Local His
Local His
Local His
OF THE BARRIO of
TABANGAO
1. Tabangao is the present official name of the barrio.
2. The barrio includes the sitios of Balogbog or Pook ng Pare, Ambulong, Pook ng
Piskal or Kabila, and Naluklok.
3. As to when the barrio was established is unknown. During the latter part of the
Spanish regime, Tabangao was already a big community.
Kabila, which means on the other side, is the name given to Judge G. Abaya’s
lands on the north side of the Paitihan River. Abaya’s wife inherited the place from
Piskal Sario who one time the chief clerk of the Catholic church was. It was a
flourishing community then. Here developed the famous comedy that charmed
thousands in the town of Batangas during Genato's time. Fiestas were famous here
during the days of Mr. Macario Papasin who leased the place one time. When the
Papasins moved permanently to town sometime in 1925, the sitio became
depopulated little by little. Now, there are only two houses where once there was a
happy community.
7. Date of Historical Sites.
A kilometer away and east of the shore of Tabangao is a hill known as
Kampusanto. It was temporarily used as a cemetery during the cholera epidemic of
1900.
8. Important Facts and Incidents that took place.
a. A public school was opened as early as 1905. It was sadly closed due to [the]
personal enmity of the supervisor, Mr. Perfecto Condez, and the teniente del
barrio, Mr. Isidoro Dinglasan. It was reopened in 1924. It became a complete
elementary school in 1948 – up to the present.
b. In 1913, when majority of the houses were still in the north side of the river
(Pook ng Piskal), an Aglipayan barrio fiesta was held. It was the first and last
Aglipayan fiesta in the barrio. The people are now staunch Catholics.
When the people returned after liberation in 1945, the houses were destroyed. All
fishing nets were either lost or destroyed. The day before Batangas was liberated
by the Americans, retreating Japanese soldiers burned houses in Pook ng Pare and
bayoneted several persons to death.
2. In eight years’ time, since 1944, the fishing industry was reestablished, and more
beautiful homes were built.
FOLKWAYS
1. Traditions, customs, and practices
a. Birth
1. A gun is fired.
2. For three successive nights, young men and women keep the young mother
company.
b. Baptism
1. Basi and wine are generally offered.
2. The godmother or godfather give gifts to the midwife after the baby arrives from
the church.
3. The ninong or ninang presents the child a gift and furnishes the drinks for the
party.
c. Courtship
1. The young man shows his love be being helpful to the family.
2. With the consent of the sweetheart, the lover begins service by bringing bundles
of fuel and cans of water. It is then the duty of the girl’s father to question the
young man’s motive of offering services. The young man’s parents are then
summoned and arrangements, for marriage, are talked about. The length of
personal service, the dowry, and the kind of wedding feast will be the subjects for
con-ference of both parties.
d. Marriages
1. For a long and prosperous life, the new couple lives separately for three days;
the bride in the groom’s house and the groom in the bride’s home.
2. Upon arrival from the church, the couple is showered with grains of rice.
3. The bride sits flat on a mat spread with peso and fifty centavo pieces in the
middle of the room.
4. The one who goes out of the church first or the one who goes upstairs first upon
arriving home will be the superior character.
5. No relative of the bride is allowed to go with her to the home of the groom to
make her happy with her in-laws.
e. Death
1. Neighbors, usually the younger folks, stay in the home of the dead at night to
relieve the mourners of their sorrow.
2. Visitors are expected to give alms to help defray the burial expenses.
3. On the fourth and nine days of the death of a person, his family offers special
prayers for the salvation of his soul. Feasts are served on these occasions.
f. Burial
1. All those attending the burial ceremony are attired in black, a sign of mourning.
2. For nine consecutive evenings, a prayer is offered so that the dead may rest in
peace.
g. Visits
1. Neighborliness is shown by visiting the sick and those who have just given
births.
2. Young men do not visit their sweethearts on Tuesdays and Fridays. Saturday is
believed to be the best visiting day. Visitors do not stay later than eight o’clock at
night.
h. Festivals
The month of May is the merrymaking time. Every evening, the young people
offer fresh flowers with prayers and songs to Virgin Mary in the barrio shrine.
These festivities culminate in the staging of a barrio fiesta.
Bands, parades, beauty contests, programs, dances, and lavish feasts are the
principal features in these festivals.
Once there was a bad man who was returning home one dark night. He was
carrying a sack full of green corn stolen from a neighbor’s field. He was crossing a
creek when he stepped on soft ground. “Ah,” he cried as he sunk in the mud knee
deep. When he tried to pull himself out and could not, he cried, “Ah” each time
and sank deeper in the mine [mire?]. The poor man forgot to think of God in his
doom. The next day, a coconut grew on the spot where the bad man sank. That
explains the letter “A” in the houng [young?] leaves of every coconut tree.
2. The First Man and Woman
A crow was looking for food among the treetops. When it got tired, it rested among
some bamboo trees. Sounds seemed to come from inside the bamboo tree where it
was resting on.
Members:
Marisol Damance
Nezza Faith Dimatulac
Jovelyn Montalbo
Maria Angela Ramirez