Saturday, July 24, 2010

Manila City Hall

Photos also seen in Tumblr.

I transferred all the contents of my blog there

Since my personal blog is in Tumblr and the interface is much much easier for me, I decided to transfer all of the contents of this blog to Tumblr. Okay?

But I will still make time to update this, bit by bit.

Then and Now

Sta. Cruz Church in the 1950's


Sta. Cruz Church and I think the current GE savings bank in Sta. Cruz, Manila.
All the buildings are intack. Even that lamp that lit up the area for the past 50 years is still there standing.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

The City within Walls

     Intramuros, the city within walls, in literal Latin. In the City of Manila there is such a place, the place where the city marked its birth and and growth, this is our Intramuros.
     The city literally bloomed out of Pasig River, where the Islamic Kingdom of Maynilad existed as a Fortress with wooden walls until Miguel Lopez de Legaspi invaded the city, 1571.
     The current stone walls existing today was only built starting 16th century, with a height of 6 meters and a width of more than a hundred meters, the walls surely gives the city an invulnerable protection.
     In the Spanish Period, the enclosure itself marks the whole of the city. The outlying areas (Ermita, Malate, Binondo, San Nicolas, Santa Cruz) were just arraballes of suburbs. Expansion only started in the latter period of Spanish Rule.
     The walls survived numerous earthquakes and fires, but not the Battle of Manila in 1945, which reduced the Beautiful City into a piece of Rubble.
     Restoration works started after the war, in which the Manila Cathedral is the first to be restored. Intramuros Administration was solely in charge of the restoration and urban plans of the walled city.
    Currently, numerous buildings have been restored to their full grandeur and glory and more still awaits.

Plan of Intramuros, 1851, Map source here

Plan of Intramuros, 1898, map source here

contemporary map of Intramuros, map source here

There is a current archaeological excavation in Colegio de San Ignacio Ruins, the first College in the Country.

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

The Malate Church


Malate Church the oldest Church in Manila outside of Intramuros, started as a nipa hut by Agustinian Friars in the 16th century. The last structure, built in Baroque Architecture was completed 1864. Used as a garrison for British Forces during the British Occupation of Manila, 1762 - 1763. Was razed by the Japanese

Malate Church is called the Nuestra Señora del Remedios (Our Lady of Remedies), the patroness of women in childbirth. The image was brought from Spain, 1624 and still stands in the altar.

The place where a hero died and a nation was born

Shaped like a small moon, thus Luneta.

The place started as a clearing south of the walls, where the Spanish Elite could have some social activities, and witness the bay's beautiful sunset. The park is also called Bagumbayan (New Town).

Like the small moon in the night, the place witnessed several moments in Philippine History.

The Death of a Hero




December 30, 1896. 7 o'clock in the morning. Jose Rizal was executed, after that he was hailed as the Philippines' National Hero.

The Birth of a Nation

Marker celebrating the first cabinet.

The Flagpole in front of Rizal Park, this is where the Inauguration of the third Philippine Republic Happened.


July 4, 1961

The flag of The United States was lowered and the flag of the Philippines was raised, with the full declaration of independence from US, the inauguration of the Third Philippine Republic with Manuel Roxas as the President.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Vigan City: The Heritage City

Short Historical Background


Vigan City, almost 500 kms north of  Manila, is a one of the two cities in the Province of Ilocos Sur. It is also the capital of the said province province.
The area, upon conquest by Juan de Salcedo, was called Villa Fernandina, after the Spanish King Philip II's son, Ferdinand.
Eventually, the settlement grew, because of these, the Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia, originally from Lallo, Cagayan was transferred here, 1758.


Contemporary Times


Vigan is the best preserved European planned city in Asia. By 1980's, destruction of the Old Buildings reduced the area of the Old Spanish settlement. By 1993, construction of new buildings became heavily regulated in favor of the restoration of the Old Ones. In 1999, the UNESCO declared the city as one of the Heritage Sites, making it the only village to be a Heritage Site by UNESCO creating a boost for the restoration program of the Town.
Vigan was reduced to a municipality in the reorganization of the Philippines after Spanish Rule. Before that Vigan was already a city, by virtue of a Royal Decree of King Fernando VI of Spain. It was reinstated as a city 2001 by RA 8988 and approved at a plebiscite 2001.


Places you must Go

  • Heritage City, the Old Settlement which includes the Old Town and the most famous of them is Calle Crisologo, the only cobblestone street in the whole heritage village.
  • Plaza Burgos, this is Padre Jose Burgos' Home.
  • Plaza Salcedo, this is where the Unesco Heritage inscription is found.
  • Baluarte, a zoo being kept by the Governor Chavit Sinsgon.
Photos




Click on photos for High Resolution

The Traveling Fountain



Click on Photos to see High Resolutions

Located in the Plaza Sta. Cruz and in front of the Sta. Cruz Church in Manila, the Fountain, is one of the oldest in the city. Carriedo Street is near the fountain, but the fountain is not originally located here.

The fountain is dedicated to Don Francisco Carriedo, who inherited in his will an amount to start up the piped water system in Manila. Upon the start of the construction of the piped water system, this fountain was inaugurated 1882 into then Sampaloc Rotunda, the intersection of Ramon Magsaysay, Legarda and Nagtahan in the Contemporary period. Prior to this, Manila just derive its water supply in the Pasig River and its Tributaries, this water is used for all purposes (laundry, cleaning, drinking) that's why in the 19th century all diseases and epidemics are water-borne.

In the 1970s' due to traffic, construction of the Nagtahan flyover and the transfer of Nawasa in Balara, Quezon City, the fountain was transferred and included in the new office of the Nawasa.

In 1992, upon Alfredo Lim's start as the Manila Mayor, he negotiated with the MWSS regarding the return of the fountain back to the city. MWSS agreed only if the fountain has to be duplicated. They hired National Artist Napoleon Abueva to replicate the fountain, and the original fountain was back in the city in its current location, though not the original one.

Monday, May 17, 2010

San Lorenzo Ruiz de Manila

Life

c. 1600 (Manila)  - September 29, 1637

Lorenzo Ruiz, the first Filipino Saint, is born to a Filipino (Indio) Mother and a Chinese Mother. Raised as a Catholic and his father taught him Chinese and his mother taught him Tagalog.
He served as an altar boy in the Tutelage of the Dominicans at the convent of the Domincan Church. He became an escriba (calligrapher) because of his skill in handwriting. He is also a member of the Confradia del Santissimo Rosario.
He married a Filipina and had two sons and a daughter. They lived in peace.
However, while working as a clerk in the Binondo Church, he is falsely accused of killing a Spaniard. He sought asylum on a missionary ship to Japan along with three Dominican Priests.
Upon landing in Okinawa, Japan, they were arrested and persecuted because of the Catholic Religion.
They have to endure several methods of torture like hanging by feet, submerging the whole body with water, water torture.
Finally, when these methods couldn't make them recant their Christian Faith, they have to endure horca y hoya or trurushi. He died at September 29, 1637. He was cremated and the ashes thrown to the sea.

Sainthood

St. Lorenzo Ruiz was beatified by Pope John Paul II February 18, 1981 at Manila, this is the First beatification ceremony outside the Vatican. Finally, He was canonized October 18, 1987 in Vatican.

Tributes
Statue in Front of the Binondo Church, also called Minor Basilica of San Lorenzo Ruiz.


Statue Marking the Beatification of San Lorenzo Ruiz here in Luneta, Manila.


Marker inscribed at the foot of the Statue in Luneta.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

The Binondo Church




Situated between Ongpin and Condesa Streets in Binondo, Manila. Binondo Church is one of the oldest Churches in the Philippines. Erected by the Dominicans 1596, although the first structure was destroyed 1762 during the British Occupation of Manila.


The current building was completed in 1852 and was greatly damaged but fortunately the building survived.


Currently, it is named as Minor Basilica of St. Lorenzo Ruiz to honor the First Filipino Saint.


(c) theurbanhistorian

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Voting done!

First Timer.

Yup. I went to the Voting Precinct to early at 6:00AM. The actual voting started at 7:30, and the school is now jampacked with people! Argh!

But the voting is fun and easy. And the PCOS machine, now the most dreaded machine of this season, rejected my first feeding of the ballot and accpeted the second. Alignment siguro ang problema.

So far. the Election is Fun for me.

This election would either make or break the country.

(c) theurbanhistorian

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Kalesa, the primary mode of transportation in Old Manila. If you had an Own Kalesa Back then, youre considered member of the alta de sociedad. Today, even owning a car doesn't make you filthy rich.
Rajah Sulayman, the last king of Manila

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Manila

Manila: A Short History

Manila is the Philippines' capital city since the start of the country's written history, the Spanish Colonial times. Like the country itself, the city was enhanced by the different groups that set foot on the city, giving it a multicultural flavor. Manila is originally the Asian Bastion of Catholicism, where all Catholic Missions to the Asian Mainland originate but the intermigration of different cultures and beliefs abolished Catholic monopoly in the city. Manila started as a Malay Kingdom called "Maynilad" last ruled by Rajah Sulayman until Miguel Lopez de Legazpi invaded Maynilad and Established the "Ever Loyal and Distinguished City of Manila" and he himself as the "Adelantado de Manila".

( - 1571) The Kingdom of Maynilad


The Kingdom of Maynilad is then the most revered empire in the whole of Luzon that time. Even Rajahs and Datus in the nearby Islands paid tribute to it. The kingdom was a thriving trade center of that time. The word 'maynilad' in old Tagalog literally means "There is a nilad there." the nilad is a flowery plant that reputedly grows in the Pasig River. Adjacent to the Kingdom is another Kingdom, the Kingdom of Tondo, which is the Kapampangan kingdom north of Pasig ruled lastly by Lakandula.
As the expedition of Legazpi invaded the Visayan Islands, they heard information of a place of wealth in the north (pertaining to Luzon) called Maynilad and Tondo so he sent his aide Martin de Goiti to the northern island where he met unwelcome greeting from the Kingdom. Upon returning to the Panay Island, Legazpi personally commanded the invasion of Maynilad along with some Visayan Natives.
Legazpi fought the resistance force of Lakandula and Rajah Sulayman. The Kings were defeated and were asked to accept the sovereignty of the Spanish Crown in exchange for some conditions. Legazpi then founded the City and restored the freedom of the two kings until he died. He founded the city on June 24, 1571 with the name "Distugished and Ever Loyal City of Manila."





(1571 - 1898) The Imperial City of Manila



Manila was built in the ruins of the Kingdom of Maynilad. Only Spanish along with the servants are allowed in the city premises and the gates are closed at sunset. Inside the walls is the University of Santo Tomas, the Ayuntamiento, the Palacio del Gobernador, the Manila Cathedral and so others.
The city was administered from Mexico and it run the Manila Galleon Trade from the 16th century to the 19th century. The Manila Galleon trade was a trading exchange between Asia, the Americas and Europe. The galleon runs from Acapulco in Mexico to Manila in Filipinas. The galleon goes from Acapulco bringing it American and European products to Manila where the Chinese Junks go and exchange their products with the Western ones in exchange for gold or silver. During this time, Maize or corn was first introduced to China by Manila, thereby augmenting the food supply to the mushrooming Chinese Population. At 1815, at the near collapse of the Spanish Economy, the Manila Galleon was abolished.
When South America got its independence from the Spanish, Spain eventually directly ruled the Archipelago. They opened the ports of the colony to international trade in 1834 where the economy grew rapidly, heralding the rise of the middle class who would go on to peacefully press equality with the Spanish, because of the increase in economic activity, Manila's urban area increased beyond the walls, now including Santa Cruz, Ermita, Paco, Binondo, Pandacan and Malate (Sampaloc and Tondo was separate provinces then.). Together they constitute the arrabales (or suburbs).
The First Nationalist revolution didn't start from here. The First Philippine Republic by Emilio Aguinaldo temporarily ended Manila's status as the Capital City, where they declared the Town of Malolos in Bulacan the Capital of the Country.







(1898 - 1946) The City of Manila

The Spanish - American War was ignited by the sinking of USS Maine in the Havana Coast in 1898. The Americans attacked Spanish Territories, including the Philippines. In a tale of being a double agent, the Americans offered Emilio Aguinaldo help in totally repulsing the Spanish in Manila and also offered Spanish a graceful exit from the colony in exchange for the territories. On May 1, 1898, the Americans attacked the now obsolete Spanish Armada in Manila Bay, marking the defeat of the Spanish, after the battle was ended, the Americans didn't allow Filipinos to the city.

On December 10, 1898, the now depleted power Spain ceded its remaining territories to the Americans in exchange for $10million. The Americans now from allies to conquerors invaded the country. Now, the Americans reconfigured the whole country for their administration. Now, they made the City of Manila from the old Imperial City which was called Intramuros, the Arrabales, Tondo and Sampaloc.

For the development of the city, they commisioned Architect Daniel Burnham to plan the city of Manila (and similarly the Baguio City). The plan was made, but the second world war destroyed the Burnham Plan, only the Manila City Hall and Dewey Boulevard (now Roxas Boulevard) were some of the remnants of the Burnham Plan. This would leave the post-war plan to the Filipinos themselves.

The pre-War Manila was largely a beautiful city they say. The city was developed along American Model, and has the first train line, first airlines, first telephone lines, cleanest city and the second main city in Asia after Tokyo in Japan. There was no Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Jakarta and Singapore that time, Manila was the envy of Southeast Asia that time. Even Tokyo itself marveled at Manila and in one of Zaide's books the citizens even hired Japanese that time as servants.

The World War II definitely destroyed Manila, despite being an Open City after the Pearl Harbor Bombing, the Japanese still bombed the city, but the leaders Quezon and Osmeña retreated to Corregidor. The Battle of Manila in 1945 wholly destroyed the old charm of the city, in this battle, the Japanese slaughtered at least 100,000 helpless Manileños.



(1946 - 1975) After 300 years in Catholic Convent and 50 Years in Hollywood, Manila is still the City of Manila

The Philippines finally got its independence on July 4, 1946 with Manuel Roxas and Elpidio Quirino as the President and Vice President respectively in Luneta. Manila is not the Capital City anymore but is Quezon City, a capital city planned by Quezon to be like the Washington, D.C., but Manila Serves still as the Cultural Center for the Country. After the pains of post-war rehabilitation, Manila reclaimed its throne as the best cities in Asia and even the world thanks to the clean and colorful 10 year administration of Mayor Arsenio H. Lacson who along with successor Antonio Villegas, built a city university, zoological park, city hospital and an underpass in busy Quiapo, which was a first in the country for that time. Until the formation of the bigger Metro Manila, the City remained the center of business for the country, while Quezon City is the center of Government. The city, like the country itself experienced a relatively healthy growth upon peaceful transistions of leadership until President Marcos declared Martial Law in 1972.
President Marcos amalgated the city of Manila, along with the municipalities of Makati, Mandaluyong, Marikina, San Juan Del Monte, Navotas, Taguig, Paranaque, Multinlupa, Quezon City, Pateros, Kalookan, Pasay, Pasig, Las Piñas, Malabon and Valenzuela to be the components of Metropolitan Manila or Metro Manila and Function as the capital of the country. He also appointed Imelda Marcos as the governor.


(1975 - present) Metropolitan Manila

Marcos foresaw the overpopulation of Manila so he expanded it to become Metro Manila. He and his planners planned the Metropolitan city, distributed government offices to different municipalities and planned for the Metropolitan Manila Railway System to ease traffic, road networks of Metropolis.
Even after the fall of Marcos, Metro Manila still is the capital of the country but now, the business districts now are distbuted from each component. the current population was ten million double the population limit when Marcos planned the Metropolis.
As of this writing, only Pateros remained at Municipal level though landlocked by bigger urban jungles, Makati and Taguig. Its economy still mainly agricultural with eggs (balut) as its main produce. The area controls more than 40 per cent of the Philippine Economy and still houses the headquarters of many transnational companies operating in the country. The old Metropolis faces intense competition from the other fast rising cities of the south, Metro Cebu and Metro Davao.

Manila's Gift to the World

Since the time of Maynilad, the area is a meeting place of different cultures: Chinese, Indian, Arabic and other SE Asian Kingdoms. Magellan did not set foot in Luzon, so it was Legazpi who first made contact with the natives of Maynilad. Since then, European enhanced the melting pot quality of Manila, creating Manila what is known today.
Manila Bay is the link of the Old World and New World to the Celestial Empire (China), bringing western culture to the Orient and Oriental Culture to the West. Manila is the crossroads of the world. As I said earlier, Manila Galleon introduced corn to China, which was an Aztec staple food.
Manila is the model of many South East Asian Cities in the past, including Singapore. But as they learned from Manila, they soon imbibed their own national flavor, and therefore soon rose ahead of Manila.
At the moment, Metro Manila is still one of Asia's largest Urban Agglomeration.

Appendixes
Image 1. The walled city of Manila, Intramuros
Image 2. Plan of Manila by Daniel Burnham
Image 3. Map of Manila CBD (Ermita)
Image 4. Metropolitan Manila
____________________________________________________________________
Niki Jon Y. Tolentino
November 27, 2008
bokologs_nickytolentino@yahoo.com.ph

Arsenio H. Lacson




(1911 December 26 , Talisay Negros Occidental – 1962 April 14, City of Manila)


Life and Political Career

Arsenio Hilario Lacson was born 1912 in Talisay, Negros Occidental and is the grandson of Aniceto Lacson, the President of the Republic of Negros. He graduated Bachelor of Arts in Ateneo de Manila and Bachelor of Laws in the University of Santo Tomas. He passed the Bar in 1937.
He became a member of the Free Philippines Movement in the outbreak of World War II. He was in the Battle of Manila (1945) and fought in the Liberation of Baguio.
Lacson was a journalist in radio and print, an athlete, a lawyer, professor and his most celebrated achievement: A colorful political figure of the City of Manila.
Lacson was a radio commentator of a radio program titled “In this corner” in which political and social commentaries are being made. The radio program made started the man’s colorful career, for it was popular among Manileños. The radio program continued still when the latter is still mayor. Then President Manuel Roxas suspended him from the airwaves for calling him “Manny the Weep”. Then, he paired with Pedro Padilla to write in Daily Star Express to write a newpaper column of the same title.
Lacson was back in the airwaves after the death of Roxas and the assumption of Quirino to the Presidency, which they proclaim as “His Accidency”. Lacson became the most fervent and the devil’s advocate of Elpidio Quirino after the ambush of former first lady Aurora Quezon and her family, allegedly by Hukbalahap in 1949. Pres. Quirino beforehand announced that the whole archipelago is in state of peace and order and the rebellion was quelled. The Quezon incident proved Quirino wrong.
Lacson entered politics at the 1949 General Elections under the Nacionalista Party. He successfully ran for the Representative of the Second District of Manila against the Vicente Fugoso of Quirino’s Liberal Party. He was named as one of the “Ten Most Useful Congressman” by the media group assigned in the Congress.
Before 1951, the position of Manila Mayor was an appointive position: the National Government Picks the Mayor for the Capital City. On 1951, changes are introduced so that Manileños can now elect the candidate they like for the position.
Running against palace stalwart and incumbent Mayor Manuel De la Fuente, Arsenio Lacson became the first elected mayor of the Capital City, and was re-elected for three times until his death.
Ridding the city of graft and corruption, he fired 600 incompetent or corrupt city employees and policemen. He inherited from his predecessors a 23.4 million pesos (that time it was very large considering that two pesos is a dollar) debt and by the end of 1959 the city had a 4 million pesos surplus.
He personally administered Manila’s peace and order situation having been along the police at raids, and patrols. He would patrol in Manila at nights and from time to time he would stop at Bay View and Filipinas Hotels to hear complaints from residents themselves.
Being a politician, he was an ardent critic of the Quirino administration and supported the Magsaysay Campaign in 1953. When President Magsaysay’s untimely death happened in 1957 and Carlos Garcia became the President, he had turned away from the latter because he claimed that he was offered by Pres. Magsaysay to be the Nacionalista Nominee for 1957 which he refused, saying that “the time has not yet come”. He was a critic of the Garcia administration in his full term as president. In 1961, he turned against re-electionist Garcia to support fellow Thomasian and Liberal Candidate Diosdado Macapagal because of principle. By this time, people knew he will run for president by 1965 as he returned to Nacionalista Party saying “I agree to make Macapagal President, but not to agree with him forever.”
The Mayor said himself “I will become a president of the Philippines or become a victim of an assassin.”That assassin would be the fatal disease called stroke which killed him in his hotel suite in April 14, 1962. That stopped him from becoming the President of the Philippines. By 1965, the Nacionalistas nominated Ferdinand Marcos for the Presidency.
He was buried in the Manila North Cemetery.


The Lacson Attitude


His fashion outfit was always in dark polos and pants and never forgetting that shades, which was never missing in his public appearances. His friend Pedro Padilla in his tribute book Arsenic and I reasoned that the shades are used to hide his black eyes he got from the night brawls in bars in Manila.
He maintained a brawny and compared by Americans to NY mayor Fiorello LaGuardia. He is the man who challenged then Representative Ferndinand Marcos into a fistfight. He is a good man with a bad mouth. He has a good time mocking Manuel Roxas into Manny the Weep and Elpidio Quirino as Elpito Quirino. He subjected then Manila Councilor Ernesto Maceda into eternal damnation when the ribald mayor branded him so young yet so corrupt. When in a State Visit to the Philippines, Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi asked him if he had learned any Japanese During the war and he answered “I was too busy shooting the Japanese to learn any.”His satire stings well during those days. His show has to be pre-recorded before broadcasting to delete of the expletives he said.
A factor which hastened the mayor’s end is his vice of drinking. He drinks, anytime of the day whether his stomach is empty or not.

The Lacson Legacy

By his second term as Manila Mayor, a group of American City Mayors said that Manila was one of the 10 best administered cities in the world, the only Asian City at that time to be given that recognition. The Manila of the Lacson Era was the envy city of the South East Asia, with almost all of its neighbours were just gaining independence from colonialism.
He was he brainchild of the Quiapo Underpass (now the Lacson Underpass), Manila Zoo, Ospital ng Maynila, Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila. Almost all of the Post-war Manila was of Lacson’s Plans.
He is now celebrated not only by Manila as the City’s Greatest Mayor but also as the greatest Philippine President Filipinos never had. He is the Standard for all mayors all over the country like Cesar Climaco, had had the title Arsenio Lacson of Zambo.
His successors have honoured him of the greatest mayor the city ever had, the underpass in Quiapo was renamed by his immediate successor Antonio Villegas to his name. Plaza Goiti in Sta. Cruz (between Escolta, McArthur Brigde and LRT Carriedo) was renamed Plaza Lacson and an imposing sculpture was erected in it. Lacson, if still alive till today maybe ordering to remove his handsome statue in the ground with his vocabulary of the finest swear words, more to oust Gov. Forbes in place of him in the Streets.
References.

Padilla, Pedro. Arsenic and I, Book one. Manila: 1962 (Available in the UP Main Library: Filipiniana Section)

“Arsenio Lacson”. Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

__________________________________________________________________________

About the blogger:
Niki Jon Y. Tolentino is a student of Civil Engineering in UP Diliman in Quezon City. He was born and grew up in Sampaloc, Manila. He reads Philippine History Books and plots US invasion by the Philippines if at his free times. He currently resides in Quezon City but he still comes back to Manila, as there were more adventures in Manila.
Violent Reactions? Email bokologs_nickytolentino@yahoo.com.ph or leave comments here.