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A History of Kuwait

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About this book:

A History of Kuwait A History of Kuwait invites readers on a sweeping journey from the ancient shores of the Persian Gulf to the glittering skyscrapers of modern Kuwait City, revealing how a small desert outpost became a pivotal player on the world stage. Beginning with the earliest Stone Age settlements on Failaka Island and tracing the rise of the Utub tribes, the book shows how geography, trade, and pearling forged a resilient community long before oil transformed its fortunes. Readers will understand the strategic diplomacy that kept Kuwait autonomous amid empires, the pivotal Anglo‑Kuwaiti Agreement of 1899, and the visionary leadership that turned a pearling‑dependent sheikhdom into a welfare state built on black gold.

The narrative continues through the dramatic discovery of oil at Burgan in 1938, the first exports in 1946, and the rapid modernization under Sheikh Abdullah Al‑Salim that introduced free education, healthcare, and a ambitious public works program. Readers will experience the golden age of the 1960s and 1970s, when Kuwait became a founding member of OPEC, a cultural beacon, and a generous donor through the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development, while also witnessing the challenges of political pluralism, the Souk Al‑Manakh crash, and the nation’s test of neutrality during the Iran‑Iraq war.

The book does not shy from the darkest chapters: the Iraqi invasion of 1990, the seven months of occupation, the resistance, and the liberation that followed. Readers will feel the shock of the burning oil wells, the human cost of war, and the monumental reconstruction effort that revived the country. Subsequent chapters explore the postwar political revival, the struggle for women’s suffrage, constitutional crises, and the ongoing pursuit of economic diversification through Vision 2035, mega‑projects like Silk City, and the effort to build a sustainable, post‑oil future.

Beyond politics and economics, A History of Kuwait delves into the fabric of society— the diwaniya as the heart of male social life, the evolving role of women, the expatriate majority, and the tensions between tradition and a hyper‑consumerist culture. Readers will gain insight into Kuwait’s rich artistic heritage, its cuisine, its religious life, and the ways the nation balances global modernity with deep‑rooted tribal and familial bonds.

Finally, the book positions Kuwait within a shifting Middle East, highlighting its reputation as an honest broker, humanitarian leader, and mediator in crises from Syria to the Qatar blockade. By the end, readers will have a comprehensive understanding of how a small state has repeatedly risen from near‑extinction, leveraging resilience, pragmatism, and a unique social contract to secure its place in a turbulent region—offering lessons that resonate far beyond its borders.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The book traces Kuwait’s origins from ancient Dilmun and Greek settlements to the 18th‑century Utub migration and the establishment of Al Sabah rule, highlighting how pearling and trade built the early economy.
  • It details the 1938 discovery of the Burgan oil field, the post‑WWII oil exports, and how the resulting wealth funded a comprehensive welfare state, modern infrastructure, and a sovereign wealth fund.
  • The narrative covers Kuwait’s path to independence in 1961, the adoption of a constitution and parliament, and the ensuing democratic experiments punctuated by periods of autocracy and political gridlock.
  • It examines the 1990 Iraqi invasion, seven months of occupation, the Gulf War liberation, and the massive reconstruction effort that followed, including the extinguishing of over 700 oil wells.
  • The final chapters discuss contemporary challenges: economic diversification under Vision 2035, the rentier economy’s social tensions, and Kuwait’s evolving role as a diplomatic mediator in a volatile Middle East.
Who's It For:

This book is ideal for students, academics, and general readers interested in Middle Eastern history, Gulf studies, and nation‑building processes. It will particularly benefit those seeking to understand how a small, arid territory transformed into a wealthy, oil‑driven state, navigated regional conflicts, and continues to balance tradition with modernization in its political and societal development.

Author:

John Winslow

Published By:

Ephyia Publishing


Date Published:

May 25, 2026

Word Count:

49,048 words

Reading Time:

3 hours 26 minutes

Sample:

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