Last modified: 2023-06-03 by zachary harden
Keywords: ilocos | laoag | la union | pangasinan | dagupan city | san carlos | don mariono marcos memorial state university |
Links: FOTW homepage |
search |
disclaimer and copyright |
write us |
mirrors
Region I of the Philippine Republic is Ilocos. This is, not to dwell on the
obvious, where the Ilocanos came from who were transplanted to work in the
tobacco fields in other provinces. Tobacco was formerly dominant here, too, but
the product has taken a beating on the world market, and the farmers have
diversified and now also grow rice, maize, fruits, vegetables, sugar cane,
cotton, and livestock as well. There is also fishing, as the province consists
largely of coast, and considerable small-scale manufacturing, producing jewelry,
ceramics, textiles and clothing, furniture, and other products.
Ilocos, at the northwestern corner of Luzon, had regular trade with Japan and
China long before the Spanish arrived in 1572 under Juan de Salcedo. He
established Spanish rule, but the Ilocanos rebelled in 1589, and apparently
every few years thereafter during the sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, and
nineteenth centuries. In 1882 the people erected a monument King Alfonso XIII in
gratitude for his recent abolition of the government tobacco monopoly,
established in 1782, which had forbidden the Ilocanos to grow any other crop. At
the time of the final break with Spain a Philippine Independent Church was
established under the leadership of Father Gregorio Aglipay of Ilocos Norte. It
now holds the allegiance of most of the people of the province.
John Ayer, 1 April 2001
Flag images here drawn after Symbols of the State, published by the Philippines Bureau of Local Government.
See also:
by Jaume Ollé, 12 January 2001
Ilocos Norte was made a separate province in 1818, and comprises 3,400 sq.km.
Its capital and only city is Laoag, site of an international airport. There are
also twenty-two towns. The province's population is 514,000 by the census of
2000, and its governor (as of 1999) is Ferdinand Marcos, Jr. (the late President
Marcos's family comes from the town of Batac). A coastal highway connects the
province with the rest of the country. One of the numerous architectural
notabilities is the Cathedral of San Guillermo, which I believe is depicted on
the seal of Laoag. Eighty meters away is its bell-tower, which is sinking into
the ground--straight down, unlike Pisa's. I infer that this tower appears on the
provincial seal.
John Ayer, 1 April 2001
by Dirk Schönberger, 12 January 2001
Source: Symbols of the state
by Jaume Ollé, 12 January 2001
Ilocos Sur also dates from 1818. Its population is 584,000 in thirty-four towns
covering 2579 sq.km. The capital is Vigan, where Juan de Salcedo established the
Spanish government of Ilocos. Vigan was the seat of a bishopric from the
seventeenth century and long a flourishing trading center. The architectural
monuments of its mercantile heyday still stand, and a number of museums preserve
the area's cultural heritage. For the rest, Ilocos Sur, like Ilocos Norte,
rebelled frequently. Tirad Pass contains a monument to the Filipino soldiers
under Gregorio Pilar who there covered the retreat of General Emilio Aguinaldo
of the first Philippine Republic. During 1945 Ilocos Sur was a staging area for
the Philippine and American forces preparing to attack the Japanese under
General Yamashita, making their last stand in the northern Cordilleras.
The economy of Ilocos Sur is based on agriculture, producing a wide variety of
vegetables, animals, and fish; they are expanding into a variety of
food-processing industries, and also practice a number of crafts and cottage
industries: jewelry making, wood and stone craft, ceramics, wine and vinegar
making, blanket-weaving, basket-weaving, shellcraft, and ironmongery.
Transportation services have been modernized, and tourism is now established.
John Ayer, 1 April 2001
by Jaume Ollé, 12 January 2001
The Philippine Province of La Union was formed in the 1850s of towns taken from
Ilocos Sur and Pangasinan--hence the name, and probably the handshake on the
shield. Its 1500 sq.km. of land is home to 656,000 inhabitants (by the 2000
census) dwelling in twenty towns, of which San Fernando is the provincial and
regional capital. I suspect that the yellow building in the center of the shield
is the provincial capitol.
Long before the Spanish (led by Juan de Salcedo) arrived, the people who lived
in what is now La Union had regular trade with China and Japan. They panned for
gold--de Salcedo sent fifty pounds of it to Manila after his first visit. The
foundation of the economy is farming and fishing. Unusually for the Philippines,
the province grows grapes commercially. In common with its neighbors, it
produces rice, tobacco, bananas, coconuts, other fruits and vegetables, and
fresh and dried fish. It shares many handicrafts with them: blanket-weaving,
basket-weaving, ceramics, shell-craft, ironwork, and jewelry. It is modernizing
its foreign trade with an international airport and seaport at San Fernando, and
working to develop local industry and expand tourism.
John Ayer, 2 April 2001
image located by Jan Mertens, 12 July 2008
A university page showing the seal featured on the flag can be found at
http://www.dmmmsu.edu.ph.
Jan
Mertens, 12 July 2008
by Jaume Ollé, 12 January 2001
Pangasinan is the largest (about 5,400 sq.km.), most populous (well over
2,000,000 inhabitants), and southernmost province in the Ilocos Region of the
Philippine Republic. It curves around Lingayen Gulf, a rich fishing ground. The
name "Pangasinan" comes from the traditional and still current practice of
making salt from sea-water on the beach, as shown in the foot of the provincial
seal. The marshland along the coast has largely been converted into fishponds,
which also I detect on the shield. Like the more northern provinces in the
region, Pangasinan enjoyed a brisk foreign trade long before the arrival of the
Spanish, and continues it now, with a modern international seaport under
construction. It also grows huge quantities of rice, maize, vegetables, fruits,
and seafoods and freshwater fishes. Food processing is steadily advancing.
Traditional small-scale industries still practiced include brick-making (look at
the flag again), pottery, woodcrafts, rattan-craft, metalcraft, shellcraft, and
hat- and shoemaking. Other industries are being introduced, and tourism (which
also has a long history in Pangasinan) is encouraged. I suspect the stately
building is the provincial capitol, in the town of Lingayen. Pangasinan also has
three cities, Urdaneta, for which I have no flag, and San Carlos and Dagupan.
John Ayer, 3 April 2001
by Dirk Schönberger, 12 January 2001
Source: Symbols of the state
by Dirk Schönberger, 12 January 2001
Source: Symbols of the state