O is for Oman

Oman curves around the tip of the southern Arabian peninsula. Graphic by OCHA.

Fast Facts

  • Named for: Umān/Oman the “settled ones” in Arabic.
  • Capital: Muscat
  • Long/Lat: 23.2N/ 58.2 E or 8200 mi, 12 hrs East of Castro Valley
  • Population: 5.4 million or 81 CVs, but has more than doubled in 20 years.
  • Size: 121,000 sq mi or 900 CVs, not so small
  • Avg temp in April: 93 F/34 C phew!
  • Median household income: ~$50,000 annual
  • Ethnicity: Arab (Baluchi), Indian, African. Much of the growth is expats/immigration.
  • Main industries: Oil & trade

Oman curves around the eastern corner of the Arabian peninsula, which is why it has long been both strategic and often powerful. It’s not a particularly small country, but it’s the only country that begins with an “O” so it was going to earn a spot.

The country borders a key waterway in the news at the moment: the Strait of Hormuz. If it wasn’t for You Know Who’s War, we’d be oblivious to anything named Hormuz. Oman is just south of Iran, and maps that show the Persian Gulf emptying into the Arabian Sea show how much that straight (at the “point” below) is a chokepoint.

While settlements go back into the B.C.E. era, the earliest development in Oman happened during the spread of the Islamic Empire, which moved from Mecca around the peninsula and into Persia as well as west across North Africa. However, where Oman really came into its own was during the 17th and 18th centuries, as it created a maritime and trading empire across the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean.

Oman’s rising influence in the 17th-18th century, wikipedia photo.

If you remember a little about the Age of Exploration, the Portuguese, Spanish, and Italian city-states were sailing all around the Mediterranean and beyond to find waterways to get to the great spice and trading empires of India, China, and so on. While Portugal was a small country, their advances in navigation and savvy political power helped them so much that one point the Pope carved the Atlantic Ocean in half, giving the east to the Portuguese and the west to the Spanish. (Spanish=New World/Portugal and Dutch=Old World).

Oman still hosts over 500 forts and castles in the medieval Islamic style. Photo from justnotesjustroads.

In 1692, Saif bin Sultan of the Yaruba dynasty in Oman captured Zanzibar. That’s one of those wikipedia facts, but we can translate it. It’s the Age of Enlightenment, so science and technology is enhancing seafaring, economies in Europe are booming, and colonization is happening everywhere. Countries that have those new advances–gunpowder and muskets–are taking over those without them, and slavery is starting to expand rapidly, as the Haves want to populate their plantations with Have Nots. Zanzibar is down the south-east African coast, so if a Sultan of Oman was able to fend off the Portuguese and other colonists, it means he could control the trade going in and out of Africa, Arabia, and India. Spices or slaves. That would be a big hairy deal.

The British were also going into India, and they made sort of a trade/non-aggression pact with Oman against other rivals from Persia, the French, or the Dutch. Apparently, the Africans and Indians of the area didn’t have much to say about it. Ultimately, British influence grew strong enough that they controlled leaders on the throne in Muscat, until Oman was another British “possession.” Oman control from Muscat kept it feudal, relying on slavery until 1970 (!), when Sultan Qaboos bin Said deposed his father.

Sultan Haithim bin Tariq a few years ago, photo courtesy of omanispire.

Qaboos lasted until 2020, when he finally died and his cousin Haithim bin Tariq became the new monarch, one of the few remaining sultans still in the world. A sultan is an absolute monarch, but under the rules established by Islam. During the Islamic Empire, there were sometimes caliphs and sometimes sultans. A caliph was a ruler in both a political and religious sense, something like the Holy Roman Emperor. A sultan is not a religious leader, but a leader following religious rules, which themselves can have political and economic implications. A king, in comparison, would not be tied to a specific religious system.

Modern Muscat–still not as high tech as Dubai, but making strides. Photo from zaharatours.

While Oman might have turned itself briefly into a backwater in the early 20th century, the rise of the price of oil pumped new life into its economy. Today 71% of its revenue comes from oil and gas reserves (which must mean their economy also rides a roller-coaster), and its influx of immigrants are expanding its economy and cultural attitudes.

There is one more unique product that comes from Oman among a handful of countries in the area. As I wrote about it once before: “Did you remember the one about Chinese and Egyptian astrologers taking African bark scrapings into the alleyway behind the Marriott, where the illegal aliens, who were on their way to the tax collectors, stopped to have a baby? …”

Harvesting frankincense in Oman, from Euronews.

Also known as “Adoration of the Magi.”

Oman along with nearby Somalia, Ethiopia, and Yemen are the place where you can still find frankincense. It’s still valuable although not perhaps big enough to finance a trading empire. For that today, you have to dig underground.

N is for North Macedonia

North Macedonia is a landlocked country in the Balkans, i.e., the old Kingdom of Macedonia. Graphic from Countryreports.org.

Fast Facts

  • Named for: Macedonia means “tall people” according to ancient Greeks
  • Capital: Skopje
  • Long/Lat: 42.0 N/21.2 E, 6500 mi & 13 hrs East of CV
  • Population: 1.8 million or 27 CVs, big for a “small” country
  • Size: 9800 sq mi, 540 CVs
  • Avg temp in April: 64 F/16 F, similar
  • Median household income: $7,000
  • Ethnicity: 55% Macedonian, 24% Albanian, 4% Turks
  • Main industries: Chemicals, Manufacturing. Embargoes and trade conflicts are common.

Sadly, there is no South Macedonia. Neither is there an East or West Macedonia, and when Macedonia gained independence in 1991 and tried to be the whole Macedonia, the Greeks blpcked them. It’s pretty ironic, since the Macedonians once conquered Greece, and the Greeks have never conquered Macedonia.

Those Greeks do act as if they run the show. They think they invented everything, and slap labels on things like the Pythagorean theorem (Pythagoras was great, but the Babylonians knew about the right-triangle relationships way before that) or the Metonic cycle (Babylonians again) and so on. Alexander the Great, the Macedonian emperor who spread “Greek” culture into the east, was tutored by a Greek, but he wasn’t Greek. Such a long time ago, who pays attention?

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M is for Malta

Malta, the two tiny islands south of Sicily and west of Tunis. Graphic by Nuclear Vacuum.

What is it?
The stuff that dreams are made of…

Sam Spade, describing the Maltese falcon in “The Maltese Falcon”

Fast Facts

  • Named for: Greek meli (μέλη) for honeyed. There are native bees.
  • Capital: Valletta
  • Long/Lat: 35.5 N/14.3 E , 6700 mi East/11 hours East of CV. Nearly directly south of Liechtenstein.
  • Population: 520,000, or 9x Castro Valleys
  • Size: 122 sq mi, 8x CV. The population density and size of about 10 CVs.
  • Avg temp in April: 62 F/16 C (CV-like)
  • Median household income: $60,000, also high on a world standard
  • Ethnicity: 78% Maltese, meaning a mix of Italian, Spanish, Arab, French etc.
  • Main industries: Tourism, banking. In theory, limestone, but not too much.

Unlike Liechtenstein from yesterday, Malta is a tiny dot of great strategic importance. It’s in the Mediterranean, just south of Sicily and Italy but just East of Tunis and North Africa. Tunis was the springboard for the Phoenicians, who advanced sailing and the alphabet, but they were more traders than conquerors. The Romans took over in their turn, as did Hannibal and the Carthaginians. The Goths and Visigoths came through, followed by Islam sweeping across southern Europe and northern Africa. And that’s just the first half of their story of civilization.

Aleccio, Matteo Perez d’; The Siege of Malta: Attack on the Post of the Castilian Knights, 21 August 1565; National Maritime Museum.

It was a place of launching dreams of conquest or re-conquest. When the Crusaders made their move to “take back” land, they pushed from Europe south, establishing footholds in the Mediterranean from Venice and the Riviera to islands like Malta and Cyprus going down to Jerusalem. There were multiple waves of Crusades in the Middle Ages, and, at some point, a group of Benedictine monks built a hospital to minister to the wounded and sick Christian Crusaders. This was the Order of the Knights Hospitallers, affiliated with St. John. Their surcoat with the white cross against the red background is the inverse to the Knight’s Templar, but both captured the idea of a monastic order, beginning from ministering to the sick and needy, yet grounded in a military base.

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