Map of Near and Middle East Oil 1965

(davidrumsey.com)

97 points | by warrenm 2 days ago ago

76 comments

  • Hilift 2 days ago ago

    Hard to believe Churchill was one of the early developers of that field. Fascinating history.

    "In 1913, shortly before World War I, APOC managers negotiated with a new customer, Winston Churchill, who was then First Lord of the Admiralty. Churchill, as a part of a three-year expansion program, sought to modernise Britain's Royal Navy by abandoning the use of coal-fired steamships and adopting oil as fuel..."

    "Persian popular opposition to the D'Arcy oil concession and royalty terms whereby Persia only received 16% of net profits was widespread."

    "By the end of April 1933, a new agreement was finally forged. The concession area was reduced by three-quarters. Persia was guaranteed a fixed royalty of four shillings per ton, which protected it against fluctuations in oil prices. At the same time, it would receive 20 percent of the company's worldwide profits that were actually distributed to shareholders above a certain minimum sum. In addition, a minimum annual payment of £750,000, irrespective of other developments, was guaranteed."

    "Truman and US ambassador to Iran Henry F. Grady opposed intervention in Iran but needed Britain's support for the Korean War."

    "BP was incorporated in London in 1954 as a holding company called Iranian Oil Participants Ltd (IOP).[41][42] The founding members of IOP included British Petroleum (40%), Gulf Oil (8%), Royal Dutch Shell (14%), and Compagnie Française des Pétroles (now TotalEnergies SE, 6%). The four Aramco partners — Standard Oil of California (SoCal, later Chevron), Standard Oil of New Jersey (later Exxon), Standard Oil Co. of New York (later Mobil), and Texaco – each held an 8% stake in the holding company.[41][43] In addition, these companies paid Anglo-Iranian about $90 million for their 60 percent share in the consortium, and a further $500 million, paid out of a ten cent per barrel royalty. The Shah signed the agreement on 29 October 1954, and oil flowed from Abadan the next day. Within a few months each of the American companies contributed 1 percent to Iricon, a consortium made up of nine independent American companies, which included Phillips, Richfield, Standard of Ohio, and Ashland."

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Persian_Oil_Company

    • rayiner 2 days ago ago

      The history of oil development is so poorly known in the Arab world. The prevailing view is “the British came in and took our oil.” But everyone overlooks that the Arab countries had never developed the mechanical technology to really extract it except the portion that came near the surface.

      • dredmorbius a day ago ago

        For anyone interested in learning that history, I cannot recommend highly enough Daniel Yergin's book The Prize (1990), and its companion PBS series of the same title (1992).

        <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prize:_The_Epic_Quest_for_...>

        That recommendation comes despite the fact that Yergin is an unapologetic booster of the petroleum industry. The simple fact is that he's written an exquisitely researched and detailed history of oil in the 19th and 20th centuries, and the tremendous changes it produced. This includes ample coverage of oil development throughout the Middle-East and North Africa (and of course, elsewhere).

      • boringg 2 days ago ago

        They didn't have anything - not just the mechanical technology, the talent, the market, the capital, infrastructure or the use case.

      • oa335 a day ago ago

        > The history of oil development is so poorly known in the Arab world.

        Comment you replied to is talking about the history of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company. Iran is outside the Arab world.

        • dredmorbius a day ago ago

          It's difficult to come up with a comprehensive name that encompasses the oil-rich lands within eastern / middle-eastern / central Asia, north Africa, and south-eastern Europe.

          I'm strongly reminded of Peter Adamson's Google Lecture on philosophy in the Islamic World, which is almost entirely dedicated to the matter of why he calls it the Islamic World, rather than Arabic, Persian, Islam, or several other possible names.

          Ideas are maps, and here the map fits the terrain fairly poorly. Any term is going to have its inaccuracies, and will inflate or neglect one or more parties.

          Ultimately, though, that specific matter is of very limited interest or discussion potential.

          • jacquesm a day ago ago

            Resource cursed countries?

            • dredmorbius 18 hours ago ago

              That too, but there's the geographical continuity which spans continents (at least as we generally classify them), cultures, language, and religion.

              Resource curse isn't oil specific, and you might include some remote outliers into that group as well: Venezuela, Mexico, Brazil, and Nigeria, for example, all oil producers, and numerous others throughout the world based on other natural resources, with Nauru being perhaps the most spectacular boom-bust case.

              The question of how / why / whether the US avoided the resource curse is another interesting one. I'd argue that it's similar to the case of the UK, in that 1) energy resources and industrialisation arose more-or-less simultaneously, 2) in a world with no industrial rivals and 3) with a fairly wide regional variance in both. In the case of the US, industry settled largely in the Great Lakes / North-East regions, whilst energy was focused in Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana. The latter three far more resemble resource-cursed countries in their economic, political, and socioeconomic profiles, though much of that is tied up in ... other historical baggage, to avoid taking this thread entirely off the rails ;-)

      • BeetleB a day ago ago

        > The prevailing view is “the British came in and took our oil.”

        No one thinks that in Saudi Arabia, because it is not remotely true.

        • dredmorbius a day ago ago

          No, in Saudia Arabia, it was the Americans.

          Editing/Updating to note: yes, the British were involved, somewhat, but for various reasons the UK had a far greater influence in Persia, and the US in Saudi Arabia, particularly following the Great Bitter Lake meeting between Kind Saud and FDR, very shortly before the latter's death, during WWII.

          <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_oil_industry_in...>

          (Also covered in The Prize which is mentioned by myself and others elsewhere in this thread.)

      • hamonrye a day ago ago

        Crude oil was developed as therapy to treat arthiritic along the Caspian sea.

      • Aspos 2 days ago ago

        One does not need to develop the tech to own the oil and monetize it. Those who developed the tech can be hired.

        • rayiner 2 days ago ago

          Your options are limited when you have none of the tech stack to find the oil, development fields, and extract the oil. Nor the capital to buy the equipment and do it all yourself.

          Theoretically, book authors could “hire” everyone needed to turn a popular book into a movie. But in practice they sell the rights to develop the property to a studio in return for a cut of the profits.

          • Aspos 2 days ago ago

            There is a difference in the way it went for Saudis and Iranians. Saudis, not having the tech, capital, knowledge at the time, still retained ownership. Iranians did not. Saudis had enough bargaining power (and balls), Iranian Shakh agreed to exploitative concessions.

            Those who had the tech, capital and expertise in the end just lined up in front of Saudis to be hired.

          • pazimzadeh 2 days ago ago

            Finding the oil fields was often easy. The soil was oily to the touch. The Arabs were using the oil for lamps for a while (think Aladdin’s lamp).

            • rayiner a day ago ago

              The British company that first found oil in Iran nearly ran out of money before finding it. In the middle east some oil comes to the surface, and in fact the Muslim world invented distillation in the middle ages. But finding sources to support a commercial oil field is another matter.

            • AftHurrahWinch a day ago ago

              Aladdin's lamp would have been an olive-oil lamp. Flammable vapor lamps are comparatively modern.

              Before the Renaissance, rock-oil/petroleum was used mostly for waterproofing as tar, with a few other medicinal and military uses.

        • kimixa 2 days ago ago

          It also requires significant capital investment on top of whatever it takes to hire them. The equipment isn't cheap, and the entire stack of knowledge you need to hire in spiders out significantly, and with the lack of experience likely would take a long time to truly fill all the knowledge gaps. It may not be obvious what you're lacking until you start hitting walls.

          Bootstrapping via external investors experienced in the sector is way faster, but comes with costs, as shown in the deals here. But that's true in every market.

        • IncreasePosts 2 days ago ago

          That's essentially what happened. Good luck negotiating when it is well known that if you don't get a deal, you'll get $0. Whereas those with oil expertise can easily go to other potentially productive oil fields.

          • dylan604 a day ago ago

            Back then they wouldn't have had lateral drilling abilities. Otherwise, they'd just sit in their space taking your oil before you even knew you had oil

    • dredmorbius a day ago ago

      Churchill's role in expanding the role of oil was in fact profound. It's another fact I'd learned in Yergin's The Prize (mentioned elsewhere in this thread).

      Britain was a naval power, and in the early 20th century was rich in several factors that served as a basis for that, including iron and coal, as well as access (through trade) to the essentials of munitions manufacture (saltpetre, an ingredient in gunpowder and other propellants, was abundant in India).

      But coal-fired ships were cumbersome to manage: solid coal had to be physically handled when fueling ships initially, in re-bunkering coal as it was consumed in transit, and of course, being shoveled into the boilers themselves.

      Petroleum, by contrast, flowed through pipes, by gravity or with the assistance of pumps. Fueling, bunkering, and operational procedures were streamlined remarkably. Ships also gained vastly greater performance flexibility: direct-combustion engines (diesel or turbine) could be powered up or down in seconds, rather than the many minutes or hours to increase steam-based output. And of course petroleum enabled the two great 20th century advances in naval power: submarines and aircraft, of which the technological history of coal-fired variants is brief.

      (Not non-existant, however. The British Navy deployed K-Class submarines, coal powered, in WWI, and the Germans experimented with a coal-dust burning airplane in WWII, see <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_K-class_submarine> and <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lippisch_P.13a>.)

      Britain's problem in 1913 however was that the country had no domestic oil production capacity. (The North Sea oil fields wouldn't be proven and developed until the 1960s.) Switching from (domestic) coal to (foreign) oil was a tremendous gamble, and required sea-lane control to the Middle East, as well as control of the Suez Canal for greatly-reduced shipping costs.

      The story of oil in both World Wars is probably the most fascinating aspect of Yergin's book. WWI in particular started with cavalry charges and horsecarts, and ended with tanks, submarines, and bombers. During WWII, a critical element in the Allied invasion of mainland Europe was the establishment of an oil pipeline, in Operation Pluto, initially consisting of a single two inch diameter cross-channel pipe. Through those two inches flowed the material which made mechanised invasion possible.

      <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Pluto>

      (Appropriation of German "Jerry Cans" --- Wehrmacht-Einheitskanister to its creators --- was also a huge strategic gain. <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerrycan>)

      • Hilift a day ago ago

        The UK was in a really interesting position. The British empire was the largest in history, and it occurred during a time of great advancement during the industrial revolution. Liquid fuel wasn't new. The owner of two of the three ships holding 90k lbs of tea in the Boston Tea Party, Joseph Rotch (1704–1784), held a monopoly on whale oil. His existence was probably illustrative and educational for those who followed in railroads and petroleum.

        Churchill did not know it at the time, but he was the peak of the empire. Physically the empire was untenable, but in business there was a new world of influence. I sometimes compare early Churchill to the business adventures of Averill Harriman and Prescott Bush.

        https://nha.org/research/nantucket-history/history-topics/ro...

    • cyberax 2 days ago ago

      Another interesting tidbit: https://russia-islworld.ru/en/kultura/karim-hakimov-red-pash...

      In 1930-s there was a chance for Saudi Arabia to become close with the USSR. It had diplomatic relations and wanted assistance from the USSR, in particular in obtaining enough fuel.

      • trhway a day ago ago

        fascinating, the time when USSR repressions impressed even Saudis (by watching for example Lawrence of Arabia one can see that life there was a complete opposite of a cake walk) :

        "one year later he was recalled to Moscow where he was arrested one year later on the false denunciation. On the 10th of January in 1938 Red Pasha was cut short. Repressions of «Red Pasha» and the follow-up execution made a great impression on representatives of the ruling till now dynasty of the Saudi Arabia Kingdom – diplomatic relations between that country and the USSR were broken off in 1938 after Khakimov’s withdrawal and they were not resumed till the fall of the communist system in the Soviet Union."

  • dredmorbius a day ago ago

    One of the interesting features prominent on this map is the TAPline, the Trans-Arabian Pipeline, constructed in 1950 and operated, with some interruptions, until 1976.

    My understanding is that the TAPLine was amongst the reasons for Lebanon's significance in the 1950s and 1960s, as this was the transshippment point for Arabian oil headed to Europe (shipped by amongst others Aristotle Onasis's oil tankers). The 1967 Six Days War say a portion of the pipeline running through the Golan Heights fall into Israeli control, though Israel permitted the line to continue operating. The pipeline was damaged by Palestinian activists in 1969, and eventually ceased operating in 1976 with advances in supertankers, political conflicts between states over which the line passed, transit fee disagreements, and breakdowns.

    Along with control over the Suez Canal, the TAPline is an instructive lesson in the values and risks of fixed-route transports (physical, data, logical) especially under volatile political and military climates.

    <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trans-Arabian_Pipeline>

  • SirFatty 2 days ago ago

    That's a great website! The linked map is certainly interesting, but there's all kinds of map and map related info there. Thanks for the link!

  • mikhailfranco 17 hours ago ago

    Note Abu Musa, Greater & Lesser Tunb islands are attributed to the Emirates. These were occupied by Iran at the formation of the UAE and remain contested.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seizure_of_Abu_Musa_and_the_Gr...

  • boomboomsubban 2 days ago ago

    The presumably Brezhnev caricature is an amusing touch.

    • wyldfire 2 days ago ago

      Is he the figure shown in Russian Turkistan with fists raised, in circles?

      • boomboomsubban 2 days ago ago

        I assume so, they were the leader of the USSR in 65 and that looks like his hairline.

  • uijl a day ago ago

    For the ones interested, there’s a fascination book on the history of oil. The Prize, by Daniel Yergin [1].

    [1] https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/169354

  • anonu a day ago ago

    One of the more "recent" developments, not depicted on this map, is the development of the Leviathan gas fields in the Eastern Mediterranean: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leviathan_gas_field

    This is bound to shape the geopolitics of the region.

    • mikhailfranco 17 hours ago ago

      Turkey claims sectors of the field all around the island of Cyprus.

      Egypt has some small hope of reversing its economic decline.

      A direct pipeline from the field to Europe, via Greece and Italy is contentious.

      Israel invades Gaza to claim offshore resources.

  • eschulz 2 days ago ago

    The the font for the title of the map meant to allude to the style of Arabic writing? It looks crazy.

    • saljam 2 days ago ago

      the arabic writing is also crazy, so i have no idea what author was going for.

    • SirFatty 2 days ago ago

      More like it's imitating Persian writing...

      • Aspos 2 days ago ago

        What is Persian writing?

        • arnsholt 2 days ago ago

          Arabic script as written in Iran (and Pakistan I think) is in a different style than most of the rest of the world. The style is called Nastaliq (the more common one being Naskh).

          • jahewson a day ago ago

            Yes I think that’s what it is - only the writing on the map uses a horizontal baseline whereas the real script uses a sloping baseline so it looks weird here.

        • tejtm a day ago ago

          Isn't it rebranded now as Farsi. Why? I do not know.

  • pimlottc 2 days ago ago

    Non-AI description from original publication note (Robert Frew, 2025) [0]:

    > "Original large colour-printed map of the Middle East (95 x 126 cm), laid down onto board and in original frame, unglazed. Includes detailed inset maps of Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, the Persian Gulf, Pakistan, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Kuwait, and Turkey (2x), and Kamaran (Yemen). Also included is a detailed table entitled ‘Owners of Concessions, Leases, Permits, & Contracts’, 4x statistical tables on the production and consumption of oil, and a detailed key. Extremely rare, genuinely imposing and highly attractive map that showcases the petroleum industry across the Middle East and adjacent regions.

    > It is the seventh edition of a sequence of maps on the subject produced in Fort Worth, Texas, by Brian Orchard Lisle, a flamboyant and well-known oil trade insider, founder of industry-leading magazine The Oil Forum. This map offers an unrivaled visual record of the state of play in the oil industry at a critical stage in its development, when the oil assets of Iran, Iraq, and Kuwait were still controlled by British concerns, although being challenged by nationalist movements.

    > It covers an area from the Aegean and Libya in the west, to the frontiers of India in the east, while the Gulf, epicentre of the petroleum world, occupies pride of place. The greatest concentrations of oilfields are located in south-eastern Iran, Kuwait, northern Iraq, the Gulf Coast of Saudi Arabia, and in Bahrain and Qatar, while the Baku oilfields in Soviet Azerbaijan are shown in the far upper area.

    > Of the numerous marginal inset maps the most important illustrate the ultra-productive Dhahran-Damman area of Saudi Arabia, with the great Ghawar Field, and the nearby petroleum operations in Qatar and Bahrain.

    > The creator of the map, Brian Orchard Lisle (1915–2004), is an enigmatic figure, described in A History of the Twentieth Century in 100 Maps as “an English-born Second World War pilot and later kayaking champion”. In fact, he was born in New York to English parents, his father being “an internationally known journalist in the petroleum and marine industry” and publisher of International Oilman (obituary in The Monitor, 2 December 1959). Brian Lisle joined the staff of World Petroleum in 1934, becoming assistant editor in 1936. In the war he served in the USAAF, rising to the rank of first lieutenant. He is buried in Dallas-Fort Worth National Cemetery. His enduring legacy is the series of impressive oil maps issued under the aegis of Oil Forum: the Caribbean (1952), Northern and Middle Africa (1961), Australasia (1962), and the Far East (1963)."

    0: https://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~3...

  • notherhack 2 days ago ago

    "Verification failed. You cannot access this page."

    • dredmorbius a day ago ago

      You may have to enable several Google domains to view the full map.

  • bgwalter 2 days ago ago

    The "AI" slop description of the map mentions:

    Heavy lines traverse the map, notably from Iraq (Kirkuk) to the Mediterranean (Tripoli, Haifa) ...

    I can see the pipeline from Kirkuk to Tripoli on the map, but the pipeline from Kirkuk to Haifa is hallucinated and not on the map. Or perhaps the description is stolen from elsewhere rather than based on the map itself.

    • davidu 2 days ago ago

      It's not AI slop, it's probably not even AI. You simply are unable to parse the description, or the map, or both.

      • bgwalter 2 days ago ago

        Here’s a breakdown of the networks present, what they mean, and how they relate to the map’s context ...

        The first red flags.

        Conclusion

        The map is a diagram of networks—pipelines, oilfields, terminals, company concessions, and shipping routes—depicting the Middle East’s oil as a vast, interdependent system. These networks are both physical (infrastructure) and abstract (ownership, contracts), making the map a powerful tool for understanding the strategic importance and international entanglement of oil in the mid-20th century. AI analysis.

        And now the last paragraph literally says "AI analysis".

        > It's not AI slop, it's probably not even AI. You simply are unable to parse the description, or the map, or both.

        Yeah, right.

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  • larrykluger 2 days ago ago

    [flagged]

    • pjc50 2 days ago ago

      It has an "Israel" labelled breakout on the right hand side?

    • 2 days ago ago
      [deleted]
    • nkozyra 2 days ago ago

      It's on the right side of the map, not sure what you're talking about.

    • myth_drannon 2 days ago ago

      I was actually expecting all the "free palestine" crowd to complain that the zionists erased Palestine...

      • sofixa 2 days ago ago

        The West Bank is shown under Jordan, while Gaza under United Arab Republic (Egypt, plus Syria for a brief period, and almost Iraq). This reflects the reality in 1965. It was after all the height of Arab nationalism, with legitimate widespread desire to unite all Arab people (east of Libya at least) under a common country, and Palestinians were included in that.

        In 1967 that would change, both coming under Israeli control/occupation.

    • saljam 2 days ago ago

      have you actually looked at the map?

      there a whole inset panel for israel, and not a single mention of palestine.

    • s5300 2 days ago ago

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    • 4gotunameagain 2 days ago ago

      Who knows, maybe the date is off by a year or two and Israel did not even exist then ;)

    • WhereIsTheTruth 2 days ago ago

      First of all they didn't

      Here's a reminder of what the word 'Semitic' means:

      "Semitic people or Semites is a term for an ethnic, cultural or racial group[2][3][4][5] associated with people of the Middle East and the Horn of Africa, including Akkadians (Assyrians and Babylonians), Arabs, Arameans, Canaanites (Ammonites, Edomites, Israelites, Moabites, Phoenicians, and Philistines) and Habesha peoples"

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semitic_people

      • JumpCrisscross 2 days ago ago

        Antisemitism means anti-Jewish, not anti the Semitic people, because Prussians [1].

        [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antisemitism#Origin_and_usage

        • WhereIsTheTruth 2 days ago ago

          The 19th century German coinage "antisemitism" was never a neutral label for "opposition to Judaism", it was a racial science slogan that recast Christian anti-Judaism as a biological war against "Semitic" Orientals

          At the time it had no connection with Zionism

          Because the word now circulates without that historical packaging, many people take "Jew" to be a racial category and imagine Jews, not Arabs, Assyrians, or other Semitic language communities, to be the only Semitic group, an assumption that reproduces the very Nazi racial taxonomy the term originally served

          Its very design, framing Jews alone as the quintessentially "Semitic" target, censors every attempt to talk about the Middle East, because it buries the shared Semitic matrix (Arab, Assyrian, Hebrew, Aramaic, etc.) under a racialized badge that only sticks to one side

          Once the vocabulary itself encodes a single victim story, any mention of parallel or overlapping suffering sounds like denial instead of description, and the conversation stalls before facts can even be named

          • breppp 2 days ago ago

            The Nazis had no problem allying with the Arabs including the Palestinians in WW2, so there is evidence these weren't placed in the same racial category as Jews.

            As these racial categories are all pseudo-science anyway, their only meaning is the meaning attributed to them by the racists. So you can only complain to 19th century Europeans for not being as racist towards Arabs

        • 2 days ago ago
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  • chiffre01 2 days ago ago

    Just going to leave this here:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrocurrency

    • 2 days ago ago
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