developed in Sharjah,
        but not enough were made to meet local demand so they were also
        imported from Bahrain and al Hasa. Most of the cloth used by the
        population of the Trucial Stales was not made locally but imported
        from India and elsewhere. As recently as the early 1920s there was no
        tailor in Abu Dhabi town; the women of each family made the clothes
        for everyone with the exception of the men’s 'ciba’ah, while the
        shaikhly families and the well-to-do merchants had servants to do
        this work.

         Camel-trimmings
        On first sight it seems surprising that camel-saddles and camel-
         trimmings were not always made by the camel-breeders on the
        Trucial Coast themselves, because the locally used havvlani saddle is
         easily made; it requires very little wood, a small amount of woollen
         material and date palm fibres for stuffing.58 The descendants of the
         nomads who originally developed this type of camel-saddle are the
         full nomadic tribes roaming the areas to the west and south of Tbri
         and as far as Hadhramaut. 'Ibri was a centre for the trade in camel-
         saddles and trimmings made by these beduin, from whence the suq
         of Buraimi was supplied.
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