Al-Luḥayyah, town, western Yemen, on the Red Sea coast. Situated on the coastal plain known as the Tihāmah, it is one of the country’s minor ports. It was founded in the mid-15th century, and tradition connects its origin with a local holy man, Sheikh Salei, around whose dwelling and tomb the town is supposed to have developed. By the end of the 18th century it was a walled and fortified town. After being held by the Ottomans from about 1800 to World War I, in 1918 it was taken by the British, who gave it, with the rest of the Yemeni Tihāmah, to the Idrīsī rulers of Asir, to the north. Recovered by Yemen in 1925, the town and coastal plain were occupied in 1934 by the Saudis, who returned them to Yemen by the terms of the Treaty of Al-Ṭāʾif of that year.
The port is a shallow open roadstead, 4 miles (6 km) southwest of the town, that is partially protected by the offshore island of Al-Urmak. Once a Yemeni coffee export centre, the town and port have declined greatly in the last 200 years; the formerly strong fort is in ruins. Traffic is limited to coastal shipping; Yemen’s international seaborne trade is now centred at the modern facilities at Aḥmadī, the port of Al-Ḥudaydah. Pop. (2004) 4,869.