Features of civilizational and cultural conflict in the Arabian Gulf
Abstract
The Arabian Gulf forms the eastern wing in the Arab world, and it is the great maritime extension that exits from the Pacific Ocean in the southeast to the northwest, where it flows into the Shatt al-Arab, which consists of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. In the south, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Oman are scattered along it along many Arab islands. It is codified in the Sumerian panels, and this leads us to say that the Arabs are the people of the Gulf since ancient times. Therefore, its civilized value lies in the sovereignty of a blended civilization during its long historical eras in which the civilization of the Arabian Peninsula, the Sumerian civilization, the Delmon civilization, the Akkadian and Amorite civilization, and then the Arab Islamic civilization.