The area around Qulensya is host to several
petroglyph sites created at an undetermined time. One site called
Simar Qar lies west of the town. It consists of what appears to be an
altar stone and two
rock cupules with letters inscribed on the sides. Another site, known as
Haida, was discovered in 1900 to the north of the town towards the mountains, though its exact location is unknown. At this site, inscriptions were found which were believed to have been from either a late
Himyaritic or an
Ethiopic script. Before an 1876 protection treaty with the
British, the island of Socotra was barely governed by the ruling
Mahra Sultanate. Socotra was merely used as a tax farm by the sultan, who annually sent a relative to collect taxes in the form of
ghee. These taxes were primarily collected from the villages of
Hadibu,
Qād̨ub, and Qulensya. During this time period, Qulensya was one of the five largest villages on the island, though these five urban agglomerations altogether had a population of only 1,880 people. , which would have been damaged by proposed road projects|left The British explorers
Theodore and
Mabel Bent began their tour of the island from Qulensya in December 1896, leaving from Hadibu in February 1897.
20th and 21st centuries In 2003, a proposal by Yemen's public works authority was submitted to construct a road connecting Qulensya to the island's capital of Hadibu. This new construction would have violated Yemeni conservational law in place to protect the nearby
Detwah Lagoon Nature Sanctuary, which the road would have cut through. After presidential intervention, the road was diverted around the sanctuary to follow the path of an already existing trail. More recent plans have also called for a road connecting Qulensya to the isolated fishing village of
Neet to its southwest, which is home to approximately 300 seasonal fishermen who spend much of the year in Qulensya itself. In December 2004, the island of Socotra was impacted by the
2004 Indian Ocean tsunami caused by an earthquake of at least 9.0 magnitude off the coast of
Sumatra. The runup of the tsunami was roughly higher than usual in Qulensya, in line with estimates from across the island causing one fatality. ==Demographics==