Beney Tower at the foot of Mat Loam. It includes semi-ruined or heavily damaged late medieval one semi-combat and 8 residential towers with various annexes and stone defensive walls. Each tower was part of a separate complex of buildings. Residential towers with extensions and walls were grouped into family quarters.
On the walls and doorways at two residential towers you can see linear petroglyphs and tamgas (crosses, tricvesters, figures of people, etc.).
On the northern outskirts of the village of Beini, in the steep slopes of Mount Mat Loam, there are 4 inaccessible rock shelters of the late Middle Ages, extensive caves with facade southern stone walls. They are neatly stacked on a lime binder solution and covered with light yellow plaster. In the walls there are small vaulted door and window openings. In these shelters, during the threat of an enemy attack, the incapacitated population of the village of Beini was sheltered.
On the southern outskirts of the village of Beini, on a mountain slope, in pre-war times, the late medieval temple-sanctuary of Beini Seli towered with a rectangular base and a gable-step roof.
In the late Middle Ages, the Beini Towers were designed to protect surrounding villages from enemy attacks, as well as the residence of famous families in this area. Traditionally, all towers are surrounded by stone fences. The battle tower is located at the very top of the complex and is designed to protect it. According to sources, the Beini tower complex was completely abandoned by residents during the eviction of the Ingush people in 1944.
Currently, the towers are in a half-destroyed state. The complex of Bainey towers is surrounded by alpine meadows covered with silk, emerald grass, in the thick of which the purest springs are hidden, and in spring vast fields bloom with stunningly beautiful bouquets.
The history of Bainey, founded around the XVI century, is inextricably linked with the bloody wars of those times. And although the main occupation of the inhabitants of these places was cattle breeding, nevertheless, circumstances forced them to constantly hone their defensive skills. This even preserved a legend, which from word of mouth retells the local residents. According to popular legend, once on the site of the village of Beini was the village of Ioarch1ache - weeds and lived here G1am-nakyan - a tribe of witches. G1am-nakyan was characterized by cruelty and insidiousness.
And there was no rest from them to anyone. Their main occupation was robbery and robbery. For raids and warfare in the mountains, this family had 63 warrior horsemen. G1am-Najkian cattle were taken from neighboring tribes.
The mountaineers have long endured the excesses of the people of the witch tribe. But the day came when the neighbors were tired of their insidiousness, and they decided to cunningly eradicate a strong line of robbers. The brothers Dzarakh, Marzbik, Shovkhal from the village of Falkhan, hiding their true intentions, invited men of their kind to a feast and poisoned them.
Only two men of their family survived - they were away at the time. The G1am Naqian tribe was broken and the remaining women were broken, and the children left.
Thus, the village of Joarch1ache disappeared and over time, aul Beini appeared on this place. Old-timers say that the village got its new name from the killed G1am-nakyan, i.e. from the dead - "Beinarash" - Beini, and nearby another village began to be called Kashat1e (Kasheti) - the place of their burial.