Abra (province) explained

Abra
Official Name:Province of Abra
Flag Size:120x80px
Seal Size:100x80px
Subdivision Type1:Region
Established Title:Founded
Seat Type:Capital
Leader Title:Governor
Leader Name:Dominic B. Valera (NUP/ASENSO)
Leader Title1:Vice Governor
Leader Name1:Maria Jocelyn V. Bernos (NUP/ASENSO)
Leader Title2:Legislature
Leader Name2:Abra Provincial Board
Area Footnotes:[1]
Area Rank:29th out of 81
Elevation Max Ft:8,094
Elevation Max Point:Mt.Bangbanglang
Population Rank:68th out of 81
Population Density Km2:auto
Population Density Rank:80th out of 81
Demographics Type1:Divisions
Demographics1 Title1:Independent cities
Demographics1 Info1:0
Demographics1 Title2:Component cities
Demographics1 Info2:0
Demographics1 Title3:Municipalities
Demographics1 Title4:Barangays
Demographics1 Info4:303
Demographics1 Title5:Districts
Demographics1 Info5:Legislative districts of Abra
Timezone:PHT
Utc Offset:+8
Postal Code Type:ZIP code
Blank Name Sec1:Spoken languages
Image Map1:
Frame-Width:250
Zoom:8

Abra, officially the Province of Abra (Iloko: Probinsia ti Abra; Tagalog: Lalawigan ng Abra), is a province in the Cordillera Administrative Region of the Philippines. Its capital is the municipality of Bangued. It is bordered by Ilocos Norte on the northwest, Apayao on the northeast, Kalinga on the mid-east, Mountain Province on the southeast, and Ilocos Sur on the southwest.

Etymology

Abra is from the Spanish word abra meaning gorge, pass, breach or opening. It was first used by the Spaniards to denote the region above the Banaoang Gap where the Abra River exits into the West Philippine Sea, thus the Rio Grande de Abra.[2]

History

Early history

The first inhabitants of Abra were the ancestors of the Bontocs and the Ifugaos. These inhabitants eventually left to settle in the old Mountain Province. Other early inhabitants were the Tinguians or Itnegs.

Spanish colonial era

In 1585, the Tinguians were mentioned for the first time in a letter from Father Domingo de Salazar to the King of Spain.

In 1598 Bangued was occupied by Spanish-Iloco forces. The Spanish established a garrison to protect their missionaries from head hunters so that they could Christianize the Tinguians and locate gold mines. This led to the Ilocano settlement of this area.

Bangued was under the care of the Spanish missions in Vigan and Bantay. Fr. Esteban Marin and Fr. Agustin Minon established a mission in Bangued as early as 1598. On April 5, 1612, Fr. Pedro Columbo became the first minister. It would seem that this actuation of the Augustinians was precipitated by the Dominican take-over of the ministry of Narvacan since the Dominicans wanted to convert Narvacan into a mission center to evangelize the other parts of Abra. To check this Dominican move, the Augustinians elevated Bangued to a ministry.

Fr. Juan Pareja OSA, a former parish priest in Bantay, led the conversion of the province. He came to Abra in 1626 and is reported to have converted as many as 3,000 inhabitants including the chieftain Miguel Dumaoal. He founded the mission of San Diego and later the ministry of Bangued. He established the following towns as visitas of Bangued: Tayum, Sabangan and Bucao (now Dolores). Inspired by Fr. Pareja these towns battled almost daily against the rancherias of Palang, Talamuy, Bataan, Cabulao, Calaoag, and Langiden.

Fr. Jose Polanco OP also contributed to the conversion of Abra. A man of austere mortification, he died in Abra in 1679 and was considered a saint by the locals.

Fr. Bernardino Lago OSA arrived in the early 19th century. In 1823, Fr. Lago began work in Pidigan. After 25 years the Christians were numbered about a thousand "baptized, living in community, with schools, church and municipal house, tilling the earth to support themselves and their children." Fr. Lago also founded the town of La Paz. Fr. Galende enumerates the foundation of the other towns of Abra:

Originally the area was called El Abra de Vigan ("The Opening of Vigan"). During the British Occupation of the Philippines, Gabriela Silang and her army fled to Abra from Ilocos and continued the revolt begun by her slain husband Diego Silang. She was captured and hanged by authorities in 1763.

In 1818, the Ilocos region was divided into Ilocos Norte and Ilocos Sur. On October 9, 1846, Abra became an independent province with the capital and residence of the provincial governor located in Bucay. In 1863 the capital was transferred to Bangued, the province's oldest town. It remained so until the arrival of the Americans in 1899.

American invasion era

In 1908, the Philippine Commission annexed Abra into Ilocos Sur in an attempt to resolve Abra's financial difficulties. On March 9, 1917 the Philippine Assembly re-established Abra as a province under Act 2683.[3]

Japanese occupation era

In 1942 Japanese forces occupied the Philippines and seized Abra.

Abra was liberated by the Filipino soldiers and guerrillas including Allied forces liberated the province of Abra in 1945 at the end of the Second World War.

Under the Marcos dictatorship

See main article: Martial law under Ferdinand Marcos and Human rights abuses of the Marcos dictatorship. The beginning months of the 1970s marked a period of turmoil and change in the Philippines, as well as in Abra.[4] During his bid to be the first Philippine president to be re-elected for a second term, Ferdinand Marcos launched an unprecedented number of public works projects. This caused[5] [6] the Philippine economy took a sudden downwards turn known as the 1969 Philippine balance of payments crisis, which in turn led to a period of economic difficulty and social unrest.[7] [8] [9] [10]

With only a year left in his last constitutionally allowed term as president Ferdinand Marcos placed the Philippines under Martial Law in September 1972 and thus retained the position for fourteen more years.[11] This period in Philippine history is remembered for the Marcos administration's record of human rights abuses,[12] [13] particularly targeting political opponents, student activists, journalists, religious workers, farmers, and others who fought against the Marcos dictatorship.[14] In Abra, many of the victims were from the indigenous Itneg people (known then among most lowlanders as the Tingguian people, which is an exonym). Numerous human rights abuses against Itnegs were documented in the various Amnesty International missions which allowed to conduct investigations in the country after Marcos had to give in to political pressure.[15]

On May 6, 1983, Sitio Beew in the Municipality of Tubo was the site of several attacks by the 623rd Philippine Constabulary (623rd PC) led by Captain Berido, Lt. Rehaldo Lebua and Lt. Juanito Puyawan, which would collectively come to be known as the "Beew massacre." The 623rd PC burned down four houses and a rice granary, which still contained the remains of three villagers including an unborn baby, and Barangay Councilman Rodolfo Labawig, pregnant mother Josefina Cayandag, and her unborn child.[16] Beew residents,including babies and toddlers, were beaten and their houses looted in response to the residents' alleged support of protests against the logging operations of Herminio Disini's Cellophil Resources Corporation in their area.[16]

Modern history

The revolutionary Marxist priest Conrado Balweg, who fought for the rights of the Cordillera tribes, began his crusade in Abra. After successfully negotiating a peace accord with Balweg's group in 1987 the Philippine government created the Cordillera Administrative Region, which includes Abra.[17]

On July 27, 2022, a magnitude 7.0 earthquake, jolted the province. Eleven people died (at least seven of them were from Abra) and more than 600 were injured.[18] A magnitude 6.4 aftershock three months later injured more than 100 people and caused additional damage.[19]

Geography

Abra is situated in the mid-western section of the Cordillera Administrative Region in Luzon. It is bordered by the provinces of Ilocos Norte on the northwest, Apayao on the northeast, Kalinga on the mid-east, Mountain Province on the southeast and Ilocos Sur on the southwest. Abra has a total land area of 4165.25km2.

The province is bordered by the towering mountain ranges of the Ilocos in the west and the Cordillera Central in the east. The Abra River runs from the south in Benguet to the west and central areas bisecting the Abra Valley. It is joined by the Tineg River originating in the eastern uplands at a point near the municipality of Dolores.

Administrative divisions

Abra is composed of 27 municipalities, all encompassed by Abra's lone congressional district.

MunicipalityPopulationAreaDensity
km2/km2
17.5965°N 120.6179°WBangued48,163136.4km2NaN50,382/136.4031
17.379°N 120.8198°WBoliney3,573210km2NaN4,551/210.008
17.5388°N 120.7167°WBucay17,115102.16km2NaN17,953/102.1621
17.4409°N 120.8572°WBucloc2,50163.77km2NaN2,395/63.774
17.4584°N 120.9254°WDaguioman2,088114.37km2NaN2,019/114.374
17.6841°N 120.6597°WDanglas4,192156.02km2NaN4,074/156.027
17.649°N 120.7103°WDolores11,31547.45km2NaN11,512/47.4515
17.6763°N 120.6853°WLaPaz15,43751.41km2NaN16,493/51.4112
17.6634°N 120.9474°WLacub3,403235.53km2NaN3,612/235.536
17.6103°N 120.7344°WLagangilang14,255124.2km2NaN14,914/124.2017
17.7207°N 120.7058°WLagayan4,499215.97km2NaN4,488/215.975
17.5769°N 120.5638°WLangiden3,198116.29km2NaN3,576/116.296
17.6061°N 120.8932°W4,689256.42km2NaN4,566/256.4211
17.3181°N 120.6952°WLuba6,339148.27km2NaN6,518/148.278
17.5636°N 120.9899°WMalibcong3,428283.17km2NaN4,027/283.1712
17.4331°N 120.7048°WManabo10,76181.08km2NaN11,611/81.0811
17.5642°N 120.6522°WPeñarrubia6,64039.07km2NaN6,951/39.079
17.5703°N 120.5893°WPidigan12,18549.15km2NaN12,475/49.1515
17.4168°N 120.5954°WPilar10,22366.1km2NaN10,146/66.1019
17.4551°N 120.7599°WSallapadan6,622128.62km2NaN6,389/128.629
17.4656°N 120.6017°WSanIsidro4,57448.07km2NaN4,745/48.079
17.6834°N 120.732°WSanJuan9,86764.08km2NaN10,688/64.0819
17.5427°N 120.5203°WSanQuintin5,43866.59km2NaN5,705/66.596
17.6165°N 120.6553°WTayum14,46755.68km2NaN14,869/55.6811
17.7828°N 120.9439°WTineg5,097744.8km2NaN4,977/744.8010
17.2567°N 120.7256°WTubo5,699492.12km2NaN5,674/492.1210
17.4379°N 120.6253°WVillaviciosa5,392102.93km2NaN5,675/102.938
Total250,985241,1604,199.724165.25km2NaNPD/km2NaNPD/km2303
Provincial capitalMunicipality

Barangays

The 27 municipalities of the province comprise a total of 303 barangays, with Poblacion in La Paz as the most populous in 2010, and Pattaoig in San Juan as the least.

Demographics

The population of Abra in the 2020 census was 250,985 people, with a density of NaNPD/km2NaNPD/km2.

Abra's inhabitants are mostly descendants of Ilocano settlers and members of the Tingguian tribe. Based on 2000 census data, Ilocanos comprised of the total provincial population of 209,146. Tingguians came in second at, while other ethnic groups in the province were the Ibanag at, Itneg at, and Tagalog at .[20]

The predominant languages are Ilocano[21] and Itneg.[22]

Economy

As of 1990 there were 743 cottage industries in Abra of which 208 are registered with the Department of Trade and Industry. 59% are engaged in bamboo and rattan craft making, both leading industries in the area.

Abra's economy is agriculture-based. Its major crops are rice, vegetables and root crops. Commercial products include coffee, tobacco and coconut. Extensive grassland and pasture areas are used for livestock production.

Sports

The province's lone professional sports team is the Abra Weavers of the Maharlika Pilipinas Basketball League (MPBL). The Weavers joined the league in the 2024 season.[23]

Infrastructure

Power distribution

Government

See also: Abra Provincial Board and Governor of Abra. List of former military and elected governors:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: List of Provinces . PSGC Interactive . National Statistical Coordination Board . May 14, 2014 . Makati, Philippines . https://web.archive.org/web/20160419000512/http://www.nscb.gov.ph/activestats/psgc/listprov.asp . April 19, 2016.
  2. The Ilocos Review Volume 19 - 1987 . The Ilocos Review . Arnoldus Press, Inc. . 0019-2538.
  3. Web site: Act No. 2683; An Act to Authorize the Segregation of the Subprovince of Abra from the Province of Ilocos Sur and the Reestablishment of the Former Province of Abra, and for Other Purposes.. Supreme Court E-Library. March 18, 2016. March 9, 1917.
  4. Book: Robles, Raissa . Marcos Martial Law: Never Again . Filipinos for a Better Philippines, Inc. . 2016 .
  5. Balbosa . Joven Zamoras . 1992 . IMF Stabilization Program and Economic Growth: The Case of the Philippines . Journal of Philippine Development . XIX . 35 . November 6, 2022 . September 21, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210921141056/https://dirp4.pids.gov.ph/ris/pjd/pidsjpd92-2imf.pdf . dead .
  6. Book: The Philippine Economy: Development, Policies, and Challenges . Balisacan . A. M. . Hill . Hal . 2003 . Oxford University Press . 9780195158984 . en.
  7. Cororaton . Cesar B. . Exchange Rate Movements in the Philippines . DPIDS Discussion Paper Series 97-05 . 3, 19.
  8. Book: Kessler, Richard J. . Rebellion and repression in the Philippines . 1989 . Yale University Press . 0300044062 . New Haven . 19266663 . registration .
  9. Book: Celoza, Albert F.. Ferdinand Marcos and the Philippines: The Political Economy of Authoritarianism. 1997. Greenwood Publishing Group. 9780275941376. en.
  10. Book: Schirmer, Daniel B. . The Philippines reader : a history of colonialism, neocolonialism, dictatorship, and resistance . 1987 . South End Press . 0896082768 . 1st . Boston . 14214735 .
  11. Book: Kasaysayan, The Story of the Filipino People Volume 9:A Nation Reborn. . Asia Publishing Company Limited . 1998 . Magno . Alexander R. . Hong Kong . Democracy at the Crossroads.
  12. Web site: Alfred McCoy, Dark Legacy: Human rights under the Marcos regime. September 20, 1999. Ateneo de Manila University.
  13. Book: State and society in the Philippines. Abinales. P.N.. Amoroso. Donna J.. 2005. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 978-0742510234. Lanham, MD. 57452454.
  14. News: Gone too soon: 7 youth leaders killed under Martial Law. Rappler. June 15, 2018.
  15. Web site: Pawilen . Reidan M. . May 2021 . The Solid North myth: an Investigation on the status of dissent and human rights during the Marcos Regime in Regions 1 and 2, 1969-1986 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20211113132016/https://www.ukdr.uplb.edu.ph/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1065&context=journal-articles . 2021-11-13 . 2022-05-22 . University of the Philippines Los Baños University Knowledge Digital Repository.
  16. Web site: DALANG . RHODA . DACPANO . BRENDA S. . 2016-04-10 . Terror reigns in Abra, revisited . nordis.net.
  17. Web site: Executive Order No. 220; Creating a Cordillera Administrative Region, Appropriating Funds Therefor and for Other Purposes. The LawPhil Project. July 29, 2016. Manila, Philippines. July 15, 1987. Sec. 2. Territorial Coverage. For purposes of the CAR, the region shall consist of the provinces of Abra, Benguet, Ifugao, Kalinga-Apayao and Mt. Province and the chartered city of Baguio. Until otherwise provided by the Cordillera Executive Board (CEB), the seat of the CAR shall be Baguio City..
  18. Situational Report No. 15 for Magnitude 7 Earthquake in Tayum, Abra (2022) . August 10, 2022 . . August 10, 2022 . August 10, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220810133311/https://ndrrmc.gov.ph/attachments/article/4192/SitRep_No_15_for_Magnitude_7_0_Earthquake_in_Tayum_Abra_2022.pdf . live .
  19. Web site: Situational Report for Magnitude 6.4 Earthquake in Lagayan, Abra (2022). .
  20. Web site: Abra: Housing Unit Occupancy Rate Nears 100%; Table 5. Household Population by Ethnicity and Sex: Abra, 2000. Philippine Statistics Authority. December 4, 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20120305165121/http://www.census.gov.ph/data/pressrelease/2002/pr0234tx.html. March 5, 2012. April 3, 2002.
  21. Book: Dalby, Andrew. Dictionary of Languages: The Definitive Reference to More Than 400 Languages. Columbia University Press. February 18, 2004. 978-0-231-11569-8. 264.
  22. Book: Tryon, Darrell T.. Comparative Austronesian Dictionary: An Introduction to Austronesian Studies. Ratzlow-Druck. 1994. 3-11-012729-6. 171.
  23. Web site: 2024-02-06 . MPBL welcomes unlimited pros, expands with two new franchises . 2024-02-08 . Tiebreaker Times . en-US.