In
early Philippine history
Early may refer to:
History
* The beginning or oldest part of a defined historical period, as opposed to middle or late periods, e.g.:
** Early Christianity
** Early modern Europe
Places in the United States
* Early, Iowa
* Early, Texas
* Early ...
, the
Tagalog
Tagalog may refer to:
Language
* Tagalog language, a language spoken in the Philippines
** Old Tagalog, an archaic form of the language
** Batangas Tagalog, a dialect of the language
* Tagalog script, the writing system historically used for Tagal ...
settlement
at Tondo (;
Baybayin
(, ''pre-kudlít'': , ''virama-krus-kudlít'': , ''virama-pamudpod'': ; also formerly commonly incorrectly known as alibata) is a Philippine script. The script is an abugida belonging to the family of the Brahmic scripts. Geographically, it ...
: ) was a major trade hub located on the northern part of the
Pasig River delta, on
Luzon island.
[Abinales, Patricio N. and Donna J. Amoroso, State and Society in the Philippines. Maryland: Rowman and Littlefield, 2005. as referred to in http://malacanang.gov.ph/75832-pre-colonial-manila/#_ftn1]
Together with Maynila, the polity (''bayan'') on the southern part of the Pasig River delta, it established a shared monopoly on the trade of Chinese goods throughout the rest of the Philippine archipelago, making it an established force in trade throughout
Southeast Asia and
East Asia.
Tondo is of particular interest to Filipino historians and
historiographers because it is one of the oldest historically documented settlements in the Philippines.
Scholars generally agree that it was mentioned in the
Laguna Copperplate Inscription, the Philippines oldest extant locally produced written document, dating back to 900 A.D.
Following contact with the
Spanish Empire beginning in 1570 and the defeat of local rulers in the Manila Bay area in 1571, Tondo was ruled from
Intramuros, a Spanish fort built on the remains of the
Manila polity. Tondo's absorption into the Spanish Empire effectively ended its status as an independent political entity; it now exists as
a district of the modern
City of Manila.
History
Geographically, the settlement was completely surrounded by bodies of water: mainly the
Pasig River to the South and the shore of
Manila Bay to the West, but also by several of the delta's rivulets: the
Canal de la Reina
''Canal de la Reina'' is a 1972 Filipino novel written by Filipino novelist Liwayway A. Arceo. The novel exposes the social cancer in the high levels of contemporary Philippine society. The social cancer, based on the novel, is masked by the flam ...
to the Southeast, the
Estero de Sunog Apog
The Estero de Sunog Apog is one of the rivulets, known as ''esteros'', which delineated the small islands which historically constituted the City of Manila and its predecessors, the Tagalog polities (called "bayan") of Rajahnate of Maynila, Maynil ...
to the Northeast, and the
Estero de Vitas on its Eastern and Northernmost boundaries.
It is referred to in academic circles as the "Tondo polity" or "Tondo settlement",
and the earliest Tagalog dictionaries categorized it as a "
Bayan
Bayan may refer to:
Eduational Institutions
* Bayan Islamic Graduate School, Chicago, IL
Places
*Bayan-Aul, Pavlodar, Kazakhstan
*Bayan Mountain, an ancient mountain name for part of Tarbagatai Mountains at Kazakhstan in Qing Dynasty period
*B ...
" (a "
city-state", "country" or "
polity
A polity is an identifiable Politics, political entity – a group of people with a collective identity, who are organized by some form of Institutionalisation, institutionalized social relation, social relations, and have a capacity to mobilize ...
", ).
Travellers from monarchical cultures who had contacts with Tondo (including the Chinese, Portuguese and the Spanish)
often initially observed
it as the "Kingdom of Tondo". Early Augustinian chronicler Pedro de San Buenaventura explained this to be an error as early as 1613 in his ''
Vocabulario de la lengua tagala'',
but historian
Vicente L. Rafael
Vicente L. Rafael is a professor of Southeast Asian history at the University of Washington, Seattle. He received his B.A. in history and philosophy from Ateneo de Manila University in 1977 and his Ph.D. in history at Cornell University in 1984. ...
notes that the label was nevertheless later adapted by the popular literature of the Spanish colonial era because Spanish language writers of the time did not have the appropriate words for describing the complex power relations on which
Maritime Southeast Asian leadership structures were built.
The earliest firsthand Spanish accounts described it as a smaller "village", in comparison to the fortified polity of
Maynila.
Politically, Tondo was made up of several social groupings, traditionally
referred to by historians as
Barangays,
which were led by
Datus.
These Datus in turn recognised the leadership of
the most senior among them as a sort of "
Paramount datu" called a
Lakan over the ''Bayan''.
In the middle to late 16th century, its Lakan was held in high regard within the alliance group which was formed by the various Manila Bay area polities, which included Tondo, Maynila, and various polities in
Bulacan and
Pampanga.
Extrapolating from available data, demographer-historian
Linda A. Newson
Linda Ann Newson, FBA, OBE, is director of the Institute of Latin American Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London
The University of London (UoL; abbreviated as Lond or more rarely Londin in post-nominals) is a federal publi ...
has estimated that Tondo may have had a population of roughly 43,000 when the Spanish first arrived in 1570.
Culturally, the Tagalog people of Tondo had a rich
Austronesian
Austronesian may refer to:
*The Austronesian languages
*The historical Austronesian peoples
The Austronesian peoples, sometimes referred to as Austronesian-speaking peoples, are a large group of peoples in Taiwan, Maritime Southeast Asia, M ...
(specifically
Malayo-Polynesian) culture, with its own expressions of language and writing, religion, art, and music dating back to
the earliest peoples of the archipelago.
This culture was later influenced by its trading relations with the rest of Maritime Southeast Asia.
Particularly significant were its relations with
Ming dynasty,
Malaysia, Brunei, and the
Majapahit
Majapahit ( jv, ꦩꦗꦥꦲꦶꦠ꧀; ), also known as Wilwatikta ( jv, ꦮꦶꦭ꧀ꦮꦠꦶꦏ꧀ꦠ; ), was a Javanese people, Javanese Hinduism, Hindu-Buddhism, Buddhist thalassocracy, thalassocratic empire in Southeast Asia that was ba ...
empire, which served as the main conduit for significant
Indian cultural influence, despite the Philippine archipelago's geographical location outside the Indian cultural zone.
Sources and historiography
Only a few comprehensive reviews of source materials for the study of Philippine prehistory and early history have been done, with William Henry Scott's 1968 review being one of the earliest systematic critiques.
Scott's review has become a seminal academic work on the study of early Philippine history, having been reviewed early on by a panel of that era's most eminent historians and folklorists including
Teodoro Agoncillo,
Horacio de la Costa
Horacio Villamayor de la Costa (May 9, 1916 – March 20, 1977) was the first Filipino Provincial Superior of the Society of Jesus in the Philippines, and a recognized authority in Philippine and Asian culture and history.
A writer, scholar, and ...
, Marcelino Foronda, Mercedes Grau Santamaria, Nicholas Zafra and
Gregorio Zaide
Gregorio F. Zaide (May 25, 1907 – October 31, 1986) was a Filipino historian, author and politician from the town of Pagsanjan, Laguna in the Philippines. A multi-awarded author, Zaide wrote 67 books and more than 500 articles about history, he ...
. Scott's 1968 review was acknowledged by Laura Lee Junker when she conducted her own comprehensive 1998 review of primary sources regarding archaic Philippine polities,
and by F. Landa Jocano in his Anthropological analysis of Philippine Prehistory.
Scott lists the sources for the study of Philippine prehistory as: archaeology, linguistics and paleogeography, foreign written documents, and quasi-historical genealogical documents. In a later work,
he conducts a detailed critique of early written documents and surviving oral or folk traditions connected with the Philippines early historic or protohistoric era.
Sources Scott,
Jocano,
and Junker
consider particularly relevant to the study of the Tondo and Maynila settlements include:
* Malay texts,
* Philippine oral traditions,
* Chinese tributary records and geographies,
* early Spanish writings,
and
* archeological evidence from the region around Manila Bay, the Pasig River, and Laguna Lake.
Primary sources for the history of Rajah Kalamayin's
Namayan, further upriver, include artifacts dug up from archaeological digs (the earliest of which was
Robert Fox's
work for the National Museum in 1977) and Spanish colonial records (most notably those compiled by the 19th century Franciscan Historian
Fray Felix Huerta Felix Huerta, O.F.M., was a Spanish Franciscan friar, Catholic priest, scholar and missionary to the Philippines during the 19th century, when it was still a colony of Spain. He is best known for authoring a history of local Catholic parishes which ...
).
A more detailed discussion of notable archaeological, documentary, and genealogical sources can be found towards the end of this article.
Critical historiography
Junker notes that most of the primary written sources for early Philippine history have inherent biases, which creates a need to counter-check their narratives with one another, and with empirical archaeological evidence.
She cites the works of
F. Landa Jocano
Felipe Landa Jocano (February 5, 1930 – October 27, 2013) was a Filipino anthropologist, educator, and author known for his significant body of work within the field of Philippine Anthropology, and in particular for documenting and translatin ...
,
Felix M. Keesing Felix M. Keesing (January 5, 1902 – April 1961) was a New Zealand-born anthropologist who specialized in the study of the Philippine Islands and the South Pacific. He came to the United States in the 1940s and taught at Stanford University, Calif ...
, and
William Henry Scott as notable exceptions.
F. Landa Jocano warns that in the case of early Philippine history, it's essential that "even archaeological findings" be carefully interpreted by experts, because these can be misinterpreted if not analyzed in proper context.
Names and etymology
Alternative names and orthographies
As a result of Tondo's history as a center of commerce, it has been referred to by many names by in various texts and languages. It is variously also referred to as Tundo, Tundun, Tundok, Tung-lio, Tundaan, Tunduh, Tunda, or Tong-Lao.
Origins of the name "Tondo"
Numerous theories on the origin of the name "Tondo" have been put forward. Filipino National Artist
Nick Joaquin suggested that it might be a reference to high ground ("tundok").
French linguist Jean-Paul Potet, however, has suggested that the River Mangrove, ''
Aegiceras corniculatum
''Aegiceras corniculatum'', commonly known as black mangrove, river mangrove, goat's horn mangrove, or khalsi, is a species of shrub or tree mangrove in the primrose family, Primulaceae, with a distribution in coastal and estuarine areas ranging ...
'', which at the time was called "tundok" ("tinduk-tindukan" today), is the most likely origin of the name.
Tondo as a "Bayan"
According to the earliest Tagalog dictionaries,
large coastal settlements like Tondo and Maynila, which were ultimately led by a Lakan or Rajah, were called "''Bayan''" in the Tagalog language.
This term (which is translated today as "country") was common among the various languages of the Philippine archipelago,
and eventually came to refer to the entire Philippines, alongside the word ''Bansa'' (or ''Bangsa'', meaning "nation").
However, the precolonial settlement of Tondo has also been described using a number of descriptors.
The earliest firsthand Spanish accounts described it as a smaller "''village''", in comparison to the fortified polity of
Maynila.
However, this term is no longer used in academic circles because it reflects the strong
hispanocentric bias of the Spanish colonizers.
Travellers from monarchical cultures who had contacts with Tondo (including the Chinese, Portuguese and the Spanish)
also often initially mislabelled
it as the "''Kingdom of Tondo''". Early Augustinian chronicler Pedro de San Buenaventura explained this to be an error as early as 1613 in his ''
Vocabulario de la lengua tagala''.
Historian
Vicente L. Rafael
Vicente L. Rafael is a professor of Southeast Asian history at the University of Washington, Seattle. He received his B.A. in history and philosophy from Ateneo de Manila University in 1977 and his Ph.D. in history at Cornell University in 1984. ...
notes, however, that the label was later adapted by the popular literature of the Spanish colonial era anyway, because Spanish language writers of the time did not have the appropriate words for describing the complex power relations on which Maritime Southeast-Asian leadership structures were built.
Historian
F. Landa Jocano
Felipe Landa Jocano (February 5, 1930 – October 27, 2013) was a Filipino anthropologist, educator, and author known for his significant body of work within the field of Philippine Anthropology, and in particular for documenting and translatin ...
has described Tondo using the term "large Barangay", making Tondo out to be a larger version of what Filipino historians have traditionally considered the "basic political structure" of pre-colonial societies.
However, the use of the term "Barangay" for such purposes has recently been brought to question by historian
Damon Woods Damon L. Woods is a historian and author best known for his various works concerning early Philippine history, specifically focusing on documents "''written by Tagalogs in the Tagalog language''" from the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries. His ...
, who believes that the use of this term was the result of
a 20th-century American mistranslation of the writings of
Juan de Plasencia
Miguel Juan de Plasencia () was a Spanish friar of the Franciscan Order. He was among the first group of Franciscan missionaries who arrived in the Philippines on 2 July 1578.
He spent most of his missionary life in the Philippines, where he ...
.
In an effort to avoid cross-cultural inaccuracies regarding the political structure of Tondo,
it is usually described in academic texts using generic umbrella terms, where it is described as the "Tondo polity" or "Tondo settlement".
Geographical location, territory, and political influence
Scholars generally agree
that Tondo was located north of the Pasig river,
on the northern part of ''Lusong'' or ''Lusung'', which is an
Old Tagalog name for the Pasig river delta.
This name is thought to have been derived from the
Tagalog
Tagalog may refer to:
Language
* Tagalog language, a language spoken in the Philippines
** Old Tagalog, an archaic form of the language
** Batangas Tagalog, a dialect of the language
* Tagalog script, the writing system historically used for Tagal ...
word for a large wooden
mortar used in dehusking rice.
This name eventually came to be used as the name for the entire island of modern Luzon.
Territorial boundaries
Except in the case of fortified polities such as Maynila and Cainta, the first-hand descriptions of territorial boundaries of Tagalog polities tend to discourage scholars from providing exact delineations, because the descriptions depict the boundaries of even compact polities like Tondo as slowly diminishing concentrations of households, dissipating into agricultural land (parang) and eventually wild vegetation (sukal).
However, Tondo's territorial boundaries are generally accepted as defined by several bodies of water which gave Tondo an island shape:
* the
Pasig River to the ''South'';
* the
Canal de la Reina
''Canal de la Reina'' is a 1972 Filipino novel written by Filipino novelist Liwayway A. Arceo. The novel exposes the social cancer in the high levels of contemporary Philippine society. The social cancer, based on the novel, is masked by the flam ...
, forming the
Isla de Binondo
Isla or ISLA may refer to:
Organizations
* International Securities Lending Association, a trade association
* International School of Los Angeles
* International Bilingual School, later named International School of Los Angeles
People
* Isla (g ...
between itself and Estero de Binondo
to the ''Southeast'',
* an eastern stretch of the
Estero de Vitas to the ''East'',
* the
Estero de Sunog Apog
The Estero de Sunog Apog is one of the rivulets, known as ''esteros'', which delineated the small islands which historically constituted the City of Manila and its predecessors, the Tagalog polities (called "bayan") of Rajahnate of Maynila, Maynil ...
to the ''Northeast'' forming the Isla de Balut between itself and the Estero de Vitas,
* a northern stretch the Estero de Vitas merging from the mouth of the Navotas River
to the ''North'', and
* the original (pre-reclamation) shoreline of
Manila Bay to the ''West''.
Notably, the area of modern Tondo now known as "Gagalangin" is not believed to have been part of Tondo's original "territory", since it was a place grown wild with plants in olden days.
The shoreline of the modern district of Tondo has been significantly altered by reclamation activities. Pre-reclamation maps of Tondo show a relatively straight shoreline from the beachfront of Intramuros to the mouth of Estero de Vitas.
Tondo's territorial boundaries also excluded
territory occupied by
Maynila Namayan (modern day Santa Ana),
[Locsin, Leandro V. and Cecilia Y. Locsin. 1967. ''Oriental Ceramics Discovered in the Philippines.'' Vermont: Charles E. Tuttle Company. ] Tambobong (modern day Navotas), Omaghicon (modern day Malabon), Pandacan, and Pasay - all of which had their own respective leaders.
Notable areas inside Tondo's territory
Reclamation by Chinese refugees in Baybay
One notable area controlled by Tondo under the reign of Bunao Lakandula in the 1500s
was called "''Baybay''", now known as the district of
San Nicolas, Manila.
William Henry Scott, citing Augustinian missionary records,
notes that Bunao Lakandula had allowed a group of Chinese refugees, fleeing persecution from Japan, to settle there. These refugees, which included two Christians, then "''diked, drained, and reclaimed land along the waterfront''", extending the shore of Tondo further out to Manila Bay.
Lime production in Sunog-Apog
Another notable area controlled by Tondo was on the banks of Estero de Vitas, called "Sunog Apog", which eventually lent its name to the nearby Estero de Sunog Apog in Gagalangin. This area was noted for the production of lime (''apog'') through the burning (''pag-sunog'') of oyster (''talaba'') shells, and a lime kiln was still present in the area by 1929.
Polities influenced through the Lakan's "alliance network"
Although popular portrayals and early nationalist historical texts sometimes depict Philippine paramount rulers, such as those in the Maynila and Tondo polities, as having broad sovereign powers and holding vast territories, critical historiographers such as Jocano,
Scott,
and Junker
explain that historical sources clearly show that paramount leaders, such as the Lakans of Tondo and the Rajahs of Maynila, exercised only a limited degree of influence, which did not include claims over the barangays
[Specifically meaning their "following", or group of loyal supporters] and territories of less-senior datus.
Although popular portrayals and early nationalist historical texts sometimes depict Philippine paramount rulers, such as those in the Maynila and Tondo polities, as having broad sovereign powers and holding vast territories, critical historiographers such as Jocano,
Scott,
and Junker
explain that historical sources clearly show that paramount leaders, such as the Lakans of Tondo and the Rajahs of Maynila, exercised only a limited degree of influence, which did not include claims over the barangays
[Specifically meaning their "following", or group of loyal supporters] and territories of less-senior datus.
Junker describes this structure as an "alliance group", which she describes as having "a relatively decentralized and highly segmentary structure"
similar to other polities in Maritime Southeast Asia:
''"In the Philippines, the primary unit of collective political action appears to have been an organizationally more fluid “alliance group,” ../nowiki> made up of perpetually shifting leader-focused factions, represented the extension of ../nowiki> power over individuals and groups through various alliance-building strategies, but not over geographically distinct districts or territories."''
The Malacañang Presidential Museum, on the other hand, described this political setup in their 2015 Araw ng Maynila briefers as an "alliance network."
This explains the confusion experienced by Martin de Goiti during the first Spanish forays into Bulacan and Pampanga in late 1571.
Until that point, Spanish chroniclers continued to use the terms "king" and "kingdom" to describe the polities of Tondo and Maynila, but Goiti was surprised when Lakandula explained there was "no single king over these lands",
and that the leadership of Tondo and Maynila over the Kapampangan polities did not include either territorial claim or absolute command.
San Buenaventura (1613, as cited by Junker, 1990 and Scott, 1994) later noted that Tagalogs only applied the term ''Hari'' (King) to foreign monarchs, rather than their own leaders.
Polities in Bulacan and Pampanga
The influence of Tondo and Maynila over the datus of various polities in pre-colonial Bulacan and Pampanga are acknowledged by historical records, and are supported by oral literature and traditions. This influence was assumed by Miguel Lopez de Legaspi, leading him to implore Bunao, the Lakan of Tondo, to join Martin de Goiti on his journey to Bulacan and Pampanga in late 1571. However, since the Lakandula did not have territorial sovereignty over these territories,
the effort met with limited success.
Patanne, as well as Abinales and Amoroso, interpret Postma's translation of the Laguna Copperplate Inscription as meaning that this influence-via-alliance-network defined Tondo's relationship with the territories of Binwangan, Pailah, and Puliran, which Postma believed to be in Bulacan/Pampanga.
Polities in Bulacan and Pampanga which were supposedly under the influence of Tondo and Maynila's alliance network include, but are not limited to:
* Paila, in Barangay San Lorenzo,
Norzagaray, Bulacan
Norzagaray, officially the Municipality of Norzagaray ( tgl, Bayan ng Norzagaray), is a 1st class municipality in the province of Bulacan, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 136,064 people.
It is the location of A ...
(coordinates 14–54.5 & 121–06.9) - the "Pailah" mentioned in the LCI.
*
Pulilan, Bulacan (coordinates: 14–54.2 & 120–50.8) - the "Puliran" mentioned in the LCI.
* Barangay Binwangan
in
Obando (coordinates: 14–43.2 & 120-543) - the "Binwangan" mentioned in the LCI.
*
Candaba,
Pampanga
* some other parts of
Bulacan
Laguna Lake region polities
Scholars, particularly Junker (1990) and Scott (1994) also acknowledge that Tondo and Maynila had a close relationship with "Puliran", the endonymously identified region covering the South-Eastern shore of Laguna Lake. However, neither Junker nor Scott, or even other scholars such as Jocano, Odal-Devora, or Dery, do not explicitly characterize this relationship as Puliran being a part of Tondo and Maynila's alliance network.
The interpretation of Puliran as part of Tondo and Maynila's alliance network is instead implied by the challenge posed by the Pila Historical Society Foundation and local historian Jaime F. Tiongson to Postma's assertions regarding the exact locations of places mentioned in the Laguna copperplate.
According to Tiongson's interpretation: ''Pailah'' refers to
Pila; ''Puliran'' refers to Puliran, the old name of the territory that occupied the southeastern part of
Laguna de Bay
Laguna de Bay (Spanish language, Spanish for "Lagoon/Lake of Bay, Laguna, Bay"; tl, Lawa ng Bay, ), also known as Laguna Lake, is the List of lakes of the Philippines, largest lake in the Philippines. It is located southeast of Metro Manila, b ...
at the time; and ''Binwangan'' refers to modern day Barangay, Binawangan in
Capalonga, Camarines Norte.
Polities in the Puliran region which were supposedly under the influence of Tondo and Maynila's alliance network include, but are not limited to:
Other settlements/polities
Inside modern NCR
Outside modern NCR
- Kumintang
- now the province of Batangas
- ''Katanghalan''
Culture and society
Since at least the 3rd century, the Tagalog people of Tondo had developed a culture which is predominantly
Hindu
Hindus (; ) are people who religiously adhere to Hinduism.Jeffery D. Long (2007), A Vision for Hinduism, IB Tauris, , pages 35–37 Historically, the term has also been used as a geographical, cultural, and later religious identifier for ...
and
Buddhist society. They are ruled by a
Lakan, which belongs to a caste of
Maharlika, were the
feudal
Feudalism, also known as the feudal system, was the combination of the legal, economic, military, cultural and political customs that flourished in Middle Ages, medieval Europe between the 9th and 15th centuries. Broadly defined, it was a wa ...
warrior class in ancient
Tagalog
Tagalog may refer to:
Language
* Tagalog language, a language spoken in the Philippines
** Old Tagalog, an archaic form of the language
** Batangas Tagalog, a dialect of the language
* Tagalog script, the writing system historically used for Tagal ...
society in
Luzon, translated in Spanish as ''Hidalgos'', and meaning freeman, ''libres'' or
freedman
A freedman or freedwoman is a formerly enslaved person who has been released from slavery, usually by legal means. Historically, enslaved people were freed by manumission (granted freedom by their captor-owners), emancipation (granted freedom a ...
.
They belonged to the lower nobility class similar to the ''
Timawa'' of the
Visayans. In modern
Filipino, however, the term itself has erroneously come to mean "royal nobility", which was actually restricted to the hereditary ''
Maginoo'' class.
Social structure
The pre-colonial Tagalog barangays of
Manila,
Pampanga and
Laguna
Laguna (Italian and Spanish for lagoon) may refer to:
People
* Abe Laguna (born 1992), American DJ known as Ookay
* Andrés Laguna (1499–1559), Spanish physician, pharmacologist, and botanist
* Ana Laguna (born 1955), Spanish-Swedish ballet d ...
had a more complex social structure than the cultures of the Visayas, enjoying a more extensive commerce through their Bornean political contacts, and engaging in farming
wet rice for a living. The Tagalogs were thus described by the Spanish Augustinian friar
Martin de Rada Martin may refer to:
Places
* Martin City (disambiguation)
* Martin County (disambiguation)
* Martin Township (disambiguation)
Antarctica
* Martin Peninsula, Marie Byrd Land
* Port Martin, Adelie Land
* Point Martin, South Orkney Islands
Austral ...
as more traders than warriors.
In his seminal 1994 work "''Barangay: Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society''" (further simplified in the briefer by the Presidential Communications Development and Strategic Planning Office in 2015), historian
William Henry Scott delineates the three classes of Tagalog society during the 1500s:
:* the ''Maginoo''
(ruling class), which included the Lakan/Rajah and the Datus under him;
:* A class described as "Freemen"
consisting of ''Timawa'' and ''Maharlika''; and
:* ''Alipin'' (slaves),
which could further be subcategorized as ''Aliping Namamahay'' or ''Aliping Sa Gigilid''.
The term ''
datu'' or ''
lakan'', or ''apo'' refers to the chief, but the noble class to which the ''datu'' belonged to was known as the ''
maginoo'' class. Any male member of the ''maginoo'' class can become a ''datu'' by personal achievement.
The term ''timawa'' referring to freemen came into use in the social structure of the Tagalogs within just twenty years after the coming of the Spaniards. The term, however, was being incorrectly applied to former ''
alipin'' (commoner and slave class) who have escaped bondage by payment, favor, or flight. Moreover, the Tagalog ''timawa'' did not have the military prominence of the Visayan ''timawa''. The equivalent warrior class in the Tagalog society was present only in Laguna, and they were known as the ''
maharlika'' class.
At the bottom of the social hierarchy are the members of the ''alipin'' class. There are two main subclasses of the ''alipin'' class. The ''
aliping namamahay
The ''alipin'' refers to the lowest social class among the various cultures of the Philippines before the arrival of the Spanish in the 16th and 17th centuries. In the Visayan languages, the equivalent social classes were known as the ''oripun ...
'' who owned their own houses and served their masters by paying tribute or working on their fields were the commoners and
serf
Serfdom was the status of many peasants under feudalism, specifically relating to manorialism, and similar systems. It was a condition of debt bondage and indentured servitude with similarities to and differences from slavery, which developed ...
s, while the ''
aliping sa gigilid
The ''alipin'' refers to the lowest social class among the various cultures of the Philippines before the arrival of the Spanish in the 16th and 17th centuries. In the Visayan languages, the equivalent social classes were known as the ''oripun'' ...
'' who lived in their masters' houses were the servants and slaves.
The more complex social structure of the Tagalogs was less stable during the arrival of the Spaniards because it was still in a process of differentiating.
Political leadership structure
Tondo was a large coastal settlement led by several leaders, called
Datu, who had their own followings, called either "Dulohan" or "Barangay".
These Datus with their respective Barangays in turn acknowledged the leadership of a datu with the most senior rank - a "paramount ruler"
or "paramount datu",
who was called a "Lakan".
According to San Buenaventura, a large coastal settlement with this kind of leadership structure was called a "Bayan".
The equivalent Paramount Datus who led the southern polity of Maynila were referred to using the term "
Rajah", and in Mindanao, a similar title in more Islamized polities was that of "
Sultan
Sultan (; ar, سلطان ', ) is a position with several historical meanings. Originally, it was an Arabic abstract noun meaning "strength", "authority", "rulership", derived from the verbal noun ', meaning "authority" or "power". Later, it ...
".
The term for the
Barangay social groupings refers to the large ships called ''
balangay'', which were common on such coastal polities, and is used by present-day scholars to describe the leadership structure of settlements in early Philippine history. This leads to some confusion for modern readers, because the term "barangay" was also later adapted (through the 1991
Local Government Code) as a replacement for the Spanish term ''
barrio
''Barrio'' () is a Spanish language, Spanish word that means "Quarter (urban subdivision), quarter" or "neighborhood". In the modern Spanish language, it is generally defined as each area of a city, usually delimited by functional (e.g. residenti ...
'' to describe the smallest
administrative division in the
modern Republic of the Philippines - a government structure very different from the original meaning of the word.
In addition, Jocano warns that there were significant differences between "smaller" barangays, which were only 30 to 100 households in size, and considerably larger barangays, which according to Buenaventura were called "Bayan".
Jocano asserted that the social and governance structures of these larger Barangays, with high levels of economic specialization and a clear system of social stratification, should be the primary model for the analysis of social structures in early Philippine history, rather than the "smaller" barangays.
Popular literature has described these political entities as either chiefdoms or kingdoms.
Although modern scholars such as Renfew note that these are not appropriate technical descriptions.
Contemporary historiographers specializing in early Philippine history prefer to use the generic term "
polity
A polity is an identifiable Politics, political entity – a group of people with a collective identity, who are organized by some form of Institutionalisation, institutionalized social relation, social relations, and have a capacity to mobilize ...
" in international journals,
avoiding the terms "chiefdom" and "kingdom" altogether.
Scholars such as
William Henry Scott and
F. Landa Jocano
Felipe Landa Jocano (February 5, 1930 – October 27, 2013) was a Filipino anthropologist, educator, and author known for his significant body of work within the field of Philippine Anthropology, and in particular for documenting and translatin ...
have continued to use the term "barangay", especially in longer-form texts such as books and anthologies,
because these longer forms allow space for explanations of the differences between the modern and archaic uses of the word "barangay".
South and Southeast Asian cultural influences
Scholarly analysis of the
Laguna Copperplate Inscription, which includes the first historical mention of Tondo, suggests that Tondo was "culturally influenced" by the Hindu and Buddhist cultures of Maritime Southeast Asia as early as the 9th century.
The writing system used on the copperplate is the
Old Kawi, while the language used is a variety of
Old Malay, with numerous loanwords from
Sanskrit and a few non-Malay vocabulary elements whose origin may be
Old Javanese.
Some contend it is between
Old Tagalog and Old Javanese. The date indicated on the LCI text says that it was etched in the year 822 of the
Saka Era, the month of Waisaka, and the fourth day of the waning moon, which corresponds to Monday, April 21, 900 AD in the
Proleptic Gregorian calendar.
[Morrow, Paul (2006-07-14)]
"Laguna Copperplate Inscription"
Sarisari etc.
. Accessed September 04, 2008.
While these Hindu-Buddhist cultural influences can ultimately be traced to the cultures of the Indian subcontinent, scholars generally do not believe that it indicates physical contact between the Philippines and India.
The scope, sequence, and mechanism of Indian cultural influences in early Philippine polities continues to be an active area of research
and are the subject of much debate among scholars of Philippine and Southeast Asian history and historiography.
During the reign of Sultan
Bolkiah
Bolkiah, also known as Nakhoda Ragam, was the 5th Sultan of Brunei. He ascended the throne upon the abdication of his father, Sultan Sulaiman, and ruled Brunei from 1485 to 1524. His reign marked the Golden Age of Brunei and saw the Sultanate ...
in 1485 to 1521, the
Sultanate of Brunei
This article includes a list of successive Islamic states and Muslim dynasties beginning with the time of the Islamic prophet Muhammad (570–632 CE) and the early Muslim conquests that spread Islam outside of the Arabian Peninsula, and continui ...
decided to break Tondo's monopoly in the China trade by attacking Tondo and establishing the state of Selurung as a Bruneian satellite-state.
Religion
Historical accounts,
supported by archeological and linguistic evidence
and by corroborated by anthropological studies,
show that the Tagalog people, including those in Tondo and Maynila, practiced a set of Austronesian beliefs and practices which date back to the arrival of Austronesian peoples,
although various elements were later syncretistically adapted from Hinduism, Mahayana Buddhism, and Islam.
The Tagalogs did not have a specific name for this set of religious beliefs and practices, although later scholars and popular writers refer to it as ''
Anitism'',
[Almocera, Ruel A., (2005) Popular Filipino Spiritual Beliefs with a proposed Theological Response. in Doing Theology in the Philippines. Suk, John., Ed. Mandaluyong: OMF Literature Inc. Pp 78-98] or, less accurately, using the general term "''animism''."
Tagalog religious cosmology
The Tagalog belief system was more or less anchored on the idea that the world is inhabited by spirits and supernatural entities, both good and bad, and that respect must be accorded to them through worship.
According to the early Spanish missionary-ethnographers, the Tagalog people believed in a creator-god named
Bathala,
whom they referred to both as ''maylicha'' (creator; lit. "actor of creation") and ''maycapal'' (lord, or almighty; lit. "actor of power").
Loarca and Chirino also report that in some places, they were called "Molayri" (Molaiari) or "Diwata" (Dioata)." However, these early missionary-ethnographers also noted that the Tagalogs did not include Bathala in their daily acts of worship (''pag-a-anito''). Buenaventura was informed that this was because the Tagalogs believed Bathala was too mighty and distant to be bothered with the concerns of mortal man, and so the Tagalogs focused their acts of appeasement to "lesser" deities and powers,
immediate spirits which they believed had control over their day-to-day life.
Because the Tagalogs did not have a collective word to describe all these spirits together, Spanish missionaries eventually decided to call them "anito," since they were the subject of the Tagalog's act of ''pag-aanito'' (worship).
According to Scott, accounts and early dictionaries describe them as intermediaries ("Bathala's agents"), and the dictionaries used the word ''abogado'' (advocate) when defining their realms. These sources also show, however, that in practice, they were addressed directly: "''in actual prayers, they were petitioned directly, not as intermediaries.''" Modern day writers divide these spirits are broadly into the categories of "Ancestor spirits, nature spirits, and guardian spirits," although they also note that the dividing line between these categories is often blurred.
Demetrio, Cordero-Fernando, and Nakpil Zialcita
observe that the Luzon Tagalogs and Kapampangans' use of the word "Anito", instead of the word "Diwata" which was more predominant in the Visayan regions, indicated that these peoples of Luzon were less influenced by the Hindu and Buddhist beliefs of the Majapahit empire than the Visayans were.
They also observed that the words were used alternately amongst the peoples in the southernmost portions of Luzon - the
Bicol Region,
Marinduque
Marinduque (; ), officially the Province of Marinduque, is an island province in the Philippines located in Southwestern Tagalog Region or Mimaropa, formerly designated as Region IV-B. Its capital is the municipality of Boac. Marinduque lies be ...
,
Mindoro, etc. They suggested that this have represented transitional area, the front lines of an increased "Indianized" Majapahit influence which was making its way north
the same way Islam was making its way north from Mindanao.
Localization of other beliefs
Although most contemporary historians,
approaching Philippines from the point of view of
critical historiography Critical historiography approaches the history of art, literature or architecture from a critical theory perspective. Critical historiography is used by various scholars in recent decades to emphasize the ambiguous relationship between the past and ...
, assert the predominance of indigenous religious beliefs,
they also note that there are significant manifestations of other belief systems in early Tagalog history.
While it was common among mid-20th century historians and in earlier texts to use these manifestations as evidence of "influence,"
more contemporary scholars of southeast Asian history have emphasized that the manifestations of these beliefs do not necessarily reflect outright adoption of these religions, but rather of syncretistic adaptation
or "localization."
Osborne (2004) describes a process of "adaptation" happening in connection with Hindu and Buddhist influences in the various cultures of Maritime Southeast Asia,
and emphasizes that this "indianization" of Southeast Asia did not per-se overwrite existing indigenous patterns, cultures, and beliefs:
"''Because Indian culture “came” to Southeast Asia, one must not think that Southeast Asians lacked a culture of their own. Indeed, the generally accepted view is that Indian culture made such an impact on Southeast Asia because it fitted easily with the existing cultural patterns and religious beliefs of populations that had already moved a considerable distance along the path of civilization. Southeast Asians, to summarize the point, borrowed but they also adapted. In some very important cases, they did not need to borrow at all.''"
Milner (2011)
suggests that this pattern of adaptation reflects what Wolters (1999) calls "localization," a process by which foreign ideas ("specifically Indian materials"
) could be "fractured and restated and therefore drained of their original significance" in the process of being adopted into "various local complexes."
Hindu and Buddhist religious influences
It is not clear exactly how much the various cultures of the Philippine archipelago were influenced by Hinduism and Buddhism before the arrival of European colonizers. The current scholarly consensus is that although the Philippines was not directly influenced by India, Hindu and Buddhist cultural and religious influences reached the Philippines through trade - possibly on a small scale with the SriVijayan empire, and more definitively and extensively with the Madjapahit empire.
The
Laguna Copperplate Inscription, which is the artifact which specifically points to an Indian cultural (linguistic) influence in Tondo, does not explicitly discuss religious practices.
However, some contemporary Buddhist practitioners believe that its mention of the Hindu calendar month of
Vaisakha (which corresponds to April/May in the Gregorian Calendar) implies a familiarity with the Hindu sacred days celebrated during that month.
Elsewhere in the Philippines, Hindu and Buddhist religious influences are evidenced by the presence of explicitly religious artifacts
[H. Otley Beyer, "Outline Review of Philippine Archaeology by Islands and Provinces," Philippine Journal of Science, Vol.77, Nos.34 (July–August 1947), pp. 205–374] - in at least one case as near to Tondo as
Calatagan, Batangas
Calatagan, officially the Municipality of Calatagan ( tgl, Bayan ng Calatagan), is a 2nd class municipality of the Philippines, municipality in the Philippine Province, province of Batangas, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a po ...
.
[http://asj.upd.edu.ph/mediabox/archive/ASJ-01-01-1963/Francisco%20Buddhist.pdf ]
Contemporary Buddhist practitioners believe that Filipino cultures would have been exposed to the
Vajrayana and
Theravada schools of Buddhism through their trade contacts with the SriVijaya and Madjapahit,
and archeological findings on the Island of Luzon have produced artifacts associated with the
Mahayana school of Buddhism.
Islamization
One clearer exception to the predominance of "Anitism" in early Tondo and Maynila was that the
apex-level leaders of these polities identified themselves as Muslims,
as did the migrant sailor
Luzones who were encountered by early 15th century chroniclers in
Portuguese Malacca.
However, the various ethnographic reports of the period indicate that this seemed to only be a nominal identification ("Muslim by name") because there was only a surface level acknowledgement of Muslim norms (avoidance of pork, non-consumption of blood, etc.) without an "understanding of Mohammedan teachings."
Scholars generally believe that this nominal practice of Islam actually represented the early stages of Islamization, which would have seen a much more extensive practice of Muslim beliefs
had the Spanish not arrived and introduced their brand of Iberian Catholicism.
Islamization was a slow process characterised by with the steady conversion of the citizenry of Tondo and Manila which created Muslim domains. The Bruneians installed the Muslim rajahs,
Rajah Salalila and
Rajah Matanda in the south (now the
Intramuros district) and the Buddhist-Hindu settlement was ruled under Lakan Dula in northern Tundun (now in modern
Tondo). Islamization of Luzon began in the 16th century when traders from Brunei settled in the Manila area and married locals while maintaining kinship and trade links with Brunei and thus other Muslim centres in Southeast Asia. The Muslims were called "
Moros" by the Spanish who assumed they occupied the whole coast. There is no evidence that Islam had become a major political or religious force in the region, with Father Diego de Herrera recording that the Moros lived only in some villages and were Muslim in name only.
Economic activities
Historians widely agree that the larger coastal polities which flourished throughout the Philippine archipelago in the period immediately prior to the arrival of the Spanish colonizers (including Tondo and Maynila) were "organizationally complex", demonstrating both economic specialization and a level of social stratification which would have led to a local demand for "prestige goods".
Specialized industries in the Tagalog and Kapampangan regions, including Tondo and Maynila, included agriculture, textile weaving, basketry, metallurgy, hunting, among others.
The social stratification which gave birth to the Maginoo class created a demand for prestige products including ceramics, textiles, and precious stones.
This demand, in turn, served as the impetus for both internal and external trade.
Junker notes that significant work still needs to be done in analyzing the internal/local supply and demand dynamics in pre-Spanish era polities, because much of the prior research has tended to focus on their external trading activities.
Scott notes that early Spanish lexicons are particularly useful for this analysis, because these early dictionaries captured many words which demonstrate the varied nuances of these local economic activities.
Trade
Junker describes coastal polities of Tondo and Maynila's size as "administrative and commercial centers functioning as important nodes in networks of external and internal trade."
While the basic model for the movement of trade goods in early Philippine history saw coastal settlements at the mouth of large rivers (in this case, the Pasig river delta) controlling the flow of goods to and from settlements further upriver (in this case, the upland polities on the Laguna Lake coast),
Tondo and Maynila had trade arrangements which allowed them to control trade throughout the rest of the archipelago.
Scott observes that while the port of Tondo had the monopoly on arriving Chinese merchant ships, it was Manila's fleet of trading vessels which in turn retailed them to settlements throughout the rest of the archipelago, so much so that Manyila's ships came to be known as "Chinese" (sinina).
Redistribution of Chinese goods
The most lucrative of Tondo's economic activities involved the redistribution of Chinese goods, which would arrive in Manila bay through Tondo's port and be distributed throughout the rest of the archipelago, mostly through Maynila's extensive shipping activities.
The Chinese migrations to
Malaya
Malaya refers to a number of historical and current political entities related to what is currently Peninsular Malaysia in Southeast Asia:
Political entities
* British Malaya (1826–1957), a loose collection of the British colony of the Straits ...
and the
Philippines shore began in the 7th century and reached their peak after 1644 owing to the
Manchu
The Manchus (; ) are a Tungusic East Asian ethnic group native to Manchuria in Northeast Asia. They are an officially recognized ethnic minority in China and the people from whom Manchuria derives its name. The Later Jin (1616–1636) and ...
conquest of
China
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a country in East Asia. It is the world's most populous country, with a population exceeding 1.4 billion, slightly ahead of India. China spans the equivalent of five time zones and ...
. These Chinese immigrants settled in
Manila,
Pasig included, and in the other ports, which were annually visited by their trade
junks
A junk (Chinese: 船, ''chuán'') is a type of Chinese sailing ship with fully battened sails. There are two types of junk in China: northern junk, which developed from Chinese river boats, and southern junk, which developed from Austronesian ...
, they have cargoes of
silk,
tea,
ceramics, and their precious
jade
Jade is a mineral used as jewellery or for ornaments. It is typically green, although may be yellow or white. Jade can refer to either of two different silicate minerals: nephrite (a silicate of calcium and magnesium in the amphibole group of ...
stones.
According to William Henry Scott (1982), when ships from China came to Manila bay, Lakandula would remove the sails and rudders of their ships until they paid him duties and anchorage fees, and then he would then buy up all their goods himself, paying half its value immediately and then paying the other half upon their return the following year. In the interim, these goods would be traded throughout the rest of the archipelago. The end result was that other locals were not able to buy anything from the Chinese directly, but from Tondo
and Maynila,
who made a tidy profit as a result.
Augustinian Fray Martin de Rada Legaspi says that the Tagalogs were "''more traders than warriors''",
and Scott notes in a later book (1994)
that Maynila's ships got their goods from Tondo and then dominated trade through the rest of the archipelago. People in other parts of the archipelago often referred to Maynila's boats as "Chinese" (Sina or Sinina) because they came bearing Chinese goods.
Trade with other Asian civilizations
Many of the barangay municipalities were, to a varying extent, under the de jure jurisprudence of one of several neighboring empires, among them the Malay
Srivijaya
Srivijaya ( id, Sriwijaya) was a Buddhist thalassocratic empire based on the island of Sumatra (in modern-day Indonesia), which influenced much of Southeast Asia. Srivijaya was an important centre for the expansion of Buddhism from the 7th t ...
, Javanese
Majapahit
Majapahit ( jv, ꦩꦗꦥꦲꦶꦠ꧀; ), also known as Wilwatikta ( jv, ꦮꦶꦭ꧀ꦮꦠꦶꦏ꧀ꦠ; ), was a Javanese people, Javanese Hinduism, Hindu-Buddhism, Buddhist thalassocracy, thalassocratic empire in Southeast Asia that was ba ...
,
Po-ni,
Malacca
Malacca ( ms, Melaka) is a state in Malaysia located in the southern region of the Malay Peninsula, next to the Strait of Malacca. Its capital is Malacca City, dubbed the Historic City, which has been listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site si ...
, Indian
Chola
The Chola dynasty was a Tamils, Tamil thalassocratic Tamil Dynasties, empire of southern India and one of the longest-ruling dynasties in the history of the world. The earliest datable references to the Chola are from inscriptions dated ...
,
Champa
Champa (Cham: ꨌꩌꨛꨩ; km, ចាម្ប៉ា; vi, Chiêm Thành or ) were a collection of independent Cham polities that extended across the coast of what is contemporary central and southern Vietnam from approximately the 2nd cen ...
,
Burma and
Khmer empires.
Tondo also developed trading links with Sumatra,
Borneo,
Java,
Malay Peninsula
The Malay Peninsula (Malay: ''Semenanjung Tanah Melayu'') is a peninsula in Mainland Southeast Asia. The landmass runs approximately north–south, and at its terminus, it is the southernmost point of the Asian continental mainland. The area ...
,
Indochina,
China
China, officially the People's Republic of China (PRC), is a country in East Asia. It is the world's most populous country, with a population exceeding 1.4 billion, slightly ahead of India. China spans the equivalent of five time zones and ...
,
Japan
Japan ( ja, 日本, or , and formally , ''Nihonkoku'') is an island country in East Asia. It is situated in the northwest Pacific Ocean, and is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan, while extending from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north ...
,
India and Arabia. A thalassocracy had emerged based on international trade.
Gold as a currency
Trade among the early Filipinos and with traders from the neighboring islands was conducted through
Barter. The inconvenience of barter later led to the use of some objects as medium of exchange.
Gold, which was plentiful in many parts of the islands,
invariably found its way into these objects that included the
Piloncitos, small bead-like gold nuggets/bits considered by the local numismatists as the earliest coin of ancient Filipinos, and gold barter rings.
The Piloncitos a type of gold ingots are small, some are of the size of a
corn
Maize ( ; ''Zea mays'' subsp. ''mays'', from es, maíz after tnq, mahiz), also known as corn (North American and Australian English), is a cereal grain first domesticated by indigenous peoples in southern Mexico about 10,000 years ago. Th ...
kernel—and weigh from 0.09 to 2.65 grams of fine gold. Large Piloncitos weighing 2.65 grams approximate the weight of one mass. Piloncitos have been excavated from
Mandaluyong,
Bataan, the banks of the
Pasig River, and
Batangas.
That gold was mined and worked here is evidenced by many Spanish accounts, like one in 1586 that said:
Other than Piloncitos, the people of Tundun also used the Barter rings, which is gold ring-like
ingots. These barter rings are bigger than doughnuts in size and are made of nearly pure gold. Also, they are very similar to the first coins invented in the
Kingdom of Lydia in present-day
Turkey. Barter rings were circulated in the Philippines up to the 16th century.
Agriculture
The people of Tondo engaged in agriculture,
making a living through farming, rice planting and
aquaculture
Aquaculture (less commonly spelled aquiculture), also known as aquafarming, is the controlled cultivation ("farming") of aquatic organisms such as fish, crustaceans, mollusks, algae and other organisms of value such as aquatic plants (e.g. lot ...
(especially in lowland areas). A report during the time of
Miguel López de Legazpi
Miguel López de Legazpi (12 June 1502 – 20 August 1572), also known as '' El Adelantado'' and ''El Viejo'' (The Elder), was a Spaniard who, from the age of 26, lived and built a career in Mexico (then the Viceroyalty of New Spain) and, i ...
noted of the great abundance of
rice,
fowls,
wine as well as great numbers of
carabaos,
deer, wild
boar and
goat husbandry in Luzon. In addition, there were also great quantities of
cotton and colored clothes,
wax,
wine,
honey
Honey is a sweet and viscous substance made by several bees, the best-known of which are honey bees. Honey is made and stored to nourish bee colonies. Bees produce honey by gathering and then refining the sugary secretions of plants (primar ...
and
date palm
''Phoenix dactylifera'', commonly known as date or date palm, is a flowering plant species in the palm family, Arecaceae, cultivated for its edible sweet fruit called dates. The species is widely cultivated across northern Africa, the Middle Eas ...
s produced by the native peoples,
rice,
cotton,
swine, fowls, wax and
honey
Honey is a sweet and viscous substance made by several bees, the best-known of which are honey bees. Honey is made and stored to nourish bee colonies. Bees produce honey by gathering and then refining the sugary secretions of plants (primar ...
abound.
Crop production
Rice was the staple food of the Tagalog and Kapampangan polities, and its ready availability in Luzon despite variations in annual rainfall was one of the reasons Legaspi wanted to locate his colonial headquarters on Manila bay.
Scott's study of early Tagalog lexicons revealed that the Tagalogs had words for at least 22 different varieties of rice.
In most other places in the archipelago, rootcrops served as an alternate staple in seasons when rice was not readily available.
These were also available in Luzon, but they were desired more as vegetables, rather than as a staple.
Ubi, Tugi, Gabi and a local root crop which the Spanish called Kamoti (apparently not the same as the sweet potato, sweet potato, Ipomoea batatas) were farmed in swiddens, while "Laksa" and "Nami" grew wild.
Sweet potatoes (now called Camote) were later introduced by the Spanish.
Millet was common enough that the Tagalogs had a word which meant "milletlike": "''dawa-dawa''".
Animal husbandry
Duck culture was also practiced by the Tagalogs, particularly those around
Pateros
Pateros, officially the Municipality of Pateros ( tgl, Bayan ng Pateros), is the lone municipality of Metro Manila, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 63,643 people.
This municipality is famous for its duck-rai ...
and where
Taguig City stands today. This resembled the Chinese methods of artificial incubation of eggs and the knowledge of every phase of a duck's life. This tradition is carried on until modern times of making ''
balut''.
[ Ancient Philippine Civilization](_blank)
Accessed January 7, 2013.(archived fro
on 2007-12-01
Relations with contemporaneous polities
Relations with polities within the Philippine archipelago
Relations with the Maynila polity
By virtue of proximity, Tondo had a close and complex relationship with its neighbor-settlement, Maynila.
Tondo and Maynila shared a monopoly over the flow of Chinese tradeware throughout the rest of the archipelago,
with Tondo's port controlling the arrival of Chinese goods and Maynila retailing those goods to settlements throughout the rest of the archipelago.
Historical accounts specifically say that Maynila was also known as the "Kingdom of Luzon", but some scholars such as Potet
and Alfonso
suggest that this exonym may have referred to the larger area of Manila Bay, from Bataan and Pampanga to Cavite, which includes Tondo. Whatever the case, the two polities' shared alliance network saw both the Rajahs of Maynila and the Lakans of Tondo exercising political influence (although not territorial control) over the various settlements in what are now Bulacan and Pampanga.
Notably, the 1521 account of "Prince" Ache,
who would later become Rajah Matanda,
cites a bitter territorial dispute between Maynila, then ruled by Ache's mother,
and Tondo, then ruled separately by Ache's cousin.
This conflict was enough to cause Ache to run away to his uncle, the Sultan of Brunei, in a bid to martial some military support as leverage against the Kingdom of Tondo.
Relations with Butas, Tambobong and Macabebe
Tondo's relations with its neighboring settlements to the north are less clear, but the anonymous 1571 account translated by Blair and Robertson notes that the "neighboring village" of "Butas" (now called
Navotas) acted independently of Tondo in 1571,
and allied itself with the leader of Macabebe during the Battle of Bangkusay.
Other sources mention another independent village, Tambobong was further north of Navotas. This is generally believed to be the origin of the present day city of
Malabon.
Relations with the Visayans
Tondo and Maynila are often portrayed as having adversarial relations with the polities of the Visayas, because of the disparaging comments of
Rajah Sulayman towards the Visayan "pintados" during the earliest negotiations with Martin de Goiti in 1570.
Sulayman had boasted that the people of Maynila were "not like the Painted Visayans" and would not give up their freedoms as easily as the Visayans did.
Scott notes that at the very least, this meant that Sulayman had kept up-to-date with events happening in the Visayas,
probably arising from the trade relationships Tondo and Maynila had developed with polities throughout the archipelago.
Relations with polities outside the Philippine archipelago
Java ()
One of the primary source of Tondo's historiography—the
Laguna Copperplate Inscription ( 900 AD), was written using
Kawi script, a writing system developed in
Java. The inscription was written in
Old Malay, with a few
Sanskrit and
Old Javanese elements, and many of the words in the inscription having equivalents in
Tagalog
Tagalog may refer to:
Language
* Tagalog language, a language spoken in the Philippines
** Old Tagalog, an archaic form of the language
** Batangas Tagalog, a dialect of the language
* Tagalog script, the writing system historically used for Tagal ...
.
This was a rare trace of Javanese influence that reached far flung island as far north as Luzon, which suggests the extent of interinsular exchanges of that time.
The Dutch anthropologist
Antoon Postma has concluded that the Laguna Copperplate Inscription contains
toponyms that might be corresponding to certain places in modern Philippines; such as ''Tundun'' (
Tondo); ''Pailah'' (Paila, now an enclave of
Barangay San Lorenzo,
Norzagaray); ''Binwangan'' (Binuangan, now part of
Obando); and ''Puliran'' (
Pulilan).
The toponym of ''Mdaŋ'' in particular, is interesting since it might correspond to the Javanese
Kingdom of Medang, in present-day
Indonesia, which flourished around the same period ( 9th to 10th century). However, the nature of Tondo's relations with Java is not clear.
Siam ()
Several ceramic wares from
Sukhothai and
Sawankhalok were found in Luzon and Visayas region. The discovery of Siamese artifacts in the Philippines suggests that from 13th to 15th century, the exchanges between mainland Southeast Asia and the Philippine archipelago was established.
Relations with the Ming dynasty ()
The earliest Chinese historical reference to Tondo can be found in the "Annals of the Ming dynasty" called the ''
Ming Shilu'',
which record the arrival of an envoy from Luzon to the
Ming Dynasty in 1373.
Her rulers, based in their capital, Tondo () were acknowledged not as mere chieftains, but as kings (
王
is a Chinese character encountered in East Asian languages. It was grouped with as Radical 96 in the ''Kangxi'' radicals.
It may also refer to:
* kings, in reference to non-Chinese states
* the early Chinese sovereigns of the Xia, Shang, and ...
).
This reference places Tondo into the larger context of Chinese trade with the native people of the Philippine archipelago.
Theories such as
Wilhelm Solheim's
Nusantao Maritime Trading and Communication Network (NMTCN) suggest that cultural links between what are now China and the nations of Southeast Asia, including what is now the Philippines, date back to the peopling of these lands.
But the earliest archeological evidence of trade between the Philippine aborigines and China takes the form of pottery and
porcelain pieces dated to the
Tang and
Song dynasties.
The rise of the Ming dynasty saw the arrival of the first Chinese settlers in the archipelago. They were well received and lived together in harmony with the existing local population — eventually intermarrying with them so that today, numerous Filipinos have Chinese blood in their veins.
Also a lot of Philippine cultural mores today came from China more so than their later colonizers of Spain and the United States.
This connection was important enough that when the Ming Dynasty emperors enforced the
Hai jin laws which closed China to maritime trade from 1371 to about 1567, trade with the Kingdom of Tondo was officially allowed to continue, masqueraded as a tribute system, through the seaport at
Fuzhou
Fuzhou (; , Fuzhounese: Hokchew, ''Hók-ciŭ''), alternately romanized as Foochow, is the capital and one of the largest cities in Fujian province, China. Along with the many counties of Ningde, those of Fuzhou are considered to constitute t ...
.
Aside from this, a more extensive clandestine trade from
Guangzhou and
Quanzhou
Quanzhou, postal map romanization, alternatively known as Chinchew, is a prefecture-level city, prefecture-level port city on the north bank of the Jin River, beside the Taiwan Strait in southern Fujian, China. It is Fujian's largest metrop ...
also brought in Chinese goods to Luzon.
Luzon and Tondo thus became a center from which Chinese goods were traded all across Southeast Asia. Chinese trade was so strict that Luzon traders carrying these goods were considered "Chinese" by the people they encountered.
Relations with Japan
Relations between Japan and the kingdoms in the Philippines, date back to at least the
Muromachi period of Japanese history, as Japanese merchants and traders had settled in Luzon at this time. Especially in the area of
Dilao
Paco, formerly known as Dilao, is a district of Manila, Philippines located south of the Pasig River, and San Miguel, west of Santa Ana, southwest of Pandacan, north of Malate, northwest of San Andres Bukid, and east of Ermita. According to t ...
, a suburb of
Manila, was a ''
Nihonmachi'' of 3,000
Japanese around the year 1600. The term probably originated from the
Tagalog
Tagalog may refer to:
Language
* Tagalog language, a language spoken in the Philippines
** Old Tagalog, an archaic form of the language
** Batangas Tagalog, a dialect of the language
* Tagalog script, the writing system historically used for Tagal ...
term ''dilaw'', meaning "yellow", which describes a colour. The Japanese had established quite early an enclave at Dilao where they numbered between 300 and 400 in 1593. In 1603, during the
Sangley rebellion, they numbered 1,500, and 3,000 in 1606. In the 16th and 17th centuries, thousands of Japanese people traders also migrated to the Philippines and assimilated into the local population.
Japan
Japan ( ja, 日本, or , and formally , ''Nihonkoku'') is an island country in East Asia. It is situated in the northwest Pacific Ocean, and is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan, while extending from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north ...
was only allowed to trade once every 10 years. Japanese merchants often used
piracy in order to obtain much sought after Chinese products such as
silk and porcelain. Famous 16th-century Japanese merchants and
tea connoisseurs like Shimai Soushitsu (
島井宗室) and Kamiya Soutan (
神屋宗湛) established branch offices on the island of Luzon. One famous Japanese merchant,
Luzon Sukezaemon (呂宋助左衛門), went as far as to change his surname from Naya (納屋) to Luzon (呂宋).
Timeline of historical events
Theories and legends regarding the establishment of Manila ( – )
It's not clear what role Tondo played in the founding of Maynila, which lies just south of Tondo, across the Pasig River.
Various versions of this story identify dates for the founding of Maynila variedly as 1258, 1369 and around the year 1500.
These dates all pre-date the references to the Luzones by the chroniclers of Portuguese Malacca,
but are later than the mention of Tondo in the Laguna Copperplate Inscription.
Establishment through defeat of Rajah Avirjirkaya by Rajah Ahmad of Brunei ( 1258)
The earliest date proposed for Maynila's founding is the year 1258, based on genealogical traditions documented by Mariano A. Henson in 1955.
(Later cited by Majul in 1973,
and by Santiago in 1990
[Santiago, Luciano P.R., The Houses of Lakandula, Matanda, and Sulayman 571–1898 Genealogy and Group Identity, Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 18 ]990
Year 990 ( CMXC) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.
Events
By place
Europe
* Al-Mansur, ''de facto'' ruler of Al-Andalus, conquers the Castle of Montemor-o-Velho (mode ...
/ref>) This tradition claims that a Majapahit settlement ruled by "Rajah Avirjirkaya" already existed in the Maynila at the time, and that it was attacked by a Bruneian commander named Rajah Ahmad, who defeated Avirjirkaya and established Maynila as a "Muslim principality". The LCI provides evidence that Tondo existed at the time, but it is not explicitly mentioned in Henson's account.
The Bruneian Empire and the establishment of Selurong by Sultan Bolkiah ()
According to other Bruneian oral traditions, a city with the Malay name of Selurong, which would later become the city of Maynila) was formed around the year 1500.
Scott (1994) acknowledges those traditions, noting that "''according to Bruneian folk history''", ''"Manila was probably founded as a Bornean trading colony about 1500, with a royal prince marrying into the local ruling family.''" French linguist Jean-Paul Potet notes, however, that "''According to some, Luzon and/Manila would have been called Seludong or Selurong by the Malays of Brunei before the Spanish conquest (Cebu 1565, Manila 1571).''" However, Potet also points out that ''"there is no text to support this claim. Conversely, Borneo has a mountain site called Seludong."''
According to yet other Bruneian oral traditions, the Sultanate of Brunei
This article includes a list of successive Islamic states and Muslim dynasties beginning with the time of the Islamic prophet Muhammad (570–632 CE) and the early Muslim conquests that spread Islam outside of the Arabian Peninsula, and continui ...
under Sultan
Sultan (; ar, سلطان ', ) is a position with several historical meanings. Originally, it was an Arabic abstract noun meaning "strength", "authority", "rulership", derived from the verbal noun ', meaning "authority" or "power". Later, it ...
Bolkiah
Bolkiah, also known as Nakhoda Ragam, was the 5th Sultan of Brunei. He ascended the throne upon the abdication of his father, Sultan Sulaiman, and ruled Brunei from 1485 to 1524. His reign marked the Golden Age of Brunei and saw the Sultanate ...
attacked the kingdom of Tondo, and established Selurong on the opposite bank of Pasig River. The traditional Rajahs of Tondo, like Lakandula
Lakandula (Baybayin: , Spanish orthography: ''Lacandola'') was the title of the last ''lakan'' or paramount ruler of pre-colonial Tondo when the Spaniards first conquered the lands of the Pasig River delta in the Philippines in the 1570s.
The f ...
, retained their titles and property but the real political power came to reside in the House of Soliman, the Rajahs of Maynila.[Santiago, Luciano P.R., The Houses of Lakandula, Matanda, and Soliman 571-1898 Genealogy and Group Identity, Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 18 ]990
Year 990 ( CMXC) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.
Events
By place
Europe
* Al-Mansur, ''de facto'' ruler of Al-Andalus, conquers the Castle of Montemor-o-Velho (mode ...
/ref>
Incorporation into the Bruneian Empire (1500)
Tondo became so prosperous that around the year 1500, the Bruneian Empire, under Sultan Bolkiah
Bolkiah, also known as Nakhoda Ragam, was the 5th Sultan of Brunei. He ascended the throne upon the abdication of his father, Sultan Sulaiman, and ruled Brunei from 1485 to 1524. His reign marked the Golden Age of Brunei and saw the Sultanat ...
, merged it by a royal marriage of Gat Lontok, who later became Rajah of Namayan, and Dayang Kalangitan to establish a city with the Malay name of ''Selurong'' (later to become the city of Manila) on the opposite bank of Pasig River.
The traditional rulers of Tondo, like Lakandula
Lakandula (Baybayin: , Spanish orthography: ''Lacandola'') was the title of the last ''lakan'' or paramount ruler of pre-colonial Tondo when the Spaniards first conquered the lands of the Pasig River delta in the Philippines in the 1570s.
The f ...
, retained their titles and property upon embracing Islam
Islam (; ar, ۘالِإسلَام, , ) is an Abrahamic religions, Abrahamic Monotheism#Islam, monotheistic religion centred primarily around the Quran, a religious text considered by Muslims to be the direct word of God in Islam, God (or ...
but the real political power transferred to the master trader House of Sulayman, the Rajahs of Maynila.
Probable presence in Portuguese Malacca as the Luções of Luçon (1511 – 1540s)
The Portuguese first established a presence in Maritime Southeast Asia with their capture of Malacca in 1511,[Newton, Arthur Percival (1929) ''The Cambridge History of the British Empire'' p. 1]
/ref> and their contacts with the seafarers they described as ''Luções'' (lit. people from "''lusong''", the area now known as Manila Bay) became the first European accounts of the Tagalog people, as Anthony Reid recounts: ''The first European reports on the Tagalogs classify them as “Luzons”, a nominally Muslim commercial people trading out of Manila, and “almost one people” with the Malays of Brunei.''
Portuguese chronicler Tomo Pires notes that in their own country, the Luções had "''foodstuffs, wax, honey, inferior grade gold''", had no king, and were governed instead by a group of elders. They traded with tribes from Borneo and Indonesia, and Filipino historians note that the language of the Luções was one of the 80 different languages spoken in Malacca
Malacca ( ms, Melaka) is a state in Malaysia located in the southern region of the Malay Peninsula, next to the Strait of Malacca. Its capital is Malacca City, dubbed the Historic City, which has been listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site si ...
.
As skilled sailors, Lucoes were actively involved in the political and military/naval affairs of those who sought to take control of the economically strategic highway of the Strait of Malacca, serving in the fleets of the Sultans of Ache and Brunei, and the former Sultan of Malacca, Scholars have suggested that they may have served as highly skilled naval mercenaries sought after by various fleets of the time.
Portuguese and Spanish accounts from the early to mid 1500s state that the Maynila polity was the same as the "kingdom"[Scott (1994) notes that Spanish chroniclers continued to use the terms "king" and "kingdom" to describe the polities of Tondo and Maynila until late 1571, when Martin de Goiti's first forays into Bulacan and Pampanga clarified to the Spanish that the alliances of the Tondo and Maynila polities with the Kapampangan polities did not include territorial claim or absolute command. San Buenaventura (1613, as cited by Junker, 1990 and Scott, 1994) later noted that Tagalogs only applied the term ''Hari'' (King) to foreign monarchs, rather than their own leaders.] that had been referred to as the "Kingdom of Luzon" ( Portuguese: ''Luçon'', locally called "''Lusong''"), and whose residents had been called "''Luções''".
However, Kapampangan scholars such as Ian Christopher Alfonso add that it's also possible that while the Portuguese and Spanish chroniclers specifically equated “Luçon” with Rajah Matanda's Maynila polity, the description may have been expansive enough to describe other polities in the Manila bay area, including Tondo as well as the Kapampangans of Hagonoy and Macabebe.
Territorial conflicts with Maynila (before 1521)
According to the account of Rajah Matanda as recalled by Magellan expedition members Gines de Mafra, Rodrigo de Aganduru Moriz, and expedition scribe Antonio Pigafetta, Maynila had a territorial conflict with Tondo in the years before 1521.
At the time, Rajah Matanda's mother (whose name was not mentioned in the accounts) served as the paramount ruler of the Maynila polity, taking over from Rajah Matanda's father (also unnamed in the accounts), who had died when Rajah Matanda was still very young. Rajah Matanda, then simply known as the "Young Prince" Ache, was raised alongside his cousin, who was ruler of Tondo - presumed by some to be a young Bunao Lakandula, although not specifically named in the accounts.
During this time, Ache realized that his cousin, who was ruler of the Tondo polity, was "''slyly''" taking advantage of Ache's mother by taking over territory belonging to Maynila. When Ache asked his mother for permission to address the matter, his mother refused, encouraging the young prince to keep his peace instead. Prince Ache could not accept this and thus left Maynila with some of his father's trusted men, to go to his "grandfather", the Sultan of Brunei, to ask for assistance. The Sultan responded by giving Ache a position as commander of his naval force.
In 1521, Prince Ache was coming fresh from a military victory at the helm of the Bruneian navy and was supposedly on his way back to Maynila with the intent of confronting his cousin when he came upon and attacked the remnants of the Magellan expedition, then under the command of Sebastian Elcano
Sebastian may refer to:
People
* Sebastian (name), including a list of persons with the name
Arts, entertainment, and media
Films and television
* ''Sebastian'' (1968 film), British spy film
* ''Sebastian'' (1995 film), Swedish drama film
...
. Some historians[Jose Rizal, as cited by Dery, 2001] suggest that Ache's decision to attack must have been influenced by a desire to expand his fleet even further as he made his way back to Lusong and Maynila, where he could use the size of his fleet as leverage against his cousin, the ruler of Tondo.
Exclusion from the Battle of Manila (May 1570)
Tondo and its rulers were initially ignored by the Spanish during the conquest of Manila bay, because the Spanish focused their attention on Manila, which had fortifications that Tondo did not.
While Spanish colonizers first arrived in the Philippines in 1521, the Spanish only reached the Manila Bay area and its settlements in 1570, when Miguel López de Legazpi sent Martín de Goiti to investigate reports of a prosperous Moro settlement on the island of Luzon.
De Goiti arrived in mid-1570 and was initially well received by Maynila's ruler Rajah Matanda, who, as former commander of the Naval forces of Brunei, had already had dealings with the Magellan expedition in late 1521. Negotiations broke down, however, when another ruler, Rajah Sulayman, arrived and began treating the Spanish belligerently, saying that the Tagalog people would not surrender their freedoms as easily as the "painted" Visayans did. The accounts of the De Goiti mission report that Tondo's ruler, Lakandula
Lakandula (Baybayin: , Spanish orthography: ''Lacandola'') was the title of the last ''lakan'' or paramount ruler of pre-colonial Tondo when the Spaniards first conquered the lands of the Pasig River delta in the Philippines in the 1570s.
The f ...
, sought to participate in these negotiations early on, but De Goiti intentionally ignored Lakandula because he wanted to focus on Maynila, which Legaspi wanted to use as a headquarters because it was already fortified, whereas Tondo was not.
By May 24, 1570, negotiations had broken down, and according to the Spanish accounts, their ships fired their cannon as a signal for the expedition boats to return. Whether or not this claim was true, the rulers of Maynila perceived this to be an attack and as a result, Sulayman ordered an attack on the Spanish forces still within the city. The battle was very brief because it concluded with the settlement of Maynila being set ablaze.
The Spanish accounts claim that De Goiti ordered his men to set the fire, historians today still debate whether this was true. Some historians believe it is more likely that the Maynila forces themselves set fire to their settlement, because scorched-earth retreats were a common military tactic among the peoples of the Philippine archipelago at the time.
De Goiti proclaimed victory, symbolically claimed Maynila on behalf of Spain, then quickly returned to Legaspi because he knew that his naval forces were outnumbered. Contemporary writers believe the survivors of Maynila's forces would have fled across the river to Tondo and other neighboring towns.
Establishment of Maynila (May 1571)
López de Legazpi himself returned to assert the Spanish claim on Maynila a year later in 1571. This time, it was Lakandula
Lakandula (Baybayin: , Spanish orthography: ''Lacandola'') was the title of the last ''lakan'' or paramount ruler of pre-colonial Tondo when the Spaniards first conquered the lands of the Pasig River delta in the Philippines in the 1570s.
The f ...
who first approached the Spanish forces, and then Rajah Matanda. Rajah Sulayman was at first intentionally kept away from the Spanish for fear that Sulayman's presence might antagonize them.
López de Legazpi began negotiating with Rajah Matanda and Lakandula to use Maynila as his base of operations, and an agreement was reached by 19 May 1571. According to Spanish accounts, Sulayman began participating in the discussions again when he apologized to the Spanish for his aggressive actions of the previous year, saying that they were the product of his "youthful passion." As a result of these talks, it was agreed that Lakandula would join De Goiti in an expedition to make overtures of friendship to the various polities in Bulacan and Pampanga, with whom Tondo and Maynila had forged close alliances. This was met with mixed responses, which culminated in the Battle of Bangkusay Channel
The Battle of Bangkusay ( fil, Labanan sa Ilog Bangkusay; es, Batalla de Bangkusay), on June 3, 1571, was a naval engagement that marked the last resistance by locals to the Spanish Empire's occupation and colonization of the Pasig River delta, ...
.
Battle of Bangkusay Channel (June 1571)
June 3, 1571 marked the last resistance by locals to the occupation and colonization by the Spanish Empire of Manila in the Battle of Bangkusay Channel
The Battle of Bangkusay ( fil, Labanan sa Ilog Bangkusay; es, Batalla de Bangkusay), on June 3, 1571, was a naval engagement that marked the last resistance by locals to the Spanish Empire's occupation and colonization of the Pasig River delta, ...
. Tarik Sulayman, the chief of Macabebes, refused to ally with the Spanish and decided to mount an attack at the Bangkusay Channel on Spanish forces, led by Miguel López de Legazpi
Miguel López de Legazpi (12 June 1502 – 20 August 1572), also known as '' El Adelantado'' and ''El Viejo'' (The Elder), was a Spaniard who, from the age of 26, lived and built a career in Mexico (then the Viceroyalty of New Spain) and, i ...
. Sulayman's forces were defeated, and he was killed. The Spanish victory in Bangkusay and Legaspi's alliance with Lakandula
Lakandula (Baybayin: , Spanish orthography: ''Lacandola'') was the title of the last ''lakan'' or paramount ruler of pre-colonial Tondo when the Spaniards first conquered the lands of the Pasig River delta in the Philippines in the 1570s.
The f ...
of the Kingdom of Tondo, enabled the Spaniards to establish themselves throughout the city and its neighboring towns.
The defeat at Bangkusay marked the end of rebellion against the Spanish among the Pasig river settlements, and Lakandula's Tondo surrendered its sovereignty, submitting to the authority of the new Spanish capital, Manila.
Tondo Conspiracy (1587–1588)
The Tondo Conspiracy of 1587–1588, also referred to as the "''Revolt of the Lakans''" and sometimes the "''Conspiracy of the Maharlikas''" was a plot against Spanish colonial rule by the Tagalog
Tagalog may refer to:
Language
* Tagalog language, a language spoken in the Philippines
** Old Tagalog, an archaic form of the language
** Batangas Tagalog, a dialect of the language
* Tagalog script, the writing system historically used for Tagal ...
and Kapampangan nobles of Manila and some towns of Bulacan and Pampanga. They were the indigenous rulers of their area or an area yet upon submission to the might of the Spanish was relegated as mere collector of tributes or at best Encomenderos that need to report to a Spanish Governor. It was led by Agustín de Legazpi, the son of a Maginoo of Tondo (one of the chieftains of Tondo), born of a Spanish mother given a Hispanized name to appease the colonizers, grandson of conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi
Miguel López de Legazpi (12 June 1502 – 20 August 1572), also known as '' El Adelantado'' and ''El Viejo'' (The Elder), was a Spaniard who, from the age of 26, lived and built a career in Mexico (then the Viceroyalty of New Spain) and, i ...
, nephew of Lakan Dula, and his first cousin, Martin Pangan. The datus swore to rise up in arms. The uprising failed when they were betrayed to the Spanish authorities by Antonio Surabao (Susabau) of Calamianes. The mastermind of the plot was Don Agustín de Legazpi; the mestizo grandson of conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi, nephew of Lakan Dula, a relative of Rajah Matanda. Being a Moro, he was the son-in-law of Sultan Bolkieh of Brunei, whose first cousin was Martín Panga, the gobernadorcillo of Tondo.
Besides the two, the other leaders were Magat Salamat, son of Lakan Dula and the crown prince of Tondo; Juan Banal, another prince of Tondo and Salamat's brother-in-law; Geronimo Basi and Gabriel Tuambacar, brothers of Agustín de Legazpi; Pedro Balingit, the Lord of Pandakan; Felipe Salonga, the Lord of Polo; Dionisio Capolo (Kapulong), the Lord of Kandaba and brother of Felipe Salonga; Juan Basi, the Lord of Tagig; Esteban Taes (also Tasi), the Lord of Bulakan; Felipe Salalila, the Lord of Misil; Agustín Manuguit, son of Felipe Salalila; Luis Amanicaloa, another prince of Tondo; Felipe Amarlangagui, the commander-and-chief of Katanghalan; Omaghicon, the Minister of Nabotas, and Pitongatan (Pitong Gatang), another prince of Tondo and two governors from Malolos and Guiguinto.[Corpuz, Onofre (1989). ''The Roots of the Filipino Nation''. University of the Philippines Press. pp. 111–119.]
Notable rulers and nobles of Tondo
Historical rulers of Tondo
A number of rulers of Tondo are specifically identified in ''historical documents'', which include:
* the epistolary firsthand accounts of the members of the Magellan and Legaspi expeditions, referred to in Spanish as "''relaciones''";
* various notarized genealogical records kept by the early Spanish colonial government, mostly in the form of last wills and testaments of descendants of said rulers; and,
* in the case of Jayadewa, specific mention in the Laguna Copperplate Inscription.
Legendary rulers
A number of rulers of Tondo are known only through ''oral histories'', which in turn have been recorded by various documentary sources, ranging from historical documents describing oral histories, to contemporary descriptions of modern (post-colonial/national-era) oral accounts. These include:
* orally transmitted genealogical traditions, such as the Batu Tarsila, which have since been recorded and cited by scholarly accounts;
* legends and folk traditions documented by anthropologists, local government units, the National Historical Institute of the Philippines, and other official sources; and
* recently published genealogical accounts based on contemporary research.
Scholarly acceptance of the details recounted in these accounts vary from case to case, and are subject to scholarly peer review.
Historically Notable nobles associated with Tondo
Notable sources
Notable primary sources
The Laguna Copperplate Inscription ()
The first reference to Tondo occurs in the Philippines' oldest historical record — the Laguna Copperplate Inscription (LCI). This legal document was written in Kawi
Kawi may refer to:
* Kawi language, oldest attested phase of the Javanese language
* Kawi script, writing system used across Southeast Asia from the 8th century to around 1500 AD
::Kawi (Unicode block), the script in Unicode
* Mount Kawi, a volcano ...
, and dates back to Saka 822 (c. 900).
The first part of the document says that: ''On this occasion, Lady Angkatan, and her brother whose name is Bukah, the children of the Honourable Namwaran, were awarded a document of complete pardon from the King of Tundun, represented by the Lord Minister of Pailah, Jayadewa.''
The document was a sort of receipt that acknowledged that the man named Namwaran had been cleared of his debt to the King of Tundun, which in today's measure would be about 926.4 grams of gold.
The article mentioned that other places in the Philippines and their rulers: Pailah (Lord Minister Jayadewa), Puliran Kasumuran (Lord Minister), Binwangan (unnamed). It has been suggested that Pailah, Puliran Kasumuran, and Binwangan are the towns of Paila, Pulilan, and Binwangan in Bulacan, but it has also been suggested that Pailah refers to the town of Pila, Laguna. More recent linguistic research of the Old Malay grammar of the document suggests the term Puliran Kasumuran refers to the large lake now known as Laguna de Ba'y (Puliran), citing the root of Kasumuran, *sumur as Old Malay for ''well, spring or freshwater source''. Hence ka-sumur-an defines a ''water-source'' (in this case the freshwater lake of Puliran itself). While the document does not describe the exact relationship of the King of Tundun with these other rulers, it at least suggests that he was of higher rank.
Ming Dynasty court records ( 1300s)
The next historical reference to Ancient Tondo can be found in the Ming Shilu Annals (明实录]),[Ming Annals](_blank)
(Chinese (archived fro
on 2008-04-11) which record the arrival of an envoy from Luzon to the Ming Dynasty (大明朝) in 1373. Her rulers, based in their capital, Tondo () were acknowledged not as mere chieftains, but as kings (王
is a Chinese character encountered in East Asian languages. It was grouped with as Radical 96 in the ''Kangxi'' radicals.
It may also refer to:
* kings, in reference to non-Chinese states
* the early Chinese sovereigns of the Xia, Shang, and ...
).[Volume 5 of 東西洋考 (A study of the Eastern and Western Oceans) mentions that Luzon first sent tribute to Yongle Emperor in 1406](_blank)
This reference places Tondo into the larger context of Chinese trade with the native people of the Philippine archipelago.
Theories such as Wilhelm Solheim's Nusantao Maritime Trading and Communication Network (NMTCN) suggest that cultural links between what are now China and the nations of Southeast Asia, including what is now the Philippines, date back to the peopling of these lands. But the earliest archeological evidence of trade between the Philippine aborigines and China takes the form of pottery and porcelain pieces dated to the Tang dynasty, Tang and Song dynasties.
Firsthand Spanish accounts (relaciones) (1521 – late 1500s)
Events that took place in the Pasig river delta in the 1500s are documented in some of the firsthand epistolary accounts ("''relaciones''") written by the Spanish.
Most of these describe events that took place after 1571–72, when forces under the command of Martín de Goiti, and later Miguel de Legazpi himself, arrived in Manila Bay. These are described in the numerous accounts of the Legazpi expedition, including those by the expedition's designated notary Hernando de Riquel, by Legazpi's successor Guido de Lavezares
Guido is a given name Latinisation of names, Latinised from the Old High German name Wido. It originated in Medieval Italy. Guido later became a male first name in Austria, Germany, the Low Countries, Scandinavia, Spain, Portugal, Latin America an ...
, and by Legazpi himself.
However, there are also some references to Maynila, Luzon, and Tondo in the accounts of the Magellan expedition in 1521, which, under the command of Sebastian Elcano
Sebastian may refer to:
People
* Sebastian (name), including a list of persons with the name
Arts, entertainment, and media
Films and television
* ''Sebastian'' (1968 film), British spy film
* ''Sebastian'' (1995 film), Swedish drama film
...
, had captured a commander of naval forces for the Sultan of Brunei, whom the researchers William H. Scott and Luis Dery identified as Prince Ache, who would later become Rajah Matanda. These events, and the details Ache's interrogation, were recorded in accounts of Magellan and Elcano's men, including expedition members Rodrigo de Aganduru Moriz, Gines de Mafra, and the expedition's scribe Antonio Pigafetta.
Many of these relaciones were later published in compilations in Spain, and some were eventually translated and compiled into the multi-volume collection " The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898" by Emma Helen Blair and James Alexander Robertson.
Early Tagalog lexicons (late 1500s – early 1600s)
In addition to the extensive descriptions contained in the firsthand accounts of the Spanish expeditions, much of what is now known about precolonial Tagalog culture, religion, and language are derived from early Tagalog dictionaries and grammar books, such as Fray San Buenaventura's 1613 "'' Vocabulario de la lengua tagala''" and Fray Francisco Blancas de San José's 1610 "''Arte de la lengua tagala''." Scott notes that while the ''relaciones'' spoke much about the Tagalogs' religion because it was the concern of the Spanish missionaries, and of their political and martial organization because it was the concern of the Spanish bureaucrats, these dictionaries and grammar books are rich sources of information regarding the Tagalogs' material and ephemeral culture.
Notable Genealogical sources
Historical documents containing genealogical information regarding the rulers of Tondo during and immediately after the arrival of the Spanish fleet in the early 1570s mostly consist of notarized Spanish documents executed by the direct descendants of rulers such as (Bunao) Lakan Dula of Tondo; Rajah Matanda (Ache) and Rajah Sulayman of Maynila; and Rajah Calamayin of Namayan. In addition to firsthand accounts of the executors' immediate descendants and relatives, some (although not all) of these genealogical documents include information from family oral traditions, connecting the document's subjects to local legendary figures. Several of these notarized Spanish documents are kept by the National Archives and are labeled the "Lakandula documents."
Scott, in his seminal 1984 work "''Prehispanic Source Materials for the Study of Philippine History''", identifies a number of "quasi-historical" genealogical sources, which are not physically historical, but which contain genealogical information which claims to date back to early historic times. These include the Sulu and Maguindanao Tarsilas, and the Batu Tarsila of Brunei.
Historical theories associated with Ancient Tondo
''Lakandula'' as a title
While most historians think of Lakan Dula as a specific person, with Lakan meaning ''Lord'', ''King'' or ''Paramount Ruler'' and Dula being a proper name, one theory suggests that Lakandula
Lakandula (Baybayin: , Spanish orthography: ''Lacandola'') was the title of the last ''lakan'' or paramount ruler of pre-colonial Tondo when the Spaniards first conquered the lands of the Pasig River delta in the Philippines in the 1570s.
The f ...
is a hereditary title for the Monarchs of the Kingdom of Tondo.[Santiago, Luciano P.R., The Houses of Lakandula, Matanda, and Soliman 571–1898Genealogy and Group Identity, Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 18 ]990
Year 990 ( CMXC) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.
Events
By place
Europe
* Al-Mansur, ''de facto'' ruler of Al-Andalus, conquers the Castle of Montemor-o-Velho (mode ...
The heirs of Lakan Banao Dula
In 1587, Magat Salamat, one of the children of Lakan Dula, and with his Spanish name Augustin de Legazpi, Lakan Dula's nephew, and the lords of the neighboring areas of Tondo, Pandakan, Marikina, Kandaba, Nabotas and Bulakan were martyred for secretly conspiring to overthrow the Spanish colonizers. Stories were told that Magat Salamat's descendants settled in Hagonoy, Bulacan and many of his descendants spread from this area.
David Dula y Goiti, a grandson of Lakan Dula with a Spanish mother escaped the persecution of the descendants of Lakan Dula by settling in Isla de Batag, Northern Samar
Northern Samar ( war, Amihanan Samar/Norte san Samar; tl, Hilagang Samar), officially the Province of Northern Samar, is a Provinces of the Philippines, province in the Philippines located in the Eastern Visayas Regions of the Philippines, regio ...
and settled in the place now called Candawid (Kan David). Due to hatred for the Spaniards, he dropped the Goiti in his surname and adopted a new name David Dulay. He was eventually caught by the Guardia Civil based in Palapag and was executed together with seven followers. They were charged with planning to attack the Spanish detachment.
Heirs
According to historians from National Archives of the Philippines, the main line of heirs of the Tondo monarchs are the direct family lines of Salonga and Magsaysay. Among these are international singer and theatre actress Lea Salonga
Maria Lea Carmen Imutan Salonga (; born February 22, 1971), known professionally as Lea Salonga, is a Filipino singer, actress, and columnist. Nicknamed "Pride of the Philippines," she is best known for her roles in musical theatre, for supplyin ...
and columnist Ramon Magsaysay III.
See also
* Luções
*Majapahit
Majapahit ( jv, ꦩꦗꦥꦲꦶꦠ꧀; ), also known as Wilwatikta ( jv, ꦮꦶꦭ꧀ꦮꦠꦶꦏ꧀ꦠ; ), was a Javanese people, Javanese Hinduism, Hindu-Buddhism, Buddhist thalassocracy, thalassocratic empire in Southeast Asia that was ba ...
* Cainta (historical polity)
* Namayan
*Lakandula
Lakandula (Baybayin: , Spanish orthography: ''Lacandola'') was the title of the last ''lakan'' or paramount ruler of pre-colonial Tondo when the Spaniards first conquered the lands of the Pasig River delta in the Philippines in the 1570s.
The f ...
*Battle of Bangkusay Channel
The Battle of Bangkusay ( fil, Labanan sa Ilog Bangkusay; es, Batalla de Bangkusay), on June 3, 1571, was a naval engagement that marked the last resistance by locals to the Spanish Empire's occupation and colonization of the Pasig River delta, ...
* Lacandola Documents
* Tondo Conspiracy of 1587–1588
* History of the Philippines (900–1521)
* History of Luzon
* Hinduism in the Philippines
Notes
References
Further reading
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Bolkiah era
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Spanish era
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tondo, Kingdom of
Former countries in Southeast Asia
Former countries in Philippine history
History of the Philippines (900–1565)
Barangay states
Former monarchies of Southeast Asia
Indianized kingdoms
History of Luzon
History of Manila
Manila Bay
1st-millennium establishments in Southeast Asia
1580s disestablishments in Asia
Historical Hindu kingdoms
Former countries