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Jesus loves you ❤️ Please repent and turn to him and receive Salvation before it's too late. The end times written about in the Bible are already happening in the world. Jesus is the son of God and he died for our sins on the cross and God raised him from the dead on the third day. Jesus is waiting for you with open arms but time is running out. Please repent and turn to him before it is too late. Accept Jesus into your heart and invite him to be Lord and saviour of your life and confess and believe that Jesus is Lord, that he died for your sins on the cross and that God raised him from the dead. Confess that you are a sinner in need of God's Grace and ask God to forgive you for all your sins through Jesus. Jesus loves you. Nothing can compare to how he loves you. When he hung on that cross, he thought of you. As they tore open his back, he thought of your prayer time with him. As the thorns dug into his head, he thought of you spending time in the word of God. As the spears went into his side, he imagined embracing you in heaven.
Agree. Lots of artifacts in the provinces which pre-dates the Spanish era. In fact I brought an heirloom bronze pot to the national museum, when they checked the potters mark, it wasn't on their records.
@@GaRaFaL another country corrupted by extremist religious fanatics and views, these people dont know they are screwing up their own mental by letting religion decide how they should lead their lives
My direct ancestor formerly served Rajah Sulayman as his personal cannon maker. Following the downfall of Maynila and its rulers, he then worked for Conquistador Miguel Lopez de Legazpi as a weapons maker for Spain, crafting cannons for the fortress now recognised as Intramuros. If you're familiar with him, yes I'm talking about Panday Pira. Some of his descendants (my relatives) reside in Abra, while my lineage remains in Manila. Just thought I'd share, and it's great to see more Philippine History.❤
That’s good. My maternal ancestry can be traced to Spain in the 1700s. my paternal grandpa was half American 🇺🇸 but we don't even know his real surname. He changed it 4 times that we are aware of so we don't know our real apelyido 😅
my great great great grand father is also one of rizal's close friend they even go to madrid and became superstars there. there is even a rumor that rizal stole one of my Great great great grand fathers idea.;
Can't believe my humble city (butuan) got recognized in this video when we got little recognition in national history discussions here in the Philippines
your city was once the most prominent kingdoms back then, many people there hosts different objects from bowls, clothing, weapons, etc that are made out of gold.... So it is right they mentioned the kingdom of Butuan, one of our greatest precolonial kingdoms and sultanates
You have the oldest balangay found in the Philippines as well as a seal with Kawi script, which was used in the kingdom of Sri Vijaya in it; your city's quite important.
What are you talking about, the fact that you have a National Museum branch in Butuan means you are highly recognized in National History discussion and most ancient gold exhibition highlights Butuan. You are not recognized in mainstream discussion because a lot of Filipinos do not know about their precolonial history so I hope more Butuan people can correct misinformation share in social media and share the beauty of the ancient polities of the Philippines.
This was a very good effort to shed light on the details of Pre-Colonial Philippines, so Kudos to the creator. I was happy hearing the discussion from the start up to 3:30; past 3:33, I noticed some information lacking, like: 1. In 3:33, there was the discussion on the Barangays led by the Datus, the basic form of government, but the discussion on the much larger Bayan, which was a Confederation of Barangays and was led by an Indigenous Lakan (the Ruler of all Datus in the area and supposed to have the bloodline of a Diwata) or an Indianized or Islamized Rajah was missing. Reference: Pre-Colonial Manila Briefer, Presidential Museum and Library, Republic of the Philippines 2. In 6:37, there was a discussion on Tondo and Maynila. However, they were referred to as Barangays. These were actually Bayans, a confederation of Barangays. Reference: Pre-Colonial Manila Briefer, Presidential Museum and Library, Republic of the Philippines Also, Tondo was actually a Center of a larger Confederacy of Bayans built by Gat Lontok and Dayang Kalangitan, maybe referred to as Luzon. The Confederacy includes the Bayans of Tondo, Maynila, Maysapa, I don’t know if Namayan was included, but I have read the the Bayans of Bae and Lumbang also submits to the rulership of Tondo, plus the Bayans of Central Luzon (those who participated in the Revolt of the Lakans). 3. I said that the Confederacy of Bayans may have been referred to as Luzon because the people who came from there were called Luzones by the Portuguese. In 10:33, the creator said that the first contact of the Filipinos with the Europeans was in 1521, when Magellan landed on Homonhon Island in the Visayas; however, the Portuguese were already able to interact with the Luzones in their Conquest of Malacca in 1511. In fact, the Portuguese installed Rejimo Diraja, a Luzones, to help them manage the Port of Malacca after the conquest of the Sultanate. Reference: The Suma Oriental of Tome Pires. 4. In 8:36, the creator discussed the Sulu Sultanate and Brunei Sultanate, but they did not included the island of Palawan as part of their dominion. I hope my findings help in anyway.
Thank you for the effort ... hopefully, they take the account the local Tribes and or Clans. They knew and most historians belittle the knowledge of these parts of the Visayas that actually resist and they push on Lapu Lapu as the nearby Island which is wrong... from Zugbo itself it took them day and night (Pigafetas account) to reach the location of this 'Lapu-lapu' which is NorthEasterly in direction 😂 and yet they just arive in the nearby Island which is only a swim from Cebu...what a history! Lapu-lapus Kingdom is the Samar-Leyte Islands! And that is a period with an exclamation mark.
we're warriors in the visayas. this has more information, than school in the philippines has taught. wow. whoever made this video and did the research, im wholeheartedly thankful.
The real question here is: why doesn’t the Philippine government/ Department of Education teach this in primary schools early on? Which agenda are they following here?
@@Kybernetes108 No agenda. It’s just dumb to bombard a child with too much information about the Pre-Hispanic History to the Present. Hence, a person should be in a Philippine History major should he or she wish to delve deeper in to the details of history. Or people just have terrible Philippine History professors/teachers like my parents’ having terrible Spanish professors who only taught them to write more than to speak it back in the day. 🤷🏻♂️ Check Archivo General de Indias in Seville, Spain. It houses chronicles, maps, accounts about the Spanish East Indies (the Philippines and neighboring insular possessions in the Asia-Pacific) and the Spanish West Indies (the colonial possessions of the Americas). The Archivo is in the process of digitalization of these historical accounts and are now accessible online but one has to be proficient in Spanish, a language that is virtually dead in the Philippines despite having its own Academia Filipina de la Lengua Española. 😂🥴
@@Kybernetes108 They do, but they are more biased towards the Tagalogs since it's where the capital is. The agenda is for the Tagalogs to represent all of the Philippines when it's actually composed of more tribes. The biggest tribe are the Visayans.
The Igorot people of Philippines still maintaining the original Austronesian culture, with less Abrahamic, Dharmic influence compare to lowlands Filipinos
@@skylinelover9276Igorots never taste 300-500 years war only Tagalogs, Ilonggo/Panay, and Moros. That's why they maintain their identity, culture, and so on.😂😂
@@KimJongUnGamingAndVlogging Still they maintained and preserved their tradition and culture, and language, christianity did not affect them except their headhunting culture which they stopped when the Americans arrived.
This was informative. All I ever learned about the Philippines, if we ever did in school, was that Magellan discovered it and conquered it for Spain. Then after a few centuries, America took it from Spain. Who later fought Japan over the Philippines then granted the Philippines independence.
no wonder why most filipinos get bored in history class. its like a painful recount of lost battles and sufferings. its refreshing to see the other side of history when philippines were once a melting pot diverse cultures and people who help each other and one of the stongest and riches nations, in precolonial asia./
@@MaryamSaja-xm7dk help each other my ass, Visayans and Mindanaoans were not friendly, even had skirmishes. Stop putting all of us in a Pot, We were seperated by culture and morals. And a melting pot will never have a cohesive country. A country cannot maintain peace if majority cannot agree to established morals, principles, ethics and culture. Homogeneity > Melting pot = garbage.
Even in literature. The only pre-colonial literature that I remember being taught in school was Biag-ni-Lam'ang. Revolution is cool and all, but seeing how everything started is just a lot more interesting.
Animist is much more appropriate "religion" . Much more realistic than any "man-made" religion that also have been corrrupted for a very very long time.
Pero noon 90 20s ayaw ma connect satin ng mga yan diring diri sila sa kahirapan at kaitiman ng pinoy.ngayon kungbsino sino nlng may gusto maki connect sa pinas 🤣 ambottttt!!!!
Big thanks to our ancestors who fought for our land.till now ,we igorots still have our identity we have our own tradition,culture, values etc.maybe that's why many local tourist come to baguio people of it,and our weather.😊
Wala nang mas hihigit pa sa totoong kultura natin! Our history before colonization deserves to be highlighted and give importance because it’s an integral part of our identity as Filipinos!
Why not watch our neighboring country's movies about ancient times to find more historic connections, to be honest it is thanks to our neighbors that we end up learning a pice of our history . Even mexico is connected in asia way before the pre colonial times 😮
That's the issue there's very little material on the pre colonial Philippines. I can't find many definitive sources for pre colonial beyond genetics and archaeological remains ran against the accounts of the original Spaniards. Which certainly have a bias, just like they did with the Aztec, Chickasaw, and Navajo people.
@@Saibre568Nah fam here's what it is. Philippines is of relevance because it represents a continuity of pre-European culture that continues until today. Whereas there are cultures within Mexico that have an Indigenous culture, Mexico itself is of a Spanish culture and language. So I'm saying in the realm of Indigenous people who were colonized by USA and kept their pre European language. Philippines is more similar to American Indians than it is to Mexico, because Philippines is of an Indigenous culture, not a Hispanic culture. If that makes sense?
Man I was born and raised in the Philippines before migrating to America but this information is not even taught to us in elementary school. It took 51 years for me to know these history. All they taught in schools were 1521 Spanish era onwards.
It was because of the fact that all books and history of the Philippines were burned and destroyed in order to erase the history of the Philippines during the pre-colonial era.
Talaga hindi mo alam na hindi rin satin nagsimula ang islamic at bakit hindi yan na tinatawag colonialist of arab islamic ???😂pareho din namn nakarating ang catholic satin pero tawag nila sa puti colonialist😂 may kafal pa sila ng mukha mag independency samantalang mula ng spain japan at us occupation puro ✝️mga military navy at airforce natin hangang ngayon sa china ✝️dominance parin .
I love Cebu. Very historical thats why in 2011-2015 and 2020-2022 I was there. Working and living alone. I really wsnt to settle in South Cebu. Soon. Miss that Island so much. 😔
The igorots were one of the few filipinos who never submitted to other religions(Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam) until they were Christianize by the Americans. Most muslim priest say the Philippines was a muslim country which is in fact wrong just to pursuade and convert christian filipinos. Just to remind you the Datus of Visayas were Native Filipinos, the Rajas of Manila-Luzon were Indian(Hindu) Filipinos, only the Sultan of Sulu-Mindanao were Muslim Filipinos, that's why Lapu-Lapu and other Rajas and Datus of Luzon and Visayas were not muslim because they practiced Animism not Islam. There is nothing wrong with Islam, but muslim priests tend to use this wrong information to convert christian filipinos.
@@BadIdeaRight5most of the philippines was ruled by muslim before pre Spanish colonial. But they were defeated and the locals were forcefully converted to Christian.
@@mdnytc just dont include us igorots or people of baguio or cordillera because we were never forced to convert to Christianity.igorots defeated the spanish that's why we still preserved our culture
Any game developers out there. Hear this. Any triple A game (God of War style) base off with culture and animalism of pre-colonial Philippines would be a massive hit. I would love to time travel in this time of era. Seeing those mythical creatures (tikbalang, kapre, manananggal) mixed with tagalog god (bathala), barangay kingdoms, animalism, muslims and threat of incoming spanish Christian invasion interplay with each other would be a great experience!!
@@GamerNugget18 I used to be very optimistic with Ubisoft having a studio in Laguna. But seeing what's happening to them now, I just hope the talents of the team there aren't wasted or worse.
Hi as a software developer, the history and culture of the pre-colonial Philippines have to be studied, reviewed and analyzed thoroughly to create an accurate depiction. It will be a lot of work, but with a good team I think it is possible to create this game. If I could find people who share the same interests, I would sacrifice anything to work and complete this project.
@@MaryamSaja-xm7dk If it is any consolation to you, I have heard too many Filipinos who went to school in the Philippines, studied Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo and yet these are the same filipinos who say that Rizal wrote those two books in Spanish because Spanish was the common language in the Philippines. Rizal himself said this about Spanish in his book El Filibusterismo: "Spanish will never be the general language of the country, the people will never talk it, because the conceptions of their brains and the feelings of their hearts cannot be expressed in that language-each people has its own tongue, as it has its own way of thinking! What are you going to do with Castilian, the few of you who will speak it? "
@@MaryamSaja-xm7dk Research Leni Mendoza Strobel, Center for Babaylan studies at Sonoma University. She talks about the miseducation of the Filipinos & how we have to decolonize. It’s a big movement w/ the young Filipinos in the diaspora. . They have ceremonial retreats w/ Native American tribes for healing & reeducation of our indigenous core values. Her work is beautiful. Read her book, Back from the crocodiles belly or watch her lectures on RUclips.
as born and raised as filipino, this kind history never taught in schools or in my school. i wonder why. all they taught in history is lapu-lapu, magellan, and the heroes like rizal and the rest. and unending political history. they didn't taught this things. this is the first time i heard this history so thank you very much for this.
@@carmelitotanael6183 he's name is really ferdinand magellan, until he went to spain and offered to serve charles I and so on. henceforward became known by the Spanish version of his name Fernando de Magallanes. about balangay i agreed. i kinda remember it. but when you search balangay on google its about boats and not places. so idk, maybe i remember it wrong.
Every part of the world has its different civilization before the 15th century. Most schools taught the history under the view of the west. But now, today's historians are scripting history in different views.
As someone who watched Amaya and Indio, this is a lot of fun to watch. We also had a name for our god, if Muslims calls their god, Allah. We call our god, laon. Also the datu term for leader is actually for Visayan kingdoms, lakan is what we call to a leader of a kingdom in Luzon. Luzon culture is a lot different than than the pintados of Visayas. Rajah is pronounced wrong in this video, it's supposed to be rah-hah. We also invented Baybayin.
Hi, just little corrections. It is pronounced as ra-jah and not ra-hah as it is originally a Hindu title and that's how they pronounced it. Laon is mostly for Visayans. In the Tagalog pantheon which is in Luzon, the supreme god is called Bathala. I've read that that isn't his name as Bathala just means god, other bathala/ bathalumans have their own names. They don't call the supreme god's name maybe out of respect. Other tribes in Luzon have their own beliefs too, such as some Cordillerans have anitos, and I think the Aetas that lived in the foot of Pinatubo called their god, Apo Mallari (just added infos.) Yes, we invented Baybayin. It is the writing system of Tagalog. Other regions in the Philippines with other languages have their own writing systems too.
@@Kariktan214True however most of the writings may have been on materials that could rot. Given the climate of the Philippines and an alley of natural calamities, they may have been lost in time. We only have a handful written in materials that can last for ages unlike the Pre-Hispanic Civilizations of Central and South America eg the Incas and the Mayans/Aztecs.
I'm from Lapu Lapu City and very thankful for the knowledge about Lapu Lapu. And by the way my favorite fish is Lapu lapu. I love escabeche lapu lapu, grilled lapu lapu and tinolang lapu lapu. Also kilawin Na lapu lapu. I also like kulafu which sounds like lapu lapu.
🇵🇭 Maráming salámat pára sa videong itó! (Filipino) Muchisimas gracias para [con] este video! (Chavacano Zamboangueño) Thank you so much for this video! (English) I personally call this long period of time as the Prehistory and Ancient History or Ancient and Classical History of the Philippines (without an exact time when ancient history ended and classical history began, but a long and continous period of time and history after prehistory), just to avoid naming, calling, or referring to it as "before Magellan, Pre-Magellan, Pre-Hispanic, Pre-Iberian, Pre-European, and/or Pre-Western or Pre-Westernized", and also to separate it from those other names or terms mentioned above as the Philippines does have its own prehistory and ancient history of its own people who discovered the archipelago, are descendants of these people, and are other people and their descendants from the other parts of the Asia that borders the Indian and Pacific Oceans, and that are not just based on when Magellan and/or other or other later Europeans first set their feet on any of the shores or coasts of any of the islands or islets, or whatnot else, of and that comprise the present-day Philippines. I know that it's challenging for other Filipinos like me to listen, watch, and learn or relearn their prehistory and ancient history from a non-Filipino or from non-Filipinos, or from non-Filipino historian/s, and/or also from non-Philippine historian/s, or from any other professional social scientist/s and/or humanities scholar/s, or even from any professional at all in these fields and/or it's allied fields, whether from historians, other social scientists and/or humanities scholars, teachers, instructors, educators, professors, lecturers, researchers, other scholars, and the like, as some Filipinos also do or may have their own family, clan, community, ethnic or ethnolinguistic, group, organizational, local, provincial, regional, and/or personal or individual versions, perceptions, interpretations, perspectives, points-of-view, variations, forms, counterparts, tales, beliefs, traditions, telling, retelling, myths, conceptions, stories, and/or narratives of or about Philippine prehistory and history, especially about time period/s which lack the most sources and resources or other, especially primary ones and also most especially from non-outsiders, which are what Philippine prehistory and ancient history are. For me though, it's sometimes a breath of fresh air to consider and to listen to Philippine prehistory and history from a non-Filipino or from non-Filipinos, or from non-Filipino historian/s, and/or also from non-Philippine historian/s, or from any other professional social scientist/s and/or humanities scholar/s, or even from any professional at all in these fields and/or it's allied fields, because if they always just come from us Filipinos, our own prehistory and history can and may be written and told in an order and/or with happenings or events, people or individuals, dates or times, details, etc. that are in general or overall biased for and/or against one or the other, all within the complex influences, existence, dynamics, interconnections, interrelationships, and interdependence of politics, classes, ethnicities or ethnic or ethnolinguistic groups, cultural groups or communities, languages and translations, sex, gender, levels of educational attainment, educational backgrounds, access to quality education, access to technology, access to information, right to education, educational systems and curricula, daily and/or monthly incomes of people, professions, beliefs, belief systems, religions, worldviews, ideologies, connections, relationships, power, etc. of Filipinos and non-Filipinos in or within the Philippines and of Filipinos outside or beyond the Philippines. Altough we can't get rid of biases for and/or against one or the other in the writing and telling of any prehistory and history, whether if it is in or within the Philippines or outside or beyond, whether if it's among Filipinos, with Filipinos, with non-Filipinos, or among non-Filipinos, which also includes this video, among other sources and resources, primary, secondary, or whatnot else, but listening, watching, and learning or relearning Philippine or even any other places' prehistory and/or history, or even that of the entire globe or world, from different versions, perceptions, perspectives, points-of-view, variations, forms, counterparts, tales, beliefs, traditions, telling, retelling, myths, conceptions, stories, and/or narratives are what helps me personally and individually to have enough or even more information and education about them, to weigh them, look at their pros and cons, spot for their biases, also spot for and be aware of my own personal and individual biases about Philippine or even any other places' prehistory and/or history, or even that of the entire globe or world, and then make up my mind and choose or decide which among them should I allow or let my self to learn and be educated or to learn more and be educated more, or to develop, build, or have my own personal and individual version/s, perception/s, perspective/s, point/s-of-view, variation/s, form/s, counterpart/s, tale/s, belief/s, tradition/s, telling, retelling, myth/s, conception/s, story/ies, and/or narrative/s of Philippine or even any other places' prehistory and history, or even that of the entire globe or world, from all of the other people that I communicated, listened, watched or viewed, and/or read from in my life, whether they're Filipinos themselves or non-Filipinos. In the end, no one is sure, exact, nor accurate of and on what really happened in the past, but we can only unfortunately rely on whatever multitude to just limited and rare sources and resources we had, we have, we can have, and/or we will have, or even we will ever have. After all, the past is different with history and the prehistory that comes before it. Thank you for this informative and educational animated video, for I am relearning things I already knew, I am learning new things I didn't know before, and there are some things in the video that made me go, "Hmm...I know that's inaccurate, mistaken, or wrong. I think that's inaccurate, mistaken, or wrong. I am not sure with that one. I don't know with that one. I don't have knowledge, expertise, or specialty with or on that one. Hmm...interesting!" about my own country and nation-state.
The natives are NEGRITOS. And they've been in the Philippines for 30,000 years. The Austronesians came much later, just 3,000 years ago. Don't leave out the first people. The Negritos are still in the Philippines
The only non-Indigenous Filipino would be a person of Spanish descent whose ancestors spoke only Spanish and still do. That'd just be Creoles, which they do recognize.
The Inuit aren't less native than Amerindians. Amerindians are a 25,000 year old migration, Inuit are only 5,000 . But they both kept their languages until 2024. So they're both native as hell. As did the Austronesian speakers of the Philippines. So they're equally Indigenous to where they're from as Indians are to America. Period . And they have the same history of Spanish, Mexican, and American colonization of their Indigenous lands and kept their Indigenous languages throughout all of that. Indigenous Filipinos (and to a lesser extent: Hawaiians) are the only people in the world with the same relationship to colonialism as American Indians.
@@neildegracia5263 Thats awesome bro! i visited my fiancee family in mindanao. Their village is deep in the mountains and they are from an indigenous tribe. You can see a the Negrito in these people very clearly.
This is the kind of subject that needs to be taught more in school. Understanding what we used to do before being subjugated by the Spanish is extremely fascinating.
The 5 waves of migrations to the Philippines from Indonesia. The first group of people who migrated to the Northern of Luzon were the Negritoes via Palawan (Larena, 2021). Palawan 60k-25k years ago was connected by land to Malaysia and Indonesia. The second group that went to Central Mindanao 25k-12k years ago were also the Negritoes via Tawi-Tawi, Sulu, Basilan, and Sambuwangan (now Zamboanga City) (Larena, 2021) Again, these places were all connected to Borneo and Indonesia. Third group who migrated to Southern Mindanao, which is Zamboanga Peninsulas 12k-6k years ago were the Manobo (Larena, 2021) but when the last group arrived and settled in the region, they were later pushed upward into the hinterland. And, the last wave of migration, which is the fourth, were the Sama 6k years ago (sometimes they are called "Bajau, Badjao, Sama-Bajau, and other similar cognates). The Sama first settled in Zamboanga-Basilan Strait 6k years ago (Larena, 2021) and later spread across Sulu Archipelago, including of course Tawi-Tawi. Pallessen (1985) claims that the "first settlers in Sulu were the Sama, and the second settlers here were the Buburanons (now Buranons who migrated here from Butuan, now Butuan City). Pallessen (1985) further claimed that the Sama, Jama Mapun and the Yakans descended from one common ancestor -- the Proto Sama-Bajau. Today, members of this ethnic group prefer to be called as SAMA.
Actually, the "Out of Taiwan theory" says that the original inhabitants of Taiwan (the Austronesians) left Tawain and settled the Philippines first and then made their way to Indonesia. After that there was movement and settlement back and fourth between the 2.
@@raymondabella4684the austronesian originally in south china -taiwan it's more logical because Filipinos doesn't have Austroasiatic Admixture were Indonesians has high Austroasiatics DNA admix means if Indonesians is the one migrated to Philippines, then why Filipinos doesn't have Big Austroasiatics DNA
@skylinelover9276 Incorrect! What makes up most of what the average Filipino IA Austronesian DNA. I know this for a fact because I am a prime example of this. My DNA test results came back with an 87% Austronesian results. My parents were both Filipino and came from nowhere else. Other Filipinos have similar results. In my case, the other DNA markers were that of India, Spain, China and Japan. The rest of the 87% was Austronesian. Not to mention the the various dialects from the Philippines are just about all influenced by the archaic original Formosain Autronesian language. Feel free to skip to and 54 seconds of this video. It pretty much sums what the Oit of Taiwan theory and the order of Autronesian migration are. ruclips.net/video/qcvwvXjhyyo/видео.htmlsi=9ygERvN2aojdTQMU ENJOY!
The map of Tondo is unfortunately wrong and exaggerated. This has been a common myth that kept circulating on and on. In reality they only occupied even less than what is modern-day Tondo. They were rich though. But they were only a mere city state. Please fix this mistake, even Wikipedia doesn't say there was a giant empire called Tondo let alone academic sources. Look it up. Map aside, the research done here is good. Its mostly only the map that has the issue. In RUclips we can see many people repeat the same mistake over and over so its best for us to avoid it
I've read some articles that Datu Lapu-Lapu was acting like a pirate and attacking Rajah Humabon's traders that is they became an enemy. and Lapu-Lapu was just saving himself against attacking Spanish under the command of Magellan in behalf of Humabon's wish to arrest Lapu-lapu. and since Lapu-Lapu killed magellan he became a Hero of the Philippines. Lapu-lapu didnt do it for the Luzon-Visayas-Mindanao.
Yes, Lapu-Lapu indeed resorted to piracy, raiding trade ships and nearby villages, which is why Datu Humabon urged Magellan to confront him in exchange for supplies.
Basically he was used as a propaganda figure it's common here in the Philippines for instance the national hero (Rizal) didn't really want a revolution in fact wanted the Philippines to be recognized as a official Spanish or American state.
We need to get more in-depth with our culture and history especially pre- colonial because we have to know our roots. For those Filipinos claiming that they are part spanish, please provide a DNA test! We Filipinos are sea dwellers and voyagers! We are tribal people and have no spanish ancestry only names and it was enforced!
The social castes described here are exclusive to the tagalog regions. In the visayas we have the three-class social structure: Tumao (nobility), Timawa (warrior class akin to the Japanese samurai) and Uripon (slaves, commoners, servants). The PH isn't just tagalog.
Wonderful knowledge! This was never taught in my school days History started from Lapu Lapu killing Magellan Very interesting Thank you for the research and presenting this!
PROUD of PANAY ISLAND.. We never ever had an Islamic Influence. Always Polytheistic Animism with Hindu-Buddhist influences to Roman Catholicism still today hybrid with polytheistic-animist beliefs. We have ZERO ISLAMIC INFLUENCE that's why people of PANAY are always Peaceful and Kind with Festive Spirit and Vibrant Culture.
👆Central Visayas, Western Visayas & Eastern Visayas were never Sultanate Islam Kingdoms. That's why the Spanish called the Visayans "PINTADOS" ( Tattooed ). Tattooing/Tattooes in Islam is "Haram" ( Forbidden ). Visayans were "ANIMISTS" even Antonio Pigafetta noted this in his chronicle/diary/book.
In addition, it was Datu Puti established the Madjaas territory in 13th century. They came from Brunie. They arey the grand fathers of Lapulapu, Raja Humabon in Visayas. Now, MAdjaas belongs to the Province of Antique, a big mountain called Mount Madjaas along the municipality of Culasi Antique.
The crazy part is how today's some Pilipino historians tends misrepresent Lapu Lapu as the first Filipino to resist the Spaniards neglecting the fact that Lapu is not a Filipino in fact his tribe was in conflict against the Cebuanos. It should be noted that Lapu Lapu was the Mactanian that resisted the Spaniards. The first Filipinos that resisted the Spaniards would be after Spain has officially claim and name the archipelago the Philippines.
When the "coward", Lapu massacred Magellan and his small boat of explorers, it incited Spain. That is why Spain sent r for real soldiers to avenge the cowardly massacre of Magellan, the explorer. What resulted was the the development of a united country and the end of Muslim control.
@@LNR2023-o2y Lapu Lapu was no coward he just refused to submit to the Cebuanos in spite of the Cebuanos having a new ally the Spaniards. It was more of arrogance and over confidence of Magellan thinking that their cannons, muskets and steel swords would be enough to scare the Mactanians to surrender.
Maybe over confident but certainly on Magellan's part. He came to "trade", not to fight. He was an "explorer" . Like Marco Polo. @@dantankunfiveancestorsfist
I am a Filipino American and I have been looking for information on Filipino history. I want my kids to know where I was born and where their grandparents are from. Please continue creating and posting more videos regarding the Philippines in English. Thank you and God bless.
it’s hard to accept stated facts here. it actually raised more questions than digestible facts. witten history of the Philippines is practcally absent, with just some severely fragmented information and details that makes it seem like a legend or fiction
The Spaniards wiped out almost all the documents and records of the different kingdoms in the Philippines when they conquered the islands. They literally destroyed the existing culture.
The video, unfortunately, has an error. It did not mention that Magellan arrived in Cebu before they pushed for Mactan, as well their travel to Limasawa Island.
They arrived in Mactan first before going to Mandaue in mainland Cebu. Magellan battled Lapulapu initially, but they losing so they retreated to another island. Prior to landing in Mandaue, Magellan ordered a reconnaissance of the island. There, he learned about the chieftain, who is Humabon. Then he befriended Humabon by sending gifts thru his emissary.
an old Filipino-Chinese friend of mine once told me that a lot about Philippine History were etched in bamboo rods and are still kept safely in a historical museum in Mainland China
Doing good sa imong mata, nagbahag lang man gani ta sa una. Ang e pahid sa lubot mahuman popo panit ra sa lubi. Doing good ka diha. Sige next time mag C.R. 💩ka bunot sa lubi🥥 gamita nga toilet paper parehas sa pre-colonial times. Tan-awon nato ug maka engun paka ug doing good samtang nagka samad-samad na imong lubot 😂 🤣😂
@@cucu_ultramen260 And you are afraid to go to aceh😂 I wonder why, majority of indonesian muslims doesn't even want to talk about aceh mind telling us why?
Was surprised on the similarities of our language (Bisaya) when I went to Bali, Indonesia. Eg. "Usa, duha, tulo, etc." which means "one, two, three, etc." I'm from the Philipines btw.
Thank you for the informative video. I did not know the Philippine History before the Spanish colonization. The schools only thought us from 1521 saying Ferdinand Magellan discovered the Philippines and named in honor of King Philip of Spain. I would like to know more about the origin of the Philippines, prior to colonisation.
The reason why Homabon welcomed the Spaniards was simply because of his jealousy towards Lapu-lapu. Before the Spaniards arrived, Lapu-lapu was already exiled by Rajah Homabon to the island of Mactan where almost no plants can grow abundantly because of the nature of the rocky island. You see, Homabon was a short stocky person just about 5ft in height Rajah while Lapu-lapu was a strong muscular tall chieftain (rank general nowadays) who has absolute control and command to his people. It also humored that even the most beautiful wife Juana of the Raj homabon cannot even hide her eyes on Lapu-lapu when he passes by. Lapu-lapu was a great commander who was loved by the people of Cebu, the Rajah cannot kill Lapu-lapu for it will only spark a civil war amongst his people. So when Magellan came, he thought it was a wise decision to be friends of newcomers and even prepared the biggest welcome festival for the guests, even willingness to convert his religion just to prove his intentions. (Which was considered taboo during that time). The Spaniards didn't include this narrative because they are hiding the fact that Magellan died because he was tricked by Homabon.
@@fanacc-l1v It is not written in any form except in. baybayin. Kasi sinunug lahat ng kastela ang lahat ng old Filipino litterateur noon at kanilang tinatawag na gawaing demonyo ang mga old baybayin litterateurs. Sa mga old folks na naipasa sa mga henerasyon nalang nakukuha ang mga ito. For me, it was my old folks story ko nakuha Ang info. Kasi sa kapanahonan ng grandparents ko Wala pa television at internet, kaya during nights the oldies used to tell stories to the young ones as night entertainments. Yong dad ko naman, he believe na kailangan nya maipas samin through storytelling ang mga bagay na hindi isinulat sa aklat especially during Spanish time. For him, it is vital for new generations to know the real Philippines history for it was erased and labeled by Spaniards as evil doing. Hindi kasi matangap mga kastela na si Magellan was tricked by a shorter fat asian known Homabon which resulted in his death. Ayaw nila iwasiwas sa mundo na Ang great explorer Magellan was even killed because of these.
@@yashagrawal88 you put them in reservations (concentration camp) mostly barrens land, cut their access to farm lands, jobs, education, health care and politics, that's systemic genocide.
from the notes of that one guy with magellan, he detailed the traditions and customs of natives. It implies that we have a civilization. The imperial americans actually were the ones who perpetuated the idea that we are uncivilized.
Amazing video thank you so much! 🩵I’ve been reading as many books I can find about precolonial Philippines but there’s only so much books and the internet articles in the US can tell me! I hope one day to visit the for the first time and see the laguna copperplate inscription!
If those spaniards stayed in Cebu and didn't move to luzon, they would have been totally anihalted. But thanks to the people of luzon kissed their arse and that's were they get to position themselves and ruled the people. As a Cebuano, we won't allow that.
Why do Cebuanos love dragging Tagalog and Luzon people so much. Please, address your insecurities. Regionalism will just cause more harm than good. Thank you.
@@iasked9392 i know na sobra din namang mang discriminate ang mga Tagalog pero it's more of due to ignorance. Meanwhile, Cebuanos and Bisaya in general are deliberately dragging Tagalog people and would always involve the more than 60 million people of Luzon na hindi naman lahat ay Tagalog or taga Manila. Kahit kaming mga taga luzon na hindi Tagalog ay nadidiscriminate din ng mga Tagalog/Manileños. Pero hindi namin ginawang personality ang siraan ang mga Tagalog at mga Taga Manila whenever we have the chance. Kalat na kalat kasi ito sa social media. Basta may makita akong Tagalog-Bisaya na post laging may bitterness ang mga Bisaya at idadamay na nila ang buong Luzon. Valid namin ang nararamdan niyo/natin na maoffend sa mga pangdidiscriminate ng mga taga Manila, pero ibang level kasi yung insecurities talaga ng mga Bisaya, borderline hatred na kasi. Yun lang naman napapansin ko. Pero, personally, I love the Bisaya language. And I find their accent cute.
@@notarealprophetuhh... Did you know how Christianity spread? Surely, Christians just went peacefully from country to country to spread the Word of God, and totally didn't commit genocide on different countries to turn them into Christians. Surely.
Yes our ancestor is Taiwanese aborigines not indonesians or malays this will contradict to what they teach to our school which our ancestors are malays.The migration patterns is from north to south which means from Taiwan to Indonesia and Malaysia not the other way around.
Even Malays were tawainese. .😅😅. .but most settlers didn't came from Taiwan directly, most of us came from the Malays. .the 10 datus of Borneo sailed unto the Panay island of what this video call as madja-as together with their people. .they bought that island from the aetas, then the aetas migrate into the mountains. .modern people dont know that. .
@@rufinobangcaya9973Filipinos especially those in North have purer Austronesian genetics than most Malays and Indonesian. Artifacts found in North are also much older than those found in South. Philippine language is also the closest to old Austronesian language together with Taiwanese natives. Most evidence says that migration indeed started from North to South, not the other way around.
@@asmrjackunboxinggames4328 brother, did you search in google or read some books about geneology? If not here some link i knew. This is an American web site. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19755666/ Also if you knew the Channel called Masaman you can watch it there he specializing about dna and civilization origin.
@@notarealprophet Swasti Shaka warsatita 822 Waisaka masa di jyotisa. Caturthai Karisnapaksa somwara sana tatkala Dayang Angkatan lawan dengan nya sanak barngaran si Bukah anak da dang Hwan Namwaran dibari waradana wi shuddhapattra ulih sang pamegat senapati di Tundun barja(dii) dang Hawan Nayaka tuhan Pailah Jagadewa. Di krama dang Hwan Namwaran dengan dang kayastha shuddha nu diparlappas hutang da walenda Kati 1 Suwarna 8 di hadapan dang Huwan Nayaka tuhan Puliran Kasumuran. dang Hwan Nayaka tuhan Pailah barjadi ganashakti. Dang Hwan Nayaka tuhan Binwangan barjadi bishruta tathapi sadana sanak kapawaris ulih sang pamegat dewata [ba]rjadi sang pamegat Medang dari bhaktinda diparhulun sang pamegat. Ya makanya sadanya anak cucu dang Hwan Namwaran shuddha ya kapawaris dihutang da dang Hwan Namwaran di sang pamegat Dewata. Ini grang syat syapanta ha pashkat ding ari kamudyan ada grang urang barujara welung lappas hutang da dang Hwa ...
@@notarealprophet ..."sang pamegat Medang..." It is a court of justice who authority as a judge in Medang kingdom. The inscription it self common in many inscription in java during Medang kingdom. Medang is a hindu kingdom typical.
@@history1982I am Muslim Filipino and I don't hate Indians. The only thing that we hate in this world are the bad, criminal people exterminating peace.
origin of Austronesian people somewhere in Southern China.. and started migrated in Maritime Southeast Asia during Han Chinese conquest against ancient people in Southern China.. it was well known in chinese history as "Hundred Yue" in english term is "Hundred Barbarians". indigenous people in the Philippines were Negrito people with their curly hair and dark skin.
that is just a theory.. in reality not all Filipinos are negritos.. there's no evidence to that that ancient Filipinos were ALL negritos... Safe to say Filipinos came from the Austronesian race.
@@janjamesramos247 We can settle this issue with the DNA analysis -- which has been done for sometime and not just Filipinos but also other Asians. Archaelogy doesn't lie. The ancient bones will give up its secrets and show the migration patterns of the people who traveled thru the Philippine Islands ;).
@@littlemystic4340 Good. Genetic analysis seems to be the most credible one. Archeology seems to be lacking. And if u're talking about migration settlement in the Philippines is complex because there's too many ethnicities involved. For instance the Ayta's are different from other Filipino people such that they have the highest Denisovan ancestry.
@@janjamesramos247 There was never a report that ALL Filipinos descended from the Negritos -- or more specifically the Austronesian race which includes the aborigines from Australia, Indonesia, and some of the Micronesian islands. The history books say that the Austronesians were the first people who arrived and occupied the islands of the Philippines. But other waves of peoples arrived thereafter, such as the Malays.
I want to see a continuation of this video. I hope the creator will indicate his source and references. I liked this. It gave me additional information about the Philippines.
Guam, Hawaii and the Marianas was once the great pacific empire of the sultans of the Philippines. But when Spain arrived it was the end of the old history and the old ways died out.
Tondo is just a small settlement. Even though weakers settlements were under their influence, those settlements were still independent and had their own laws.
Magellan was for a scouting mission (iirc, the wests are looking for an alternative route because Ottoman Empire is monopolizing the trade route). the second one that arrives is the military one. no tribe will win against a military from a country with a centralized government
I sincerely hope all of what is said here is proven facts. I'm Filipino, 32 years living in PH since birth and I haven't learn much from our own history class before the Spaniards came. Thank you for this!
as a Chinese, its my first time knowing that one of our dynasty established a governor state in the PH to oversee trade. even though we are known to be the one of the oldest & largest civilization on Asia, we never colonized foreign countries unlike the wests. yet it saddens me, today, that people under western sphere of influence see our country as the one who will colonize more than those who have colonizing records like US or Japan. so be it...
Ancient Filipino kingdoms and Chinese Dynasties are friends. Both countries are still friends as long territorial disputes are not put into the context Chinese have a huge influence in Filipino culture and nearly 30% of Filipinos have atleast a little Chinese blood along with 1.5,% purely Chinese
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Jesus loves you ❤️ Please repent and turn to him and receive Salvation before it's too late. The end times written about in the Bible are already happening in the world. Jesus is the son of God and he died for our sins on the cross and God raised him from the dead on the third day. Jesus is waiting for you with open arms but time is running out. Please repent and turn to him before it is too late. Accept Jesus into your heart and invite him to be Lord and saviour of your life and confess and believe that Jesus is Lord, that he died for your sins on the cross and that God raised him from the dead. Confess that you are a sinner in need of God's Grace and ask God to forgive you for all your sins through Jesus.
Jesus loves you. Nothing can compare to how he loves you. When he hung on that cross, he thought of you. As they tore open his back, he thought of your prayer time with him. As the thorns dug into his head, he thought of you spending time in the word of God. As the spears went into his side, he imagined embracing you in heaven.
Not until you stop using this BCE shite
hilarious April fools video!
bro this is not april fools i thnink?
@@fale892 BC/BCE = the same
AD/CE = the same
CE = Common Era
The Philippines' pre-1521 history DESERVES more study! I have a gut feeling we are far from fully understanding it completely!
Agree. Lots of artifacts in the provinces which pre-dates the Spanish era. In fact I brought an heirloom bronze pot to the national museum, when they checked the potters mark, it wasn't on their records.
it will tarnish the catholic views so they rather not tackle it!
@@GaRaFaL It said that Lapu-Lapu refused to convert to catholicism. Jose Rizal also dislike catholicism.....oh well..
@@GaRaFaL another country corrupted by extremist religious fanatics and views, these people dont know they are screwing up their own mental by letting religion decide how they should lead their lives
@@toriahmyworld
Chief Lapu Lapu was skilled in kali, arnis, and escrima. He killed explorer and conquistador Ferdinand Megallen in a sword duel. !!
My direct ancestor formerly served Rajah Sulayman as his personal cannon maker. Following the downfall of Maynila and its rulers, he then worked for Conquistador Miguel Lopez de Legazpi as a weapons maker for Spain, crafting cannons for the fortress now recognised as Intramuros. If you're familiar with him, yes I'm talking about Panday Pira. Some of his descendants (my relatives) reside in Abra, while my lineage remains in Manila. Just thought I'd share, and it's great to see more Philippine History.❤
So you’re a direct descendants of the traitors and weaklings 😂
That’s good. My maternal ancestry can be traced to Spain in the 1700s. my paternal grandpa was half American 🇺🇸 but we don't even know his real surname. He changed it 4 times that we are aware of so we don't know our real apelyido 😅
my great great great grand father is also one of rizal's close friend they even go to madrid and became superstars there. there is even a rumor that rizal stole one of my Great great great grand fathers idea.;
I’m related To Jesus Christ.
hella cool!
Can't believe my humble city (butuan) got recognized in this video when we got little recognition in national history discussions here in the Philippines
your city was once the most prominent kingdoms back then, many people there hosts different objects from bowls, clothing, weapons, etc that are made out of gold.... So it is right they mentioned the kingdom of Butuan, one of our greatest precolonial kingdoms and sultanates
You have the oldest balangay found in the Philippines as well as a seal with Kawi script, which was used in the kingdom of Sri Vijaya in it; your city's quite important.
I love Butuan! Stayed there for two years
What are you talking about, the fact that you have a National Museum branch in Butuan means you are highly recognized in National History discussion and most ancient gold exhibition highlights Butuan. You are not recognized in mainstream discussion because a lot of Filipinos do not know about their precolonial history so I hope more Butuan people can correct misinformation share in social media and share the beauty of the ancient polities of the Philippines.
I know butuan was a powerful kingdom. Dapat hindi ito naglaho.
This was a very good effort to shed light on the details of Pre-Colonial Philippines, so Kudos to the creator.
I was happy hearing the discussion from the start up to 3:30; past 3:33, I noticed some information lacking, like:
1. In 3:33, there was the discussion on the Barangays led by the Datus, the basic form of government, but the discussion on the much larger Bayan, which was a Confederation of Barangays and was led by an Indigenous Lakan (the Ruler of all Datus in the area and supposed to have the bloodline of a Diwata) or an Indianized or Islamized Rajah was missing. Reference: Pre-Colonial Manila Briefer, Presidential Museum and Library, Republic of the Philippines
2. In 6:37, there was a discussion on Tondo and Maynila. However, they were referred to as Barangays. These were actually Bayans, a confederation of Barangays. Reference: Pre-Colonial Manila Briefer, Presidential Museum and Library, Republic of the Philippines
Also, Tondo was actually a Center of a larger Confederacy of Bayans built by Gat Lontok and Dayang Kalangitan, maybe referred to as Luzon. The Confederacy includes the Bayans of Tondo, Maynila, Maysapa, I don’t know if Namayan was included, but I have read the the Bayans of Bae and Lumbang also submits to the rulership of Tondo, plus the Bayans of Central Luzon (those who participated in the Revolt of the Lakans).
3. I said that the Confederacy of Bayans may have been referred to as Luzon because the people who came from there were called Luzones by the Portuguese. In 10:33, the creator said that the first contact of the Filipinos with the Europeans was in 1521, when Magellan landed on Homonhon Island in the Visayas; however, the Portuguese were already able to interact with the Luzones in their Conquest of Malacca in 1511. In fact, the Portuguese installed Rejimo Diraja, a Luzones, to help them manage the Port of Malacca after the conquest of the Sultanate. Reference: The Suma Oriental of Tome Pires.
4. In 8:36, the creator discussed the Sulu Sultanate and Brunei Sultanate, but they did not included the island of Palawan as part of their dominion.
I hope my findings help in anyway.
You may also want to read “The Summa Oriental of Tome Pires” by Francisco Rodriguez, its from 1512 to 1515.
also they forgot to include the Tondo Conspiracy
Thank you for this
@@guillerhonora717 yes, I agree. “The Tondo Conspiracy” of 1587 was also called, “Revolt of the Lakans.” See my comment, item #2b.
Thank you for the effort ... hopefully, they take the account the local Tribes and or Clans.
They knew and most historians belittle the knowledge of these parts of the Visayas that actually resist and they push on Lapu Lapu as the nearby Island which is wrong... from Zugbo itself it took them day and night (Pigafetas account) to reach the location of this 'Lapu-lapu' which is NorthEasterly in direction 😂 and yet they just arive in the nearby Island which is only a swim from Cebu...what a history!
Lapu-lapus Kingdom is the Samar-Leyte Islands! And that is a period with an exclamation mark.
we're warriors in the visayas. this has more information, than school in the philippines has taught. wow. whoever made this video and did the research, im wholeheartedly thankful.
The real question here is: why doesn’t the Philippine government/ Department of Education teach this in primary schools early on? Which agenda are they following here?
@@Kybernetes108 No agenda. It’s just dumb to bombard a child with too much information about the Pre-Hispanic History to the Present. Hence, a person should be in a Philippine History major should he or she wish to delve deeper in to the details of history. Or people just have terrible Philippine History professors/teachers like my parents’ having terrible Spanish professors who only taught them to write more than to speak it back in the day. 🤷🏻♂️
Check Archivo General de Indias in Seville, Spain. It houses chronicles, maps, accounts about the Spanish East Indies (the Philippines and neighboring insular possessions in the Asia-Pacific) and the Spanish West Indies (the colonial possessions of the Americas). The Archivo is in the process of digitalization of these historical accounts and are now accessible online but one has to be proficient in Spanish, a language that is virtually dead in the Philippines despite having its own Academia Filipina de la Lengua Española. 😂🥴
we are all warriors by virtue.
@@Kybernetes108 They do, but they are more biased towards the Tagalogs since it's where the capital is. The agenda is for the Tagalogs to represent all of the Philippines when it's actually composed of more tribes. The biggest tribe are the Visayans.
Warriors. Pati nga maga taong Wala kasalanan na Filipino pinapatay kapwa Filipino dahil sa selos. Pera. Negosyo
This is one of the best videos I’ve stumbled upon trying to understand my family history. Thank you!
The Igorot people of Philippines still maintaining the original Austronesian culture, with less Abrahamic, Dharmic influence compare to lowlands Filipinos
Also to our Sea Gypsy Austronesian Peoples especially the "Bajau People".
youre dreaming. most igorots today are christian. go ask them. i honestly dont know what youre talking about. this isnt 2000 bce
@@KimJongUnGamingAndVloggingthey are only christian in paper. But their cultural is still strong austronesian unlike lowland Filipinos
@@skylinelover9276Igorots never taste 300-500 years war only Tagalogs, Ilonggo/Panay, and Moros. That's why they maintain their identity, culture, and so on.😂😂
@@KimJongUnGamingAndVlogging Still they maintained and preserved their tradition and culture, and language, christianity did not affect them except their headhunting culture which they stopped when the Americans arrived.
This was informative. All I ever learned about the Philippines, if we ever did in school, was that Magellan discovered it and conquered it for Spain. Then after a few centuries, America took it from Spain. Who later fought Japan over the Philippines then granted the Philippines independence.
no wonder why most filipinos get bored in history class. its like a painful recount of lost battles and sufferings. its refreshing to see the other side of history when philippines were once a melting pot diverse cultures and people who help each other and one of the stongest and riches nations, in precolonial asia./
20million dollars American paid Spain..
@@MaryamSaja-xm7dk help each other my ass, Visayans and Mindanaoans were not friendly, even had skirmishes. Stop putting all of us in a Pot, We were seperated by culture and morals. And a melting pot will never have a cohesive country. A country cannot maintain peace if majority cannot agree to established morals, principles, ethics and culture.
Homogeneity > Melting pot = garbage.
Even in literature. The only pre-colonial literature that I remember being taught in school was Biag-ni-Lam'ang. Revolution is cool and all, but seeing how everything started is just a lot more interesting.
thank you for this.. we need more videos like this explaining how Philippines was thousands of years ago..
Easy to get along, phillipine people
❤❤ from🇮🇩 indo..
I hope you don't get offended but we also just don't get along but we also look alike.
@@les0218 i wish the best for all my pinoy friends from game "dota 2".. make me childhood the blast😆
Hi, I'm abed fan, an indo pride
Thanks brother.
Sunda pride!
The jade culture is associated to Austronesian, the Champa people of Vietnam, Philippine archipelago, Formosa/Taiwan
*Animists/Catholic🇵🇭😎🔥*
@@Edgar_Ramirez471what spanish like doing her so attention sicker realtalk!!!
Animist is much more appropriate "religion" . Much more realistic than any "man-made" religion that also have been corrrupted for a very very long time.
Pero noon 90 20s ayaw ma connect satin ng mga yan diring diri sila sa kahirapan at kaitiman ng pinoy.ngayon kungbsino sino nlng may gusto maki connect sa pinas 🤣 ambottttt!!!!
Salamat knowledgia for the Philippine content.
Big thanks to our ancestors who fought for our land.till now ,we igorots still have our identity we have our own tradition,culture, values etc.maybe that's why many local tourist come to baguio people of it,and our weather.😊
Proud north philippines
Don't betray your tough ancestors by permitting the Chinese to gobble up paradise.
true
Mabuhay si Bantag!!!
History of our country is clearly connected in the bible ..
Wala nang mas hihigit pa sa totoong kultura natin! Our history before colonization deserves to be highlighted and give importance because it’s an integral part of our identity as Filipinos!
This is what we need more videos of ....history of nations BEFORE EUROPEANS arrived. Id like movies n videos as well and id pay to read subtitles.
Histories and info are often hard to Find from then as they werent recorded well, were destroyed, or are over shadowed by the Europeans themselves.
Why not watch our neighboring country's movies about ancient times to find more historic connections, to be honest it is thanks to our neighbors that we end up learning a pice of our history . Even mexico is connected in asia way before the pre colonial times 😮
That's the issue there's very little material on the pre colonial Philippines. I can't find many definitive sources for pre colonial beyond genetics and archaeological remains ran against the accounts of the original Spaniards. Which certainly have a bias, just like they did with the Aztec, Chickasaw, and Navajo people.
@@Saibre568Nah fam here's what it is.
Philippines is of relevance because it represents a continuity of pre-European culture that continues until today.
Whereas there are cultures within Mexico that have an Indigenous culture, Mexico itself is of a Spanish culture and language.
So I'm saying in the realm of Indigenous people who were colonized by USA and kept their pre European language. Philippines is more similar to American Indians than it is to Mexico, because Philippines is of an Indigenous culture, not a Hispanic culture. If that makes sense?
No one knows if what we have been taught is our true culture or it has been heavily filtered before spreading the information to us 🤔🤔
Man I was born and raised in the Philippines before migrating to America but this information is not even taught to us in elementary school. It took 51 years for me to know these history. All they taught in schools were 1521 Spanish era onwards.
It was because of the fact that all books and history of the Philippines were burned and destroyed in order to erase the history of the Philippines during the pre-colonial era.
Ikr? Which is why I always found it kinda boring, it wasn't until college where I heard a different Philippine history being taught and got interested
True!
Talaga hindi mo alam na hindi rin satin nagsimula ang islamic at bakit hindi yan na tinatawag colonialist of arab islamic ???😂pareho din namn nakarating ang catholic satin pero tawag nila sa puti colonialist😂 may kafal pa sila ng mukha mag independency samantalang mula ng spain japan at us occupation puro ✝️mga military navy at airforce natin hangang ngayon sa china ✝️dominance parin .
History is written by the victors.
In this case its Spain and America.
Wow! I'm from Cebu and I learned a lot from this video. Thank you for creating this!
I love Cebu. Very historical thats why in 2011-2015 and 2020-2022 I was there. Working and living alone. I really wsnt to settle in South Cebu. Soon. Miss that Island so much. 😔
The igorots were one of the few filipinos who never submitted to other religions(Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam) until they were Christianize by the Americans. Most muslim priest say the Philippines was a muslim country which is in fact wrong just to pursuade and convert christian filipinos. Just to remind you the Datus of Visayas were Native Filipinos, the Rajas of Manila-Luzon were Indian(Hindu) Filipinos, only the Sultan of Sulu-Mindanao were Muslim Filipinos, that's why Lapu-Lapu and other Rajas and Datus of Luzon and Visayas were not muslim because they practiced Animism not Islam. There is nothing wrong with Islam, but muslim priests tend to use this wrong information to convert christian filipinos.
Conquest by divide and rule tactics, subjugation.
If we are muslim before why our military marines ,navy and airforce dominated by ✝️ during spain ,japan and US colonization until now ✝️ dominated.
@@BadIdeaRight5most of the philippines was ruled by muslim before pre Spanish colonial. But they were defeated and the locals were forcefully converted to Christian.
Igorot known as traitors of our country man
@@mdnytc just dont include us igorots or people of baguio or cordillera because we were never forced to convert to Christianity.igorots defeated the spanish that's why we still preserved our culture
Any game developers out there. Hear this. Any triple A game (God of War style) base off with culture and animalism of pre-colonial Philippines would be a massive hit. I would love to time travel in this time of era. Seeing those mythical creatures (tikbalang, kapre, manananggal) mixed with tagalog god (bathala), barangay kingdoms, animalism, muslims and threat of incoming spanish Christian invasion interplay with each other would be a great experience!!
Thats what I thought, it makes sense for ubisoft to make a good assassin’s creed here since they even have a studio there
This is what I always wanted. But I need to study first about game dev. And read tons of books about Philippine Mythology.
@@GamerNugget18 I used to be very optimistic with Ubisoft having a studio in Laguna. But seeing what's happening to them now, I just hope the talents of the team there aren't wasted or worse.
There's a PC game called "Anito"
Hi as a software developer, the history and culture of the pre-colonial Philippines have to be studied, reviewed and analyzed thoroughly to create an accurate depiction. It will be a lot of work, but with a good team I think it is possible to create this game. If I could find people who share the same interests, I would sacrifice anything to work and complete this project.
Brunei now : 🤏
Brunei back then : 😨
Bruneians were pushing everybody around back in the day
No kidding there mate...
I'm sorry, I mean, the land area of Brunei
*Animists/Catholic🇵🇭😎🔥*
maniniwala ka ba na man-made ang Palawan para gawing Tulay ng Brunei papuntang Luzon, yung isang Tulay papuntang Mindanao
Philippines history sure is a mystery. I feel this is only a fraction of what really happened or half truths.
True..
as a filipino, i feel robbed by the educational system. they fail to teach these to us/
@@MaryamSaja-xm7dk If it is any consolation to you, I have heard too many Filipinos who went to school in the Philippines, studied Noli Me Tangere and El Filibusterismo and yet these are the same filipinos who say that Rizal wrote those two books in Spanish because Spanish was the common language in the Philippines. Rizal himself said this about Spanish in his book El Filibusterismo: "Spanish will never be the general language of the country, the people will never talk it, because the conceptions of their brains and the feelings of their hearts cannot be expressed in that language-each people has its own tongue, as it has its own way of thinking! What are you going to do with Castilian, the few of you who will speak it? "
@@MaryamSaja-xm7dk Research Leni Mendoza Strobel, Center for Babaylan studies at Sonoma University. She talks about the miseducation of the Filipinos & how we have to decolonize. It’s a big movement w/ the young Filipinos in the diaspora. . They have ceremonial retreats w/ Native American tribes for healing & reeducation of our indigenous core values. Her work is beautiful. Read her book, Back from the crocodiles belly or watch her lectures on RUclips.
as born and raised as filipino, this kind history never taught in schools or in my school. i wonder why. all they taught in history is lapu-lapu, magellan, and the heroes like rizal and the rest. and unending political history. they didn't taught this things. this is the first time i heard this history so thank you very much for this.
Cram test answers for feebly minded students as usual.
Cram test comments for feebly minded people as usual.
@@chuwiq01 aye, all these comments do instill mental challenges online lol
the name is Fernando Magallanes, not ferdinand magellan, and it is balangay, not baranggay as what is taught in schools
@@carmelitotanael6183 he's name is really ferdinand magellan, until he went to spain and offered to serve charles I and so on. henceforward became known by the Spanish version of his name Fernando de Magallanes. about balangay i agreed. i kinda remember it. but when you search balangay on google its about boats and not places. so idk, maybe i remember it wrong.
What this video proves that the Filipinos or the people before Spanish arrived already civilized.
But all have their own kingdom not as one.
Every part of the world has its different civilization before the 15th century. Most schools taught the history under the view of the west. But now, today's historians are scripting history in different views.
@@reneabrea4123 still, they had their own states, and we're even capable of challenging other powers (to a limited extent).
@@reneabrea4123that's very common in Asia
🇵🇭🇺🇸🇪🇦✝️
As someone who watched Amaya and Indio, this is a lot of fun to watch. We also had a name for our god, if Muslims calls their god, Allah. We call our god, laon. Also the datu term for leader is actually for Visayan kingdoms, lakan is what we call to a leader of a kingdom in Luzon. Luzon culture is a lot different than than the pintados of Visayas. Rajah is pronounced wrong in this video, it's supposed to be rah-hah. We also invented Baybayin.
Hi, just little corrections. It is pronounced as ra-jah and not ra-hah as it is originally a Hindu title and that's how they pronounced it. Laon is mostly for Visayans. In the Tagalog pantheon which is in Luzon, the supreme god is called Bathala. I've read that that isn't his name as Bathala just means god, other bathala/ bathalumans have their own names. They don't call the supreme god's name maybe out of respect. Other tribes in Luzon have their own beliefs too, such as some Cordillerans have anitos, and I think the Aetas that lived in the foot of Pinatubo called their god, Apo Mallari (just added infos.) Yes, we invented Baybayin. It is the writing system of Tagalog. Other regions in the Philippines with other languages have their own writing systems too.
@@Kariktan214True however most of the writings may have been on materials that could rot. Given the climate of the Philippines and an alley of natural calamities, they may have been lost in time. We only have a handful written in materials that can last for ages unlike the Pre-Hispanic Civilizations of Central and South America eg the Incas and the Mayans/Aztecs.
God he said he want you only to call a Lord God not laon he appreciate it
@@JosefinaMoore-l2hThis ain't a religion topic blud. No one is insulting any god.
I made the Philippines my home 9 years ago and am always enjoying learning more about their culture!
Love to the Philippines from America!
Passport bro 😂😂😂😂😂left over of your country?
@@Lucifer-h7vbagay na bagay sa pangalan mo ugali mo
Deped please include this in the curriculum. Dili sigeg pangwarta ang huna hunaon 😂
sakto mao gyud hahaha
I learned these sa araling panlipunan, just wanted a review
waw ansaya mo araling panlipunan lang subject? kaya mo mag gawa ng curriculum? kaya mo? kaya mo ba?
I'm from Lapu Lapu City and very thankful for the knowledge about Lapu Lapu. And by the way my favorite fish is Lapu lapu. I love escabeche lapu lapu, grilled lapu lapu and tinolang lapu lapu.
Also kilawin Na lapu lapu.
I also like kulafu which sounds like lapu lapu.
Pugapo the fish not lapulapu.
👆Daghang Salamat⚔💪👊
@@ChesterInChina pugapo may orig tawag sa bisdak tungod sa mga tagawg nahimong lapu2x
I found the video entertaining & educational. I learned about this in my Filipino martial arts studies. Thank you for sharing🤙🏽
🇵🇭 Maráming salámat pára sa videong itó! (Filipino)
Muchisimas gracias para [con] este video! (Chavacano Zamboangueño)
Thank you so much for this video! (English)
I personally call this long period of time as the Prehistory and Ancient History or Ancient and Classical History of the Philippines (without an exact time when ancient history ended and classical history began, but a long and continous period of time and history after prehistory), just to avoid naming, calling, or referring to it as "before Magellan, Pre-Magellan, Pre-Hispanic, Pre-Iberian, Pre-European, and/or Pre-Western or Pre-Westernized", and also to separate it from those other names or terms mentioned above as the Philippines does have its own prehistory and ancient history of its own people who discovered the archipelago, are descendants of these people, and are other people and their descendants from the other parts of the Asia that borders the Indian and Pacific Oceans, and that are not just based on when Magellan and/or other or other later Europeans first set their feet on any of the shores or coasts of any of the islands or islets, or whatnot else, of and that comprise the present-day Philippines.
I know that it's challenging for other Filipinos like me to listen, watch, and learn or relearn their prehistory and ancient history from a non-Filipino or from non-Filipinos, or from non-Filipino historian/s, and/or also from non-Philippine historian/s, or from any other professional social scientist/s and/or humanities scholar/s, or even from any professional at all in these fields and/or it's allied fields, whether from historians, other social scientists and/or humanities scholars, teachers, instructors, educators, professors, lecturers, researchers, other scholars, and the like, as some Filipinos also do or may have their own family, clan, community, ethnic or ethnolinguistic, group, organizational, local, provincial, regional, and/or personal or individual versions, perceptions, interpretations, perspectives, points-of-view, variations, forms, counterparts, tales, beliefs, traditions, telling, retelling, myths, conceptions, stories, and/or narratives of or about Philippine prehistory and history, especially about time period/s which lack the most sources and resources or other, especially primary ones and also most especially from non-outsiders, which are what Philippine prehistory and ancient history are.
For me though, it's sometimes a breath of fresh air to consider and to listen to Philippine prehistory and history from a non-Filipino or from non-Filipinos, or from non-Filipino historian/s, and/or also from non-Philippine historian/s, or from any other professional social scientist/s and/or humanities scholar/s, or even from any professional at all in these fields and/or it's allied fields, because if they always just come from us Filipinos, our own prehistory and history can and may be written and told in an order and/or with happenings or events, people or individuals, dates or times, details, etc. that are in general or overall biased for and/or against one or the other, all within the complex influences, existence, dynamics, interconnections, interrelationships, and interdependence of politics, classes, ethnicities or ethnic or ethnolinguistic groups, cultural groups or communities, languages and translations, sex, gender, levels of educational attainment, educational backgrounds, access to quality education, access to technology, access to information, right to education, educational systems and curricula, daily and/or monthly incomes of people, professions, beliefs, belief systems, religions, worldviews, ideologies, connections, relationships, power, etc. of Filipinos and non-Filipinos in or within the Philippines and of Filipinos outside or beyond the Philippines.
Altough we can't get rid of biases for and/or against one or the other in the writing and telling of any prehistory and history, whether if it is in or within the Philippines or outside or beyond, whether if it's among Filipinos, with Filipinos, with non-Filipinos, or among non-Filipinos, which also includes this video, among other sources and resources, primary, secondary, or whatnot else, but listening, watching, and learning or relearning Philippine or even any other places' prehistory and/or history, or even that of the entire globe or world, from different versions, perceptions, perspectives, points-of-view, variations, forms, counterparts, tales, beliefs, traditions, telling, retelling, myths, conceptions, stories, and/or narratives are what helps me personally and individually to have enough or even more information and education about them, to weigh them, look at their pros and cons, spot for their biases, also spot for and be aware of my own personal and individual biases about Philippine or even any other places' prehistory and/or history, or even that of the entire globe or world, and then make up my mind and choose or decide which among them should I allow or let my self to learn and be educated or to learn more and be educated more, or to develop, build, or have my own personal and individual version/s, perception/s, perspective/s, point/s-of-view, variation/s, form/s, counterpart/s, tale/s, belief/s, tradition/s, telling, retelling, myth/s, conception/s, story/ies, and/or narrative/s of Philippine or even any other places' prehistory and history, or even that of the entire globe or world, from all of the other people that I communicated, listened, watched or viewed, and/or read from in my life, whether they're Filipinos themselves or non-Filipinos.
In the end, no one is sure, exact, nor accurate of and on what really happened in the past, but we can only unfortunately rely on whatever multitude to just limited and rare sources and resources we had, we have, we can have, and/or we will have, or even we will ever have. After all, the past is different with history and the prehistory that comes before it.
Thank you for this informative and educational animated video, for I am relearning things I already knew, I am learning new things I didn't know before, and there are some things in the video that made me go, "Hmm...I know that's inaccurate, mistaken, or wrong. I think that's inaccurate, mistaken, or wrong. I am not sure with that one. I don't know with that one. I don't have knowledge, expertise, or specialty with or on that one. Hmm...interesting!" about my own country and nation-state.
Philippine geographic map has distinctive characteristics that set it apart from other geographic maps. Very Unique..
Very interesting. This is my first time to know these facts.. Thank you.
The natives are NEGRITOS. And they've been in the Philippines for 30,000 years. The Austronesians came much later, just 3,000 years ago. Don't leave out the first people. The Negritos are still in the Philippines
They're both Indigenous because they speak pre-Spanish and pre-English languages and have maintained them through 500 years.
The only non-Indigenous Filipino would be a person of Spanish descent whose ancestors spoke only Spanish and still do. That'd just be Creoles, which they do recognize.
The Austronesians and Negritos overlap though.
It's also about 5000 years.
5000 years in a place and still speaking Austronesian languages is native.
As a Filipino, many information presented here aren't known to many Filipinos or they may have already forgotten. Thanks!
Greetings from Redondo Beach 🇺🇸🇺🇸Wonderful historical video of the Philippines🇵🇭
Negrito groups were the first inhabitants to settle in the prehistoric Philippines.
Yea . But once it's past 5000 years. They're both Native and they overlap into each other.
The Inuit aren't less native than Amerindians. Amerindians are a 25,000 year old migration, Inuit are only 5,000 . But they both kept their languages until 2024. So they're both native as hell.
As did the Austronesian speakers of the Philippines. So they're equally Indigenous to where they're from as Indians are to America. Period .
And they have the same history of Spanish, Mexican, and American colonization of their Indigenous lands and kept their Indigenous languages throughout all of that.
Indigenous Filipinos (and to a lesser extent: Hawaiians) are the only people in the world with the same relationship to colonialism as American Indians.
Negrito means small Negro. Probably a subset of African tribe people.
My ancestors are negritos and austronesians
@@neildegracia5263 Thats awesome bro! i visited my fiancee family in mindanao. Their village is deep in the mountains and they are from an indigenous tribe. You can see a the Negrito in these people very clearly.
I just want to say I absolutely love your videos! Scientifically accurate asf
Its interesting about laguna copper inscription in 10th centuries.
In Java, we also have many copper inscriptions in 10th centuries
This is an awesome Historical account of the Philippines. Thank you!
This is the kind of subject that needs to be taught more in school. Understanding what we used to do before being subjugated by the Spanish is extremely fascinating.
The 5 waves of migrations to the Philippines from Indonesia. The first group of people who migrated to the Northern of Luzon were the Negritoes via Palawan (Larena, 2021). Palawan 60k-25k years ago was connected by land to Malaysia and Indonesia. The second group that went to Central Mindanao 25k-12k years ago were also the Negritoes via Tawi-Tawi, Sulu, Basilan, and Sambuwangan (now Zamboanga City) (Larena, 2021) Again, these places were all connected to Borneo and Indonesia. Third group who migrated to Southern Mindanao, which is Zamboanga Peninsulas 12k-6k years ago were the Manobo (Larena, 2021) but when the last group arrived and settled in the region, they were later pushed upward into the hinterland. And, the last wave of migration, which is the fourth, were the Sama 6k years ago (sometimes they are called "Bajau, Badjao, Sama-Bajau, and other similar cognates). The Sama first settled in Zamboanga-Basilan Strait 6k years ago (Larena, 2021) and later spread across Sulu Archipelago, including of course Tawi-Tawi. Pallessen (1985) claims that the "first settlers in Sulu were the Sama, and the second settlers here were the Buburanons (now Buranons who migrated here from Butuan, now Butuan City). Pallessen (1985) further claimed that the Sama, Jama Mapun and the Yakans descended from one common ancestor -- the Proto Sama-Bajau. Today, members of this ethnic group prefer to be called as SAMA.
Actually, the "Out of Taiwan theory" says that the original inhabitants of Taiwan (the Austronesians) left Tawain and settled the Philippines first and then made their way to Indonesia. After that there was movement and settlement back and fourth between the 2.
@@raymondabella4684the austronesian originally in south china -taiwan it's more logical because Filipinos doesn't have Austroasiatic Admixture were Indonesians has high Austroasiatics DNA admix means if Indonesians is the one migrated to Philippines, then why Filipinos doesn't have Big Austroasiatics DNA
@skylinelover9276
Incorrect! What makes up most of what the average Filipino IA Austronesian DNA. I know this for a fact because I am a prime example of this. My DNA test results came back with an 87% Austronesian results. My parents were both Filipino and came from nowhere else. Other Filipinos have similar results. In my case, the other DNA markers were that of India, Spain, China and Japan. The rest of the 87% was Austronesian. Not to mention the the various dialects from the Philippines are just about all influenced by the archaic original Formosain Autronesian language.
Feel free to skip to and 54 seconds of this video. It pretty much sums what the Oit of Taiwan theory and the order of Autronesian migration are.
ruclips.net/video/qcvwvXjhyyo/видео.htmlsi=9ygERvN2aojdTQMU
ENJOY!
The map of Tondo is unfortunately wrong and exaggerated. This has been a common myth that kept circulating on and on. In reality they only occupied even less than what is modern-day Tondo. They were rich though. But they were only a mere city state. Please fix this mistake, even Wikipedia doesn't say there was a giant empire called Tondo let alone academic sources. Look it up. Map aside, the research done here is good. Its mostly only the map that has the issue. In RUclips we can see many people repeat the same mistake over and over so its best for us to avoid it
It’s so hard to take you seriously with that profile picture
Ang hangganan Po yata Ng Tondo ay Sa ilog Pasig, hindi din naisama Ang Namayan sa video na ito.
Porket Maliit lang ang Tondo ngayon hindi ibig sabihin na maliit rin ang Tondo dati.
aw man
If Kingdom of Tondo is much smaller or much as small as modern Tondo. How come its leader was mentioned in Laguna Copperplate?
I am a Proud Filipino Muslim.😊 Thanks for posting this! Mabuhay Ang Pilipinas!😊 🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭
I'm not a Muslim but I am glad to hear that you are a Filipino because I am a Filipino
Im proud to be a filipino Christian ✝️⚔️ ill fight for my religion no matter what
@@notarealprophet Hello, brother!😃❤️
thanks for featuring Philippine history. ❤❤❤
wow thanks a lot for making this video. We didn't really learn much about this in school back in the day so this is very helpful.
Thank you very much for this video... Love from the archipelago (they called the Philippines)
What do they call it now?
I've read some articles that Datu Lapu-Lapu was acting like a pirate and attacking Rajah Humabon's traders that is they became an enemy.
and Lapu-Lapu was just saving himself against attacking Spanish under the command of Magellan in behalf of Humabon's wish to arrest Lapu-lapu. and since Lapu-Lapu killed magellan he became a Hero of the Philippines.
Lapu-lapu didnt do it for the Luzon-Visayas-Mindanao.
Business rivalry. Mafia wars 1521
Lapu-Lapu Syndicate vs. Humabon Transport Co. 😄😂
yup
Yes, Lapu-Lapu indeed resorted to piracy, raiding trade ships and nearby villages, which is why Datu Humabon urged Magellan to confront him in exchange for supplies.
Basically he was used as a propaganda figure it's common here in the Philippines for instance the national hero (Rizal) didn't really want a revolution in fact wanted the Philippines to be recognized as a official Spanish or American state.
so lapu lapu was not a hero but a bandit, contrary to what is taught in schools
This is much better than the older video that you made about Philippine history, but there are still inaccuracies.
Thanks for sharing the information of Philippines archepilego
*Shout out to the People of Mindanao* Ramdan Mubarak ☪️☪️✅️✅️
Not a filippino, but Ramadhan Mubarak to you too
I love giving pork dishes to Muslims to break their fast.
@@Indresh2468ok zoomer
@@Indresh2468I love eating Gau mata
@@zitka123 cheers katna lund. Me too! I love beef burgers.
We need to get more in-depth with our culture and history especially pre- colonial because we have to know our roots. For those Filipinos claiming that they are part spanish, please provide a DNA test! We Filipinos are sea dwellers and voyagers! We are tribal people and have no spanish ancestry only names and it was enforced!
Shut the hell up
We’re also the purest Austronesian from what I’ve heard. Idk if it’s correct.
@@MarlonD805 troll harder, would you? You’re so lame!
it saddens me that so much of our history was lost
The social castes described here are exclusive to the tagalog regions. In the visayas we have the three-class social structure: Tumao (nobility), Timawa (warrior class akin to the Japanese samurai) and Uripon (slaves, commoners, servants). The PH isn't just tagalog.
Wonderful knowledge! This was never taught in my school days
History started from Lapu Lapu killing Magellan
Very interesting
Thank you for the research and presenting this!
PROUD of PANAY ISLAND..
We never ever had an Islamic Influence.
Always Polytheistic Animism with Hindu-Buddhist influences to Roman Catholicism still today hybrid with polytheistic-animist beliefs.
We have ZERO ISLAMIC INFLUENCE that's why people of PANAY are always Peaceful and Kind with Festive Spirit and Vibrant Culture.
They resist the Islamic invaders so many times.
My visayan brother
Visayas has always stood out as an independent group of people...
@@buckeyeadventures1631 yes sir, search about visayan confederacy
👆Central Visayas, Western Visayas & Eastern Visayas were never Sultanate Islam Kingdoms. That's why the Spanish called the Visayans "PINTADOS" ( Tattooed ). Tattooing/Tattooes in Islam is "Haram" ( Forbidden ). Visayans were "ANIMISTS" even Antonio Pigafetta noted this in his chronicle/diary/book.
Just a note Datus are actually pronounce "Da-twos" because the singular word is called Datu.
Same pronounced
In addition, it was Datu Puti established the Madjaas territory in 13th century. They came from Brunie. They arey the grand fathers of Lapulapu, Raja Humabon in Visayas. Now, MAdjaas belongs to the Province of Antique, a big mountain called Mount Madjaas along the municipality of Culasi Antique.
That was very interesting. Good job, well told. Happy Trails from Florida
The crazy part is how today's some Pilipino historians tends misrepresent Lapu Lapu as the first Filipino to resist the Spaniards neglecting the fact that Lapu is not a Filipino in fact his tribe was in conflict against the Cebuanos. It should be noted that Lapu Lapu was the Mactanian that resisted the Spaniards. The first Filipinos that resisted the Spaniards would be after Spain has officially claim and name the archipelago the Philippines.
When the "coward", Lapu massacred Magellan and his small boat of explorers, it incited Spain. That is why Spain sent r for real soldiers to avenge the cowardly massacre of Magellan, the explorer. What resulted was the the development of a united country and the end of Muslim control.
@@LNR2023-o2y Lapu Lapu was no coward he just refused to submit to the Cebuanos in spite of the Cebuanos having a new ally the Spaniards. It was more of arrogance and over confidence of Magellan thinking that their cannons, muskets and steel swords would be enough to scare the Mactanians to surrender.
Maybe over confident but certainly on Magellan's part. He came to "trade", not to fight. He was an "explorer" . Like Marco Polo. @@dantankunfiveancestorsfist
Yes, thank goodness and thank you.@cuddles1767
@@LNR2023-o2yHe came to conquer and deceive
Most vids are mixed with a bunch of misdirected Filipino pride. Nice to see an unbiased factual video.
Native Filipinos has 4 decades to prepare for Spanish next conquest but failed to unite their small kingdoms against common foreign enemy 😢
To be fair the concept of "Filipino" only came to be when Spain already invaded.
It was never a single entity, nor of that particular interest.
Inaccurate statement. Wala pang idea ng nationhood ang buong arkipelago noon.
I am a Filipino American and I have been looking for information on Filipino history. I want my kids to know where I was born and where their grandparents are from. Please continue creating and posting more videos regarding the Philippines in English. Thank you and God bless.
Spanish conquistadors conquered for some time I'm fascinated to hear of the indigenous people's story
Spain conquered Mexico, South America, the Philippines and the Caribbean bringing the Jesuits to spread the Vatican infiltration and control
Thanks for doing history of the Philippines ❤❤
❤
it’s hard to accept stated facts here.
it actually raised more questions than digestible facts.
witten history of the Philippines is practcally absent, with just some severely fragmented information and details that makes it seem like a legend or fiction
The Spaniards burned or destroyed them.
Have you listened to the video. It said that the written history of the Philippines was from neighboring countries.
Most complete and verified history of the Philippines was already discussed in the 1977 lectures of the esteemed Prof. Yoyoy Villame 😂🤣🤣
The Spaniards wiped out almost all the documents and records of the different kingdoms in the Philippines when they conquered the islands. They literally destroyed the existing culture.
I love Philippines from Czech Republic 🇨🇿❤🇵🇭
Kurva 😂
The video, unfortunately, has an error. It did not mention that Magellan arrived in Cebu before they pushed for Mactan, as well their travel to Limasawa Island.
They arrived in Mactan first before going to Mandaue in mainland Cebu. Magellan battled Lapulapu initially, but they losing so they retreated to another island. Prior to landing in Mandaue, Magellan ordered a reconnaissance of the island. There, he learned about the chieftain, who is Humabon. Then he befriended Humabon by sending gifts thru his emissary.
@@reddirtmoto4841 They arrived in Cebu first. There was only **one** battle in Mactan.
an old Filipino-Chinese friend of mine once told me that a lot about Philippine History were etched in bamboo rods and are still kept safely in a historical museum in Mainland China
Really??
I love how the voices telling stories of multi cultures never sound like Natives from the region. The research is only as good as the researcher! 🧚✌🏽
Thank you🎉
The Philippines was doing good before the arrival of Spain and other conquerors.
Doing good sa imong mata, nagbahag lang man gani ta sa una. Ang e pahid sa lubot mahuman popo panit ra sa lubi. Doing good ka diha. Sige next time mag C.R. 💩ka bunot sa lubi🥥 gamita nga toilet paper parehas sa pre-colonial times. Tan-awon nato ug maka engun paka ug doing good samtang nagka samad-samad na imong lubot 😂 🤣😂
Not actually only growing because of indo traders, also i do not want my country to be islamic so thankfully spanish arrived
@@notarealprophet I'm very grateful that my country Indonesia remains Muslim majority country.
@@cucu_ultramen260 Thankfully I am a Christian and I can enjoy my crispy pork belly all day and nobody will curse me, Jesus is Lord viva España
@@cucu_ultramen260 And you are afraid to go to aceh😂 I wonder why, majority of indonesian muslims doesn't even want to talk about aceh mind telling us why?
Was surprised on the similarities of our language (Bisaya) when I went to Bali, Indonesia. Eg. "Usa, duha, tulo, etc." which means "one, two, three, etc." I'm from the Philipines btw.
Because of the Austronesians.
they're from the austronesian family tree
New Zealand has similar sounds for 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 to Tagalog and they live at the edge of the world!
Same thing here, I just traveled to Bali a few days ago.
this helped my history homework honestly😭😭
Thank you for the informative video. I did not know the Philippine History before the Spanish colonization. The schools only thought us from 1521 saying Ferdinand Magellan discovered the Philippines and named in honor of King Philip of Spain. I would like to know more about the origin of the Philippines, prior to colonisation.
The reason why Homabon welcomed the Spaniards was simply because of his jealousy towards Lapu-lapu. Before the Spaniards arrived, Lapu-lapu was already exiled by Rajah Homabon to the island of Mactan where almost no plants can grow abundantly because of the nature of the rocky island. You see, Homabon was a short stocky person just about 5ft in height Rajah while Lapu-lapu was a strong muscular tall chieftain (rank general nowadays) who has absolute control and command to his people. It also humored that even the most beautiful wife Juana of the Raj homabon cannot even hide her eyes on Lapu-lapu when he passes by. Lapu-lapu was a great commander who was loved by the people of Cebu, the Rajah cannot kill Lapu-lapu for it will only spark a civil war amongst his people. So when Magellan came, he thought it was a wise decision to be friends of newcomers and even prepared the biggest welcome festival for the guests, even willingness to convert his religion just to prove his intentions. (Which was considered taboo during that time). The Spaniards didn't include this narrative because they are hiding the fact that Magellan died because he was tricked by Homabon.
San nyo po natuto to? Gusto kong ganitong details kse nag me-make sense ang story, hindi lng mere bullet points ng kaganapan
@@fanacc-l1v It is not written in any form except in. baybayin. Kasi sinunug lahat ng kastela ang lahat ng old Filipino litterateur noon at kanilang tinatawag na gawaing demonyo ang mga old baybayin litterateurs. Sa mga old folks na naipasa sa mga henerasyon nalang nakukuha ang mga ito. For me, it was my old folks story ko nakuha Ang info. Kasi sa kapanahonan ng grandparents ko Wala pa television at internet, kaya during nights the oldies used to tell stories to the young ones as night entertainments. Yong dad ko naman, he believe na kailangan nya maipas samin through storytelling ang mga bagay na hindi isinulat sa aklat especially during Spanish time. For him, it is vital for new generations to know the real Philippines history for it was erased and labeled by Spaniards as evil doing. Hindi kasi matangap mga kastela na si Magellan was tricked by a shorter fat asian known Homabon which resulted in his death. Ayaw nila iwasiwas sa mundo na Ang great explorer Magellan was even killed because of these.
me when i spread misinformation
Source pls
Lapu Lapu was 60-70 years old when Magellan arrived.
Hispanista would always say there aren't any civilizations in Philippines before Spanish empire , but they were wrong from the start.
Just like they did in America, well, at least they didn't wipe out all the natives in Philippines just like they did in America.
@@141Travish No, all the natives in America were not wiped out.
@@yashagrawal88 you put them in reservations (concentration camp) mostly barrens land, cut their access to farm lands, jobs, education, health care and politics, that's systemic genocide.
@@yashagrawal88i think you misunderstand. The americans are the one who committed genocide and massacred to the philippine natives.
from the notes of that one guy with magellan, he detailed the traditions and customs of natives. It implies that we have a civilization. The imperial americans actually were the ones who perpetuated the idea that we are uncivilized.
Bisaya pirates went hard 🔥😭🙏
basically visaya are nightmares of seas in south china land.
@@abdulsamukhanup untill nowadays many are thieves and robberry holdup group members
thanks for featuring Philippine history.
Amazing video thank you so much! 🩵I’ve been reading as many books I can find about precolonial Philippines but there’s only so much books and the internet articles in the US can tell me! I hope one day to visit the for the first time and see the laguna copperplate inscription!
If those spaniards stayed in Cebu and didn't move to luzon, they would have been totally anihalted. But thanks to the people of luzon kissed their arse and that's were they get to position themselves and ruled the people. As a Cebuano, we won't allow that.
Why do Cebuanos love dragging Tagalog and Luzon people so much. Please, address your insecurities. Regionalism will just cause more harm than good. Thank you.
@@daxaq7888 you are so right.
@@daxaq7888that ironic considering 'bisaya' is a degatory term in manila.
@@iasked9392 i know na sobra din namang mang discriminate ang mga Tagalog pero it's more of due to ignorance. Meanwhile, Cebuanos and Bisaya in general are deliberately dragging Tagalog people and would always involve the more than 60 million people of Luzon na hindi naman lahat ay Tagalog or taga Manila. Kahit kaming mga taga luzon na hindi Tagalog ay nadidiscriminate din ng mga Tagalog/Manileños. Pero hindi namin ginawang personality ang siraan ang mga Tagalog at mga Taga Manila whenever we have the chance. Kalat na kalat kasi ito sa social media. Basta may makita akong Tagalog-Bisaya na post laging may bitterness ang mga Bisaya at idadamay na nila ang buong Luzon. Valid namin ang nararamdan niyo/natin na maoffend sa mga pangdidiscriminate ng mga taga Manila, pero ibang level kasi yung insecurities talaga ng mga Bisaya, borderline hatred na kasi. Yun lang naman napapansin ko. Pero, personally, I love the Bisaya language. And I find their accent cute.
LOl. I love this thread. Tagalog clan has already been gone.
Love the philippines🇵🇭✝️❤
✝️🤝☪️
Love from the Philippines
@@sal1500 Inshallah to you, from a Trad-Catholic✝️💙☪️
We are the laughingstock of the world
@@Unknownuser1077-8oa Everyone except China loves the Philippines.
@@Unknownuser1077-8oa only you
The Philippines and China are the Kings of Asia
Amazing history where did get that knowledge of the past and history..Interesting👍👍👍
Example cognate among the Austronesian languages (Maritime Southeast Asia, Taiwan, and Pacific Islands):
Ear -
Tagalog: Tainga/Tenga
Malay&Indonesian: Telinga
Puyuma (Taiwan): Talinga/Tangila
Chamorro (Guam) Talanga
Samoan: Karinga
Maori (NZ) Taringa
many language overlap with each other; it doesnt change the fact that filipinos are NOT pacifci islanders
Love you knowledgia ❤❤
❤
As JapaneseFilipino, good thing Im nver Christian nor Islam. Im happy with Buddhism. Mahilig sa gulo mga tao sa Mindanao.
Excuse me? 🥴
Only because of islam lol, see whenever islam touches turns into battleground just look at europe
Look at Europe and christian who colonized your country
@@notarealprophetuhh... Did you know how Christianity spread? Surely, Christians just went peacefully from country to country to spread the Word of God, and totally didn't commit genocide on different countries to turn them into Christians. Surely.
Yes our ancestor is Taiwanese aborigines not indonesians or malays this will contradict to what they teach to our school which our ancestors are malays.The migration patterns is from north to south which means from Taiwan to Indonesia and Malaysia not the other way around.
Even Malays were tawainese. .😅😅. .but most settlers didn't came from Taiwan directly, most of us came from the Malays. .the 10 datus of Borneo sailed unto the Panay island of what this video call as madja-as together with their people. .they bought that island from the aetas, then the aetas migrate into the mountains. .modern people dont know that. .
you don't get what malays is.
@@rufinobangcaya9973Filipinos especially those in North have purer Austronesian genetics than most Malays and Indonesian. Artifacts found in North are also much older than those found in South. Philippine language is also the closest to old Austronesian language together with Taiwanese natives. Most evidence says that migration indeed started from North to South, not the other way around.
I would never ever believe that lies...
That theory from Taiwan is the worst I have ever heard
@@asmrjackunboxinggames4328 brother, did you search in google or read some books about geneology? If not here some link i knew. This is an American web site. pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19755666/
Also if you knew the Channel called Masaman you can watch it there he specializing about dna and civilization origin.
3:24 Laguna cooperplate also prove the connection between philiphines and medang kingdom in java indonesia.
Source?
@@notarealprophet the cooperplate inscription...it self.
@@belajarsaham3273 i do not see any connection, anyways are you an indonesian? cause its obvious
@@notarealprophet Swasti Shaka warsatita 822 Waisaka masa di jyotisa. Caturthai Karisnapaksa somwara sana tatkala Dayang Angkatan lawan dengan nya sanak barngaran si Bukah anak da dang Hwan Namwaran dibari waradana wi shuddhapattra ulih sang pamegat senapati di Tundun barja(dii) dang Hawan Nayaka tuhan Pailah Jagadewa.
Di krama dang Hwan Namwaran dengan dang kayastha shuddha nu diparlappas hutang da walenda Kati 1 Suwarna 8 di hadapan dang Huwan Nayaka tuhan Puliran Kasumuran.
dang Hwan Nayaka tuhan Pailah barjadi ganashakti. Dang Hwan Nayaka tuhan Binwangan barjadi bishruta tathapi sadana sanak kapawaris ulih sang pamegat dewata [ba]rjadi sang pamegat Medang dari bhaktinda diparhulun sang pamegat.
Ya makanya sadanya anak cucu dang Hwan Namwaran shuddha ya kapawaris dihutang da dang Hwan Namwaran di sang pamegat Dewata.
Ini grang syat syapanta ha pashkat ding ari kamudyan ada grang urang barujara welung lappas hutang da dang Hwa ...
@@notarealprophet ..."sang pamegat Medang..."
It is a court of justice who authority as a judge in Medang kingdom.
The inscription it self common in many inscription in java during Medang kingdom.
Medang is a hindu kingdom typical.
4:15 Aliping Sagigilid at Aliping Namamahay or Stay out and Stay in Helper in Modern version✌️😊
Thanks for this. Never knew anything about our history before the spaniards
Love from india😊..
Why bro? Every filipino literally hate India and Indians. We don't need to show any love towards them.
@@history1982I am Muslim Filipino and I don't hate Indians. The only thing that we hate in this world are the bad, criminal people exterminating peace.
origin of Austronesian people somewhere in Southern China.. and started migrated in Maritime Southeast Asia during Han Chinese conquest against ancient people in Southern China.. it was well known in chinese history as "Hundred Yue" in english term is "Hundred Barbarians". indigenous people in the Philippines were Negrito people with their curly hair and dark skin.
that is just a theory.. in reality not all Filipinos are negritos.. there's no evidence to that that ancient Filipinos were ALL negritos... Safe to say Filipinos came from the Austronesian race.
@@janjamesramos247 We can settle this issue with the DNA analysis -- which has been done for sometime and not just Filipinos but also other Asians. Archaelogy doesn't lie. The ancient bones will give up its secrets and show the migration patterns of the people who traveled thru the Philippine Islands ;).
@@littlemystic4340 Good. Genetic analysis seems to be the most credible one. Archeology seems to be lacking. And if u're talking about migration settlement in the Philippines is complex because there's too many ethnicities involved. For instance the Ayta's are different from other Filipino people such that they have the highest Denisovan ancestry.
@@janjamesramos247 There was never a report that ALL Filipinos descended from the Negritos -- or more specifically the Austronesian race which includes the aborigines from Australia, Indonesia, and some of the Micronesian islands. The history books say that the Austronesians were the first people who arrived and occupied the islands of the Philippines. But other waves of peoples arrived thereafter, such as the Malays.
Philippines 🇵🇭 ✝️❤️
Deus vult
I want to see a continuation of this video. I hope the creator will indicate his source and references.
I liked this. It gave me additional information about the Philippines.
very informative. Thanks
Guam, Hawaii and the Marianas was once the great pacific empire of the sultans of the Philippines. But when Spain arrived it was the end of the old history and the old ways died out.
Bullshit
lol in your dreams
tallano bold moment 💀
Tallano Fictions
You forgot to include planet Mars 😂
Tondo is just a small settlement. Even though weakers settlements were under their influence, those settlements were still independent and had their own laws.
Wow ! I didn't know that Filipino people first repelled the Spanish invaders but unfortunately they couldn't repel them the second time
Fortunately*
They did welcome them in open arms, we were to hospitable toward strangers.
Some welcome them
Some dont
We illonggos are happy that spain arrives. They are the most tolerant
Than others.
Magellan was for a scouting mission (iirc, the wests are looking for an alternative route because Ottoman Empire is monopolizing the trade route). the second one that arrives is the military one. no tribe will win against a military from a country with a centralized government
first they just wanted to do business/trading goods, thats why theyre welcomed. then they oppress the native people.
Great content
I sincerely hope all of what is said here is proven facts. I'm Filipino, 32 years living in PH since birth and I haven't learn much from our own history class before the Spaniards came. Thank you for this!
as a Chinese, its my first time knowing that one of our dynasty established a governor state in the PH to oversee trade. even though we are known to be the one of the oldest & largest civilization on Asia, we never colonized foreign countries unlike the wests. yet it saddens me, today, that people under western sphere of influence see our country as the one who will colonize more than those who have colonizing records like US or Japan. so be it...
Ancient Filipino kingdoms and Chinese Dynasties are friends. Both countries are still friends as long territorial disputes are not put into the context
Chinese have a huge influence in Filipino culture and nearly 30% of Filipinos have atleast a little Chinese blood along with 1.5,% purely Chinese
I mean you did with the Tibet, Uyghurstan, and Inner Mongolia.
@@rarelife1 watever serves ur plate
@@leexingha Truth hurts.
Maybe the philippines and china will be friends again when the chinese people are freed from the chinese communist party