By the late 18th century the island of
Hispaniola had been divided into two European colonies:
Saint-Domingue, in the west, governed by France; and
Santo Domingo, governed by Spain, occupying the eastern two-thirds of Hispaniola. By the 1790s, large-scale rebellions erupted in the western portion of the island, spearheaded by men such as
Toussaint Louverture and
Jean-Jacques Dessalines which led to the eventual removal of the French and the independence of Haiti. Following the independence of Haiti, massive portions of the remaining French population were murdered. The eastern portion of the island was preparing itself for an eventual separation from Spain.
First unification under the French During the second half of the eighteenth century, Saint-Domingue quickly developed into the most prosperous plantation colony of the New World. As a result of the sugar plantations of the French colony worked by
African slaves; sugar had become an indispensable commodity in Europe. By contrast, Santo Domingo, the eastern side that had once been the
headquarters of Spanish colonial power in the New World, had long fallen into decline. The economy was stalled, the land largely unexploited and used for subsistence agriculture and cattle ranching, and the population was much lower than in Saint-Domingue. The accounts by the Dominican essayist and politician
José Núñez de Cáceres cite the Spanish colony's population at around 80,000, mainly composed of
criollos, mulattos, freedmen, and a few black slaves. Saint-Domingue, on the other hand, was nearing a million slaves. In the aftermath of the war between the new French Republic and Spain, the latter, by the
Peace of Basel of July 22, 1795, ceded its two-thirds of the island to France in exchange for the evacuation of the province of
Guipuzcoa occupied by the French since 1793. However, due to the near chaotic situation in Saint-Domingue resulting from uprisings by mulattos and freedmen since 1791, the expected armed opposition of the Spanish settlers of Santo Domingo who feared the abolition of slavery if the French were to take over, and under the belief that the
British would seize Santo Domingo if the transfer was effected, the
Committee of Public Safety decided to delay the occupation until such time as it had enough military and naval forces to take possession of the eastern part of the island. This was to occur in January 1801 when
Toussaint Louverture, then still loyal to France, occupied Santo Domingo in the name of the French Republic. In 1804 the leader of the Haitian revolution,
Jean-Jacques Dessalines,
declared Haiti's independence. Independence did not come easily given the fact that Haiti had been France's most profitable colony. Under Toussaint Louverture's government, slavery was abolished for the first time on the eastern portion of Hispaniola until the colony was ceded to France. While the French had lost their former colony of Saint-Domingue by 1804, the French commander of the former Spanish side had been able to repulse the attacks of Jean-Jacques Dessalines, but in 1808, the Dominicans, led by
Juan Sánchez Ramírez, revolted and the following year, with the help of a
Royal Navy squadron,
ended French control of the city of Santo Domingo. Spanish rule was
reestablished. However, this short period under which the whole of Hispaniola was
de jure under French rule was to be the chief justification of the freed Haitians in their quest to reunite the island under their rule.
1805: Haitian Forces Invasion In February 1805, Haitian forces, under
Jean-Jacques Dessalines, invaded from the southern route in opposition of French-led approved
slave raiding. Unable to overpower the Spanish–French defense, and intimidated by the arrival of a French fleet in support of Borgella in Santo Domingo, the army of Dessalines along with
Henri Christophe raided through the interior Dominican towns
Santiago and
Moca, while
Alexandre Pétion invaded
Azua. On his retreat from Santo Domingo, Dessalines arrived in Santiago on April 12, 1805. While in Santiago, Haitian forces set fire to the town, including churches and convents. The army killed approximately 400 inhabitants including some priests and took prisoners to Haiti. More people were killed on Dessalines' orders in the French-held portions of the island, including the towns of
Monte Plata,
Cotuí and
La Vega and approximately 500 people of the northern town of Moca. The
barrister Gaspar de Arredondo y Pichardo wrote, "40 [Dominican] children had their throats cut at the church in Moca, and the bodies found at the presbytery, which is the space that encircles the church's altar..." Survivors from the raids fled to eastern locations including
Higüey through Cotuí as well as to other territories of the Spanish Antilles. Prisoners rounded up by the troops were forced to accompany the army back to Haiti, where, once they arrived, were either killed or forced to work on plantations. In total, over the course of a few weeks, nearly half of Santo Domingo's population were slaughtered by the Haitian soldiers. Haitian rebel leaders encouraged fugitive African slaves to move into Hispaniola and they formed communities such as San Lorenzo de Los Mina, which is currently part of the "city" of Santo Domingo. Fugitives arrived from other parts of the West Indies as well, especially from the various islands of the
Lesser Antilles. Due to the political instability and volatile environment in the island, many of the wealthiest white families in Santo Domingo fled between 1795 and 1820. They settled in Venezuela, Puerto Rico, and Cuba resulting in a
human capital flight. The white families who stayed on the island did not consider owning slaves due to the political crisis in the island but the few rich white elites that did, fled the colony. Many of these white families that stayed on the island settled in the
Cibao region owning land. Historians state that "Santo Domingo lost most of its
best families" at that era, specially during the slave revolts. Nevertheless, during the Dominican independence movement many whites returned back to the island to reclaim their territory.
1806: Struggle to unite the South and North of Haiti On October 17, 1806, Dessalines was assassinated, an act which was instigated by his own generals
Henri Christophe and
Alexandre Pétion. Afterward, both Christophe and Pétion failed to agree on who was going to be the next
leader-for-life (a title created by Dessalines himself), so they went separate ways: Christophe took the North of Haiti (which he named
Kingdom of Haiti), while Pétion got for himself the South part of Haiti (the newly created
Republic of Haiti); and immediately they started a series of wars to take over the other's side. The internal military conflicts lasted until 1820 when Haitian president
Jean-Pierre Boyer finally unified both the South and North of Haiti. After this, Boyer aimed his sights on the struggling Spanish-side of the island.
Spanish reconquest of Santo Domingo Juan Sánchez Ramírez a Dominican general commanded the troops that fought against the French in
Santo Domingo between 1808 and 1809 in the
Battle of Palo Hincado, resulting in a victory against the French, and the return of Santo Domingo to Spanish governance. Sánchez Ramírez, an agricultural landowner, had already fought against the French in the War of the Convention, and in 1803 he had emigrated to Puerto Rico, from where he returned in 1807 to foment the insurrection. To do this, he requested the help of the governor of Puerto Rico,
Toribio Montes, and of Dominican settlers who had fled to that island, with whose forces he revolted against the French troops of general and governor Jean-Louis Ferrand, whom he defeated on July 11, 1808, in the battle of Palo Hincado. Santo Domingo was declared Spanish by Ramírez in July 1809. Under his government, Santo Domingo again traded with the allied countries to Spain, and the
Universidad Santo Tomás de Aquino (UASD) was reopened. He suspended the confiscations that the French government had executed against the colony. He also allowed the British to trade in the ports of Santo Domingo.
1821: Independence from Spain On November 9, 1821, Spanish colonial rule over Santo Domingo was overthrown by a group led by
José Núñez de Cáceres, the colony's former administrator, and the rebels proclaimed independence from the Spanish crown on December 1, 1821. The new nation was known as
Republic of Spanish Haiti (), as
Haiti had been the indigenous name of the island. Support of the unification found itself to be more popular among the Black population who believed that Boyers government would usher an era of social reform, including the
abolition of slavery. In contrast, the white and multiracial populations, however, found themselves split on the idea of merging with the neighboring country. After deals with Bolivar fell through and receiving messages of economic and military support from Boyer, Caceres found himself more obliged to side with Creole Haiti. The idea had been gaining some traction among members of the military, and in 1821 Governor
Sebastián Kindelán y Oregon discovered that some of the Dominican military officers in Azua and Santo Domingo had already become part of the plan for unification with Haiti. A defining moment took place on November 15, 1821, when the leaders of several Dominican frontier towns, particularly Dajabón and Montecristi, adopted the Haitian flag. The Dominican nationalists who were against the unification of the island were at a serious disadvantage compared to the
Haitian military, having at their disposal only an untrained infantry force. Haiti's population was eight to ten times larger than that of the Dominican population, and the Dominicans had to also contend with a
severely underdeveloped economy. The Haitian military had been hardened after decades of conflict with European powers and rival political factions in Haiti, and memories of the numerous racial massacres of the Revolution were still fresh in the mind of Haitian troops, increasing their determination to never lose a battle. ==Occupation==