Samaná (town) explained

Samaná/Xamana
Official Name:Santa Bárbara de Samaná/Saint Barbara of Samana
Pushpin Map:Dominican Republic
Pushpin Relief:1
Pushpin Map Caption:Samaná in the Dominican Republic
Mapsize:200px
Coordinates:19.2°N -88°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Dominican Republic
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Samaná
Established Title:Founded
Established Date:1756
Established Title2:Municipality since
Established Date2:1865
Area Total Km2:412.11
Area Footnotes:[1]
Elevation M:5
Elevation Footnotes:[2]
Population As Of:2012
Population Total:108179
Total Type:Total
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Blank1 Title:Demonym
Population Blank1:Samanés/ Samana American
Population Footnotes:[3]
Blank Name:Municipalities
Blank Info:3

Samaná (old spelling: Xamaná), in full Santa Bárbara de Samaná, is a town and municipality in northeastern Dominican Republic and the capital of Samaná Province. It is on the northern coast of Samaná Bay. The town is an important tourism destination and the main center for whale-watching tours in the Caribbean region.[4] [5]

The town has three municipal districts: El Limón, Las Galeras, and Arroyo Barril. According to the 2012 population and housing census, the municipality has a total population of 108,179.

Geography

Samaná is on a small plain close to the coast but most of the town is in the hills that enclose the plain.

It is the largest municipality of the province. It has a total area of 412.11 km² (almost 49% of the total area of the province), including the three municipal districts that are part of the municipality.

Most of the territory is occupied by the Sierra de Samaná, a short mountain range with steep slopes but no high mountains. The highest mountain is Monte Mesa (605 m).

Population

The demonym for the inhabitants of Samaná, both the city and the province, is Samanés (men and women). It is also possible to use Samanense.

History

The town of Santa Barbara of Samaná sits on the Samaná Peninsula which came first into written history on 13 January 1493, when Christopher Columbus made here the last stop of his first voyage to the New World. He landed on what today is known as the Rincón Beach, where he met the Ciguayos who presented him with the only violent resistance he faced during this visit to the Americas. The Cigüayos had refused to trade their bows and arrows that Columbus's pathfinders wanted. In the ensuing clash, two Amerindians were wounded. Because of the Ciguayos' use of arrows, the Admiral called the inlet the Bay of Arrows (or Gulf of Arrows). Columbus took on board four natives to show in Spain, but only one survived. For most of the colonial period, the Spanish did not settle here, opening the place for runaways and privateers.[6] [7]

In 1756, under the direction of Spanish governor Francisco Rubio y Peñaranda, families from the Canary Islands founded the village and named it Santa Bárbara de Samaná. It was named Santa Bárbara after the Queen Bárbara de Braganza, wife of King Ferdinand VI of Spain. They also settled on the other side of the bay, in Sabana de la Mar. As part of the Peace of Basel's accords, the entire Santo Domingo colony passed over to the French in 1796. But in 1807, a small force from the British Royal Navy raided Samaná and turned it back to the Spanish creoles who were fighting against the last French bastion on the island. In 1822, after the Haitians had occupied the entire island, a French vessel threatened a renewal of the French-Haitian hostilities. After a small encounter called the Samaná Affair, the French retired, taking with them various families that had resettled here after the Haitian Revolution.[8]

In 1824, Haitian President Jean-Pierre Boyer invited United States Blacks to migrate to Haiti, which by then ruled the entire island of Hispaniola. Various U.S. families settled in Samaná and prospered. Their descendants are known as Samaná Americans. With the creation of the Samaná Maritime District (an old division similar to a province) in 1865, the city was elevated to the category of municipality.[9]

Economy

The main economic activities of the municipality are tourism, agriculture and fishing. The largest boost to local economy takes place from January to March with the annual migration of thousands of North Atlantic humpback whales that come to the Samaná Bay to give birth. Samaná is the center of the country's tourism during these months.

Climate

The mean annual rainfall in Samaná is 2,349.8 mm and the mean annual temperature is 26.5 °C.

Notable people

Transport

There are two commercial airports: the international Samaná El Catey International Airport, 40 miles by road from the city, and the domestic Arroyo Barril Airport, 10 miles from the city by car.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Superficies a nivel de municipios, Oficina Nacional de Estadistica
  2. Book: De la Fuente , Santiago . Geografía Dominicana . Editora Colegial Quisqueyana . 1976 . Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic . es .
  3. Censo 2012 de Población y Vivienda, Oficina Nacional de Estadistica
  4. Web site: Whale and dolphin watching . 2014-10-30 . 2016-10-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161001212201/http://www.footprinttravelguides.com/latin-america/caribbean-islands/essentials/sport-and-activities/whale-and-dolphin-watching . dead .
  5. Web site: 2023-04-05 . Relation: Samaná (7386746) . 2024-03-30 . OpenStreetMap . en.
  6. Book: Flight to Freedom: African Runaways and Maroons in the Americas . University of West Indies Press . Thompson, Alvin O. . 2006 . 181 . 9766401802.
  7. Book: The Buccaneers of America . Allen, Limited . Exquemelin, Alexandre Olivier . 1911 . 19 and 263.
  8. Book: Samana: pasado y porvenir . Sociedad Dominicana de Geografía . Rodríguez Demorizi, Emilio . 1973.
  9. La historia de los inmigrantes afro-americanos y sus iglesias en Samaná según el reverendo Nehemiah Willmore . Davis, Martha Ellen . Boletín del Archivo General de la Nación . 2007 . 159 . 237–245.
  10. Web site: Brayan Bello stats. Baseball Reference . July 6, 2022.