Caravan trade between Kuwait and "markets of Arabian Peninsula, Levant and Southern Iraq" in the pre-oil era (A study in modes and relations of production)
الخلاصة
Although pastoralism was the common occupation of all nomads, this
does not mean that raising animals was their only economic activity.
During the modern history of the Gulf and Arabian Peninsula Bedouin
tribes had also intermittently engaged in considerable trade (mainly the
caravan trade) with urban markets. The flexibility so characteristic of
pastoral nomadism and the ability to transport goods and people have
meant that pastoralism has long been associated with the caravan trade as
one of the major livelihood strategies. Prior to the evolution of modern
transport, animals were the only method of moving large quantities of
goods across land. Consequently, pastoralists often became heavily
involved in trade caravans, guiding, managing and supplying the
appropriate livestock. In Arabia, this evolved into a quite sophisticated
form of blackmail, whereby the nomads both guided the caravans and
required payments to protect them.