On November 6, 1844 C.E., a young nation put pen to paper and defined itself. After more than three centuries of colonial rule, two decades of Haitian unification, and a declaration of independence earlier that same year, the Dominican Republic ratified its first constitution — a document that set down, however imperfectly, a vision of self-governance for a people who had never before held it on their own terms.
What the evidence shows
- Dominican constitution: Ratified on November 6, 1844 C.E., the first Dominican constitution established a republican government with three branches, modeled in part on the U.S. Constitution and French republican ideals.
- Independence declaration: The Dominican Republic formally declared independence from Haiti on February 27, 1844 C.E., making the constitution a direct outgrowth of a liberation movement led by a secret society called La Trinitaria.
- Founding republic: The First Dominican Republic emerged from a society shaped by Spanish colonialism, African enslavement, and Haitian rule — a tripartite heritage that made constitutional nation-building both urgent and complicated.
A nation born from layers of history
The island of Hispaniola had been inhabited for thousands of years before European contact. The Taíno people — Arawakan-speaking farmers, fishers, and ceramicists — called their home Quisqueya, meaning “mother of all lands.” By 1492 C.E., they numbered in the hundreds of thousands across five chiefdoms.
Within decades of Columbus’s arrival, that population had collapsed catastrophically. Disease, forced labor in gold mines, and deliberate violence reduced the Taíno population by an estimated 95% within a century. The island was then repopulated through African enslavement and Spanish settlement, forming the complex cultural and racial ancestry that would define Dominican society.
France gained control of the western third of the island — later Haiti — in 1697 C.E. Spain ceded the eastern portion to France in 1795 C.E., but it was returned in 1815 C.E. after the Napoleonic Wars. The eastern region briefly declared independence as the Republic of Spanish Haiti in 1821 C.E., only to be absorbed into the Haitian Republic within months. It was under Haitian rule for 22 years — until 1844 C.E.
La Trinitaria and the push for sovereignty
The independence movement was driven largely by Juan Pablo Duarte, a Dominican intellectual who had studied in Europe and returned with liberal republican ideals. In 1838 C.E., Duarte founded La Trinitaria, a clandestine organization dedicated to full independence — not annexation by another power, not protectorate status, but genuine sovereignty.
On February 27, 1844 C.E., the movement succeeded. Dominican forces took control of key positions in Santo Domingo, and independence was proclaimed. The date is still celebrated as Dominican Independence Day.
The constitution that followed nine months later drew on Enlightenment principles that were circulating across the Atlantic world at the time. It established a separation of powers, guaranteed certain individual rights, and defined Dominican citizenship. It was, in many ways, a document of its revolutionary moment — ambitious in aspiration, contested in practice.
Lasting impact
The 1844 C.E. constitution was the first of many. Between independence and 1914 C.E., the Dominican Republic adopted 19 separate constitutions — a number that reflects both the instability of the era and the persistent belief that written law could anchor a society still finding its footing. Each constitution, however short-lived, kept alive the idea that governance required a legal foundation.
The founding moment also produced enduring national symbols and a civic mythology that Dominicans still draw on. Duarte, along with Francisco del Rosario Sánchez and Ramón Mella — known as the Founding Fathers — remain central figures in Dominican national identity. Their portraits appear on currency, their names on public spaces, their story taught in schools across the country.
Crucially, the 1844 C.E. independence established the legal and political scaffolding that, after generations of turbulence, eventually supported a more durable democratic order. Freedom House today rates the Dominican Republic as a functioning electoral democracy — a status that traces its formal origins to that first constitutional moment.
The African heritage of the Dominican people, long marginalized in official national narratives that emphasized Hispanic identity, has increasingly been acknowledged by scholars and cultural movements as central to what the country is. The constitution was written by and for elites — but the society it governed was built, in the most literal sense, by enslaved Africans and their descendants.
Blindspots and limits
The first Dominican constitution excluded women from political participation entirely and offered no meaningful protections for the descendants of enslaved Africans who formed the backbone of Dominican society. The document’s liberal language did not translate into liberal practice: within years, caudillo rule — personalized, military-backed dictatorship — became the political norm, with 53 individuals holding the presidency between 1844 and 1914 C.E. and only three completing their full terms. Independence from Haiti also hardened an anti-Haitian ideology among Dominican elites that would have devastating consequences in the centuries to come, most catastrophically in the Parsley Massacre of 1937 C.E. and in ongoing statelessness policies targeting Haitian-descended Dominicans.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — History of the Dominican Republic
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights gain global recognition at COP30
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the Dominican Republic
About this article
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