All Object Lessons
Knowledge & Navigation

The Dhow: A Sail That Tied an Ocean Together

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, geography, science, languages, citizenship
Core question How does one type of sailing boat, with a single triangular sail, connect East Africa, Arabia, Persia, and India for over 2,000 years — and what does its long life teach us about the Indian Ocean world, monsoon trade, and the deep cultural connections that wind and water can build?
A traditional Swahili dhow off the coast of Zanzibar, Tanzania. The triangular lateen sail rigged on a long sloping yard is the defining feature of dhows — the sailing boats that connected East Africa, Arabia, Persia, and India for over 2,000 years. Photo: Muhammad Mahdi Karim / Wikimedia Commons / GFDL
Introduction

For most of human history, the easiest way to travel long distances was not by land but by water. A horse can carry a person 30 kilometres in a day. A camel can carry goods 40 kilometres in a day. A sailing ship, with a good wind, can travel 200 kilometres in a day — carrying tons of cargo with a small crew. Across thousands of years, the people who lived around great seas and oceans built the boats that connected them. The Norse built longships in the cold Atlantic. The Polynesians built voyaging canoes in the Pacific. The Chinese built junks for the South China Sea. Across the warm waters of the Indian Ocean, between East Africa, Arabia, Persia, and India, people built dhows. A dhow is, at its simplest, a wooden boat with one or more masts, each carrying a single triangular sail rigged on a long sloping yard. The sail is called a 'lateen' or 'settee' sail, and it is the signature feature of dhows. The triangular shape allows a dhow to sail much closer to the wind than a square-sailed ship can — meaning a dhow can sail in directions that would be impossible for European-style ships of the same era. This is one of the reasons dhows have remained useful for so long. Dhows have been built across the Indian Ocean coastlands for over 2,000 years. The Greek trading manual Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, written around 50 CE, describes ships matching the dhow design carrying goods between Roman Egypt and the East African coast. Dhows have been continuously built and sailed ever since. They were the workhorses of the Indian Ocean trade — the vast network of seasonal monsoon-driven commerce that for centuries connected the Swahili cities of East Africa, the ports of Arabia and Persia, the coast of India, and through these links, the wider world. A dhow leaving Lamu, Kenya, in October could ride the northeast monsoon to Mumbai, India, in six weeks. The same dhow, leaving Mumbai in April, could ride the southwest monsoon back to Lamu in five weeks. Twice a year, fleets of dhows moved across the ocean. The people who sailed them lived in ports for months at a time. They learned each others' languages. They married into local families. They carried goods, faiths, languages, and ideas in both directions. The dhow shaped the cosmopolitan culture of the Indian Ocean world. Today, dhows are still being built and sailed. The economy of long-distance dhow trade has been replaced by container ships and aircraft. But hundreds of dhows still work the coasts of East Africa, Arabia, and India — fishing, carrying small cargo, taking tourists on day trips. Traditional dhow-building yards in Sur (Oman) and Mandvi (India) still build new boats by hand, using techniques passed down for many generations. A dhow being launched in Sur today is recognisably the same kind of vessel that sailed in 50 CE. This lesson asks what a dhow is, how it works, what world it built, and what its 2,000-year survival teaches us about technologies that get the basics right.

The object
Origin
Built across the Indian Ocean coastlands for over 2,000 years. Traditional dhow-building centres include Sur in Oman, Mandvi and Beyt Dwarka in Gujarat (India), Karachi (Pakistan), Lamu and Mombasa (Kenya), Zanzibar (Tanzania), and various ports of Yemen, Iran, the United Arab Emirates, and Somalia. The dhow is not the product of a single culture — it is a shared technology of the entire Indian Ocean world.
Period
Built and used continuously from at least the 1st century CE (when the Greek trading guide Periplus of the Erythraean Sea described Indian Ocean sailing vessels) to the present day. Possibly much older — some scholars argue for origins as early as 600 BCE. The basic design has changed remarkably little over 2,000 years, though modern dhows often have engines as well as sails.
Made of
Traditionally made entirely of wood — teak imported from India, mango wood from East Africa, or local timbers depending on the region. The hull is built from carefully shaped planks, traditionally sewn together with coconut-fibre rope (called coir) before metal nails became common. The sail is made of cotton canvas or, in some traditions, woven palm leaves. Modern dhows often combine traditional wooden hulls with diesel engines.
Size
Dhows come in many sizes. Small fishing dhows (the Omani shu'ai or East African ngalawa) are 5-10 metres long and crewed by 2-3 people. Mid-size cargo dhows (the jahazi or sambuk) are 10-20 metres and carry 6-12 crew. Large ocean-going dhows (the historical baghlah and ghanjah) could be 30-40 metres long, carry 30+ crew, and cross the entire Indian Ocean.
Number of objects
Tens of thousands of dhows still sail today across the Indian Ocean — though their economic role has been largely replaced by container shipping and motorised vessels. The largest concentrations of working traditional dhows are still found at Sur (Oman), Mandvi (India), Karachi (Pakistan), and along the Swahili coast of East Africa.
Where it is now
Still being built and sailed in dozens of ports across the Indian Ocean. The Sur Maritime Museum in Oman, the Bait Al Boom Maritime Museum in Sur, the National Museum of Tanzania (Dar es Salaam), the Mandvi Shipbuilding Yards (Gujarat, India), and the Zanzibar Stone Town (a UNESCO World Heritage Site partly built on dhow trade) all preserve dhow heritage. Dhow racing festivals are held annually at Sur, Lamu, and other ports.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. The dhow is a shared technology across many cultures — Arab, Persian, Indian, East African, Swahili. How will you teach this without flattening the differences between these cultures or claiming the dhow for any single one?
  2. The Indian Ocean trade carried many things, including (in some periods) enslaved people. How will you handle this honestly without dwelling on it?
  3. The dhow is still a living technology, with people building and sailing them today. How will you teach it as a living tradition, not as a museum object?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
The most important fact about the Indian Ocean is the wind. Twice a year, the dominant wind direction reverses. From November to April, the wind blows from the northeast — from Arabia and India towards East Africa. From May to October, the wind reverses and blows from the southwest — from East Africa back towards Arabia and India. These reversing seasonal winds are called the monsoons (from the Arabic word mawsim, meaning 'season'). They are caused by temperature differences between the Asian landmass and the surrounding oceans. The monsoons are remarkably reliable. People have known about them and timed their voyages to them for thousands of years. For a sailing ship, the monsoons are a gift. A dhow leaving Mumbai in November can ride the northeast monsoon south to Mombasa or Mogadishu, arriving 6-8 weeks later. The captain unloads cargo, picks up new cargo, and waits in East Africa. In May, the wind reverses. The same dhow rides the southwest monsoon back to Mumbai, arriving in June or July. The cycle repeats every year. This pattern shaped the entire Indian Ocean trade. Sailors did not just visit other ports — they lived in them. A dhow captain might spend half the year in Lamu and the other half in Muscat. Crews married local women in distant ports. Children grew up speaking multiple languages. Ports became cosmopolitan, with permanent communities of foreign traders. The Greek trading guide Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, written around 50 CE, describes this trade in detail. Greek and Roman traders sailed from Egypt to India, exchanging goods at every port. They were following routes that had probably been established centuries before by Arab, Indian, and African sailors. By the medieval period, the Indian Ocean trade was carrying staggering quantities of goods. Spices from the Spice Islands. Cotton and silk from India. Gold and ivory from East Africa. Frankincense from Arabia. Pearls from the Persian Gulf. Slaves from many places. Books, ideas, religions. Islam spread to East Africa and India largely through dhow trade. Christianity spread to South India through the same routes. Hinduism spread to Southeast Asia. The Indian Ocean was, for over a thousand years, one of the most connected seas in the world. Why might one regular wind pattern shape so much human history?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because reliability is more important than speed. The monsoons are not the fastest winds in the world — they are not as strong as the trade winds of the Atlantic or the westerlies of the Roaring Forties. But they are predictable. A merchant in Mombasa in 1400 CE knew exactly when the wind would shift. He could plan his entire year around it. He could buy goods, charter a ship, hire a crew, all months in advance. The reliability made trade possible. Compare with other oceans. The Atlantic is dominated by westerlies and trade winds, but the patterns are more complex. The Pacific is huge and weather is unpredictable. The Mediterranean is small enough that wind matters less. The Indian Ocean's combination of size and reliable monsoons made it uniquely suited to long-distance sailing trade. The Indian Ocean trade is sometimes called the 'first globalisation' — a world economy stretching from Mozambique to Java, all connected by ships and seasonal winds. Ports along the network — Kilwa, Mogadishu, Aden, Hormuz, Calicut, Malacca — were among the richest cities in the medieval world. Wealth flowed back and forth. Cultural exchange was deep. None of this would have been possible without the monsoons. Students should see that 'geography matters' is not an abstract claim. The actual physics of how warm air rises over the Asian landmass in summer, drawing in moist ocean air, is what made the Swahili cities possible. Climate, geography, and human history are deeply linked. The monsoons made the dhow trade. The dhow trade made the world of the Indian Ocean.

2
The dhow itself is a remarkable piece of engineering. The hull is built from wooden planks shaped to a long, narrow form — typically with a sharp prow that cuts through waves and a high stern that helps with steering. The shape is efficient: a dhow can carry heavy cargo without sinking deep into the water, and can sail in shallow coastal waters that bigger ships cannot enter. The key feature, though, is the sail. A dhow has one or more masts, each rigged with a single triangular sail attached to a long sloping wooden yard (called a 'lateen' or 'settee' yard). The sail is rigged so that it can be pulled tight against the wind from either side. This is a crucial point. A traditional European square-rigged ship can sail downwind very well, but cannot sail close to the wind. To go upwind, a square-rigger has to sail in a long zig-zag pattern, called tacking. This is slow and inefficient. A lateen-rigged dhow can sail much closer to the wind — within about 60-70 degrees of the wind direction, compared to about 90 degrees for a square-rigger. This means a dhow can sail in directions that a square-rigger cannot. It can change course faster. It can take more direct routes. For coastal sailing — where the wind direction is often variable and you need to dodge between islands and headlands — the lateen sail is a major advantage. Indian Ocean sailors had been using it for centuries before European sailors adopted it. (Europeans adopted the lateen sail from Arab and Indian Ocean shipping in the medieval period; the caravels that carried Christopher Columbus, Vasco da Gama, and Magellan all used lateen sails.) Dhows are also built without nails in the traditional method. The wooden planks are sewn together with coconut-fibre rope, called coir. The rope swells when wet and grips the planks tightly. Coir does not rust the way iron nails do. A traditional dhow can last 50 years or more in salt water without major repair. Modern dhows often use metal fastenings, but some traditional builders still use the sewing method, especially in East Africa. The rudder of a dhow hangs at the stern and is operated by a long tiller. A skilled steersman can hold a course for hours in changing conditions. The skill takes years to learn. Why might one old technology survive when newer technologies exist?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because it works. The dhow is not just a curiosity. It is a fully functional vessel, well-suited to its environment. For coastal trade in the Indian Ocean — fishing, carrying small cargo, ferrying people between islands and ports — a dhow is in many ways better than a modern motor boat. It uses no fuel. It can be built locally with traditional skills. It is repairable with traditional materials. It is environmentally friendly. The crew know how to handle it intuitively. Modern container ships are better for very large cargo over very long distances. They are not better for everything. The dhow's specific advantages — shallow draft, lateen rig, simple construction, low operating cost — are real and continue to matter. Other examples of old technologies that persist exist worldwide. Wooden fishing boats are still made in many parts of the world. Sailing yachts are popular for recreation. Solar dryers are used for food preservation across the Global South. The dhow is one of many cases where a traditional technology holds its own against more 'modern' alternatives. The dhow also carries cultural meaning that a steel hull does not. A new dhow in Sur is the product of generations of accumulated knowledge. Its sailors are the latest in a long line. The boat ties them to their ancestors and to the wider Indian Ocean culture. Some things matter beyond pure economics. Students should see that 'progress' is not always about replacing old with new. Sometimes old technologies remain useful. Sometimes new ones replace them. Sometimes both coexist for centuries. The dhow has coexisted with steamships, motor vessels, and container ships for over 150 years. It is still here.

3
The great Indian Ocean trade had many products. Some were luxuries. Some were everyday goods. The list is long and varied. From East Africa: gold (especially from the inland kingdom of Great Zimbabwe), ivory, leopard skins, mangrove poles for building, ebony wood, copper, slaves (a difficult chapter — see below), ambergris (a perfume ingredient produced by sperm whales). From Arabia: dates, frankincense (a tree resin used as incense and medicine), myrrh (another resin), pearls (especially from the Persian Gulf), Arabian horses (highly prized in India). From Persia: silk, carpets, glass, fine pottery, dried fruits. From India: cotton textiles (the most important export by volume), silk, spices (especially black pepper from Kerala), iron, sugar, rice, semi-precious stones, teak wood (used for shipbuilding across the region). From Southeast Asia: cloves and nutmeg from the Spice Islands (worth their weight in gold in the medieval period), camphor, sandalwood, gold from Sumatra. From China (via Indian Ocean ports): silk, porcelain, tea. The trade was enormously profitable. Cities along the route became fabulously wealthy. Kilwa Kisiwani, on the Tanzanian coast, was visited by the Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta in 1331 and described as one of the most beautiful and prosperous cities he had ever seen. Hormuz, in the Persian Gulf, was called 'the pearl of the world' in the 14th century. Calicut, on the Indian coast, was the destination of Vasco da Gama's first voyage to India in 1498 — its wealth was famous across Europe. Dhows also carried slaves. The Indian Ocean slave trade — separate from the better-known Atlantic slave trade — moved enslaved people from East Africa to Arabia, Persia, India, and beyond, for over a thousand years. Estimates of the total number of people enslaved in this trade vary, but it was probably in the range of 4-6 million over the long history of the trade. The trade is sometimes called the 'Arab slave trade' but this is misleading: it involved many parties, including African intermediaries, Arab and Persian merchants, Indian buyers, and others. It is part of the dhow's history. It does not define the dhow, but it is part of the story. Why might one trade network shape so many cultures?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because trade carries more than goods. People who trade together also exchange ideas, languages, religions, foods, music, and styles. The Indian Ocean trade made the Swahili coast — the long band of coastal cities from Mogadishu in Somalia to Sofala in Mozambique. Swahili culture is a deep mix of African, Arab, Persian, and Indian elements. The Swahili language itself is a Bantu language with extensive Arabic vocabulary, written historically in Arabic script (now usually in Latin script). Islam came to East Africa via dhow trade. Coastal mosques like the Great Mosque of Kilwa (12th century) are among the oldest in sub-Saharan Africa. Indian craftsmen brought distinctive architectural styles to the Swahili coast. Persian merchants brought their language, customs, and political ideas. African crafts and music influenced Arab and Persian culture. The Spice Islands, far to the east, were converted to Islam through Indian Ocean trade — leading to modern Indonesia being the largest Muslim-majority country in the world. Cultural exchange was not always equal. The Indian Ocean trade was a hierarchy: certain ports and certain merchant communities had more power than others. Slavery was part of this. So was conquest — by Arab, Persian, Portuguese, Dutch, British, and other forces at different times. The trade was not utopian. But it was also genuinely cosmopolitan. People who lived in trading cities like Lamu or Hormuz or Cochin spoke multiple languages, ate foods from many cultures, and married across communities. Their world was wider than most landlocked communities of the time. Students should see that 'globalisation' is not new. The Indian Ocean trade was a sophisticated, long-distance economic system tying together hundreds of millions of people across thousands of kilometres. It was older than European overseas empires. It was more durable than most political states. It is part of why the modern Indian Ocean world looks the way it does.

4
The great age of dhow trade ended slowly across the 19th and 20th centuries. Several things together caused the decline. First, steam ships. Steam-powered vessels became common in the Indian Ocean from the 1860s onwards. They could travel against the wind. They could keep schedules independent of the monsoons. They could carry larger cargoes faster. By 1900, most long-distance Indian Ocean trade was being done by European-flagged steam ships. Dhows shifted to shorter regional routes. Second, European colonialism. The Portuguese, Dutch, French, and British took over much of the Indian Ocean trade by force during the period from 1500 to the 19th century. They set up monopolies, taxed dhow trade heavily, and sometimes attacked dhow ports. The Portuguese destruction of Mombasa and Kilwa in the 16th century devastated those cities. Later, the British in East Africa restricted dhow trade in various ways, particularly to suppress the slave trade. Third, the abolition of the slave trade. The British abolished the Atlantic slave trade in 1807 and began suppressing the Indian Ocean slave trade in the 19th century. The Royal Navy patrolled the East African coast searching dhows for enslaved people. By the early 20th century, the slave trade had largely ended. This was a moral victory but also affected the economic basis of some dhow ports. Fourth, container shipping. From the 1950s onwards, container ships transformed global trade. Cargo could be moved enormously cheaply and reliably. Traditional dhow trade could not compete economically. Despite all this, dhows are still here. Tens of thousands of working dhows still sail the Indian Ocean. They fish. They carry small cargo between islands and small ports. They take tourists on day trips. They race in annual festivals at Sur, Lamu, and other places. They are still being built — by hand, in traditional yards, with skills passed from generation to generation. In 2011, UNESCO inscribed dhow building in Oman on its Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, recognising the dhow as a living cultural tradition worth protecting. Similar recognition has been given to dhow traditions in other countries. National governments along the Indian Ocean rim have invested in dhow heritage — funding museums, supporting traditional builders, sponsoring festivals. The Sur Maritime Museum in Oman, the Bait Al Boom Maritime Museum (also in Sur), and the Mandvi Shipbuilding Yards in Gujarat, India, are major centres of dhow heritage today. Lamu in Kenya, with its old town a UNESCO World Heritage Site, has annual dhow races that draw competitors from across the Swahili coast. A dhow being launched in Sur today is recognisably the same kind of vessel that sailed in 50 CE. The hull design, the lateen sail, the basic methods of construction — these have changed remarkably little. The dhow is one of the longest continuously living technologies in human history. What does the dhow's continuing life teach us?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several things together. First, that good designs last. The dhow has lasted because it works. The basic engineering — long narrow hull, lateen sail, simple construction — solves real problems efficiently. New technologies have not made it obsolete; they have just changed what it is used for. Second, that traditional skills are valuable. The dhow-builders of Sur and Mandvi carry knowledge that cannot be quickly replaced. If their tradition died out, rebuilding it would take generations. Active practice is what keeps the knowledge alive. Third, that cultural heritage is not only about objects in museums. The dhow tradition is alive in working boats, in active shipyards, in seasonal festivals, in songs and stories. Heritage protection has to make space for these living traditions, not just for static artefacts. Fourth, that connections across cultures can outlast political changes. The dhow tradition has survived Roman traders, Arab caliphates, Portuguese conquest, Omani sultans, British empires, and many other regimes. The deep cultural connections of the Indian Ocean world — Swahili-Arab-Persian-Indian — have outlasted all of these. The dhow is a small symbol of those long connections. End the discovery here. A dhow is being launched in Sur tonight. Another is fishing off Lamu at dawn. The sails are still up. The story continues.

What this object teaches

The dhow is a traditional sailing vessel of the Indian Ocean, built across coastal regions from East Africa to South Asia and the Persian Gulf for over 2,000 years. The defining feature is the lateen sail — a triangular sail rigged on a long sloping yard, attached to one or more masts. This rig allows the dhow to sail much closer to the wind than European-style square-rigged ships could, making it ideally suited to coastal sailing and to the seasonal monsoon winds of the Indian Ocean. Dhows are traditionally built of wood, with planks shaped and fitted (originally sewn together with coconut-fibre rope, later nailed). They come in many regional varieties — the Omani sambuk, the Yemeni baghlah, the Indian kotia, the Swahili jahazi, the Pakistani dhangi, the East African ngalawa — each adapted to local conditions and uses. Dhows enabled the Indian Ocean trade — a vast network of seasonal monsoon-driven commerce connecting East Africa, Arabia, Persia, India, Southeast Asia, and (through these links) the wider world. From at least the 1st century CE (when the Greek trading guide Periplus of the Erythraean Sea described it) to the 19th century, Indian Ocean trade was one of the most important economic systems in the world. Dhows carried gold, ivory, spices, textiles, pearls, dates, slaves, and ideas. Cities along the network — Kilwa, Mogadishu, Aden, Hormuz, Calicut, Malacca — became wealthy and cosmopolitan. The Swahili coast of East Africa, with its mix of African, Arab, Persian, and Indian influences, was largely shaped by dhow trade. Islam, Christianity, and Hinduism all spread along these routes. Dhow trade declined from the 19th century onwards with the arrival of steam ships, European colonialism, the abolition of the slave trade, and (later) container shipping. But dhows are still being built and sailed today. Active dhow-building yards continue in Sur (Oman), Mandvi (India), Karachi (Pakistan), and along the Swahili coast. UNESCO has recognised dhow-building traditions as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. A dhow built in Sur today is recognisably the same kind of vessel that sailed in 50 CE — making the dhow one of the longest continuously living technologies in human history.

QuestionWhat many people assumeWhat is actually true
Where does the dhow come from?Just ArabiaBuilt across the entire Indian Ocean coastland — Arabia, Persia, India, East Africa, Pakistan. The dhow is a shared technology, not a single-culture invention
How old is the dhow?A few hundred yearsAt least 2,000 years. Described in the Greek Periplus of the Erythraean Sea around 50 CE. Possibly much older
Are dhows still used today?Only as museum curiositiesTens of thousands of working dhows still sail the Indian Ocean — fishing, carrying cargo, racing, taking tourists. Dhow-building is still active
What is the secret of the dhow?Strong woodThe lateen sail. The triangular rig allows sailing closer to the wind than European square sails could, making coastal sailing much more efficient
Who built the Indian Ocean trade?Europeans (mostly)Arabs, Persians, Indians, East Africans, and others built the trade for over 1,500 years before European powers (Portuguese, Dutch, British) arrived in the 16th century
What did dhows carry?Mainly spicesMany things — gold, ivory, cotton textiles, spices, pearls, dates, books, religions, ideas. Also (at times) enslaved people. The trade was complex and varied
Key words
Lateen sail
A triangular sail rigged on a long sloping yard, attached to a mast. The defining feature of dhows. Allows sailing much closer to the wind than a square sail can. The technology spread from the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean in medieval times, where it was adopted by European caravels and other ships.
Example: The lateen sail can be set on either side of the mast, allowing fast direction changes. The famous European voyages of discovery — Columbus to the Americas (1492), Vasco da Gama to India (1498), Magellan around the world (1519-1522) — all used ships with lateen sails, technology adopted from Arab and Indian Ocean shipping.
Monsoon
The seasonal wind system of the Indian Ocean. From November to April, winds blow from the northeast (from Asia towards Africa); from May to October, winds reverse and blow from the southwest (from Africa towards Asia). Caused by temperature differences between the Asian landmass and the surrounding oceans. The Arabic word mawsim means 'season'.
Example: The reliability of the monsoons made the Indian Ocean trade possible. A captain in Mombasa in October knew exactly when the wind would shift to allow sailing to India. He could plan a year in advance. This predictability was rare in pre-industrial sailing.
Indian Ocean trade
A vast network of long-distance seaborne commerce connecting East Africa, Arabia, Persia, India, Southeast Asia, and (through these links) the wider world. Active for over 2,000 years. Made possible by the monsoon winds and the dhow. Sometimes called the 'first globalisation'.
Example: By the medieval period, the Indian Ocean trade was carrying goods worth billions of dollars in modern terms. Cities along the network — Kilwa, Mogadishu, Aden, Hormuz, Calicut, Malacca — were among the richest in the world. The trade declined slowly after European colonial intrusion from the 16th century onwards.
Swahili coast
The long band of coastal cities and culture stretching from Mogadishu (Somalia) in the north to Sofala (Mozambique) in the south, including Mombasa, Lamu, Zanzibar, Dar es Salaam, and Kilwa. The culture is a deep mix of African (especially Bantu), Arab, Persian, and Indian elements, shaped by centuries of dhow trade.
Example: The Swahili language itself is a Bantu African language with extensive Arabic vocabulary. About 35% of Swahili words have Arabic origins. The language has been spoken for over 1,000 years and is now an official language of Tanzania, Kenya, and other East African countries. The cosmopolitan culture of the Swahili coast is a direct legacy of dhow trade.
Sur, Oman
A coastal city in eastern Oman, traditionally one of the most important dhow-building centres in the world. Sur has been building large ocean-going dhows for centuries and continues to do so today. The town has a major maritime museum and the Bait Al Boom Maritime Museum.
Example: Traditional Sur dhow-builders still construct hulls by eye, without blueprints, using techniques passed down for generations. A typical large dhow can take 6-12 months to build. The skills are recognised by UNESCO as Intangible Cultural Heritage. Annual dhow races at Sur draw competitors from across the Gulf and Indian Ocean.
Periplus of the Erythraean Sea
A Greek trading manual written around 50 CE, describing in detail the maritime trade routes from Roman Egypt down the East African coast and across to India. One of the most important sources for understanding ancient Indian Ocean commerce. The 'Erythraean Sea' was the Greek name for the Indian Ocean and the Red Sea together.
Example: The Periplus describes specific ports along the East African coast — Rhapta (probably modern Tanzania), Opone (probably Hafun in Somalia) — and the goods traded at each. It mentions ships matching the dhow design carrying cargo across the ocean. It gives us our earliest detailed picture of Indian Ocean trade and shows that this commerce was already mature 2,000 years ago.
Use this in other subjects
  • Geography: On a map of the Indian Ocean, mark the major dhow-building and trading ports — Sur (Oman), Aden (Yemen), Hormuz (Iran), Karachi (Pakistan), Mandvi and Mumbai (India), Calicut (India), Galle (Sri Lanka), Mogadishu (Somalia), Mombasa and Lamu (Kenya), Zanzibar and Kilwa (Tanzania), Sofala (Mozambique). Discuss how the monsoons connected these ports into a single trading system.
  • Science: Discuss the physics of sailing. A square sail catches wind from behind and pushes the boat forward. A lateen sail works differently — it acts more like an aeroplane wing, with air flowing faster on one side, creating a pressure difference that 'pulls' the boat forward. This allows the boat to sail at angles to the wind, including upwind. Discuss how the same principle works in modern sailing yachts.
  • History: Build a class timeline of Indian Ocean history: Periplus of the Erythraean Sea written (around 50 CE); rise of Swahili coast cities (around 800 CE onwards); great age of Indian Ocean trade (1100-1500 CE); arrival of Portuguese (1498); Omani Empire dominates East African coast (1700s-1800s); abolition of Indian Ocean slave trade (19th century); container shipping replaces dhow trade (mid-20th century); dhow tradition recognised by UNESCO (2011). The story spans 2,000 years.
  • Languages: Discuss the Swahili language as a product of dhow trade. Bantu African grammatical structure with extensive Arabic vocabulary, plus loanwords from Persian, Portuguese, English, and Indian languages. Compare with other languages shaped by trade — Maltese (Arabic with European influences), Indonesian (Malay base with extensive borrowings), West African Pidgin English. Trade languages are a recurring pattern.
  • Citizenship: Hold a class discussion: 'What does it mean for a technology to be a 'shared heritage' across many cultures?' The dhow belongs to no single country — it is part of the heritage of Arabs, Persians, Indians, East Africans, and others together. UNESCO's recognition of dhow-building reflects this. Discuss other shared technologies (paper-making, ironworking, traditional irrigation) that connect multiple cultures.
  • Ethics: The Indian Ocean trade carried, among many other things, enslaved people. The Indian Ocean slave trade involved roughly 4-6 million enslaved people over many centuries. Discuss this honestly: it is part of the dhow's history, but does not define what dhows were or are. Strong answers will see that historical complexity is normal — major trade networks usually carried both valuable goods and serious moral wrongs.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The dhow is an Arab boat.

Right

The dhow is a shared technology of the entire Indian Ocean coastland. Arabs, Persians, Indians, East Africans, Pakistanis, and others have built and sailed dhows for over 2,000 years. The word 'dhow' itself probably comes from Swahili (East African), not Arabic. Treating the dhow as 'just Arab' erases the contributions of many other cultures.

Why

Crediting one culture for a shared invention is a common but unfair pattern.

Wrong

Dhows are old technology that does not exist anymore.

Right

Dhows are still being built and sailed today. Tens of thousands of working dhows still operate in the Indian Ocean. Active building yards continue in Sur (Oman), Mandvi (India), Karachi (Pakistan), and along the Swahili coast. UNESCO recognises dhow-building as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

Why

Treating living traditions as dead misses what they are.

Wrong

European explorers like Vasco da Gama discovered the Indian Ocean trade.

Right

The Indian Ocean trade had been operating for over 1,500 years before Vasco da Gama arrived in 1498. Arab, Persian, Indian, and East African sailors had built sophisticated trade networks long before any European involvement. The Europeans did not discover the trade — they joined it (and later disrupted it through conquest).

Why

'Discovery' framings tend to centre European actions in stories that were not European at all.

Wrong

The Indian Ocean slave trade was 'just' the Arab slave trade.

Right

The Indian Ocean slave trade involved many parties — African intermediaries who captured people, Arab and Persian merchants who transported them, Indian buyers who purchased them, and others. Calling it 'the Arab slave trade' simplifies a complex multi-party trade. The total number of people enslaved was probably 4-6 million over many centuries.

Why

Honest acknowledgment of who participated in historical wrongs requires precision.

Teaching this with care

Treat the dhow as a living shared technology of the Indian Ocean world. It is not 'Arab' or 'African' or 'Indian' alone — it is all of these at once. The lesson should celebrate this shared heritage without claiming it for any single culture. Use precise language. The lateen sail, the monsoon trade, the specific regional varieties (sambuk, baghlah, jahazi, etc.) all have specific names worth using. Avoid lumping everything into 'Arab dhow' or 'African dhow' — both are oversimplifications. Be respectful of multiple cultures. The Indian Ocean world is incredibly diverse. The lesson should treat Arab, Persian, Indian, East African, and other contributions to dhow culture with equal seriousness. Be careful with the slavery topic. The Indian Ocean slave trade is real and was significant. It was also more complex than the better-known Atlantic slave trade. The lesson should acknowledge it honestly without dwelling on it. The dhow's history includes slavery; it is not defined by slavery. Be balanced about European colonialism. Portuguese, Dutch, French, and British forces caused significant disruption to Indian Ocean trade from the 16th century onwards. They also contributed to ending the slave trade in the 19th century. Both parts of this history are real. The lesson should not present Europeans as either pure villains or pure liberators — the picture is more complex. Be respectful of Islam. The spread of Islam to East Africa and Southeast Asia was largely peaceful, through trade contact rather than conquest. Many Muslim-majority cities in these regions trace their religious history to dhow trade. The lesson should treat this as a normal religious history, not as exotic or threatening. Be respectful of Swahili culture. The Swahili coast is one of the world's great mixed-heritage cultural zones, with its own rich language, architecture, music, food, and traditions. The lesson should treat Swahili culture as a real, sophisticated tradition with deep roots, not as a curiosity. Be careful with the 'modernisation' framing. The decline of long-distance dhow trade was partly economic (steam ships, container ships) and partly political (European colonialism, abolition of slavery). The lesson should not present container shipping as simple progress that replaced an outdated technology. Many dhow communities lost economic power during this period in ways that mattered. Be respectful of UNESCO and traditional builders. The recognition of dhow-building as Intangible Cultural Heritage is real and important. Traditional builders carry knowledge that cannot be quickly replaced. The lesson should support their work. Be aware of regional politics. The Indian Ocean rim today includes countries with complicated relationships with each other (Iran, Saudi Arabia, India, Pakistan, China, etc.). Some students may have particular feelings about specific countries. The lesson should focus on shared heritage rather than national rivalries. Finally, end the lesson on the present. Dhows are being built and sailed today. The story continues.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the dhow.

  1. What is a dhow, and what is its defining feature?

    A dhow is a traditional sailing vessel of the Indian Ocean, built across coastal regions from East Africa to South Asia and the Persian Gulf for over 2,000 years. Its defining feature is the lateen sail — a triangular sail rigged on a long sloping yard. This allows the dhow to sail much closer to the wind than a European-style square-rigged ship can, making it ideal for coastal sailing and the seasonal monsoon winds.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions both the boat and the lateen sail.
  2. What is the monsoon, and why does it matter for dhow sailing?

    The monsoon is the seasonal wind system of the Indian Ocean. From November to April, winds blow from the northeast; from May to October, winds reverse and blow from the southwest. The reliability of these winds made long-distance dhow sailing possible — captains could plan a year ahead, knowing exactly when to sail in each direction.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the wind reversal and the predictability that made trade possible.
  3. Name three things that the Indian Ocean dhow trade carried.

    Many possible answers. The trade carried gold, ivory, leopard skins, ebony, ambergris, and slaves from East Africa; dates, frankincense, myrrh, and pearls from Arabia; silk, carpets, and dried fruits from Persia; cotton textiles, spices (especially black pepper), iron, sugar, and teak from India; cloves, nutmeg, and sandalwood from Southeast Asia; silk, porcelain, and tea from China.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that names three specific goods. Bonus credit for noting the geographic spread.
  4. What is the Swahili coast, and how did dhow trade shape it?

    The Swahili coast is the long band of coastal cities and culture stretching from Mogadishu (Somalia) to Sofala (Mozambique), including Mombasa, Lamu, Zanzibar, and Kilwa. Dhow trade brought Arab, Persian, and Indian merchants to East African ports for centuries. The result is the Swahili language (a Bantu language with extensive Arabic vocabulary) and a rich mixed culture combining African, Arab, Persian, and Indian elements.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention both the geographic extent and the cultural mixing.
  5. Are dhows still in use today?

    Yes. Tens of thousands of working dhows still sail the Indian Ocean today, fishing, carrying small cargo, racing, and taking tourists on day trips. Active dhow-building yards continue in Sur (Oman), Mandvi (India), Karachi (Pakistan), and along the Swahili coast. UNESCO has recognised dhow-building traditions as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. A dhow built today is recognisably the same kind of vessel that sailed 2,000 years ago.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises dhows are still in active use and gives at least one specific detail.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The Indian Ocean trade is sometimes called the 'first globalisation'. What does this mean, and is it a fair description?

    Push students to think specifically. For 'yes': the trade connected millions of people across thousands of kilometres; it was sophisticated, long-distance, and lasted for over a thousand years; goods, ideas, religions, and people moved in both directions; the trading cities were genuinely cosmopolitan. Against 'yes': 'globalisation' is a modern term with specific meanings; pre-modern trade did not have the speed, reach, or transformative power of modern globalisation; many parts of the world (Americas, most of Africa, much of Europe) were not connected to it. Strong answers will see that the comparison is partly fair and partly anachronistic. The Indian Ocean trade was a real long-distance trading system. Calling it 'the first globalisation' captures something true but also imports modern assumptions that may not fit perfectly.
  2. Old technologies often disappear when new ones arrive. The dhow has survived for 2,000 years. What does this tell us about which technologies last and which do not?

    There are several factors worth discussing. The dhow has lasted because: (1) it works well for its purpose — coastal sailing in the Indian Ocean; (2) it can be built locally with traditional skills; (3) it has cultural meaning beyond economics; (4) the new technologies (steam ships, container ships) are better for some purposes but not for all. Other old technologies that have lasted include: bicycles (still useful in many contexts), wood-fired ovens, hand-knotted carpets, sourdough bread-making. Strong answers will see that 'progress' is not always linear. Some old technologies persist because they meet specific needs that newer technologies do not. Some are tied to cultural meaning. Some are environmentally better. The dhow is one of many examples.
  3. If you wanted to learn the deep cultural connections of your part of the world, what would you study — what 'dhow' equivalent connects your region to others?

    This is a creative question that brings the lesson home. Students might suggest: roads (which carry trade, languages, customs); rivers (which connect inland regions); particular foods that travelled (rice, potato, tomato, chili — all of which have transformed cuisines on multiple continents); musical traditions that show influence from many places; languages with mixed origins. The deeper point is that 'connections across cultures' are usually visible in the things people use, eat, sing, and say. Strong answers will see specific examples in their own lives. The dhow is one extraordinary case. Most regions have their own.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Show the photograph of the dhow. Ask: 'What is special about this boat?' Take guesses. Then say: 'A traditional sailing boat of the Indian Ocean. The triangular sail lets it sail close to the wind. People have been building them for over 2,000 years. We are going to find out what kind of world they built.'
  2. THE MONSOON AND THE OCEAN (10 min)
    Explain the monsoon — wind reverses twice a year, from northeast in winter and southwest in summer. The reliability of these winds made long-distance Indian Ocean trade possible. Pause and ask: 'Why might one regular wind pattern shape so much human history?' Lead them to the connection between physics, geography, and trade.
  3. HOW THE DHOW WORKS (10 min)
    Explain the lateen sail — triangular, rigged on a long yard, allowing sailing closer to the wind than European square-rigged ships. Discuss the regional varieties — sambuk, baghlah, jahazi, kotia, ngalawa. Discuss the traditional construction — wooden hull, originally sewn together with coconut-fibre rope.
  4. THE WORLD OF THE INDIAN OCEAN TRADE (15 min)
    Tell the wider story: 2,000 years of trade, the Swahili coast, Indian textiles, Arab dates, Persian carpets, the spread of Islam and other religions, the wealth of cities like Kilwa and Hormuz. Discuss the slavery part of the trade honestly. End with the modern picture: dhows are still being built. Many of them are still sailing.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'What does the dhow's 2,000-year survival teach us about the technologies that last?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'A wooden boat with a triangular sail. Built across many cultures for two thousand years. Connecting the people of Africa, Arabia, Persia, and India. Still being launched today in Sur and Mandvi and Lamu. Still sailing the Indian Ocean. The story continues.'
Classroom materials
The Monsoon Calendar
Instructions: On the board, draw a monsoon calendar with two halves of the year. From November to April, draw arrows pointing southwest (from Asia towards Africa). From May to October, draw arrows pointing northeast (from Africa towards Asia). Now imagine you are a dhow captain in Lamu, Kenya. When would you sail to India? When would you return? What would you do during the months you cannot sail? Discuss as a class.
Example: In Mr Mwangi's class, students traced the year of a typical dhow captain — sailing to India in November, doing trade there for several months, returning to East Africa in May, doing trade there for several months, then sailing again in November. The teacher said: 'You have just understood why dhow communities along the Swahili coast were so cosmopolitan. The traders did not just visit other ports. They lived in them. They learned the local languages. Their children grew up speaking many languages. The whole rhythm of life was shaped by the monsoons.'
Trade Goods Map
Instructions: On a large outline map of the Indian Ocean, students place small labels showing what each region produced for the trade. East Africa: gold, ivory, ambergris. Arabia: dates, frankincense, pearls. Persia: silk, carpets. India: cotton, spices, teak. Southeast Asia: cloves, nutmeg. China: silk, porcelain. Then trace possible dhow routes connecting them. Discuss: what was each region buying, and what was it selling?
Example: In Mrs Sharma's class, students were surprised at how interconnected the trade was. The teacher said: 'You have just visualised one of the world's great trade networks. Each region had something the others wanted. Each region wanted something the others had. The dhows moved goods back and forth, year after year, for over a thousand years. The result was an enormously rich economic system, deep cultural connections, and great wealth in trading cities.'
Living Heritage
Instructions: In small groups, students discuss: 'What traditional crafts or skills in your community are still being practised today, and what would happen if they died out?' Examples might include: traditional cooking, particular musical instruments, regional crafts, building techniques, agricultural methods. Discuss as a class. The dhow tradition is one example of a living heritage protected by UNESCO; what about your local examples?
Example: In Mrs Patel's class, students named local examples: traditional bread baking, particular kinds of weaving, certain musical traditions, family farming techniques. The teacher said: 'You have just thought about something the dhow teaches in a very direct way. Living traditions need active practice to survive. Each generation has to learn from the last. If the chain is broken, the knowledge is hard to recover. The work of keeping traditions alive matters.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the stick chart for another remarkable navigation tradition from a great seafaring culture.
  • Try a lesson on the Hokule'a for another revival of traditional navigation, this time in the Pacific.
  • Try a lesson on the cowrie shell for another object that connected African and Asian trade across the Indian Ocean.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on the Indian Ocean world — its trade networks, cities, religions, and cultural exchanges.
  • Connect this lesson to geography class with a longer study of the monsoons and how seasonal wind patterns have shaped human history across many parts of the world.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of cultural heritage and UNESCO's role in protecting traditions like dhow-building. Other examples include the Mediterranean diet, Korean Kimjang, and many regional crafts.
Key takeaways
  • The dhow is a traditional sailing vessel of the Indian Ocean, with a triangular lateen sail rigged on a long sloping yard, allowing it to sail much closer to the wind than European-style square-rigged ships could.
  • Dhows have been built and sailed for over 2,000 years across the entire Indian Ocean coastland — by Arabs, Persians, Indians, East Africans, Pakistanis, and others. They come in many regional varieties.
  • The dhow trade was made possible by the monsoon winds — wind patterns that reverse direction twice a year, blowing from the northeast in winter and the southwest in summer.
  • The Indian Ocean trade was a vast network connecting East Africa, Arabia, Persia, India, Southeast Asia, and China, carrying gold, ivory, spices, textiles, pearls, and many other goods. It also carried (in some periods) enslaved people. The trade shaped the cosmopolitan culture of cities like Kilwa, Mombasa, Aden, Hormuz, and Calicut.
  • The Swahili coast of East Africa, with its mix of African, Arab, Persian, and Indian influences, was largely shaped by dhow trade. The Swahili language is itself a product of this exchange.
  • Dhows are still being built and sailed today. Active building yards continue in Sur (Oman), Mandvi (India), Karachi (Pakistan), and along the Swahili coast. UNESCO has recognised dhow-building as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. A dhow built today is recognisably the same kind of vessel that sailed 2,000 years ago.
Sources
  • The Indian Ocean in World History — Edward A. Alpers (2014) [academic]
  • Sewn Boats of the Indian Ocean — Eric Staples and Tom Vosmer (2017) [academic]
  • The Dhow: An Illustrated History of the Dhow and Its World — Clifford W. Hawkins (1977) [academic]
  • Traditional dhow construction in Oman (UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage) — UNESCO (2011) [institution]
  • Dhow — Wikipedia (citing multiple peer-reviewed sources) (2024) [academic]