Fujairah
About Fujairah
Fujairah is one of the seven emirates that make up the United Arab Emirates, and the just a single of the seven that has a coastline exclusively on the Gulf of Oman and none on the Persian Gulf. The capital is Fujairah City. Fujairah, ruled by the Sharqiyin clan, sits at the mouth of the essential exchange course, the Wadi Ham or, in other words the Sharqiyin fortification at Bithnah, through the mountains to the inside and the Persian Gulf Coast. Known as the Shamaliyah, the east bank of what is currently the UAE was liable to Muscat until 1850, when it was attached by the Al Qasimi of Sharjah.
The Shamaliyah was administered by the Al Qasimi Wali at Kalba albeit much of the time withdrew and in 1901 Hamad container Abdulla Al Sharqi, head of the Sharqiyin, proclaimed autonomy from Sharjah. This was perceived by some of the Trucial Sheikhs and furthermore by Muscat, yet not the British, who were every now and again incited by the autonomously disapproved of ruler. Since the assimilation of Kalba by Sharjah in 1952, the Shamaliyah is shared by the emirates of Fujairah and Sharjah.
In 1952, Fujairah went into bargain relations with Britain, turning into the remainder of the emirates to join the Trucial States. On 2 December 1971, Fujairah joined the United Arab Emirates. Fujairah is home to the most seasoned mosque in the United Arab Emirate, the Al Badiyah Mosque, which was worked in 1446 of mud and bricks. It is like different mosques found in Yemen, eastern Oman, and Qatar. Al Bidyah Mosque has four vaults not at all like the other comparable mosques which have somewhere in the range of seven and twelve and comes up short on a minaret.