Saint-Exupéry might have had the Little Prince say that he liked the desert because that is where camels can hide out. Dubai is one of the seven Gulf Emirates and has become a high-tech avantgarde metropolis where superlatives are superfluous. Major wonders of architectural imagination and scale include the National Bank of Dubai, Clock Tower, Creek Side and Dubai Internet City. It also operates the world's largest man-made harbour in Jebel Ali, which features a major water desalination plant. It is the world's third largest trans-shipment hub after Hong Kong and Singapore. Nonetheless, Dubai preserves close ties to the past, based on Bedouin tradition, camel racing, falconry, pearl diving and the world of palm groves. The land thrived before the era of oil derricks and is now preparing to live again after they leave as it invests in higher education that heartily welcomes women. Time-honoured legends of Arab cavalries that swept across the deserts still survive in horse races that display equestrian tradition against a background of exclusive state-of-the-art driving machines: Welcome to this sneak preview of the 21st Century!
Reflexionen über Dubai
Klaus H. Carl
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bookRéflexions sur Dubaï
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bookArt History Romanesque art
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bookArt History Baroque art
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bookArt History Gothic art
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bookArt History Rococo
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bookHistoire de l'art L'art gothique
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bookSaigon - Ho Chi Minh-Ville
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bookSaigon - Ho Chi Minh-Stadt
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bookAthens
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bookRio de Janeiro
Ingo Latotzki, Klaus H. Carl
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