Masantol

Masantol, officially the Municipality of Masantol, (Kapampangan: Balen ning Masantol; Tagalog: Bayan ng Masantol), is a 2nd class municipality in the province of Pampanga, Philippines. According to the 2015 census, it has a population of 57,063 people.[3]

Masantol
Municipality of Masantol
Downtown area
Seal
Nickname(s): 
San Miguel de Masantol
Motto(s): 
Kayabe Kabang Bie
Map of Pampanga with Masantol highlighted
Masantol
Location within the Philippines
Coordinates: 14°54′N 120°43′E
Country Philippines
RegionCentral Luzon (Region III)
ProvincePampanga
District4th District
Founded1878
Reinstated1907
Barangays26 (see Barangays)
Government
[1]
  TypeSangguniang Bayan
  MayorDanilo S. Guintu
  Vice MayorEpifanio M. Lacap Jr.
  CongressmanJuan Pablo P. Bondoc
  Electorate39,748 voters (2019)
Area
[2]
  Total48.25 km2 (18.63 sq mi)
Elevation
6.0 m (19.7 ft)
Population
 (2015 census)[3]
  Total57,063
  Density1,200/km2 (3,100/sq mi)
  Households
11,665
Economy
  Income class2nd municipal income class
  Poverty incidence19.96% (2015)[4]
  Revenue (₱)111,730,819.71 (2016)
Time zoneUTC+8 (PST)
ZIP code
2017
PSGC
IDD:area code+63(0)45
Climate typetropical monsoon climate
Native languagesKapampangan
Tagalog
Websitewww.masantolpampanga.gov.ph

Etymology

The municipality is named after the santol trees that used to grow abundantly in the area.[5]

The reason is either because there was a proliferation of santol trees in the area, or because the town was where santol fruits were heavily bartered (Kapampangans being fond of 'sinigang' dish).

A legend of how the town got its name goes like this: 'A Spanish missionary came to the town for the first time. Upon reaching a roadside corner store, he parked his horse-driven vehicle and inquired from the store keeper the name of the place. A middle-aged woman vendor, believing that the Spanish priest was asking for the name of the fruits she was selling, readily responded in broken Spanish language, Padre, todos dulce Masantol. The priest took from his pocket a pencil and a small diary and wrote down the word mas santol, referring to the name of the place he has visited. At the time, the locality abounded with santol trees, and santol fruits were in season when the priest visited the place.'

History

San Miguel de Masantol May 1, 1878

Originally named San Miguel de Masantol and a part of the town of Macabebe, three of the town's leading patriarchs - Manuel Fajardo, Gregorio Bautista, and Juan Lacap - filed a motion on June 26, 1877, to separate the barrios of Bebe, Bulacus, Caingin and Nigui from Macabebe thereby creating a new Spanish pueblo called San Miguel. This new pueblo was approved by Spanish Governor General Domingo Moriones y Murillo and was inaugurated on May 1, 1878. On November 30, 1893, the Catholic Parish of San Miguel was formally acknowledged through a Royal Decree.[6] For a while it came to be known San Miguel Masantol, until popular usage reverted it to the original name.

Balen ning Masantol 1907

On July 26, 1904, Masantol once more became part of Macabebe. However, in 1907, Masantol was again reinstated as a separate independent municipality and this lasted up to the present.[6]

The Battle of Bangkusay Channel The Ruler of Macabebe

Tarik Sulayman Bambalino / Bankau or for some Historians the Unnamed ruler of Macabebe was the indigenous leader of Macabebe from the "Masantol area", who refused to ally with the Spaniards and therefore mounted an attack against the Spanish forces of Miguel López de Legazpi during the Battle of Bangkusay Channel on June 3, 1571. The Joint Force of Macabebe, Calumpit, Hagonoy and Maynila "Old Rajahnate of Maynila under Rajah Sulayman III / Rajah Mura/Muda of Manila" were defeated, by the Joint Force of Spanish Armada and Tagalog mercenaries and Tarik Sulayman himself was killed in the Battle, and Consequently, this victory enabled the Spaniards to establish themselves throughout the city "Territory of Kingdom of Tondo" and its neighboring Kingdoms and towns.

Tragedy

On January 7, 2008, one person drowned, another missing and 40 others were injured due to electric shocks, when a live cable hit the floating pagoda boat in the fluvial festival of Virgen La Purisima Concepcion at Barangay Alauli.[7]

Contemporary history

In 2020, Masantol and the entire Province of Pampanga was placed under community quarantine starting March 15 to May 31 due to the 2020 coronavirus pandemic, or the NCovid-19.

Geography

Masantol is almost surrounded by the municipality of Macabebe (For it was once a former part of the town). It is known to be the southernmost town in the province of Pampanga. It is bounded to the north by the municipality of Macabebe; to the east by the municipalities of Calumpit and Hagonoy in Bulacan; to the west by Macabebe; and to the south by some parts of Macabebe and Manila Bay.

Climate

Climate data for Masantol, Pampanga
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 28
(82)
29
(84)
31
(88)
33
(91)
32
(90)
31
(88)
30
(86)
29
(84)
29
(84)
30
(86)
30
(86)
28
(82)
30
(86)
Average low °C (°F) 20
(68)
20
(68)
21
(70)
23
(73)
24
(75)
24
(75)
24
(75)
24
(75)
24
(75)
23
(73)
22
(72)
21
(70)
23
(72)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 6
(0.2)
4
(0.2)
6
(0.2)
17
(0.7)
82
(3.2)
122
(4.8)
151
(5.9)
123
(4.8)
124
(4.9)
99
(3.9)
37
(1.5)
21
(0.8)
792
(31.1)
Average rainy days 3.3 2.5 3.6 6.6 17.7 22.2 25.2 23.7 23.2 17.9 9.2 5.2 160.3
Source: Meteoblue [8]

Barangays

Masantol is politically subdivided into 26 barangays and 2 independent/dependent sitios.

  • Alauli
  • Bagang
  • Balibago
  • Bebe Anac
  • Bebe Matua
  • Bulacus
  • San Agustin (Caingin)
  • Santa Monica (Caingin)
  • Cambasi
  • Malauli
  • Nigui
  • Palimpe
  • Puti
  • Sagrada (Tibagin)
  • San Isidro Anac
  • San Isidro Matua (Poblacion)
  • San Nicolas (Poblacion)
  • San Pedro
  • Santa Cruz
  • Santa Lucia Matua
  • Santa Lucia Paguiaba
  • Santa Lucia Wakas
  • Santa Lucia Anac (Poblacion)
  • Sapang Kawayan
  • Sua
  • Santo Niño

Sitios:

  • Bebe Arabia
  • Sagrada 2 (sagrada dos)

Demographics

Population census of Masantol
YearPop.±% p.a.
1903 7,076    
1918 9,636+2.08%
1939 14,095+1.83%
1948 15,770+1.26%
1960 24,159+3.62%
1970 30,538+2.37%
1975 32,658+1.36%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1980 35,350+1.60%
1990 41,964+1.73%
1995 45,326+1.45%
2000 48,120+1.29%
2007 50,984+0.80%
2010 52,407+1.01%
2015 57,063+1.63%
Source: Philippine Statistics Authority[3][9][10][11]

In the 2015 census, the population of Masantol, Pampanga, was 57,063 people,[3] with a density of 1,200 inhabitants per square kilometre or 3,100 inhabitants per square mile.

Religion

The majority of the population are members of the Catholic church and each village or barangay has its own fiesta. The main Roman Catholic parish church of the town is the San Miguel Parish Church in Barangay San Nicolas, established in the late 20th century.

  • 80% One Holy Apostolic Catholic Church (Christian) (Roman rite)
  • 19% Evangelical, Pentecostal, Presbyterian, Jesus Is Lord Church, Protestant etc. (Christian Denomination)
  • 0.07% Iglesia Ni Cristo
  • 0.20% Islam (Sunni, Shia)
  • 0.10% others/non-believers/atheist

Festivals

  • Batalla San Miguel Arkangel (Apung Igue) - May 8, All Masantolenos
  • Battalla Santo Niño - every last Sunday of January. - Barangay Santo Nino
  • Batalla Santa Monica - May 4. - Barangay Santa Monica Caingin
  • Batalla San Roque de Montpelier (Apung Duque) - August 15,16,17 Sittio Bebe Arabia, Barangay Bebe Anac
  • Batalla San Roque (Apung Duque) - 3rd or 4th Sunday of April - Sittio Bebe Arabia, Barangay Bebe Anac, Barangay Bebe Matua
  • Batalla San Roque de Montpelier (Apung Duque) - August 15,16,17 Barangay Bebe Matua
  • Fiesta de San Nicolas (Apung Culas) - May 12 and September 10 - Barangay San Nicolas
  • Feast of The HOLY ROSARY - every 2nd Saturday of October in BULACUS MASANTOL
  • Batalla de Santa Lucia (Apung Lucia) - December 13 of the year. - Barangay Santa Lucia Wakas, Matua, Anac
  • Batalla de San Agustin (Apung Gustin)- August 28 Barangay San Agustin Caingin
  • Limbun at Libad or Labas Larawan (Celebration of the Saints) in each barrio/barangay celebrating their patron saint for ones a week in January.

Education

Masantol is home to several primary, secondary, Vocational and Collage School among them are:

  • Pampanga institute (Collage)
  • TESDA Vocational Training Center (Under the Municipality support)
  • San Miguel Academy Semi-Catholic School (Christian School) (Junior/Siñor High School)
  • Holy Child of Mary Academy Semi-Catholic School (Christian School) (Junior/Siñor High School)
  • Pampanga Institute (Junior/Siñor High School) 1st high school institution in town of Masantol
  • Masantol Central High School (Siñor High)
  • Masantol National High School (Junior High) (fmr. Santa Lucia High School)
  • Masantol High School Annex (Junior High) (Tarik Suliman High School)
  • Masantol High School Annex (Junior High) (Malauli High School)
  • St. Michael The Archangel Archdiocesan Parochial School Exclusive Catholic School (Masantol Parochial School)
  • Masantol Elementary School (Masantol Central Elementary School)
  • Bagang Elem. School
  • Caingin Elem. School
  • Palimpe Elem. School
  • Bebe Anac Elem. School
  • Bebe Matua Elem School
  • Puti Elem. School
  • Sagrada Elem. School
  • Sua Elem. School
  • San Isidro Elem. School
  • Balibago Elem. School
  • SantaLucia elem school
  • Alauli Elem School
  • San Pedro Elem School
  • Santa Cruz Main Elem School
  • Santa Cruz (Annex) Elem School
  • San Nicolas Elem School
  • Bagang Elem School
  • Balibago Elem School
  • Nigui Elem School

MASANTOL HERO CLAIMING GAT. ANDRES BONIFACIO ROOT

BY NOW, Kapampangans should be totally convinced that the derogatory term dugong aso is not derogatory at all. Its original meaning was "fierce and fearless" (the British general William Draper wrote that Pampangos fought like mad dogs "gnawing at our bayonets") and "loyal to a fault" (the Spaniards called Kapampangans the "loyal companions of our disgraces and our glories").

It was only later when people started interpreting dugong aso as "treacherous," which is totally the opposite of what dogs are.

I will not make excuses for their acts; I will just say that when you are colonized, you are forced to make compromises to survive. We never lived in those times and therefore never know their sufferings and the moral dilemmas they faced every single day of their tortured lives.

Besides, non-Kapampangans were just as traitorous. The Macabebe soldiers were only following orders. A Tagalog, Hilario Tal Placido, and an Ilocano, Cecilio Segismundo, defected on their own from Aguinaldo's camp and revealed his hiding place to the Americans.

All these thoughts about traitors and heroes come to mind. In life and in death, Andres Bonifacio was tormented by traitors-from fellow Katipuneros who abandoned, humiliated and executed him, to those who, after his death, disarranged, destroyed, and covered up evidence in an attempt to diminish his role in history.

At Tejeros where Katipuneros convened to choose between Aguinaldo who wasn't there and Bonifacio who was there, the electors who were mostly upper-class Caviteños chose the absentee as their new president. When they proceeded to vote for vice president, they ignored Bonifacio again and chose another Caviteño (Mariano Trias). And when they finally, reluctantly gave him the crumbs (the position of interior secretary), someone objected and had the gall to say that the Katipunan founder was not educated enough for the position. It was obvious the whole proceeding had been scripted from the start.

When the split occurred, Aguinaldo ordered Bonifacio arrested. You'd think that with Bonifacio's stature the arresting party would politely salute him before putting on the handcuffs. Instead, they barged into his headquarters and mauled him and his two brothers Ciriaco and Procopio (some say they also raped his wife Gregoria de Jesus). The mauling was so extreme that Ciriaco died on the spot. Andres was stabbed in the neck before being hauled off.

Bonifacio had to be carried on a hammock to his trial, where he and Procopio were sentenced to die by execution. Aguinaldo tasked Bonifacio's former aide, Lazaro Macapagal, to carry out the execution, perhaps to further embitter Bonifacio.

They took the Bonifacio brothers to the mountain where they were killed-Procopio shot in the back and Andres hacked with a bolo. Were they left there to rot? Were they buried in unmarked shallow graves? Was it on Mount Buntis, Mount Tala or Mount Nagpatong? No one knows for sure. They destroyed all records about Bonifacio in an effort to promote someone else's role in history, according to HAU researcher Ian Alfonso.

In life, Bonifacio was shut out because he was poor, unschooled and an outsider in the circle of Caviteño elites who controlled a bloc in the Katipunan. In death, Bonifacio was sidelined because the American colonizers considered the elite, educated and pacifist Rizal as a worthier role-model for Filipinos, and also because Bonifacio's nemesis, Aguinaldo, lived long enough to perpetuate only his version of events (he died in 1964 at age 95).

Some historians are saying that Bonifacio, not Aguinaldo, should be considered first President of the Philippines for heading the first revolutionary government before Aguinaldo's Tejeros convention replaced it. Others are suggesting that Bonifacio should be equally ranked with Rizal for launching Asia's first anti-colonial revolution that Rizal merely inspired and Aguinaldo merely continued.

Today, a group of scholars, cultural workers and common folk are coming together in Barangay Sta. Cruz, Masantol, Pampanga to mark Bonifacio Day in a special way. They will use research and folk tradition to establish Andres Bonifacio's Kapampangan roots. The project is spearheaded by HAU faculty member and researcher Joel S. Regala.

According to Regala, the Bonifacios originated in Masantol, not Tondo. His proofs?

(1) A certain Domingo Bonifacio served as Macabebe capitan (mayor) in 1731.

(2) More than a thousand voters surnamed Bonifacio are listed in Masantol and 256 more in Macabebe, compared to only 102 in all of Tondo.

(3) There is an oral tradition among old folks in Masantol about Andres Bonifacio being their blood relative.

Regala says he cannot find hard evidence about Andres Bonifacio's birth in 1863 in Masantol because all church records were destroyed in 1898 when Aguinaldo ordered the burning of Macabebe church after the Macabebes helped the Spaniards escape from his revolutionary army. Masantol was a barrio of Macabebe until 1878.

Regala adds that Tondo is only an hour away from Masantol by boat. Then as now, Kapampangan merchants regularly went to Tondo to ply their trade. There were so many Kapampangan settlers there that they assigned a Pampanga Street.

And then, of course, there's the fact that Tondo formerly belonged to the linguistic orbit of the ancient Kapampangan Region.

When Andres Bonifacio founded the Katipunan, he had Kapampangans with him, most notably Aurelio Tolentino. After Bonifacio's death, Aguinaldo also got help from Kapampangan generals (Maximino Hizon, Jose Alejandrino, Francisco Makabulos, Servillano Aquino).

Other heroes had Kapampangan blood in them, too. Marcelo H. del Pilar was a cousin of the Hilarios of Bacolor (the H in his name stands for Hilario). Jose Rizal was related to the Mercados of Sasmuan (his father Francisco Mercado was descended from Domingo Lamco of Guagua).

With so many Kapampangan patriots and heroes, I don't understand why some people stay fixated on the few traitors.

As for the Macabebes, let me just say that even Aguinaldo himself asked to be photographed with them after his capture. Enough said

They must be referring to the Macabebes who helped the Americans capture Aguinaldo, and to two Macapagals in history: Juan Macapagal of Arayat who helped the Spaniards put down the Kapampangan Revolt of 1660, and Lazaro Macapagal who carried out the execution of Andres Bonifacio in 1897.

Images

References

  1. "Municipality". Quezon City, Philippines: Department of the Interior and Local Government. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
  2. "Province: Pampanga". PSGC Interactive. Quezon City, Philippines: Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved 12 November 2016.
  3. Census of Population (2015). "Region III (Central Luzon)". Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay. PSA. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  4. "PSA releases the 2015 Municipal and City Level Poverty Estimates". Quezon City, Philippines. Retrieved 1 January 2020.
  5. Alejandro S. Camiling. "The Town of Masantol, Pampanga". Historical articles. andropampanga.com. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
  6. "The Town of Masantol, Pampanga". Andropampanga. 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-05. External link in |publisher= (help)
  7. chinapost.com.tw, One drowns, 40 injured in Philippine boat mishap
  8. "Masantol: Average Temperatures and Rainfall". Meteoblue. Retrieved 5 May 2020.
  9. Census of Population and Housing (2010). "Region III (Central Luzon)". Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay. NSO. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  10. Censuses of Population (1903–2007). "Region III (Central Luzon)". Table 1. Population Enumerated in Various Censuses by Province/Highly Urbanized City: 1903 to 2007. NSO.
  11. "Province of Pampanga". Municipality Population Data. Local Water Utilities Administration Research Division. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
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