The settlement by the colonizers in the Baní plain has its origins in the beginning of the 16th century, during the beginning of sugar production. In its vicinity there were several sugar mills near the Nizao and Ocoa rivers. One of the most important mills was founded by Alonso de Suazo, judge of the
Royal Court of Santo Domingo, on the banks of the Ocoa River. From 1680 to 1684 families from the
Canary Islands spread throughout the fields nearby Santo Domingo, especially through the territories of today's Baní. After a synod in 1683, a parish, dedicated to
Our Lady of Regla, was erected in Baní to serve as a center of worship for the surrounding
haciendas and
estancias. According to a book written on the founding families of Baní: Pimentel, Mejia, Rivera, Herrera, Ortiz, Garcia, Ruiz, Lara, Machado, Melo, Castro, Peynado, Sanchez, Dias, Pena, Jimenez, Caraballo, Bernal, Lluberes, Soto, Carvajal, Perez, Olivas, Aybar, Fernandez, Pereyra, Rodriguez, Enriquez, Gutierrez, Rojas, Leon, Gonzalez, Araujo, Nieto, and Cabral. In addition to these, the Báez and the Guerrero were a strong part of the establishment of the city. The city of Baní was officially founded on 2 March 1764, when a sale contract for 374
Spanish dollars was signed between the parishioners of Baní and the del Castillo and Báez families, the owners of the land in which Baní was to be erected, under the auspices of the Spanish governor
Don Manuel de Azlor.
Father Manuel Franco de Medina, the parochial vicar, participated in this negotiation, representing the landowners, while
General Pablo Romero represented the neighbors. On the same day, the streets of the town were laid out the parishioners divided the land, laid out the streets, and began to build what would become their
town houses, as in that time, people typically used to have a farm and house in the countryside and a house in the most nearby town. Also, the local parish was enlarged by adding a chapel. In 1789 Baní was an ethnically homogeneous town, with a white population of Canary Islander origin that reached 2,000 inhabitants; the base of its economy was cattle ranching (mainly
swine) and
logging. Agriculture in that era was non-existent. Despite the efforts of Governor Azlor, Baní would not have a town council nor autonomy from the city of Santo Domingo until 1810, because during the 1700s the Santo Domingo elite of Basque and Castilian origin disdained the Canary Islander population for their supposed "moral inferiority" and ethnic difference from
Peninsular Spaniards. By 1810 much of the old colonial elite had fled to Venezuela due to the
1805 Haitian invasion. After the Independence, the Central Government Board established a territorial division of the Republic in 1844, which made Baní a
commune in the
Department of Santo Domingo. In 1844 Baní was the headquarters of the “Ocoa Battalion” unit of the
Dominican Army made up of soldiers from the region and composed of two Rifle Companies and one of Hunters. Baní was connected by land with
Santo Domingo through the royal road, being a narrow in a trip that lasted around 12 hours, which communicated with the south of the country through the communities of Sombrero, Matanzas,
Sabana Buey and
Palmar de Ocoa. To transport goods, the sea route was used using schooners, through coastal ports that existed along the coast.
Downtown Baní File:Bani Dominican Republic town.jpg File:Bani Dominican Republic town 8.jpg File:Bani Dominican Republic town 6.jpg File:Bani Dominican Republic town 5.jpg File:Bani,_Peravia,_Dominican_Republic_church.jpg File:Bani Dominican Republic town 7.jpg Its culture and customs were most accurately portrayed in the novel
Bani o Engracia y Antoñita, written by Francisco Gregorio Billini. The local beach is "Playa Los Almendros" (Almendros Beach,) situated south of the center square. The town's original design follows the classic Spanish square, with a park in the center of the town surrounded by the local church and the local government (mayor's office). The city's Patron Saint is "Nuestra Señora de Regla (Our Lady of Regla)," whose celebration is on 21 November every year. Additionally, Baní is surrounded by many smaller towns with many with their own specific identities. One example is Paya, well known around the country for its milk-based candies (most famously "Dulce de Leche," or Milk Candy.) Another is Salinas, a town by the Salinas bay, where salt is produced. Salinas is famous for its Sand Dunes, that make the Dominican Republic the country with the largest sand dunes in the Caribbean.
Dunas de Baní File:Dunas de Baní 1.jpg File:Bani,_Peravia,_Dominican_Republic_beach.jpg File:Bani,_Peravia,_Dominican_Republic.jpg File:Dunas de Baní 7.jpg ==Climate==