Jasra

Al Jasra (Arabic:الجسرة , sometimes transliterated as Jasra) is a coastal village situated on the western coast of the Kingdom of Bahrain. It is situated in the Northern Governorate administrative region of the country and in the vicinity of the King Fahd Causeway. The village is notable for being the site of a historic house called Bait Al-Jasra (English: Al Jasra house) as well as its handcrafting history.

Handicrafts

The Al-Jasra house.

The village was noted for having a strong handcrafting history, as with most villages in Bahrain, with some having their own souqs. A local handicraft centre was launched in 1990 to preserve the arts and crafts of Al Jasra village.[1] Crafts traditionally produced by the village included woodworks, basket weaving, sadow making, pottery making, cloth weaving and textile weaving.[1][2][3]

Al Jasra House

Bait Al-Jasra is a traditional-style house built in 1907 by Shaikh Hamad bin Abdullah Al-Khalifa and was later adopted as a summer home for Shaikh Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa.[3] It is famous for being the birthplace of Isa bin Salman Al Khalifa, the Emir of Bahrain until 1999, in 1933. The house itself was dilapidated and was restored in 1986.[4] The house was built with coral stones and palm tree trunks.[3]

gollark: You don't have an accurate map, though, and you have devices which might randomly be moving around, or ones which drop out unexpectedly, or ones which can't hold much of a routing table due to limited RAM, or ones which are doing evil things.
gollark: It's not *just* a graph thing. If you had an accurate map of all the network connections it would be a relatively easy thing to route between nodes.
gollark: I heard that general mesh-network routing was extremely hard, so I ignored it and implemented something really stupid instead.
gollark: Without the ID thing, though.
gollark: I mean, my networking thing is effectively a port of rednet, and thus really inefficient and bad, which is probably why it uses so much power?

References

  1. The Middle East. Greenwood Publishing Group. 2004. p. 26. ISBN 9780313329258.
  2. Terterov, Shoult, Marat, Anthony (2005). Doing Business with Bahrain. GMB Publishing Ltd. p. 174. ISBN 9781905050529.
  3. Butler, Walker, Stuart, Jenny (2010). Oman, UAE & Arabian Peninsula. Lonely Planet. pp. 123. ISBN 9781741791457. Jasra bahrain.
  4. Bloom, Blair, Jonathan, Sheila (2009). The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art & Architecture: Volume Two. Oxford University Press. p. 253. ISBN 9780195309911.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.