Afghanistan  
  Armenia  
  Australia  
  Azerbaijan  
  Bahrain  
  Bangladesh  
  Bhutan  
  British Territory  
  Brunei  
  Burma  
  Cambodia  
  China  
  Cyprus  
  East Timor  
  Egypt  
  Georgia  
  Greece  
  Hongkong  
  India  
  Indonesia  
  Iran  
  Iraq  
  Israel  
  Japan  
  Jordan  
  Kazakhstan  
  Kuwait  
  Kyrgyzstan  
  Laos  
  Lebanon  
  Malaysia  
  Maldives  
  Mongolia  
  Nepal  
  North Korea  
  Oman  
  Pakistan  
  Philippines  
  Qatar  
  Russia  
  Saudi Arabia  
  Singapore  
  South Korea  
  Sri Lanka  
  Syria  
  Taiwan  
  Tajikistan  
  Thailand  
  Turkey  
  Turkmenistan  
  UAE  
  Uzbekistan  
  Vietnam  
  Yemen  
 
   
   
   
 
  Map of Pacific Asia  
  Hotel Registration  
  Car Registration  
  Cruise Registration  
 
 
    Home | Culture | Geography | History | Religion| Maps | Overview| Education    
    Hotels | Tourism | Transport | Tourism Attractions | Visa Info    
 
 
Qatar English pronunciation TAR local pronunciation, also known as the State of Qatar or locally Dawlat , is an Arab emirate in the Middle East, occupying the small Qatar Peninsula on the northeasterly coast of the much larger Arabian Peninsula. It is bordered by Saudi Arabia to the south; otherwise the Persian Gulf surrounds the state. A strait of the Persian Gulf separates Qatar from the nearby island nation of Bahrain.Qatar is an oil- and gas-rich nation, with the third largest gas reserves and the second highest GDP per capita in the world..An absolute monarchy, Qatar has been ruled by the al-Thani family since the mid-1800s and has since transformed itself from a poor British protectorate noted mainly for pearling into an independent state with significant oil and natural gas revenues.During the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Qatari economy was crippled by a continuous siphoning off of petroleum revenues by the Emir, who had ruled the country since 1972. His son, the current Amir Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, overthrew him in a bloodless coup in 1995. In 2001, Qatar resolved its longstanding border disputes with both Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.
 
 
     
 
 
Recent discoveries on the edge of an island in the West of Qatar indicate early human presence in pre-historic Qatar. Discovery of a 6th millennium BC site at Shagra, in the South-east of Qatar revealed the key role the sea played in the lives of Shagra’s inhabitants. Excavation at Al-Khore in the North-east of Qatar, Bir Zekrit and Ras Abaruk, and the discovery there of pottery, flint, flint-scraper tools, and painted ceramic vessels there indicates  Qatar’s
connection with the Al-Ubaid civilization which flourished in the land between the Tigris and the Euphrates during the period of 5th –4th millennium BC. There had also been a barter-based trading system between the settlements at Qatar and the Ubaid Mesopotamia, in which the exchanged commodities were mainly pottery and dried fish.
 
     
 
  Advertisements