[1] The original settlement there consisted of a cluster of wells in the wadi protected by an ancient fort (husn).
Caravans on the Incense Route would water there and the place also served as a base for Bedouin tribes such as Sa'ar or Sei'ar.
Abdulla bin Schuwail al Dawsai, who was active against the Sa'ar in the late 1940s, is known to have been present in the town.
[4] The Wadi Hadhramaut has its source near Al Abr[5] and it is about 3,000 feet above sea level.
Poetry is politically significant in the region and the popular poet, Khamis Salim Kindi, made reference to the place in a famous quatrain about the powerful Adbat clan whose area was bombed by the British during WW2 because of their Axis sympathies, as the British had previously bombed the al-Say'ar tribe in the al-'Abr area.