Baní


title: "Baní" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["populated-places-in-peravia-province", "municipalities-of-the-dominican-republic", "1764-establishments-in-the-spanish-empire", "populated-places-established-in-1764"] topic_path: "geography/spain" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baní" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::data[format=table title="Infobox settlement"]

FieldValue
nameBaní
settlement_typeMunicipality
official_namePeravia
image_skylineBani,_Peravia,_Dominican_Republic_town.jpg
image_captionBaní, Dominican Republic town church
pushpin_mapDominican Republic
pushpin_relief1
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1Peravia
established_titleFounded
established_date1764 ( years ago)
established_title2Municipality since
established_date21845
area_total_km2642.75
area_footnotes
elevation_m61
elevation_footnotes{{cite book
lastDe la Fuente
firstSantiago
titleGeografía Dominicana
publisherEditora Colegial Quisqueyana
year1976
locationSanto Domingo, Dominican Republic
languagees }}
population_total158,019
population_as_of2022 census
total_typeTotal
population_urban111,658
population_density_km2auto
population_blank1_titleDemonym
population_blank1Banilejo(a)
population_footnotes
blank_nameDistance to
Santo Domingo
blank_info
65 km
blank1_nameMunicipal Districts
blank1_info9
blank2_nameClimate
blank2_infoAw
::

::callout[type=note] the municipality in the Dominican Republic ::

|name =Baní |settlement_type =Municipality |official_name =Peravia |image_skyline = Bani,_Peravia,_Dominican_Republic_town.jpg |image_caption = Baní, Dominican Republic town church |pushpin_map =Dominican Republic |pushpin_relief = 1 |mapsize = |coordinates = |subdivision_type =Country |subdivision_name = |subdivision_type1 =Province |subdivision_name1 =Peravia |established_title =Founded |established_date =1764 ( years ago) |established_title2 =Municipality since |established_date2 =1845 |area_total_km2 =642.75 |area_footnotes = |elevation_m =61 |elevation_footnotes ={{cite book | last = De la Fuente | first = Santiago | title = Geografía Dominicana | publisher = Editora Colegial Quisqueyana | year = 1976 | location = Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic | language = es }} |population_total =158,019 |population_as_of =2022 census |total_type =Total |population_urban =111,658 |population_density_km2 =auto |population_blank1_title =Demonym |population_blank1 =Banilejo(a) |population_footnotes = |blank_name =Distance to – Santo Domingo |blank_info = 65 km |blank1_name =Municipal Districts |blank1_info =9 |blank2_name = Climate |blank2_info = Aw

Baní is a capital town of the Peravia Province, Dominican Republic. It is the commercial and manufacturing center in the southern region of Valdesia. The town is located 65 km south of the capital city Santo Domingo.

Baní is the headquarters of the Southcentral General Directorate of the National Police, the Central Regional Directorate of the Ministry of Agriculture and the South Regional Directorate of the General Directorate of Traffic Safety and Land Transport (DIGESETT).

Overview

The city of Bani is the capital of the Peravia province; its residents also know it as the home of poets. The province's population is 169,865 people, with 61,864 living in the Bani metro area. This is a tightly knit community with families and neighborhoods dating back several centuries.

Bani is a Taino word meaning "abundant water." The area was named after an important Taino leader of the Maguana people. He was said to be one of Caonabo's closest allies. But, it wasn't until 1764 when a group of neighbors concerned with their security and safety came together to purchase a property large enough to build their own village in the valley of Bani. Historians set the sum of this purchase as that of “300 pesos fuertes” for a property called Cerro Gordo; the principals were listed as Francisco Baez and Bartolome del Castillo.

History

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 6 km 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

Owing to its location in the rain shadow of the trade winds, Baní has a relatively dry tropical savanna climate (Köppen Aw) with a pronounced dry season between December and April. |location = Baní (1961–1990) |metric first = yes |single line = yes |width = auto |temperature colour = pastel |Jan record high C = 35.5 |Feb record high C = 36.5 |Mar record high C = 36.5 |Apr record high C = 37.2 |May record high C = 36.7 |Jun record high C = 36.6 |Jul record high C = 37.0 |Aug record high C = 38.0 |Sep record high C = 38.5 |Oct record high C = 38.0 |Nov record high C = 37.0 |Dec record high C = 37.5 |year record high C = 38.5 |Jan high C = 31.2 |Feb high C = 31.5 |Mar high C = 32 |Apr high C = 32.6 |May high C = 32.6 |Jun high C = 32.7 |Jul high C = 33.5 |Aug high C = 33.5 |Sep high C = 33.3 |Oct high C = 32.8 |Nov high C = 32.3 |Dec high C = 31.3 |year high C = 32.4 |Jan low C = 20.5 |Feb low C = 20.7 |Mar low C = 21.5 |Apr low C = 22.2 |May low C = 22.7 |Jun low C = 23.2 |Jul low C = 23.8 |Aug low C = 23.5 |Sep low C = 23.0 |Oct low C = 22.5 |Nov low C = 21.7 |Dec low C = 20.6 |year low C = 22.2 |Jan record low C = 14.0 |Feb record low C = 14.5 |Mar record low C = 15.5 |Apr record low C = 16.0 |May record low C = 19.0 |Jun record low C = 19.0 |Jul record low C = 20.0 |Aug record low C = 20.0 |Sep record low C = 20.0 |Oct record low C = 18.0 |Nov record low C = 15.5 |Dec record low C = 15.0 |year record low C = 14.0 |rain colour = green |Jan rain mm = 24.7 |Feb rain mm = 25.7 |Mar rain mm = 23.2 |Apr rain mm = 36.8 |May rain mm = 118.6 |Jun rain mm = 135.2 |Jul rain mm = 79.6 |Aug rain mm = 125.0 |Sep rain mm = 131.9 |Oct rain mm = 137.2 |Nov rain mm = 61.0 |Dec rain mm = 29.8 |unit rain days = 1.0 mm |Jan rain days = 3.7 |Feb rain days = 3.4 |Mar rain days = 4.0 |Apr rain days = 4.4 |May rain days = 9.4 |Jun rain days = 9.4 |Jul rain days = 6.9 |Aug rain days = 8.5 |Sep rain days = 7.8 |Oct rain days = 9.4 |Nov rain days = 5.2 |Dec rain days = 3.5 |year rain days = 75.6 |source 1 = NOAA{{cite web | url = ftp://ftp.atdd.noaa.gov/pub/GCOS/WMO-Normals/TABLES/REG_IV/DR/00000003.TXT | title = Bani Climate Normals 1961-1990 | publisher = National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20201031184149/ftp://ftp.atdd.noaa.gov/pub/GCOS/WMO-Normals/TABLES/REG_IV/DR/00000003.TXT | archive-date = 2020-10-31 | url-status = dead | access-date = September 11, 2016}}

Economy

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/dd/Bani,_Peravia,_Dominican_Republic_beach_town.jpg" caption="Puntarena beach in Bani, Dominican Republic"] ::

Baní's economy is based on agribusiness. In Baní, different products are processed such as coffee, tomato, corn, pigeon peas, onion, coconut, mango, banana, cashew, milk and salt. The main industries are Peravia Industrial (La Famosa), Industrias Banilejas (Induban), La Fosforera del Caribe, the Banileja free zone and the Punta Catalina Thermoelectric Power Plant. There are also different industries in the construction sector. ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3f/Bani,_Peravia,_Dominican_Republic_people.jpg" caption="People in Bani, Dominican Republic"] ::

Retail trade is also part of the town's economy. The main shopping centers are the La Maravilla network of stores, and supermarkets. The tourism sector includes several hotels and is developing in the province with the construction of two large tourist projects.

The Grupo Peravia Industrial was established in 1963 who are the owners of the La Famosa brand among others and quickly achieved popularity among Dominicans under its founder Don Roberto Serrano Oms. Then there is Industrias Banilejas who own Induban, had also had their origins in Baní under its founder Manuel de Jesús Perelló Báez in 1945. Additionally, Valdesia Coffee produced between the mountains of Peravia, San Cristóbal and Ocoa was recognized as a Protected Designation of Origin by the European Union in 2017.

People from Baní

Miscellaneous

References

References

  1. link. (April 17, 2009)
  2. Citypopulation, [https://www.citypopulation.de/en/domrep/admin/peravia/1701__ban%C3%AD/ Bani, Municipality]
  3. (2014-11-29). "ES EL NOMBRE DE BANI DE ORIGEN INDOANTILLANO O BIBLICO?".
  4. access-date=2025-03-08 |archive-url=An Ethnography - Discovering the hidden identity of the Banilejos" https://www.amazon.com/Ethnography-Discovering-Hidden-Identity-Banilejos/dp/1533643636/

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populated-places-in-peravia-provincemunicipalities-of-the-dominican-republic1764-establishments-in-the-spanish-empirepopulated-places-established-in-1764