[3] Surrounding villages are: Malo Ilino and Bazernik from the southwest and west, Dolenci and Zeleznec from the north and northeast, Žvan from the southeast, and Sloeshtica from the south.
[4] The onomastics consisted almost entirely of Christian Slavic anothroponyms, with the exception of one case of the Albanian anthroponym Dushman being present.
[6] In 1683 the inhabitants of Babino together with those of Kochishte, Zashle, Brezovo and Dolenci refused to pay the tax and killed their collector.
[7] In the XIX century Babino is a completely Christian village in the Bitola kaza, nahija Demir Hisar of the Ottoman Empire.
On the evening of August 1, 1903, in the Babino meadows of the locality "Ramni Livadi" the Kruševo flag was waved which was completely red, with the inscription "Freedom or death".
In Babino's meadows, the detachments took an oath of "Death or Freedom" and set out to attack the village of Pribilci.
A collision with the Turkish army took place near Ilinska Church and 7 chetniks were killed there, all from the village of Virovo.
[12] Residents believe the legend of the old woman from Babino, who, driven away by her daughters-in-law, lived alone deep in the forests of Ilinska Mountain for years.
The expelled old woman, angry with fate, cursed the whole female gender from the end of her old age to live a lonely life just like her.
[13] According to another legend, when the ancient Romans first conquered this territory, they started the practice of extermination of the male population, in order to facilitate assimilation and colonization.
[17] The table below provides an overview of the population in all census years: According to Branislav Rusic's research in 1951 genera in the village:[21] Indigenous: Ugleshovci (5 k.), Tokmakovci (2 k.), Radevci (4 k.), Karadakovci (2 k.), Gjurkovci (4 k.), Despotovci (14 k.), Spasenovci (5 k.), Tanevci (6 k.), Jancevci (3 k.), Grashinovci (6 k.) And Popovci (24 k.).
[23] A huge portion of the population has moved to Skopje, Bitola, Demir Hisar, Veles and other cities in Macedonia.