Zubarah Fort

Al Zubarah Fort
حصن الزبارة
Zubarah in  Qatar

The Zubarah Fort.
Al Zubarah Fort
Coordinates 25°58′37″N 51°02′43″E / 25.9769°N 51.0454°E / 25.9769; 51.0454Coordinates: 25°58′37″N 51°02′43″E / 25.9769°N 51.0454°E / 25.9769; 51.0454
Type Historical Fortress
Site information
Owner  Qatari Government; Ministry of Tourism, Qatar Museums Authority
Controlled by 1938-present:  Qatar
Open to
the public
Yes
Condition Intact
Site history
Built 1938
Built by Sheikh Abdullah bin Jassim Al Thani
In use 1938-mid 1980s: Coast Guard Station
mid 1980s-present: Museum
Materials Limestone, Compressed Mud and Wood
Structural system: Masonry
Tour of Qatar Women 2012 map, showing the Zubarah fort on northwestern part of the map.

Zubarah Fort (Arabic: حصن الزبارة), also known as Fort Zubara(h), Zubara Fort, Al Zubara(h) Fort, or Az Zubara(h) Fort, is a historic Qatari military fortress built under the oversight of Sheikh Abdullah bin Qassim Al Thani in 1938.[1][2]

History

The Zubarah Fort was originally built by Sheikh Abdullah bin Jassim Al Thani in 1938 to serve as a Coast Guard station, although some utter that it was built to serve as a police station. It was later renovated into a museum to display diverse exhibits and artworks, most especially for contemporarily topical archaeological findings.[1][2]

Geography

The Zubarah Fort is situated in the antique yet chronological town of Zubarah, which in turn is located on the northwestern coast of the Qatar peninsula in the Madinat ash Shamal municipality, and is about 105 km from the Capital of Qatar .[1][3]

Zubarah

Zubarah (Arabic: الزبارة "Zubarah"), also known as Al Zubarah or Az Zubarah, the town where the Zubarah Fort is situated in, is a deserted town located on the northwestern coast of the Qatari Peninsula, in the municipality of Madinat ash Shamal, which in turn, is about 105 km from Doha, the capital city and state of Qatar (The geography of both Zubarah and Zubarah Fort are the same since the latter is located in Zubarah). Zubarah covers an area of approximately 400 hectares and about 60 hectares inside the outer town wall, thus Zubarah being the largest archaeological site in the whole Qatari Peninsula.

It was once a thriving pearl fishing and trading port positioned midway between the Strait of Hormuz and the west arm of the Persian Gulf. It is one of the largest and best preserved examples of an 18th-19th century merchant town in the Gulf. The entire layout and urban fabric of a settlement dating to this formative period in the region has been preserved as no other similar place in the Gulf. Al Zubarah provides an important insight into urban life, spatial organization, and the social and economic history of the Gulf before the discovery of oil and gas in the 20th century.

Structure

Lofty, compact walls, substantial and profuse in broadness, swathe this eminent fort which are one meter in length and bulk. It was said that the walls of the fort were fabricated and were put together by merging and blending overlapping raw pieces of coral stones, specifically limestone, with a mortar and a pestle specifically conceived for grinding mud. The fort has a protective roof that was jury-rigged by utilizing compressed mud. The roof endows shade and coolness for the ones inside the fort. The fort's roof was also erected for the soldiers who would patrol and traverse the surrounding areas for enemies. The fort has three, gargantuan yet superbly conceived corners, each having massive, circular towers on top, which are geared with diverse varieties of Qatari-style defenses, with the fourth one as the most picturesque corner, as it has a rectangular tower with exquisite triangular-based ledges with slits that are called machicolations. Of course, the soldiers themselves had their own respective rooms. Eight rooms were constructed to accommodate such valiant and patriotic soldiers which are situated in the ground floor. These rooms were just converted recently to house exhibits, artworks and other archaeological findings. The fort has external staircases which were used to climb up to the fort's floors and roof.[1][2]

A functional machicolation of the Château de Pierrefonds, one of the Zubarah Fort's features.

For more information about the Zubarah Fort's structure, see the table below.

Parts of the Fort Type of Material Used Features Purpose
Walls Coral Stones (Limestone) For Protection
Roof Compressed Mud To Provide Shade
1st, 2nd and 3rd Circular Towers Different Qatari-style Defenses For Defense
Rectangular Tower Triangular Ledges with Machicolations Mainly For Design
Rooms (Present) Cement/Compressed Mud To House Exhibits and Recent Archaeological Findings
Rooms (Past) Cement/Compressed Mud To Accommodate the Soldiers
External Staircases Wood For Climbing Up to its Floors and the Roof

Schedule

Today, the Zubarah Fort serves as a museum and a famous landmark. As a result, a schedule for opening and closing the fort for visitors and tourists is needed. The fort is open regularly from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m. except for early Friday mornings and Saturdays.[1][3]

Day Time
Sunday 8 a.m. - 6'Bold text' p.m.
Monday 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Tuesday 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Wednesday 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Thursday 8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Friday Closed in the morning, opened early in the afternoon
Saturday Closed

Click on the thumbnail to enlarge.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Qatar Tourism Authority - Forts". Qatartourism.gov.qa. Retrieved 2012-10-30.
  2. 1 2 3 "Al Zubarah Fort :: Qatar Visitor". Qatarvisitor.com. Retrieved 2012-10-30.
  3. 1 2 "Major Museums & Forts". Qatarembassy.net. Retrieved 2012-10-30.
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Zubarah.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zubarah Fort.

Zubarah travel guide from Wikivoyage

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.