Descriptor English: | Oman | ||||||
Descriptor Spanish: |
Omán
| ||||||
Descriptor Portuguese: | Omã | ||||||
Descriptor French: | Oman | ||||||
Entry term(s): |
Muscat Muscat and Oman |
||||||
Tree number(s): |
Z01.252.245.500.600 |
||||||
RDF Unique Identifier: | https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D009850 | ||||||
Scope note: | A sultanate on the southeast coast of the Arabian peninsula. Its capital is Masqat. Before the 16th century it was ruled by independent emirs but was captured and controlled by the Portuguese 1508-1648. In 1741 it was recovered by a descendent of Yemen's imam. After its decline in the 19th century, it became virtually a political and economic dependency within the British Government of India, retaining close ties with Great Britain by treaty from 1939 to 1970 when it achieved autonomy. The name was recorded by Pliny in the 1st century A.D. as Omana, said to be derived from the founder of the state, Oman ben Ibrahim al-Khalil. (From Webster's New Geographical Dictionary, 1988, p890; Oman Embassy, Washington; Room, Brewer's Dictionary of Names, 1992, p391) |
||||||
Annotation: | a sultanate on the southeast Arabian peninsula |
||||||
Allowable Qualifiers: |
EH ethnology EP epidemiology |
||||||
Online Note: | use OMAN to search MUSCAT & OMAN 1975-78 |
||||||
History Note: | 79; was MUSCAT & OMAN 1975-78 |
||||||
DeCS ID: | 10035 | ||||||
Unique ID: | D009850 | ||||||
Documents indexed in the Virtual Health Library (VHL): | Click here to access the VHL documents | ||||||
Date Established: | 1975/01/01 | ||||||
Date of Entry: | 1974/11/11 | ||||||
Revision Date: | 2015/06/29 |
-
-
GEOGRAPHICALS
Geographic Locations [Z01]Geographic Locations
|
Oman
- Preferred
Muscat
- Related but not broader or narrower
Muscat and Oman
- Related but not broader or narrower
Concept UI |
M0015288 |
Scope note | A sultanate on the southeast coast of the Arabian peninsula. Its capital is Masqat. Before the 16th century it was ruled by independent emirs but was captured and controlled by the Portuguese 1508-1648. In 1741 it was recovered by a descendent of Yemen's imam. After its decline in the 19th century, it became virtually a political and economic dependency within the British Government of India, retaining close ties with Great Britain by treaty from 1939 to 1970 when it achieved autonomy. The name was recorded by Pliny in the 1st century A.D. as Omana, said to be derived from the founder of the state, Oman ben Ibrahim al-Khalil. (From Webster's New Geographical Dictionary, 1988, p890; Oman Embassy, Washington; Room, Brewer's Dictionary of Names, 1992, p391) |
Preferred term | Oman |
Concept UI |
M0015289 |
Preferred term | Muscat |
Concept UI |
M0015290 |
Preferred term | Muscat and Oman |
We want your feedback on the new DeCS / MeSH website
We invite you to complete a survey that will take no more than 3 minutes.
Go to survey