Bahrain history slowly rises from sands

More than 4,000 years ago, Dilmun merchants traveled from Mesopotamia to the Indus River, titans of trade and culture before rise of the empires of the Persians or the Ottomans

Bahrain history slowly rises from sands
Bronze-age settlement near the encroaching modern village
of Saar, Bahrain [Credit: Hasan Jamali/ AP]
Over a millennia, the civilization that Dilmun created on the back of trading in pearls, copper and dates as far as South Asia faded into the encroaching sands. It wasn't until an excavation by Danish archaeologists in the 1950s that its past was rediscovered.

Now, with Bahrain in a deepening political crisis between its Sunni rulers and majority Shiite population, the connection to ancient Dilmun is one of the few unifying symbols on the island. It also is a rare and vivid look at pre-Islamic life in a region with few sites celebrating cultures before the time of the Prophet Muhammad.

Bahrain history slowly rises from sands
A modern mosque (in white) looks over a Dilmun-era graveyard in a Bronze-age
settlement in Saar, Bahrain [Credit: Hasan Jamali/ AP]
A distinguishing feature of Dilmun civilization was extensive burial mounds, which are still visible today — but under threat.

In the ancient settlement of Saar, about 10 kilometers (six miles) southwest of Bahrain's capital, Manama, archaeologist and researcher Abdul Aziz Suwalih worries about modern developments that have chipped away at the honeycomb-patterned burial mounds. The mounds have been proposed as a UNESCO World Heritage site to join Bahrain's ancient Dilmun harbor on the list.

Bahrain history slowly rises from sands
Bahraini archaeologist Abdul Aziz Suwalih stands by a central column in a Dilmun-era
temple in the heart of the expansive Bronze-age settlement in Saar, Bahrain
[Credit: Hasan Jamali/ AP]
"Bahrain was famous for holding the largest cemetery in the world by having more than 100,000 burial mounds. Now we have around 60,000 burial mounds. There are threats," Suwalih told The Associated Press. "Protecting the archaeological sites in Bahrain is a big issue."

In May, Bahrain hosted a conference by UNESCO — the U.N.'s educational, scientific and cultural body — that included discussions about preserving the burial mounds and other remnants of Dilmun civilization, as well as prospects for future digs and explorations.

Bahrain history slowly rises from sands
Ruin of a circular stand, or offering table, is seen near the site of a Dilmun-era
temple [Credit: Hasan Jamali/ AP]
The Saar settlement was excavated between 1990 and 1999 by the London-Bahrain Archaeological Expedition, though more work remains.

"It is the only Dilmun settlement that has been extensively investigated by archaeologists," Suwalih said.

Bahrain history slowly rises from sands
A Dilmun-era temple in the Bronze-age settlement in Saar, Bahrain
[Credit: Hasan Jamali/ AP]
There are more than 70 buildings in the settlement, some of which were extraordinarily well-preserved and showcases domestic life and worship in a society that followed the rhythms of the moon. Here's a gallery of images from archeological sites in the ancient settlement of Saar in modern-day Bahrain.

Author: Reem Khalifa | Source: Associated Press [August 02, 2013]