Learn More: 📖Araullo, Kirby. 2021. The Fierce Women of Southeast Asia. 📖Araullo, Kirby. 2021. Tondo, Slavery, & the Revolt of the Lakans. 📖Araullo, Kirby. 2021. What They Never Told You About the Discovery of the Philippines. 📖 Bergaño, Diego. 1860. Vocabulario de La Lengua Pampanga En Romance. 📖 Emma Helen Blair, and James Alexander Robertson. 1903. The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898. Vol. 1-55. 📖 F. Landa Jocano. 1998. “Filipino Prehistory: Rediscovering Precolonial Heritage. 📖 Furlong, Matthew J. 2014. “Peasants, Servants, and Sojourners: Itinerant Asians in Colonial New Spain, 1571-1720.” University of Arizona. 📖 Gallop, Annabel Teh. 2019. “Silsilah Raja-Raja Brunei: The Manuscript of Pengiran Kesuma 📖 George Bryan Souza, and Jeffrey Scott Turley. 2016. The Boxer Codex : Transcription and Translation of an Illustrated Late Sixteenth-Century Spanish Manuscript Concerning the Geography, Ethnography and History of the Pacific, South-East Asia and East Asia. Leiden: Brill. 📖 Muhammad Hasyim.” Archipel. Études Interdisciplinaires Sur Le Monde Insulindien, no. 97 (June): 173-212. 📖 Henson, Mariano A. 1955. The Province of Pampanga and Its Towns (A.D. 1300-1955) with the Genealogy of the Rulers of Central Luzon. 📖 Jumsai, Brig. Gen. M.L. Manich. 1987. History of Thailand & Cambodia from the Angkor to the Present. Chalermnit Press. 📖 Laura Lee Junker. 2000. Raiding, Trading, and Feasting : The Political Economy of Philippine Chiefdoms. Quezon City: Ateneo De Manila University Press. 📖 Loarca, Miguel, Juan Plasencia, Pedro Chirino, Francisco Colin, and Anotnio Pigafetta. 1975. The Philippines at the Spanish Contact. 📖 Majul, Cesar Adib. 1965. “Political and Historical Notes of the Old Sulu Sultanate.” Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 38 (1): 23-42. 📖 Pangilinan, Michael Raymon M. 2012. An Introduction to KULITAN the Indigenous Kapampangan Script. Angeles City, Philippines: Center for Kapampangan Studies, Holy Angel University. 📖 Pangilinan, Michael Raymon M. "Ót Mayábang la ring Kapampángan?" (a series of lectures at the Ágúman Sínúpan Singsing: Center for Kapampangan Cultural Heritage). 📖 Parker, Luther. 1931. “The Gats and the Lakans.” Philippine Magazine, January. 📖 Parker, Luther. . 1931. “The Lakandolas.” Philippine Magazine, February. 📖 Parker, Luther. . 1931. “The Last of the Lakans.” Philippine Magazine, March. 📖 Paul Michel Munoz. 2016. Early Kingdoms : Indonesian Archipelago & the Malay Peninsula. Singapore Editions Didier Millet. 📖Pigafetta, Antonio, and T J Cachey. 2007. The First Voyage around the World, 1519-1522 : An Account of Magellan’s Expedition. Toronto: University Of Toronto Press. 📖Postma, Antoon. 1992. “The Laguna Copper-Plate Inscription: A Valuable Philippine Document.” Philippine Studies 40 (2): 183-203. 📖Reid, Anthony. 1995. Southeast Asia in the Age of Commerce, 1450-1680. New Haven: Yale University Press. 📖 Ruurdje Laarhoven. 1989. Triumph of Moro Diplomacy: The Maguindanao Sultanate in the 17th Century. Quezon City, Philippines: New Day Publishers. 📖 Saleeby, Najeeb. 1908. The History of Sulu. 📖 San Agustin, Gaspar de, and Manuel Merino. 1975. Conquistas de Las Islas Filipinas (1565-1615). Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas: Madrid. 📖 Santiago, Luciano P. R.1990. “The Houses of Lakandula, Matanda, and Soliman (1571-1898): Genealogy and Group Identity.” Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 18 (1): 39-73. 📖 Wadi, Jukipli. 2008. “Rajah Sulayman, Spain and the Transformation of the Islamic Manila.” In More Hispanic than We Admit 1: Insights into Philippine Cultural History. Quezon City, Philippines: Vibal Foundation. 📖William Henry Scott. 1982. Cracks in the Parchment Curtain and Other Essays in Philippine History. Quezon City, Philippines: New Day Publishers. 📖William Henry Scott.1992. Looking for the Prehispanic Filipino. Quezon City, Philippines: New Day Publishers. 📖William Henry Scott. 1997. Barangay: Sixteenth-Century Philippine Culture and Society. Quezon City, Manila, Philippines: Ateneo De Manila University Press. 📖Zorc, R. David Paul. 1993. The Prehistory and Origin of the Tagalog People.
There's no Tagalog and kapampangan before Spanish. Learn Laguna copper plate if you can understand. Laguna is Tagalog now but not a single word you can understand on Laguna copper plate
@@donkeysmile4205 parang hindi legit ang mga detalye, halatang basi lang ang iba sa haka-haka at sabi-sabi, sabihin pa namang direct descendant dw sya ng hari ng maynila tapos sa ibang video direct descendant sya nang Spanish aristocratic family na naexile sa Pilipinas, tapos kamaganak daw nya c rizal, inaangat talaga ang sarili para sabihing legit, kulang nlang sabihin nyang direct descendant sya ni king Arthur hahahaha
@@khust2993 that's EXACTLY why it's a rivalry - Tagalogs use colonial tools like supremacy against their own people. If there's no rivalry, they you should be able to speak Kapampangan.
@@lakas_tama There is a HUGE issue! That's EXACTLY why it's a rivalry - Tagalogs use colonial tools like supremacy against their own people. If there's no rivalry, they you should be able to speak Kapampangan.
You should be the undersecretary of DEPED or Head commissioner of National Commission for Culture and Arts. Your videos really helped a lot of Filipinos to rediscover our roots.
Kaya na-occupy ng mga Kastila ang Pilipinas kasi matriarchal ang mga Indio, eh crush ng mga babae ang mga Kastila kaya bumigay agad sila, wala nagawa yong mga lalaking Indio dahil sa itsura nila. Likas kasi malalandi ang mga babaeng Indio, inakyat nila yong mga barko ni Magellan ayon kay Pigafetta at open nilang binobosohan yong mga Kastila kung maligo sila. So much so by 1798, ayon sa Spanish census, 50% ng mga natibo ay mestizo na. Ikinilat ng mga Kastila ang tamod nila via the querida system, kaya hanggang ngayon, uso sa mga mayayaman marami kerida kasi pamana yon ng mga Kastila. Sabagay, okay lang, dumami may itsurang Pinoy ngayon, ang lungkot sana pag di dumating yong mga Kastila
mas malungkot nga na nasakop tayo nila dahil ngayon iba utak natin. naka embed sa utak natin na tayo ay inferior sa mga dayuhan at nakakalimutan natin na we are great people just like them. We are what we think.. kaya tignan mo nangyayari sa Pilipinas.. Anong nangyari sa kingdom of butuan, Tondo, Pangasinan, Mayi na mayayamang kaharian. edi sana ngayon pinagmamalaki natin sila kung may naiwan silang structures and cultures. ngayon ang alam mo lang kasing kultura ay nahaluan na ng kastila. hanggang dyan lang ang alam mo
@Jfransss Nasakop na tayo, marami ang gumanda, salamat sa mga Kastila. Wala namang great sa history natin, ordinaryong mga Datu at raja lang mga yon na tumiklop kaagad nang dumating ang mga Kastila, kasi hindi nga great eh. Wag na tayong mag-imbento. Wala namang malaking gyera nangyari. Yong mga Igorot at Muslim, di naman sineryoso ng mga Kastila mga yon kasi ang focus nila ay ang China trade thru the Manila galleon to Mexico naman ang main revenue driver ng Spanish East Indies based in Manila. Let's be thankful sa blessing despite the frailties of our ancestors. At least, malalandi ang mga Indio matriarch kaya marami nalahian. At dahil likas talagang malalandi ang mga babae natin, marami pa rin nalalahian hanggang ngayon. Di impyerno sana ngayon dito kung mukhang kargador o lavandera ang level ng itsura natin
I hope more Filipino Historians will follow your passion to inform and educate young Filipinos around the world with a non biased history of our beloved country. All these western historians seems to focus on the colonialism in the Philippines and strip away our identity and rich culture.
Being a Filipino im really proud to hear the story of our civilizations and ancestors. This is prove and evidence that we have Rich Civilizations and society. This is the evidence of our Identity. The survival evidence of Civilization of The Tagalog and Pampanga is our unique native Language that we still use today.
FUN FACT : RAJA MEANS KING IN INDIA. TOO, I DONT HOW INDIANS AND PHILIPPINES USING SAME TERM FOR KING, AS I KNOW INDIANS INFLUENCED HIS CULTURE MOST TO ASEAN or south east Asia COUNTRIES.
Esperanza Corazon 1 minute ago (edited) imposibleng aralin ang precolonial history ng hindi tinatackle yung bagong findings ngayon tungkol sa austronesian migration. ang sabi sa theory na yon, galing sa taiwan ang mga ninuno natin. dumating sila sa luzon at nakita ang mga melanesians or aetas. sa cordillera regions muna sila nagstay. tapos nagpuntahan pa south. then pa east and west hanggang umabot hanggang madagascar at hawaii and easter islands and papua new guinea. sa tingin ko, ang word na lusong ay nqagpapatunay sa austornesian theory na galing sa highlands muna ang mga ninuno natin. mula sa highlands ng cordillera, nagsipagbaba sila sa plains at kaya tinawag ang mga lowlands na yon na lusong. at doon din palusong ang mga rivers na galing sa mga bundok...kaya tinawag yun na lusong. at doon din ang tagpuan ng hanging amihan, hanging habagat, at mga easterly winds, kaya talagang doon papalusong ang mga hangin at tubig at ang gravity galing sa mga bundok.
@@lone_wolf947 Basing from your name, I gues you are Indian. The pre colonial Philippines was reached by budhism thru the srivijaya and majapahit empires based in Sumatra and Java Indonesia. As you stated already, Indian culture was prevalent in these indo-chinese lands(indonesia).
@@aessedai2739it only seems that way since many of the records and information are just simply gone. but the deeper you go into the rabbit hole the more it becomes clear that there clearly was a rich history that we may never truly know about now.
I was wondering why as many of my ancestors seem to have come from the Kapampangan regions as they were to have come from Batangas or Manila when both of my parents are Southern Tagalog (at least according to Ancestry and 23andMe). Now it makes a lot more sense to know that our Kapampangan and Tagalog ancestors were once united as the Luzones people. This video makes me at least a little more proud to be Filipino, as a whole, and want to learn more about my own Tagalog and Kapampangan roots, alike, since I’ve always felt so detached from our Filipino cultures growing up in Texas. I also appreciate the videos that highlight how our ancestors historically cooperated and had our own native civilizations spanning Luzon to Mindanao and agree with your point that we should come together, as Filipinos, to reclaim our histories and reverse our colonial mentality and tendencies that highlight our ancestors’ differences, based on ethnic/linguistic divisions, rather than their cooperation, kingdoms, etc. while also embracing the diversity of the Philippines and showing respect to members of all Filipino ethnic groups, not just the major or influential ones.
Your forgetting the cordillera chiefdoms, the and Sambals, and ilocanos. Kapangpangans and tagalos were unite as they are related to one another but it does mean all Luzon were united.
@@kairenaaliyahchua2183 I actually didn’t forget, I just didn’t mention it. Although we’re all related in the sense that we share the same original ancestors our peoples always had differences, not even all peoples of Northern Luzon got along in the same sense that the (Southern) Luzones people had differences with the nearby Bikolanos and Visayans whose own peoples didn’t always get along (very clear seeing how the Battle of Mactan was quite literally fought between the Datus of Cebu and Mactan). My understanding of this is, personally, either complicated or enriched, by the fact that I also have ancestors from Northern, Central and Southeastern Luzon as well as Panay and surrounding islands and how, despite even some of them being from modern-day Southern China, Southern India and Yunnan, they did find ways to unite and accept each other regardless of their differences. So, to me, ancestors (regardless of where on the islands or beyond they came from) may not have always been united but we, now, get a chance at uniting our peoples through our ancestors’ shared linguistic heritage, cultural similarities and shared experiences under colonialism and imperialism by the West. In the same way that our ancestors historically changed ethnic affiliations via intermarriage or migration, future generations will continue to pass down their Filipino heritage and hopefully keep the traditions, practices or beliefs of our ancestors alive. At the same time we also shouldn’t underscore the fact that large cities, such as Manila, Cebu, and even smaller cities like Baguio, attracted people from all over during the times of colonialism and imperialism as well as in the present-day, thus, although most of my ancestors came from areas of the former Southern Tagalog region and Central Luzon, it’s safe to say that many of my non-Tagalog and non-Kapampangan ancestors came to the region due to its proximity to Manila. At the same time, the Kapampangan are actually more linguistically and culturally closely related to the Sambalic peoples than they were to the pre-Tagalog people who, along with the Bikolanos and Visayans, migrated from northern Mindanao to settle in the regions that their descendants (the majority of lowland Filipinos) now reside, intermixing with existing indigenous peoples, such as the Kapampangan and Sambalic peoples, as well as Aeta, Ati, and Agta peoples. These original peoples conducted what is now linguistically known as the Central Philippine language expansion and, as a result, Tagalog and Cebuano are actually both a part of this same linguistic family.
@@ChristopherFornesa theory lang yan na ang mga tagalog ay ay galing sa northern mindanao may nagsasabi rin na ang mga kapampangan ay galing sa querzon o bicol dahil ang kapampangan at central bicol language ay may mga magkakatulad na salita
@@lakas_tama Kapampangans are not from Quezon and not from Bicol. Also Kapampangans don’t eat spicy foods, and their cuisine is very different from Bicolano food. Kapampangans are from Pampanga.
Kirby, maraming, maraming salamat sa iyong pag-iikspleka ng istorya ng ating ninuno. Lalo na yung ikspleka mo tungkol kay Magat Salamat. Siya ang aking ninuno. I am proud to be a Filipino! ✊🏼 I’ve done some extensive research on pre-colonial Philippines. We had a powerful infrastructure long before the Spanish conquistadors came. It saddens me sometimes when I hear my fellow Filipinos only acknowledging the time period from colonization and forward. Our poor conditions back home is a result of ignorance and deep animosity towards our tribal ancestors. Please keep doing what you’re doing to educate and thank you for what you do! 🙏🏼
Not when you promote dictators like Marcos and Duterte. They need to keep the people ignorant and uneducated so you have nothing to fight for (or against).
Luzon also sounds very similar to the word for rice mortar, which can be found in many Austronesian languages, which probably began as *nusung in PAN, but some languages in Taiwan already has the form luzung or lusung. Using the shape of a rice mortar to describe the shape of Manila Bay is actually pretty apt.
Yes, the pronunciation of Luzon is similar with the Tagalog term lusong (rice mortar), same stress as well. During Tomas Pinpin's time in early 1600s, Tagalogs still referred Luzon as Lusong.
@@AXimab I think you mean to say from the perspective of space, since prior to the Muslims reaching China, China's maps are notoriously inaccurate. As mentioned in the video, the name Luzon used to refer to the region and peoples living around Manila Bay, and didn't become the name for the entire island and even adjacent islands until much much later. It's similar to how Taiwan was the name for the Austronesian people living in region where the Dutch built Fort Zeelandia, and later expanded to include surrounding regions encompassing present day Tainan, and finally became the name for the entire island, forcing the original region to be renamed to Tainan, meaning Southern Taiwan in Chinese.
@@paiwanhan Chinese seafarers would have discovered that the Bicol peninsula was not an island of its own. When did Muslims reach China ?-- as early as the Tang dynasty. The Cantonese and other southern Chinese peoples refer to their country as the "Land of Tang" (rather than the "Land of Han"). The Chinese traditionally saw the world as one with the emperor facing south, and from that perspective you have a long square thing with the Bicol peninsula sprouting from it like a pestle from a mortar. That's all I meant. I don't particularly buy the video's etymology of Lusong (from the perspective facing north, as on most modern maps, the mortar and pestle are upside down). Again we are dealing with mapmaking traditions that do not take literal geographic reality as something to depict but one that depicts time travel distances.
@@AXimab I wonder if you even watched the video, since Kirby didn't give the mortar etymology in the video. I'm simply making a comment on this other take on Luzon's etymology from the perspective of Austronesian Formosan languages. It is exactly because China's map making traditions not only do not take literal geographic reality into consideration that it would be impossible for them to see the whole of Luzon's shape as a mortar. It is more likely that the first people who arrived around Manila Bay saw the shape of the bay on top of nearby mountains and thought the bay itself looks like a mortar.
As an English person living in The Philippines I found this very interesting. I notice that you did not mention the British occupation of Manila (almost 2 years) during the Anglo-Spanish war of the 18th Century. Maybe the short period of occupation before they gave it back to Spain was not long enough to influence the local population. I always have an interest in history and I will save this video for reference and watch it again. Thank you.
Amazing work! It's invaluable to learn about our precolonial roots. It's all so informative. I'd love to know a bit more about our indigenous first peoples maybe a series about tribal customs throughout the islands. Ifugao, Aeta/Agta etc. Our ancient societies were so complex. It would be interesting to know where the descendants of all these prominent rulers ended up now.
We had the wealthiest and most vibrant cultures since our tribal ancestors were renowned merchants and lived our economy through international markets and trade routes, enriching us throughout the ages. But, sadly, the Imperialist Spaniards robbed and deprived us of our Capitalistic and Mercantilist ways by the imposition of the Imperialist-Statist-feudalist regime of the Spaniards. This curse has been ingrained into the societal and political system that made us poor up to this day.
Yeah but then without the Spaniards, Philippines would not exist as well. The islands would be different nations. Each of those nations in an alternate history would be wealthy though.
@@LakanSukwo It's difficult for us to separate now since intermarriages took place for a very long time. We are really a Philippine nation and many of us were already born with parents coming from different provinces. However, I do like the idea of federalism but a lot of things must be considered before we get there.
We are bound to be colonized even if the Spanish doesn't colonize us simply because we are weak, a bunch of small Independent Kingdoms can easily be conquered, Even Burma, a great power of Southeast Asia wasn't able to escape this fate. People blame the Spaniards for colonizing us but that's just how the world works, if they don't someone else will, take a look at what the Americans and the Japanese did.
@Lakan Sukwo no, we have already been established as a single nation/country - it's better that we should be constitutionally reformed as a Constitutional Federative country.
Mabuhay! Maraming salamat po! This is so interesting! I'm so proud to be a philipino and finally learning my roots as a philipino is amazing and it makes me proud to be one! I grew up in America but my roots is from the Luzon area. My mom can speak and understand Kapampangan while my dad forgot how. I hope one day I can visit my family. I would love to learn more about this topic and hopefully learn the language and roots of the Kapampangan!
Kaya na-occupy ng mga Kastila ang Pilipinas kasi matriarchal ang mga Indio, eh crush ng mga babae ang mga Kastila kaya bumigay agad sila, wala nagawa yong mga lalaking Indio dahil sa itsura nila. Likas kasi malalandi ang mga babaeng Indio, inakyat nila yong mga barko ni Magellan ayon kay Pigafetta at open nilang binobosohan yong mga Kastila kung maligo sila. So much so by 1798, ayon sa Spanish census, 50% ng mga natibo ay mestizo na. Ikinilat ng mga Kastila ang tamod nila via the querida system, kaya hanggang ngayon, uso sa mga mayayaman marami kerida kasi pamana yon ng mga Kastila. Sabagay, okay lang, dumami may itsurang Pinoy ngayon, ang lungkot sana pag di dumating yong mga Kastila
Yeah Tagalog is very different from Kapampangan, Tagalog is closer to many Visayan & Mindanao languages than Ilocano or Kapampangan despite being the same island
@@balistab1125 i thinks it's Austronesian language, because the tagalog, visayan and mindanao languages is almost similar to malay and bahasa indonesia
FUN FACT : RAJA MEANS KING IN INDIA. TOO, I DONT HOW INDIANS AND PHILIPPINES USING SAME TERM FOR KING, AS I KNOW INDIANS INFLUENCED HIS CULTURE MOST TO ASEAN or south east Asia COUNTRIES.
The precolonial Tagalogs of the Pasig River delta were said, by the Spaniards who first arrived in the area, to prefer and were interested in doing business and trading rather than warfare and piracy like the Moros of Sulu and Mindanao.
@Hanz Kins There were some oral legends about raiders. Of course, the raiders would trade slaves too, and of course Brunei, Maynila, Demak, Malacca, Magindanau, and Sulu would be beneficiaries from those raids then. There were records of Spaniards using the Panay Visayan soldiers to invade Manila in the Battle of Bangkusay. Philippines from Pampanga, Katagaluguan, Palawan, Panay, Cebu, Bohol, Lanao, Butuan, and Sulu have some rather prominent links with Brunei, Java, Southeast Sulawesi, and Sumatra. Lanao and Bohol had trade links with Moluccas.
@Hanz Kins Ahem, it was documented by the Spanish missionaries that the Moros to the south would pirate and ravage the Catholic Filipino villages in the Visayas. The Moros would take the Catholic Filipinos as slaves since it was against their Islamic religion and Sharia to enslave another Muslim. The Laws of the Indies instituted by King Phillip II of Spain forbade any indios from being slaves since pre-colonial Filipinos were practicing slavery from their raids and conquests before the Spanish came.
@@user-ce9kc9pm9g most likely influenced by Mike Pangilinan school of pseudohistory... Robby Tantingco ganun din. Mga may pagka Kapampangan ubermensch datingan.
Dakal salamat Kirby! Amazing content and very inspiring and informative. I don’t remember much of the pre colonial history from school - hope they would put more of this in our history books. Would be great to create an illustrated history of pre colonial Philippines like that of the GRRM game of thrones books. Thank you.
Hello, Sir Kirby Araullo. Your videos are so amazing and very informational. There are many things from our history that haven't been tackled or shared inside the classrooms that you have had discussed and hence, thanks to you, Sir. I hope that many Filipinos will become aware and well educated towards the reality about our own culture and history. Just a suggestion, I'm also looking forward to see you having videos about the difference between the Filipino and Tagalog language in which the majority of us and even foreigners apparently have confusions about which is which and how are they differ from each other. Thanks, more power and God bless! 🤗☺️
I wish that mainstream media would create movies or tv series about pre colonial era. Now Pinoys are only familiar about Joseon era, royals from Eurooe, Samurai/Ninja, Cowboys and so on.
FUN FACT : RAJA MEANS KING IN INDIA. TOO, I DONT HOW INDIANS AND PHILIPPINES USING SAME TERM FOR KING, AS I KNOW INDIANS INFLUENCED HIS CULTURE MOST TO ASEAN or south east Asia COUNTRIES.
Thank you Kirby. This should be taught in our primary and higher learnings. This knowledge would give us identity we should be proud of. And not the identity of a defeated, conqueredand colonized people.
Kaya na-occupy ng mga Kastila ang Pilipinas kasi matriarchal ang mga Indio, eh crush ng mga babae ang mga Kastila kaya bumigay agad sila, wala nagawa yong mga lalaking Indio dahil sa itsura nila. Likas kasi malalandi ang mga babaeng Indio, inakyat nila yong mga barko ni Magellan ayon kay Pigafetta at open nilang binobosohan yong mga Kastila kung maligo sila. So much so by 1798, ayon sa Spanish census, 50% ng mga natibo ay mestizo na. Ikinilat ng mga Kastila ang tamod nila via the querida system, kaya hanggang ngayon, uso sa mga mayayaman marami kerida kasi pamana yon ng mga Kastila. Sabagay, okay lang, dumami may itsurang Pinoy ngayon, ang lungkot sana pag di dumating yong mga Kastila
I’m kapampangan and when I was in Indonesia, I was surprised to recognize a lot of the Indonesian words I was hearing as kapampangan. Particularly numbers and counting are identical. I couldn’t see any study about it online except for one anecdote of a kapampangan who was brought to Indonesia by the Spaniards and upon reaching a river was able to understand and converse with the locals. I think this connection should be studied further. Did the Indonesian’s language come from Kapampangan or was it the other way around?
Fun fact: the Mardjiker community of Jakarta had Kapampangans as one of their ancestors when the Dutch recruited soldiers for military purposes when the Philippines was still a Spanish colony and Jakarta was a Dutch colonial port.
Kaya na-occupy ng mga Kastila ang Pilipinas kasi matriarchal ang mga Indio, eh crush ng mga babae ang mga Kastila kaya bumigay agad sila, wala nagawa yong mga lalaking Indio dahil sa itsura nila. Likas kasi malalandi ang mga babaeng Indio, inakyat nila yong mga barko ni Magellan ayon kay Pigafetta at open nilang binobosohan yong mga Kastila kung maligo sila. So much so by 1798, ayon sa Spanish census, 50% ng mga natibo ay mestizo na. Ikinilat ng mga Kastila ang tamod nila via the querida system, kaya hanggang ngayon, uso sa mga mayayaman marami kerida kasi pamana yon ng mga Kastila. Sabagay, okay lang, dumami may itsurang Pinoy ngayon, ang lungkot sana pag di dumating yong mga Kastila
To be Honest I am Ilocano but I don't have any idea of the history of Ilocanos before the Hispanic occupation. I'm so curious because Ilocanos are dominated in Northern Luzon. Almost 50% of land area of Luzon is occupied by Ilocano speakers. Can you pls do also a video for the history of Ilocanos.
Yes, the precolonial history of Samtoy (Ilokos), Caboloan (Pangasinan), and Ibalon (Bikol), and Sambales is usually pushed to the wayside for the history of the Lúsung.
@@sykeraid4944 I’m also interested in finding out more about the history of other peoples in Luzon since I have a bunch of relatives on my mother’s side that are fully Pangasinan or Ilokano while my father’s family have been on the Bondoc peninsula, very close to the Visayas and Bikol, for as long as they can reasonably trace their roots.
@@ChristopherFornesa Some things I can say about Bikolanos was that the region was called “Ibalon” before Spain’s arrival. Precolonial mga Bikolnon had the same body modifications (pierced penises and gauged ears), the near-exact same tattoo styles as the Bisayans. And the Bikol language has a lot of martial vocabulary. By “martial vocabulary”, I mean that the Bikol language is noted to have the most extensive vocabulary for arms, armament, and military tactics when compared to other languages in the Philippines. Even the Spanish noted they lost more men in Bikol than other regions of the kapuluan.
Esperanza Corazon 1 minute ago (edited) imposibleng aralin ang precolonial history ng hindi tinatackle yung bagong findings ngayon tungkol sa austronesian migration. ang sabi sa theory na yon, galing sa taiwan ang mga ninuno natin. dumating sila sa luzon at nakita ang mga melanesians or aetas. sa cordillera regions muna sila nagstay. tapos nagpuntahan pa south. then pa east and west hanggang umabot hanggang madagascar at hawaii and easter islands and papua new guinea. sa tingin ko, ang word na lusong ay nqagpapatunay sa austornesian theory na galing sa highlands muna ang mga ninuno natin. mula sa highlands ng cordillera, nagsipagbaba sila sa plains at kaya tinawag ang mga lowlands na yon na lusong. at doon din palusong ang mga rivers na galing sa mga bundok...kaya tinawag yun na lusong. at doon din ang tagpuan ng hanging amihan, hanging habagat, at mga easterly winds, kaya talagang doon papalusong ang mga hangin at tubig at ang gravity galing sa mga bundok.
I'm curious to find out where are the descendants of Raja Matanda, Raja Suliman and the Lakans are now. They are technically the royal bloods of Luzon in our recent time.
I am a direct descendant of Raja Sulayman,. Which later on changed to Soliman. I believe my great grandfather is from a strong Majapahit influenced Kingdom who ruled Tondo. My great great grandfather is a Soliman from Vidak, Bicol. Which is said to be from the Moro Pirates.
I see, that's how Pampanga became capital of all the capital of the Philippines. Nevertheless, I just love how beautiful those chibi illustrations used
Kirby, I'm with you. I think we Filipinos have more sources leaning to the west. So maybe when you say that Lusog did not fall quickly but gradually, include some hard sources. So whenever I hear someone say the opposite, I can quote you and a source and set the record straight then and there. But yeah, please keep churning out contents like this. This stuff is what we lack as Filipinos and why our historical identity in our minds is the 2nd class citizen from the colony of another kingdom.
Here's a video I made about the Battle of Cagayan where Kapampangan and Tagalog warriors fought victoriously and as a reward they were given land to settle in the Cagayan Valley. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-YFtbT8_lwjc.html
FUN FACT : RAJA MEANS KING IN INDIA. TOO, I DONT HOW INDIANS AND PHILIPPINES USING SAME TERM FOR KING, AS I KNOW INDIANS INFLUENCED HIS CULTURE MOST TO ASEAN or south east Asia COUNTRIES.
The Cebuano-speakers in the Visayas & Mindanao number by the millions. The idea of a Mindanao Republic as mentioned by ex-Pres. Digong (a Cebuano) could lead to the Bis-daks joining it and form a Bisayà Federal Republic. If that happens then the Tagalogs, etc. of Luzon and other non-Bisdak speakers of the Vis-Min area could then form some sort of a "Ladrones Republic" (whatever that means), at least to discard that colonial-sounding "Republic of the Phils." (if u don't mind). the
No. Luzon is from "lusong" which is that wooden mortar used in rural areas, notice that the stress in "lusong" (to go down) is different from Luzon, while the "lusong" that pertains to mortar has the same stress with pronunciation of Luzon. On top of that, Spanish sources corroborated it, even in Murillo Velarde map from 1734 notes the island's etymology and directs it to the wooden mortar. An interesting note though, in Diccionario Tagalog-Hispano of 1914, the Tagalog term for China is Sungsong (or Songsong in Vocabulario de la Lengua Tagala). Sungsong in Tagalog is also the opposite of the verb lusong.
At the landing spot on Morro Bay, there is a beautiful plaque signifying this event! Iirc, placed by the Fil-Am historical society. Hope more Filipinos visiting the area will seek it out (comes with a fabulous close-up view of Morro Rock too..)
We are all Filipino we should respect n honor each other always love each other protect our country for any European or American always remember our history.
I hope there are more about Ilocanos, Bicolanos, Igorots, Ivatans and all other ethnicities in Luzon. There are more about Luzon than Kapmpangans and Tagalogs.
@@StickyKeys187 lol saan ka kukuha ng reference ? Malamang sa mga kastila kasi sila ang nakakita sa mga ninuno natin sila din ang nagdocument ng mga pamumuhay ng mga sinuanang pinoy sige maghanap ka ng actual picture kung talagang magaling ka
@@lakas_tama porma porma lang 😂 kain ka ng pan de sal medyo mataas yata ang blood pressure mo. Tama ka naman tungko sa mga kastilya eh. Sila nga ang nagdocument. Feliz navidad! 😂
This is really interesting. I was wondering what connections Brunei and Luzon had after receiving my ancient DNA results showing Bruneian Dusun results and Northern Philippines results 🤔 THANK YOU for your videos, I love watching and learning about our people!
Ancient Filipinos have Bornean origin from the families of 10 Datus who migrated the Islands of Panay( Visayas), Luzon and Mindanao to escaped the Tyrant King of Borneo with households using the Balangay ,an ancient sea vessel craft! Moreso; the archipelagos of Modern day Philippines was part of Sri-Visayan Madjapahit Empire and the Sultanate of Sulu and North Borneo, the south Western part of the Philippines Island Country!
I would like to know more about the Philippine precolonial warfare particularly with gunpowder. You hosted a online conference on Philippine martial tradition months ago and while blades, sticks and FMA were heavily discussed not much attention was given to guns and other gunpowder weapons. Perhaps a video highlighting this and the Kapampangan arcebuseros would be good for this. Are there any sources discussing this?
Kaya na-occupy ng mga Kastila ang Pilipinas kasi matriarchal ang mga Indio, eh crush ng mga babae ang mga Kastila kaya bumigay agad sila, wala nagawa yong mga lalaking Indio dahil sa itsura nila. Likas kasi malalandi ang mga babaeng Indio, inakyat nila yong mga barko ni Magellan ayon kay Pigafetta at open nilang binobosohan yong mga Kastila kung maligo sila. So much so by 1798, ayon sa Spanish census, 50% ng mga natibo ay mestizo na. Ikinilat ng mga Kastila ang tamod nila via the querida system, kaya hanggang ngayon, uso sa mga mayayaman marami kerida kasi pamana yon ng mga Kastila. Sabagay, okay lang, dumami may itsurang Pinoy ngayon, ang lungkot sana pag di dumating yong mga Kastila
FUN FACT : RAJA MEANS KING IN INDIA. TOO, I DONT HOW INDIANS AND PHILIPPINES USING SAME TERM FOR KING, AS I KNOW INDIANS INFLUENCED HIS CULTURE MOST TO ASEAN or south east Asia COUNTRIES.
Kaya na-occupy ng mga Kastila ang Pilipinas kasi matriarchal ang mga Indio, eh crush ng mga babae ang mga Kastila kaya bumigay agad sila, wala nagawa yong mga lalaking Indio dahil sa itsura nila. Likas kasi malalandi ang mga babaeng Indio, inakyat nila yong mga barko ni Magellan ayon kay Pigafetta at open nilang binobosohan yong mga Kastila kung maligo sila. So much so by 1798, ayon sa Spanish census, 50% ng mga natibo ay mestizo na. Ikinilat ng mga Kastila ang tamod nila via the querida system, kaya hanggang ngayon, uso sa mga mayayaman marami kerida kasi pamana yon ng mga Kastila. Sabagay, okay lang, dumami may itsurang Pinoy ngayon, ang lungkot sana pag di dumating yong mga Kastila
I always wondered why the pre-colonial Filipinos were not wiped out when Europeans made contact. If we look at the history of the native inhabitants of the American continent there are tribes or civilizations which were wiped out due to the diseases brought by the Europeans. My hypotheses are: 1. The Philippines is an archipelago so plagues or diseases will not easily spread. 2. However, if the above is the main reason, the Sugbuanons should have died due to the diseases when they made contact with Magellan and the Spanish/Portuguese. 3. Due to international trade since ancient times our ancestors built up immunity thus having robust bodies. 4. Tambalans or Mananambals were great healers lol
Doon sa mga mabilis magalit sa comments section, una sa lahat panoorin niyo muna ng buo bago kayo magcomment ng kung anuano, pangalawa intindihin niyo din ng maigi yung sinasabi at hindi yung puro kayo galit at comment kagad ng comment.
I love ancient history and enjoyed your Philippine/Luzon discussion. I subbed and will recommend your channel to many others also. Looking forward to seeing more of your videos. I have been living in Cebu for many years now.
I grew up knowing kapampangan but i haven’t heard his intro greeting ‘luwid kayu??’ I was from Dau btw but now based in Toronto, mayap a bengi cecayu ngan 😍
"Luíd" is the Kapampangan equivalent of the Tagalog word "Mabuhay." Not many people use it today but I grew up hearing it from my elders, and it was also recorded in the oldest Kapampangan dictionaries.
Nice videos very informative! Any chance you can do a video about our ancestors who were Islam followers during the 14th century and how until this day the people of Mindanao have never been conquered by anyone. Would love to see your point of view on that.
We had a very colorful and rich history. I hope kids today are able to understand our history and embrace our true identity. Dacal a salamat kapatad for this very informative videos.❤❤❤
Thank you so much for your comment! I'm really glad you found the videos informative and I appreciate your support. It's important for us to preserve our history and pass it on to future generations. Dacal mu namang salamat!
According to Tome Pires, Portuguese chronicler, the Lucoes were not highly esteemed in Melaka, having no king and being ruled only by councils of elders.
If the Kingdom of Tondo (led by a Lakan), the Kingdom of Namayan (Mandaluyong), the Kingdom of Maysapa (Pasig), and other major and minor Kadatuans in Central and Southern Luzon were under the rulership of Lusong, why is Dayang Kalangitan not considered as a Maharajah (equivalent of Sultan) of Lusong?
She was. The title "Dayang" is somewhat a misnomer. Most people today refer to Kalangítan, Pánginuan (Panginoan), and Sasanban (Sasaban) with the title Dáyang preceding their “given” names, however, according to Kapampángan Culture and Oral Traditions, their “given” names were actually their royal/regnal titles/reign names. It means that putting “Dáyang” before “Kalangítan” or “Pánginuan” and “Sasanban” is not just redundant but also somewhat demoting their rank from being rightful queens to a lady or a princess.
@@KirbyAraullo oh, so Kalangitan is her Title. So, her real name was forgotten? Because the Datus, Lakans, and Rajahs of Luzon have their given names mentioned after their title, but the name after Kalangitan was not mentioned.
Im still upset that... Pampanga is removed from the philippine history... Unless you go to pampanga and visit the museum there and you would learn what great contribution and history we had
Im of babaylans Bloodline I meet the mayor of pampanga I felt the presence Of the old kings Now this explains Why I did meet the descendants of Apo matanda The Portuguese who arrives in Philippines Are also Related to my white bloodline
Heya! Could you cover the short history of the Self-Proclaimed Emperor of Philippines, Andres Novales? I came across it after looking for an alternative history. It would be great to hear your thoughts about it.
Someone needs to make a decent film about one of our ancient kingdoms. Not just a movie, a decent one that'll catch people's attention. Then, we can get the conversation about what it means to be a true Filipino rolling. Not the Filipino we know as the 2nd class citizens in colonial times, but someone who lived in the times that would become the foundation of what would be the Ph. (Yes, I know the Spaniards gave us the term Phil. but it is what it is.) If we Filipinos are looking for something to get us all united, it is our pre-colonial ancestors. Our ancient bloodlines. Not the colony of another kingdom.
Sana magkaseries ung ganito para mas madaming Filipino ang makaalam ng past natin. Sobrang ganda kasi at mapapaisip ka na lang paano kung di tayo nasakop ng spain ano kaya yung lagay natin?
i'm born and grow as kapampangan in my own knowledge if tondo is formerly tundun ancient word is also kapampangan word means batok in tagalog and nape in english and the name of luzon in ancient word is lusung is also kapampangan word means decending specifically to water in tagalog papunta o papunta sa tubig
Please do precolonial ilocos my region. Ilocos was originally ancient land of Samtoy. btw, ang alam lang talaga ng nakararami ay nung naganap pagkatapos ng 1500. in fact, our cultures are many years before colonization at dapat proud tayo dyan! Dapat din na gawin nang national script ang baybayin and all it’s variant na kumalat sa kapuluan natin bago pa man dumating ang hayop na mananakop
One of the important part of a civilizations and culture is the Language. Ang Language Tagalog and Kapampangan prove that we have ancient civilizations. Filipino are very lucky because their identity the language is still use. Unlike other countries that conquest by Spaniards they are Spanish speakers there language is Spanish.
Latin America did have a civilization but unfortunately their culture was nearly wiped out and the Spanish culture has become mainstream. We are lucky and we should be proud that we fought hard to preserve our culture. Mabuhay sa ating Inang Bayan! Mabhuhay Asya/Asia!
@@magnus7153 That is actually false. As in the Philippines, much of indigenous culture was preserved at the time of independence in Latin America. Spanish only became the sole official or de facto language in some LA nations after independence, when the local criollos were interested in having a single official state language. But even nowadays, Paraguay is a bilingual Guaraní-Spanish speaking country (even European descendants speak it). close to 50% of Bolivia speaks at least one native language, even Argentina has whole provinces that have a traditional native language. México has Nahuatl, Mayan, Puerepecha...and the first records of all of these languages as is the case with Tagalog and other Filipino languages are due to Spanish friars interested in linguistics.
Most of it probably has to do with the fact that the Spaniards never established schools to teach Spanish like they did in Latin America. Which is why Spanish was not widely spoken in the Philippines other than those with mixed blood. The Americans on the hand established schools and brought in teachers from America to teach to the population at large.
Don't think that people who were conquered by the Spanish in the Americas were unlucky. Whether this is highly debatable, the fact is that Spain gave us a linguistic and religious unity, eg. in Mexico, more than a hundred native languages were spoken. Nowadays, Spanish is spoken by the absolute majority. Still, some of the most important native languages are still spoken. Nevertheless, none of them reaches more than 2 or 3 percent. We have now a cultural connections among us, Spanish speakers, that is something to cherish and value greatly. If we go to Buenos Aires, Madrid or Santiago, La Habana or even Los Angeles or Nueva York we get along pretty well without speaking any other language than Spanish.
I believe there are still important archaeological discoveries that are waiting to be made on Luzon that would no doubt cement the fact we are a Southeast Asian country first and foremost, and NOT a Latin American country that was transplanted on the other side of the Pacific!
What I read before it was 1968, I read Butuan City was the first merchandising city of Spaniards and Chinese, wherein a logging industry was introduced by Spaniards and Chinese occupants, I read at the Thomas Jefferson Library in New Manila, Quezin City that was 1968...
Ok Po ito idagdag nyo po pati Ang struggle noong 1896 during Philippine revolution ...Ang watawat ng Pilipinas.... sa walong sinag Ng araw..Ang sinasagisag po nito ay 7 Lalawigan ng katagalugan at Ang Lalawigan ng Pampanga... Maraming Salamat po Sir...