Flag Size: | 120x80px | ||||
Seal Size: | 100x80px | ||||
Image Map1: |
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Pushpin Map: | Philippines | ||||
Pushpin Label Position: | right | ||||
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location within the | ||||
Subdivision Type: | Country | ||||
Subdivision Name: | Philippines | ||||
Subdivision Type1: | Region | ||||
Subdivision Type2: | Province | ||||
Nickname: | Home of the Buyogan Festival | ||||
Anthem: | Abuyog Hymn | ||||
Subdivision Type3: | District | ||||
Established Title: | Founded | ||||
Parts Type: | Barangays | ||||
Parts Style: | para | ||||
P1: | (see Barangays) | ||||
Leader Name: | Lemuel Gin K. Traya | ||||
Leader Title1: | Vice Mayor | ||||
Leader Name1: | Octavio J. Traya Jr. | ||||
Leader Name2: | Carl Nicolas C. Cari | ||||
Leader Title3: | Councilors | ||||
Leader Title4: | Electorate | ||||
Leader Name4: | voters (electorate_point_in_time}}|) | ||||
Elevation Max M: | 357 | ||||
Elevation Min M: | 0 | ||||
Population Density Km2: | auto | ||||
Population Blank1 Title: | Households | ||||
Population Demonym: | Abuyognon | ||||
Timezone: | PST | ||||
Utc Offset: | +8 | ||||
Postal Code Type: | ZIP code | ||||
Demographics Type1: | Economy | ||||
Demographics1 Title2: | Poverty incidence | ||||
Demographics1 Info2: | % | ||||
Demographics1 Title3: | Revenue | ||||
Demographics1 Title4: | Revenue rank | ||||
Demographics1 Title5: | Assets | ||||
Demographics1 Title6: | Assets rank | ||||
Demographics1 Title7: | IRA | ||||
Demographics1 Title8: | IRA rank | ||||
Demographics1 Title9: | Expenditure | ||||
Demographics1 Title10: | Liabilities | ||||
Demographics Type2: | Service provider | ||||
Demographics2 Title1: | Electricity | ||||
Demographics2 Title2: | Water | ||||
Demographics2 Title3: | Telecommunications | ||||
Demographics2 Title4: | Cable TV | ||||
Blank1 Name Sec1: | Native languages | ||||
Blank2 Name Sec1: | Crime index | ||||
Blank1 Name Sec2: | Major religions | ||||
Blank2 Name Sec2: | Feast date | ||||
Blank3 Name Sec2: | Catholic diocese | ||||
Blank4 Name Sec2: | Patron saint |
Abuyog (IPA: [ʔɐ'bujog]), officially the Municipality of Abuyog (Waray: Bungto han Abuyog; Cebuano: Lungsod sa Abuyog; Tagalog: Bayan ng Abuyog), is a municipality in the province of Leyte, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 61,216 people.
Facing Leyte Gulf out into the Philippine Sea, it is the largest town on the island of Leyte in terms of land area. It is bordered to the north by Javier, to the west by Mahaplag and Baybay and to the south by Silago, located in Southern Leyte.
Abuyog got its name when Spanish bread sailors came ashore in an early settlement at the mouth of the Abuyog River to replenish their supplies. Swarms of bees were all over the shore. The Spaniards asked the natives "¿Cómo se llama el pueblo?", not knowing that the Spaniards asked for the town's name, the natives answered "Buyog". Repeating after the natives, the sailors muttered, "Ah! Buyog". Eventually the town came to be known as "Abuyog" to which some Spanish chroniclers often used in reference to the whole island of Leyte. But Abuyog in the early annals, though grown prosperous, remained obscure because of the absence of a powerful chieftain. It was Datu Bangcao, who had his seat of government in Carigara, who ruled Abuyog.
In 1588, presumably on account of mal-administration of the incumbent encomendero, the inhabitants revolted. Captain Juan Esguerra had to send a punitive force to chastise the assassins of the encomendero. In 1613, Sanguiles and Caragas plundered and marauded the town.
In 1655 the Jesuits made Abuyog their second post, with Dagami as the center. The year 1716 saw the founding of the town and parish under the patronage of St. Francis Xavier, the apostle of the Indies. The Augustinians took over in 1768 and continued the work of Frs. Jose Herrera and Cipriano Barbasan. The people of this era, according to Fr. Augustin Maria de Castro, were very rich though extremely belligerent; the continually defied the Moros. In 1843 the town was given to the Franciscan Order with Fr. Santiago Malonda as the first Franciscan parish priest. A horse path was opened between Abuyog and Dulag in 1851.
The early captains were Galza, Foran, Nicolas Mandia, Faustino Remanes, Prudencio Remanes, Felipe Costin, Ciriaco Costin, Eulalio Brillo, and Vicente Tiaoson. Eulalio Brillo became president in 1896-1899 while Nazario Tupa took office in 1900. Eugenio Villote finished Tupa's term.
The period 1901 to 1906 was notable for the notorious pulahanes or bolero attacks, the most infamous leader of which was Faustino Ablen. The municipal building was razed. Ex-Captain Eugenio Villote, Pedro Gonazaga, and two other policemen were killed in the encounter.
In the electoral division made by the Philippine Assembly, Abuyog was placed in the third district of Leyte. During the Commonwealth regime, Abuyog was transferred to the fourth district. During these periods, the town prospered under the administration of Arturo Brillo, Vicente Brillante, Basilio Adolfo (two terms), Antero Brillo and Ricardo Collantes (three terms). In 1940, Pedro Gallego was elected mayor and served until July 3, 1946, Mayor Pedro Remanes Gallego was the only mayor of Leyte province who did not surrender to the Japanese forces. On July 4, 1946, Catalino Landia was appointed mayor. He was re-elected for three terms.
Abuyog's progress took greater strides with the inauguration of the first passenger bus service in 1925. In 1936, the vice-president Sergio Osmeña inaugurated the Baybay-Abuyog road, thus linking for the first time, by good road, the eastern and western coasts of Leyte.
At the outbreak of World War II, Abuyog became a Japanese occupied area. Pedro Gallego retreated to the mountains to administratively led the guerrilla resistance while encouraging his people to continue working on agricultural lands. His wife, Ignacia Regis Gallego, organised the non-combatant Auxiliary Forces to fed guerrillas fighting the Japanese
On October 13, 1942, the Japanese abandoned the town due to guerrilla pressure. They came back on November 26, 1943, much stronger this time, yet they suffered heavy losses in the hands of the guerrillas.
On July 14, 1944, when the submarine "Nautilus" landed in Barangay San Roque, Mayor Gallego provided the logistics (manpower, bamboo rafts, transport, lookouts) to Colonel Ruperto Kangleon (the head of Leyte Resistance Movement) to unload 72 tons of automatic weapons (Thompson submachine guns and other rapid fires like carbine and M1 Garand guns), ammunition, food and propaganda materials for Leyte and Samar guerrillas.
Kangleon tipped the naval officers of Nautilus on the locations of Japanese fortifications in Leyte province, which MacArthur bombed during the Battle of Leyte Gulf on October 23–26 that year, the last but largest naval battle of WWII.
The local guerrillas of Abuyog, with headquarters in Barangay Kikilo under the command of Mayor Gallego, used the automatic weapons to repeatedly ambush the Japanese forces. When the American Armada under General Douglas MacArthur was sighted off Leyte Gulf, the weakened Japanese forces were forced to desert Abuyog, even before the landing of Allied Forces, which included the Filipino troops of the Philippine Commonwealth Army and Philippine Constabulary military units.
After liberation, elementary school education was resumed on December 4, 1944, under the supervision of the Philippine Civil Affairs Unit (PCAU).
In 1946, the new Quirino administration of the opposing political party appointed a liberal mayor (Catalino Landia, the guerilla Captain who rescued Colonel Kangleon after he was captured by the Japanese).
Abuyog is politically subdivided into 63 barangays. Each barangay consists of puroks and some have sitios.
In the 2020 census, the population of Abuyog, Leyte, was 61,216 people, with a density of NaNPD/km2NaNPD/km2.
People mostly from Samar migrated to Abuyog because of the many opportunities the immigrants got from its rich soil. The language of this town which acquired the name "melting pot" became Waray-Waray language from the Samar immigrants.