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Alipin

The alipin refers to the lowest social class among the various cultures of the Philippines before the arrival of the Spanish in the 16th and 17th centuries. In the Visayan languages, the equivalent social classes were known as the oripun, uripon, or ulipon.

Overview edit

The most common translation of the word is "servant" or "slave", as opposed to the higher classes of the timawa/maharlika and the tumao/maginoo. This translation, however, is inaccurate. The concept of the alipin relied on a complex system of obligation and repayment through labor in ancient Philippine society, rather than on the actual purchase of a person as in Western and Islamic slavery. Indeed, members of the alipin class who owned their own houses were more accurately equivalent to medieval European serfs and commoners.[1]: 146–147 

Etymology edit

Alipin comes from the transitive form of the archaic Visayan root word udip ("to live"). It derived from the word meaning "to let live" in the senses of letting a war captive live or paying or ransoming someone for a debt that exceeds the value of their life.[2]

Alipin were also known as kiapangdilihan in the Sultanate of Sulu, whereas then Muslim Manila (Which opossed and supplanted local Hindu Tondo)[3] prefer the term Alipin when referring to slaves, either Muslim or Non-Muslim.[4] where they were distinguished from the Arab and European-inspired chattel slaves (known as banyaga, bisaya, ipun, or ammas).[5]

Subclasses edit

 
An illustration from Historia de las Islas e Indios de Bisayas (1668) by Francisco Ignacio Alcina depicting a tattooed horo-han with a paddle, labeled "esclavo" ("slave")

As a social class, alipin had several subclasses based on the nature of their obligations and their dependence on their masters:

  • Horo-han or horohan, a hereditary class of oripun unique to the Visayans and first mentioned in the Boxer Codex. Instead of serving obligations through labor, the horo-han instead served their masters as warriors (usually as paddlers for warships).[2][6][7] Unlike the timawa warrior class, they were not considered nobility, though higher-status horo-han were virtually indistinguishable from lower-class timawa.[8] Like the timawa, they may also sometimes be obligated to do communal work and paid a vassalage fee known as dagupan.[2][7]
  • Aliping namamahay (translated as "Servant who is housed") refers to alipin that had their own houses, which was usually built on the property of their masters. They were also known as tuhay, mamahay, or tumaranpoc (Spanish spelling: tumaranpoque) in Visayan, literally means "house dweller" or "villager." They were not at all slaves, as they were often only obligated to pay a percentage of their earnings or harvests (known as handog in Tagalog and buhis in Visayan, 'tribute' and 'tax' respectively) to their masters and no more, thus making them more similar to the medieval European serfs and commoners. They may sometimes be called upon by their masters for harvesting, sowing fields, building new structures, or for aid in emergencies, though these were usually not part of their obligations. They could also freely buy their way out of debt and could marry without the consent of their masters. In the Visayas, some tuhay might also serve their masters in war, like the horohan.[2][9][10]
  • Alipin sa gigilid (translated as "Servant in the corners [of the master's house]") refers to unmarried alipin without a house and whose existence was completely dependent on the graces of their masters. They were also known as tomataban, alalay, hayohay, or ayuey in Visayan (meaning "servant", "assistant", or "follower"). They could only marry with the consent of their master (rarely given for female alipin sa gigilid). Once married, an alipin sa gigilid became an aliping namamahay, as the master was not obligated to feed and house the family of the latter. Their obligations (i.e. services) could also be transferred or sold to another master.[9][10] Most of the people belonging to this class were the unmarried children of aliping namamahay, or were unransomed captives taken from wars or raids (bihag).[11]

At lower ranks than the above were the alipin of alipin. The alipin sa gigilid of an aliping namamahay was called bulisik ("vile"), while an alipin sa gigilid of an alipin sa gigilid was known by the even more derogatory bulislis (literally meaning "lifted skirt", a term implying that these persons were so vulnerable that it seems like their genitals are exposed). At an even more lower social rank than the latter two were alipin who were acquired through war or who came from other communities. They were often treated as non-persons until they became fully integrated into the local culture.[9]

Differences from the western concept of slavery edit

While the alipin does, indeed, serve another person, historians note that translating the term as "slave" in the western sense of the word may not be fully justifiable. Documented observations from the 17th century indicate that there may be significant differences between the Western concept of "slave" and the Pre-Hispanic Filipino concept of "alipin".[2] Some academics prefer to use the more accurate terms "debtors", "serfs", "bondsmen", or "dependents" instead.[12]

 
A plate in the Boxer Codex possibly depicting alipin in the Prehispanic Philippines

The lowest class of alipin originating from prisoners-of-war were traded like market goods initially. But unlike Western slaves, subsequent transfer of the alipin to a new master was priced at the value of the [remaining] bond. It was the labor obligation of the alipin being sold, not the person. Most alipin usually acquired their status either voluntarily (usually because of material or honor debt, or as a form of assistance to impoverished relatives), by inheriting the status of their parents, as a form of legal punishment for crime, or by being spared from execution after being captured in wars or raids. Alipin who acquired their status by debt were known as tinubos (literally "redeemed" or "ransomed"), and their creditors might sell their services for profit at the price of the debt incurred.[2]

The actual degree of obligations of the alipin could vary considerably. It was dependent on the monetary equivalent of the obligation owed and was usually limited in duration. An alipin could earn their freedom or gain higher status by marriage, being set free by their masters (known as matitimawa or tinimawa among Visayans), buying it with their earnings, fulfillment of the obligations, or by extraordinary accomplishments and bravery in battle.[2][9]

The inheritance of the alipin status was subject to a complex system of rules dependent on the offspring's condition known as the saya. For example, the first child of a male freeman and a female alipin would be free, but their second child would be an alipin like the mother; and so on with the rest of the children. If the number of children was not even, the last child would be a partial alipin. The master of an aliping namamahay might also sometimes take one child of the latter as an alipin sa gigilid in the case of the latter's death. They might become sibin or ginogatan ("favorites") of their masters and be set free upon the master's death.[2]

An alipin who inherits the debts of their parents was known as a gintubo (literally "grown up with").[11] Children of parents who are both alipin were known as ginlubos, while the children of ginlubos were known as lubos nga oripun.[2]

Partial alipin retain their alipin ancestors' obligations according to their degree of relation. The partial alipin child of a timawa and an alipin, for example, will inherit half of their alipin parent's obligations, while the grandchild of an alipin will only owe a quarter. Half alipin whose services were scheduled alternately by months are referred to as bulan ("moon" or "month") or pikas ("half"). Quarter alipin were referred to as tilor or sagipat ("quarter"). They could also freely buy their way out of service if they can afford it. Part or all of the alipin duties of the parents are often taken over by their children.[2][11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Scott, William Henry (1980). "Filipino Class Structure in the Sixteenth Century". Philippine Studies. 28 (2): 142–175.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j William Henry Scott (1994). Baranggay: Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society (PDF). Ateneo De Manila University Press. ISBN 9715501354.
  3. ^ Scott, William Henry (1994). Barangay: Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press. ISBN 978-971-550-135-4.
  4. ^ . Malacañang Presidential Museum and Library. Malacañang Presidential Museum and Library Araw ng Maynila Briefers. Presidential Communications Development and Strategic Planning Office. June 23, 2015. Archived from the original on March 9, 2016. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  5. ^ James Francis Warren (2002). Iranun and Balangingi: Globalization, Maritime Raiding and the Birth of Ethnicity. NUS Press. pp. 53–56. ISBN 9789971692421.
  6. ^ Cristina Blanc-Szanton (1990). "Collision of Cultures: Historical Reformulations of Gender in the Lowland Visayas, Philippines". In Jane Monnig Atkinson & Shelly Errington (ed.). Power and Difference: Gender in Island Southeast Asia. Stanford University Press. p. 356. ISBN 9780804717816. tumao nobility.
  7. ^ a b Souza, George Bryan; Turley, Jeffrey S., eds. (2016). The Boxer Codex: Transcription and translation of an illustrated late sixteenth-century Spanish manuscript concerning the geography, ethnography and history of the Pacific, South-East Asia and East Asia. Translated by Turley, Jeffrey S. Leiden: Brill. pp. 346–347. ISBN 978-90-04-30154-2.
  8. ^ Jose Amiel Angeles (2007). "The Battle of Mactan and the Indigenous Discourse on War". Philippine Studies: Historical and Ethnographic Viewpoints. 55 (1). Ateneo de Manila University: 3–52. ISSN 2244-1093.
  9. ^ a b c d Paul Morrow (January 16, 2009). "Maharlika and the ancient class system". Pilipino Express. Retrieved July 18, 2012.
  10. ^ a b Emma Helen Blair & James Alexander Robertson, ed. (1903). "Relacion de las Yslas Filipinas (1582) by Miguel de Loarca". The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803, Volume V., 1582-1583: Explorations By Early Navigators, Descriptions Of The Islands And Their Peoples, Their History And Records Of The Catholic Missions, As Related In Contemporaneous Books And Manuscripts, Showing The Political, Economic, Commercial And Religious Conditions Of Those Islands From Their Earliest Relations With European Nations To The Beginning Of The Nineteenth Century. The A.H. Clark Company (republished online by Project Gutenberg).
  11. ^ a b c M.C. Halili (2004). Philippine History. Rex Bookstore, Inc. p. 57. ISBN 9789712339349.
  12. ^ Carolyn Brewer (2004). Shamanism, Catholicism, and Gender Relations in Colonial Philippines, 1521-1685. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 197. ISBN 9780754634379.

Further reading edit

  • Leon Ma. Guerrero (2007). The First Filipino. Guerrero Publishing. Manila.
  • Reynaldo Oliveros (2007). Philippine History and Government. Ibon Publishing. Manila.

alipin, alipin, refers, lowest, social, class, among, various, cultures, philippines, before, arrival, spanish, 16th, 17th, centuries, visayan, languages, equivalent, social, classes, were, known, oripun, uripon, ulipon, contents, overview, etymology, subclass. The alipin refers to the lowest social class among the various cultures of the Philippines before the arrival of the Spanish in the 16th and 17th centuries In the Visayan languages the equivalent social classes were known as the oripun uripon or ulipon Contents 1 Overview 2 Etymology 3 Subclasses 4 Differences from the western concept of slavery 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingOverview editMain articles Barangay state and History of the Philippines 900 1565 The most common translation of the word is servant or slave as opposed to the higher classes of the timawa maharlika and the tumao maginoo This translation however is inaccurate The concept of the alipin relied on a complex system of obligation and repayment through labor in ancient Philippine society rather than on the actual purchase of a person as in Western and Islamic slavery Indeed members of the alipin class who owned their own houses were more accurately equivalent to medieval European serfs and commoners 1 146 147 Etymology editAlipin comes from the transitive form of the archaic Visayan root word udip to live It derived from the word meaning to let live in the senses of letting a war captive live or paying or ransoming someone for a debt that exceeds the value of their life 2 Alipin were also known as kiapangdilihan in the Sultanate of Sulu whereas then Muslim Manila Which opossed and supplanted local Hindu Tondo 3 prefer the term Alipin when referring to slaves either Muslim or Non Muslim 4 where they were distinguished from the Arab and European inspired chattel slaves known as banyaga bisaya ipun or ammas 5 Subclasses edit nbsp An illustration from Historia de las Islas e Indios de Bisayas 1668 by Francisco Ignacio Alcina depicting a tattooed horo han with a paddle labeled esclavo slave As a social class alipin had several subclasses based on the nature of their obligations and their dependence on their masters Horo han or horohan a hereditary class of oripun unique to the Visayans and first mentioned in the Boxer Codex Instead of serving obligations through labor the horo han instead served their masters as warriors usually as paddlers for warships 2 6 7 Unlike the timawa warrior class they were not considered nobility though higher status horo han were virtually indistinguishable from lower class timawa 8 Like the timawa they may also sometimes be obligated to do communal work and paid a vassalage fee known as dagupan 2 7 Aliping namamahay translated as Servant who is housed refers to alipin that had their own houses which was usually built on the property of their masters They were also known as tuhay mamahay or tumaranpoc Spanish spelling tumaranpoque in Visayan literally means house dweller or villager They were not at all slaves as they were often only obligated to pay a percentage of their earnings or harvests known as handog in Tagalog and buhis in Visayan tribute and tax respectively to their masters and no more thus making them more similar to the medieval European serfs and commoners They may sometimes be called upon by their masters for harvesting sowing fields building new structures or for aid in emergencies though these were usually not part of their obligations They could also freely buy their way out of debt and could marry without the consent of their masters In the Visayas some tuhay might also serve their masters in war like the horohan 2 9 10 Alipin sa gigilid translated as Servant in the corners of the master s house refers to unmarried alipin without a house and whose existence was completely dependent on the graces of their masters They were also known as tomataban alalay hayohay or ayuey in Visayan meaning servant assistant or follower They could only marry with the consent of their master rarely given for female alipin sa gigilid Once married an alipin sa gigilid became an aliping namamahay as the master was not obligated to feed and house the family of the latter Their obligations i e services could also be transferred or sold to another master 9 10 Most of the people belonging to this class were the unmarried children of aliping namamahay or were unransomed captives taken from wars or raids bihag 11 At lower ranks than the above were the alipin of alipin The alipin sa gigilid of an aliping namamahay was called bulisik vile while an alipin sa gigilid of an alipin sa gigilid was known by the even more derogatory bulislis literally meaning lifted skirt a term implying that these persons were so vulnerable that it seems like their genitals are exposed At an even more lower social rank than the latter two were alipin who were acquired through war or who came from other communities They were often treated as non persons until they became fully integrated into the local culture 9 Differences from the western concept of slavery editSee also Peon While the alipin does indeed serve another person historians note that translating the term as slave in the western sense of the word may not be fully justifiable Documented observations from the 17th century indicate that there may be significant differences between the Western concept of slave and the Pre Hispanic Filipino concept of alipin 2 Some academics prefer to use the more accurate terms debtors serfs bondsmen or dependents instead 12 nbsp A plate in the Boxer Codex possibly depicting alipin in the Prehispanic Philippines The lowest class of alipin originating from prisoners of war were traded like market goods initially But unlike Western slaves subsequent transfer of the alipin to a new master was priced at the value of the remaining bond It was the labor obligation of the alipin being sold not the person Most alipin usually acquired their status either voluntarily usually because of material or honor debt or as a form of assistance to impoverished relatives by inheriting the status of their parents as a form of legal punishment for crime or by being spared from execution after being captured in wars or raids Alipin who acquired their status by debt were known as tinubos literally redeemed or ransomed and their creditors might sell their services for profit at the price of the debt incurred 2 The actual degree of obligations of the alipin could vary considerably It was dependent on the monetary equivalent of the obligation owed and was usually limited in duration An alipin could earn their freedom or gain higher status by marriage being set free by their masters known as matitimawa or tinimawa among Visayans buying it with their earnings fulfillment of the obligations or by extraordinary accomplishments and bravery in battle 2 9 The inheritance of the alipin status was subject to a complex system of rules dependent on the offspring s condition known as the saya For example the first child of a male freeman and a female alipin would be free but their second child would be an alipin like the mother and so on with the rest of the children If the number of children was not even the last child would be a partial alipin The master of an aliping namamahay might also sometimes take one child of the latter as an alipin sa gigilid in the case of the latter s death They might become sibin or ginogatan favorites of their masters and be set free upon the master s death 2 An alipin who inherits the debts of their parents was known as a gintubo literally grown up with 11 Children of parents who are both alipin were known as ginlubos while the children of ginlubos were known as lubos nga oripun 2 Partial alipin retain their alipin ancestors obligations according to their degree of relation The partial alipin child of a timawa and an alipin for example will inherit half of their alipin parent s obligations while the grandchild of an alipin will only owe a quarter Half alipin whose services were scheduled alternately by months are referred to as bulan moon or month or pikas half Quarter alipin were referred to as tilor or sagipat quarter They could also freely buy their way out of service if they can afford it Part or all of the alipin duties of the parents are often taken over by their children 2 11 See also editSlavery in the Sultanate of Sulu Piracy in the Sulu Sea Spanish expedition to BalanguinguiReferences edit Scott William Henry 1980 Filipino Class Structure in the Sixteenth Century Philippine Studies 28 2 142 175 a b c d e f g h i j William Henry Scott 1994 Baranggay Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society PDF Ateneo De Manila University Press ISBN 9715501354 Scott William Henry 1994 Barangay Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society Quezon City Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 135 4 Pre colonial Manila Malacanang Presidential Museum and Library Malacanang Presidential Museum and Library Araw ng Maynila Briefers Presidential Communications Development and Strategic Planning Office June 23 2015 Archived from the original on March 9 2016 Retrieved April 27 2017 James Francis Warren 2002 Iranun and Balangingi Globalization Maritime Raiding and the Birth of Ethnicity NUS Press pp 53 56 ISBN 9789971692421 Cristina Blanc Szanton 1990 Collision of Cultures Historical Reformulations of Gender in the Lowland Visayas Philippines In Jane Monnig Atkinson amp Shelly Errington ed Power and Difference Gender in Island Southeast Asia Stanford University Press p 356 ISBN 9780804717816 tumao nobility a b Souza George Bryan Turley Jeffrey S eds 2016 The Boxer Codex Transcription and translation of an illustrated late sixteenth century Spanish manuscript concerning the geography ethnography and history of the Pacific South East Asia and East Asia Translated by Turley Jeffrey S Leiden Brill pp 346 347 ISBN 978 90 04 30154 2 Jose Amiel Angeles 2007 The Battle of Mactan and the Indigenous Discourse on War Philippine Studies Historical and Ethnographic Viewpoints 55 1 Ateneo de Manila University 3 52 ISSN 2244 1093 a b c d Paul Morrow January 16 2009 Maharlika and the ancient class system Pilipino Express Retrieved July 18 2012 a b Emma Helen Blair amp James Alexander Robertson ed 1903 Relacion de las Yslas Filipinas 1582 by Miguel de Loarca The Philippine Islands 1493 1803 Volume V 1582 1583 Explorations By Early Navigators Descriptions Of The Islands And Their Peoples Their History And Records Of The Catholic Missions As Related In Contemporaneous Books And Manuscripts Showing The Political Economic Commercial And Religious Conditions Of Those Islands From Their Earliest Relations With European Nations To The Beginning Of The Nineteenth Century The A H Clark Company republished online by Project Gutenberg a b c M C Halili 2004 Philippine History Rex Bookstore Inc p 57 ISBN 9789712339349 Carolyn Brewer 2004 Shamanism Catholicism and Gender Relations in Colonial Philippines 1521 1685 Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 197 ISBN 9780754634379 Further reading editLeon Ma Guerrero 2007 The First Filipino Guerrero Publishing Manila Reynaldo Oliveros 2007 Philippine History and Government Ibon Publishing Manila Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alipin amp oldid 1219192453, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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