Qasr al-Hosn
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The Qasr al-Hosn (Arabic: قصر الحصن), is the oldest stone building in the city of Abu Dhabi, UAE.
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[edit] Location
It is located along Sheikh Zayed the First Street (i.e. Sheikh Zayed bin Khalifa, not Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan), on the same compound as the Cultural Foundation (arabic site).
[edit] History
Also known as the 'white fort' (erroneously so, it was never white until the 1976-1983 renovations when it acquired a bright white painted concrete render) or 'old fort', it started out as a round watchtower defending the only freshwater well on Abu Dhabi island in ca. 1761. This tower was later expanded to a small fort in ca. 1793, at which point it became the permanent residence of the ruling sheikh. It remained the royal palace (hence the name Qasr al-Hosn, meaning palace-fort) and seat of government until 1966.
[edit] Literature
Heard-Bey, Frauke (2004) From Trucial States to United Arab Emirates, Dubai, Abu Dhabi, London, Motivate (3rd edition).
Maitra, Jayanti and Al Hajji, Afra (2001) Qasr al Hosn: The History of the Rulers of Abu Dhabi 1793-1966. Abu Dhabi. Center for Documentation and Research.
[edit] Current Research
The Qasr al-Hosn is currently the subject of extensive historical, archaeological, and architectural research. On conclusion of that research, more data will be added to this section.