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Santo Domingo - History |
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The original city was located on the left (east) bank of the Ozama River and was called Nueva Isabella in honor of Queen Isabella. It was destroyed by a hurricane, however, and was rebuilt in 1502 at its present location on the right bank of the river. It became the starting point of most of the Spanish expeditions of exploration and conquest of the other West Indian islands and the adjacent mainland. The colony prospered as the seat of government of the Spanish possessions in the Americas until the conquest of Mexico and Peru, after which its importance declined. In 1586 Sir Francis Drake, the English buccaneer, sacked the city. In 1655 its inhabitants defeated a British force that had been sent to seize the city. From 1795 to 1809 Santo Domingo was under French domination, and then, after a brief Spanish period, it was conquered by invaders from Haiti. Independence was proclaimed in 1844, and Santo Domingo became the capital of the new Dominican Republic until the republic's annexation to Spain in 1861-65. The city has been the Dominican capital since the restoration of independence in 1865. The city's name, officially changed in 1936 to Ciudad Trujillo in honor of the dictator Rafael Trujillo, was restored after his assassination in 1961.
Santo Domingo is also the chief seaport of the Dominican Republic. Its harbor at the mouth of the Ozama River was greatly improved in the 1930s in order to handle the largest vessels, and the port handles both heavy passenger and freight traffic. Roads connect the capital with the rest of the republic. There are no railway lines from the city, except those of the nearby sugar refineries. An international airport serves the city. Santo Domingo claims the oldest university in the Western Hemisphere: the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo (founded 1538). The city's other educational institutions include the Pedro Henriquez Urena National University (1966) and a technological university. Cultural institutions include the National Theatre - School of Art, the music conservatory and the National Symphony Orchestra, the Museum of Dominican Man - important for its pre-Columbian collection - and various public and private libraries, especially the National Library. The two most prominent colonial monuments in Santo Domingo are the cathedral and the palace of Diego Columbus. The cathedral, built in Spanish Renaissance style, dates from 1514 and contains the reputed remains of Christopher Columbus. |
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