In the 3rd and 2nd millennium BC, the Arabian Gulf was an important
waterway linking the large cities and states of Mesopotamia and Iran
with Southeast Arabia and the Indus Valley. Trade along the Lower Sea,
as the Gulf was named, demanded supporting stations, and civilizations
grew and declined with the fortunes of this trade. In the 1950s, Danish
investigations along the southern shores of the Gulf discovered remains
of two of these ancient civilazations, Dilmun and Makkan (Bibby 1969).
Survey and excavation in Kuwait beginning in 1958 revealed that the
upper Gulf was an important part of Dilmun in the early 2nd millennium.
Both before, during and after the flourishing of the Dilmun civilization
the island of Failaka located off the Kuwait mainland formed an
important role in several Near Eastern trade networks with Mesopotamia
as the dominant partner.