Today is: Wednesday, Sep. 08, 2010   
Kalinga Village
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The Kalinga Houses in Nayong Pilipino-Clark allows us to take a peek into the rich Kalingan way of life

 

FACTS & FIGURES  At a Glance

 

Kalinga is a landlocked province in the northernmost section of the Cordillera Region. It is bounded by the provinces of Cagayan and Apayao in the north, Mt. Province in the south, and Abra in the West. The greater sections of Cagayan and Isabela are found on its eastern part.


Barasoain Church
Barasoain Church

This is the replica of the historic Barasoain Church.

The Holy Mass is celebrated here every Sunday at 10:00am.

You are welcome!!!


Ifugao Village
Ifugao Village

 

 

The Ifugao Village features typical Ifugao houses  called Ulog.


Malakas at Maganda
Malakas at Maganda

 

 

 

See the rendition of our artist on the legend on how the first man and woman came about.

The Torogan
The Torogan

 

See the newly-built Torogan. This is the typical house of our Muslim brothers from Mindanao. See the details, art work and architecture of the Torogan and how it is adapted to the local culture and environment.

The Torogan House is the ancestral home of the Sultan or Datu, the village chief in Maranao, Southern Philippines. The Torogan house has a butterfly-like end beams that protrude in front of the house. It is intricately adorned with a range of folk motifs, usually a plant, geometric form, dragon or serpent that are prominent in Maranao artwork. The building is constructed on post resting on rocks which act as a rollers to prevent earthquake damage.

 


Cultural Presentations
Socio-Cultural Presentations

 

The Nayong Pilipino sa Clark has become the venue for Socio-Cultural presentations featuring Filipino culture, through dances, drama, stage performances and other media. 

 


Invitation to Bid

Bidding of Non-performing Assets


The Lagoon
The Lagoon

 

The Lagoon is an amusement area. It  features activities such as boating, fishing and an area will be devoted for bubble balloons for visitors to enjoy.


Ifugao Hut (Ulog) Features

The Ulog is the traditional house in Ifugao. It has sheltered even their ancestors. Its architecture speaks of intelligence and practical way of living.

The FLOORING of the hut is made of woven bamboo slabs which can be conveniently spread or rolled. This can serve the purpose of easy access to the area below to flee from enemies anytime. It is also easy to clean. After a meal members of the family can shake off from the floor any leftovers and crumbs directly feeding the chicken below the floor.

 

The STEPS leading to the hut looks like a ladder. It can be conveniently detached and carried inside the house. This keeps the family inside the house secure from intruders and enemies.

Beneath the raised floor, Ifugaos keep their livestock, crops and farm implements. The house is set on 4 inverted tree trunks as posts whose forked branches touch the ground, giving more stability to the house. Posts are not anchored deep into the ground since Ifugaos are known to move or transfer homes to other locations. (source:Maryan54)

The rounded piece of wood embracing the posts looks like adornments but their function are more on protecting the house from rats. These are called the halipan.

 

Ifugao The Province

Ifugao is a landlocked province of the Philippines in the Cordillera Administrative Region in Luzon. Covering a total land area of 251, 778 hectares, the province of Ifugao is located in the mountainous region characterized by rugged terrain, river valleys, and massive forests. Its capital is Lagawe and borders Benguet to the west, Mountain Province to the north, Isabela to the east, and Nueva Vizcaya to the south.

It is named after the term "i-pugo" (which means i-from/people and pugo-earth thus people of the earth).

The Banaue Rice Terraces are the main tourist attraction in the province. These 2000-year-old terraces were carved into the mountains without the aid of machinery to provide level steps where the natives can plant rice. In 1995, they were declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Contents

 

People and culture

See also: Igorot

 

Ifugao refers to the people, their dialect and the province they live in the mountainous northern part of the Philippines. They are known as an independent, agricultural society. They speak various Ifugao dialects, such as Tuwali and Ayangan. They can also speak Filipino vernacular dialect like Ilokano and Tagalog. Many Ifugaos, especially in Lagawe, Kiangan, Mayoyao, Aguinaldo and Banaue, are fluent in English as well.

This people prefer to be called Ifugaos as opposed to the more generic and less accurate Igorot term that includes all the peoples of the Cordillera Region, which specifically refers to some of the inhabitants of Benguet.

Rice culture

Ifugao culture revolves around the rice which is considered a prestige crop. Thus, it is not surprising that there is an elaborate and complex array of rice culture feasts inextricably linked with taboos and intricate agricultural rites from rice cultivation to rice consumption. Harvest season certainly calls for grandiose thanksgiving feasts while the concluding harvest rites "tungo or tungul" (the day of rest) entail a strict taboo of any agricultural work. Partaking of the rice beer (bayah), rice cakes, and betel nut is an indelible practice during the festivities and ritual activities.

Rightly known as the unrivaled rice terrace builders, the Ifugao people practice swidden farming expending most of their energy working at their terraces and forest lands while occasionally tending to swidden/shifting root crop cultivation as a complementary form of agriculture. This diversification in agriculture, that is to say, rice growing while cultivating indigenous edible shells, fruit trees, and root crops, has been exhibited among Ifugaos for generations which reflects their awareness in diversified but sustainable farming. Even the building of the rice terraces, which is a painstaking and backbreaking work of blanketing walls with stones and earth and effectively drawing water from a main irrigation canal above the terrace clusters, clearly manifests the importance Ifugao people put on their rice terraces. Indigenous rice terracing technologies are in fact identified with the Ifugao rice terraces such as their hydraulic knowledge (use of water as a construction tool), stonework and earthwork (the knowledge of utilizing various types of soil and rocks to form stable terrace walls), terrace design (maximizing the terrace area and building them into an agriculturally-productive area) and lastly, terrace maintenance (traditional irrigation and drainage management systems). As their source of life and art, the rice terraces have sustained and shaped the lives of the community members.

 

Geography Political

Ifugao is subdivided into 11 municipalities.

Municipalities
History

Ifugao was formerly a part of the old Mountain Province. It was created as an independent province on June 18, 1966 by virtue of Republic Act No. 4695. The name is derived from the word "IPUGO". Pugo means "hill" while the prefix "I" means "from". The Spaniards changed ""Ipugo"" to ""Ipugaw"" and it was finally changed by the Americans to Ifugao.

For the Ifugaos, custom is the basis of all laws. But these customs would mean nothing if not supported by ancestry knowledge. Among the Ifugaos, extensive pedigrees exist. They are the graphic representation that puts in evidence one of the most basic principles of the Ifugao culture: "We can not but do what our ancestors told us" (Lambretch CICM 1964).

Ifugao became the center of warfare during the last stages of World War II. It was in Ifugao, particularly in Mt. Napulawan, where General Yamashita, the known "Tiger of Malaya", decided to put his last stand against the Filipino and American forces. He informally surrendered to Captain Grisham of the 6th US Army in the Philippines, based in Kiangan, Ifugao, before he was flown to Camp John Hay where he formally surrendered.

Ifugao finally gained provincial status on June 18, 1966 with the municipality of Lagawe as the capital town.

Article From Wikipedea