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  2. San Juan de la Maguana is a city and municipality in the western region of the Dominican Republic and capital of the San Juan province. It was one of the first cities established on the island; founded in 1503, and was given the name of San Juan de la Maguana by San Juan Bautista and the Taino name of the valley: Maguana.

  3. As one of the country’s first cities, it was founded in 1503 and it takes its name from Saint John the Baptist and the Taíno name for the valley, Maguana. The Taíno commander of Maguana was Caonabo, who fought against the Spanish colonisers.

  4. San Juan de la Maguana was founded by the Spanish in 1503 by Diego Velázquez, who later went to conquest the island of Cuba, when Nicolás de Ovando was the Spanish governor of the island. [3] In 1606, those that were living in San Juan de la Maguana were ordered by the Spanish king to move to a place to the northwest of the city of Santo ...

  5. Article History. In full: San Juan de la Maguana. San Juan, city, western Dominican Republic. It lies on the San Juan River, an affluent of the Yaque del Sur River, northwest of Santo Domingo city. The Spanish explorer Diego Velázquez founded San Juan in 1508 by royal decree on the site of the Taino Indian capital, then ruled by Chief Caonabo.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Aug 30, 2023 · San Juan de la Maguana was created on March 5, 1845. San Juan de la Maguana is part of the San Juan province. According to the 2010 Census, San Juan de la Maguana had a population of 233,392. [1] Localities within San Juan de la Maguana. Civil Registration. Parish Records.

  7. San Juan de la Maguana, Dominican Republic cathedral church. In 1606, the people who were still scattered in the San Juan area, were transferred to Azua, leaving that landscape practically depopulated. It was not until the end of the 17th century that the repopulation of San Juan de la Maguana began.

  8. The settlements of La Yaguana, and Bayaja, on the west and north coasts respectively of modern-day Haiti were burned, as were the settlements of Monte Cristi and Puerto Plata on the north coast and San Juan de la Maguana in the southwestern area of the modern-day Dominican Republic.

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