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Laoag City Philippines
The name of the city “Laoag”, is a derivation of the Ilocano term,
which means light/brightness. Buzeta, an augustinian Missionary, in his
Diccionarios Geografico Estatistico Historico de las Islas Filipinas, states
that Laoag has a clear atmosphere which presents a beautiful, blue skyline and
that there is no doubt that this is the reason why the place was given the name
“Laoag”.
At the arrival of the Spaniards in the Philippine Islands, they found out that
the natives were divided into community groups, each having its own independent
government. That there were centers of population as was observed by Captain
Juan de Salcedo, Ilocos was extraordinary in size. In Laoag alone, the
population reached as high as 6,000. This was the greatest number of inhabitants
in a “barangay” or “puroc” in the whole country at the advent of the Spaniards.
The houses of the natives, made of bamboo and cogon numbered to no less than a
thousand. These were built and compactly arranged around a hill known as “Ermita
Hill”, located at the Southeastern section of what Laoag is now at the very brim
of the northern bank of the Padsan River. The natives must have chosen this spot
for the location of their community not only of its proximity to the river which
is indispensable to them as the source of their protein, that is, fish,
shellfish, and water for drinking and washing. Buzeta, commenting on the
practice of the Ilocanos in constructing their houses very close to one
another., that no space was left for their orchards contrary to the common
practice of the natives in their places of island who constructed their houses
isolated in the fields adjacent to their farms.
The late Don Luis Montilla, who for several years, was Director of the National
Library (now the Rizal Centennial Commission) unquestionable documents in the
national Archives which mention 1580 as the real data of the organization of
Laoag as a parish under the Patronage of St. William, the Hermit, whose feast is
celebrated on the 10th of February every year.
Before the end of the 16th century, the missionaries, in their desire to improve
the living conditions of the natives, resettled the big center of the community
of Laoag from Ermita Hill to its present location. This center is the
present Plaza of the city of Laoag.
Following the gridiron pattern of Greco-Roman origin in laying out towns,
Laoag was resettled by the Spanish missionaries by first laying out the
central rectangle where the location of the plaza, church, convent, tower,
“tribunal”, and other important edifices were indicated. These were followed by
the laying out of rectangular street blocks. The Laying out of the poblacion
done, the indigenous population was prevailed upon to construct their houses in
proper places within the reach of the church bells. The poblacion was
subsequently divided into different barrios, each named after a patron saint
assigned to them.
Though Laoag was converted into a city in 1965 through a
plebiscite, leaving its municipal status, it remained the capital of Ilocos
Norte. The first city mayor was Hon. Eulalio F. Saizon.
The inhabitants of Ilocos at the arrival of Salcedo were a sturdy and industrial
race predominantly Malay.
The first wave of Malay Immigrants to the Philippines came about 200 to 300 B.C.
These immigrants were the less civilized Malays – ancestors of the Igorots,
Ifugaos, Bontocs, and Tinguians of Northern Luzon.
The second wave came after the Christian Era, beginning about the first century
A.D. and continuing through the succeeding centuries until the 13th century.
These migratory waves saw the advent of the alphabet using Malays – ancestors of
the present Ilocanos, Tagalogs, Visayans, Bicols, Pampangos, and other christian
Filipinos. To these better civilized Malays belonged the Ilocanos that Salcedo
found in the Ilocos in 1572.
The Spaniards found the inhabitants of Ilocos with distinctive peculiarities in
character and culture. They looked very similar to the Tagalogs with faded hair,
big eyes, olive-like color, flat nose and with very thin beard or none at all.
However, they spoke a different dialect that, although belonging to a common
mother tongue as the Tagalogs, had required certain modifications and
idiosyncracies making the Ilocano dialect quite different from the Tagalog.
Laoag City, the sparkling gem of Ilocandia, is located at the west
central part of the province of Ilocos Norte in Northern Luzon, nestles
in the vast plain in the idyllic bank of the Padsan River that course its way
from the east towards the South China Sea. Laoag City is along the Manila North
Road. Vigan is 78 kms. from Laoag, 217 kms. from San Fernando City, La Union,
363 kms. from Tarlac and 488 kms. from Manila. It is 274 kms. from Baguio City.
source: www.laoagcity.gov.ph
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click here to Fort Ilocandia Website
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