Dominican Republic

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Introducing Dominican Republic

The Dominican Republic (DR) is a land of contrasts – the physical kind, like the highest peak and the lowest point in the Caribbean, and the more metaphorical kind, like that between the urban street life of Santo Domingo and the rural villages only a short drive away.

Santo Domingo, or ‘La Capital’ as it’s typically called, is to Dominicans what New York is to Americans, a collage of cultures; or what Havana is to Cubans, a vibrant beating heart that fuels the entire country. It’s also a living museum, offering the sight of New World firsts scattered around the charming cobblestone streets of the Zona Colonial.

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Teenage schoolgirls walking home from school.
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Teenage schoolgirls walking home from school.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Margie Politzer
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Produce vendor pedalling through the streets on bicycle.
  • Man making cigars by hand.
  • Tourists enjoying sun and sea near Punta Cana.
  • Golfing in Paradise at Playa Grande golf course, designed by Robert Trent Jones ten out of the eighteen holes are on the water's edge, in the San Juan Province.
  • Signs, shops, traffic and people, all on Duarte Avenue, Santo Domingo
  • Oblique view of the Citadel of Columbus Museum facade and entrance, designed in Gothic-Mudejar transitional style and originally used as a residence by Diego Columbus, son of the explorer and the first Governor of Santo Domingo in 1509.
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