Sorry man , but you are the symbol of failure in history .
I actually don't know how to start teaching you the history cos you don't know where Persia was , who Persian empires were and where they were ruling .
1st there no Persian gulf he is Arabian gulf , What do I say guys ? What can I say when I see such ignorance in people who are filled of hate and racism ? All the historic maps and evidences call it Persian Gulf , then a bunch of puppet Shaikhs that neither have history and root nor have read a history book in their lives , close their eyes on several thousand years of history , civilization and culture and piss on everything .
World Map 1689
Persian golf in 1689 world map-red-arrow
PG 1740
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This is the Persia's map from beginning . It might help you know where it was
Persian Gulf - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Persian Gulf in Wikipedia
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Persian Gulf naming dispute : ( From Wikipedia )
The name of the body of water separating the Iranian plateau from the Arabian Peninsula,
historically and internationally known as the Persian Gulf, after the land of Persia (Iran), has been disputed by some Arab countries since the 1960s. Rivalry between Iran and some Arab states, along with the emergence of pan-Arabism and Arab nationalism, has seen the name Arabian Gulf become predominant
in some Arab countries. Names beyond these two have also been applied to or proposed for this body of water.
in almost all maps printed before 1960, and in most modern international treaties, documents and maps, this body of water is known by the name "Persian Gulf". This reflects traditional usage since the Greek geographers Strabo and Ptolemy, and the geopolitical realities of the time with a powerful
Persian Empire (Iran) comprising the whole northern coastline and a scattering of local emirates on the Arabian coast. It was referred to as the
Persian Gulf in the Arabic Christian writer Agapius, writing in the
10th century.
According to Mahan Abedin of Jamestown Foundation,
the first proposal to change the name to the "Arabian" Gulf goes back to the 1930s by Sir Charles Belgrave, then the British adviser to the ruler of Bahrain; however it was rejected immediately by the British government. In 1957, a few years after the nationalization of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company,
an alleged British MI6 officer named Roderick Owen published a book named "The Golden Bubble of the Arabian Gulf" making it the first literature in modern history to use the term "Arabian Gulf".
Arab countries used the term "Persian Gulf" until the 1960s, but with the rise of Arab nationalism during that decade,
some Arab countries, including the ones bordering the Persian Gulf, adopted widespread use of the term "الخليج العربي" (al-Ḫalīj al-ʻArabiyy; Arab Gulf or Arabian Gulf) to refer to this waterway. A senior presenter for Al Jazeera English said "ironically, among the major drivers of the movement for change were Arab perceptions that Iran, driven by Washington, had supported Israel during the Arab-Israeli war of 1973". This, coupled with the decreasing influence of Iran on the political and economic priorities of the English-speaking Western World, led to increasing acceptance, both in regional politics and the mostly petroleum-related business, of the new alternative naming convention "Arabian Gulf" in Arab countries.
The term "Arabian Gulf" (Sinus Arabicus) was formerly used to refer to what is now known as the Red Sea (as illustrated in the map examples with this article). This usage was adopted into European maps from, among others, Strabo and Ptolemy, who called the Red Sea Sinus Arabicus (Arabian Gulf). Both of these ancient geographers also used the name Sinus Persicus to refer to the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran.
In the early Islamic era, Muslim geographers did the same, calling the body بحر فارس (Baḥr Fāris; Persian Sea) or "خليج فارس" (Ḫalīǧ Fāris; Persian Gulf). Later, most European maps from the early Modern Times onwards used similar terms (Sinus Persicus, Persischer Golf, Golfo di Persia and the like, in different languages) when referring to the Persian Gulf, possibly taking the name from the Islamic sources.
Saudi map of Persian gulf - 1952
Hope you've got your answer my friend , please read about everything before posting .
For more information and maps , please search in some valid books , websites and etc in order not to suffer from such illusions