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Wikipedia

Anito

Anito, also spelled anitu, refers to ancestor spirits, nature spirits, and deities in the indigenous Philippine folk religions from the precolonial age to the present, although the term itself may have other meanings and associations depending on the Filipino ethnic group. It can also refer to carved humanoid figures, the taotao, made of wood, stone, or ivory, that represent these spirits.[1][2] Anito (a term predominantly used in Luzon) is also sometimes known as diwata in certain ethnic groups (especially among Visayans).[3]

Various Igorot bulul depicting ancestor spirits (c. 1900)
Taotao carvings sold in a souvenir shop in Siquijor Island

Pag-anito refers to a séance, often accompanied by other rituals or celebrations, in which a shaman (Visayan: babaylan, Tagalog: katalonan) acts as a medium to communicate directly with the spirits. When a nature spirit or deity is specifically involved, the ritual is called pagdiwata. The act of worship or a religious sacrifice to a spirit is also sometimes simply referred to as anito.[1][4][5]

The belief in anito are sometimes referred to as Anitism in scholarly literature (Spanish: anitismo or anitería).[2]

Spirits

Pre-colonial Filipinos were animistic. They believed that everything has a spirit, from rocks and trees to animals and humans to natural phenomena.[2][6][7] These spirits are collectively known as anito, derived from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *qanitu and Proto-Austronesian *qaNiCu ("spirit of the dead"). Cognates in other Austronesian cultures include the Micronesian aniti, Malaysian and Indonesian hantu or antu, Nage nitu, and Polynesian atua and aitu. As well as Tao anito, Taivoan alid, Seediq and Atayal utux, Bunun hanitu or hanidu, and Tsou hicu among Taiwanese aborigines.[6][8][9] Anito can be divided into two main categories: the ancestor spirits (ninunò), and deities and nature spirits (diwata).[1][2][10]

Ancestor spirits

 
The Neolithic Manunggul burial jar from the Tabon Caves, Palawan, depicts a soul and a psychopomp journeying to the spirit world in a boat (c. 890–710 BCE)

The ninunò (lit. "ancestor") can be the spirits of actual ancestors, cultural heroes, or generalized guardian spirits of a family. Pre-colonial Filipinos believed that upon death, the "free" soul (Visayan: kalag; Tagalog: kaluluwa)[note 1] of a person travels to a spirit world, usually by voyaging across an ocean on a boat (a bangka or baloto).[1][11][12][13][14][15][16]

 
Manang carved images of household guardian spirits from the Mandaya people

There can be multiple locations in the spirit world, varying in different ethnic groups.[note 2] Which place souls end up in depends on how they died, the age at death, or the conduct of the person when they were alive. There was no concept of heaven or hell prior to the introduction of Christianity and Islam;[note 3] rather, the spirit world is usually depicted as an otherworld that exists alongside the material world. Souls reunite with deceased relatives in the spirit world and lead normal lives in the spirit world as they did in the material world. In some cases, the souls of evil people undergo penance and cleansing before they are granted entrance into a particular spirit realm. Souls would eventually reincarnate after a period of time in the spirit world.[1][11][2][17]

In some cultures (like among the Kalinga people), the acceptance of a soul by ancestors into a certain realm in the spirit world requires tattoos (batok), by which they can gauge the worthiness of a soul. In other cultures, tattoos illuminate and guide the spirits during the journey to the afterlife.[18][19][20][21]

Souls in the spirit world still retain a degree of influence in the material world, and vice versa. Pag-anito may be used to invoke good ancestor spirits for protection, intercession (kalara or kalda), or advice. Ancestor spirits that become intercessors with deities are known as pintakasi or pitulon. Vengeful spirits of the dead can manifest as apparitions or ghosts (mantiw)[note 4] and cause harm to living people. Pag-anito can be used to appease or banish them.[1][2][7][10] Ancestor spirits also figured prominently during illness or death, as they were believed to be the ones who call the soul to the spirit world, guide the soul (a psychopomp), or meet the soul upon arrival.[1]

Ancestor spirits are also known as kalading among the Igorot;[22] tonong among the Maguindanao and Maranao;[23] umboh among the Sama-Bajau;[24] nunò or umalagad among Tagalogs and Visayans; nonò among Bicolanos;[25] umagad or umayad among the Manobo;[26] and tiladmanin among the Tagbanwa.[27]

Nature spirits and deities

 
A golden anito figurine of the Igorot people, from the mines of Suyoc, Mankayan, Benguet (1909)[28]

Spirits that have never been human are differentiated in some ethnic groups as diwata. These spirits can range from simple spirits like the diwata of a particular inanimate object, plant, animal, or place,[note 5] to deities who personify abstract concepts and natural phenomena,[note 6] to deities who are part of an actual pantheon.[note 7] They are also known as dewatu, divata, duwata, ruwata, dewa, dwata, diya, etc., in various Philippine languages (including Tagalog diwa, "spirit" or "essence"); from pre-colonial Philippines meaning "spiritual faery".

However, what entities are considered diwata varies by ethnic group. In some ethnic groups like the B'laan, Cuyonon Visayans, and the Tagalog, Diwata refers to the Magical Spirits of the Elements of the Land, and the Nature Ancestor Guardian Spirits in the pre-colonial, nature-based animistic pantheon,[note 8] in which case there are different terms for non-human spirits.[1][2][note 9]

In traditional, pre-colonial, nature-based Philippines, many of the syncretic animist traditions pay respect to the ancestor spirits, who are believed to be elemental dwellers. The traditional pre-colonial belief of the Filipino people call magical spirit guardians, who protect and watch the children, the land, and the elementals (earth, wind, water, fire, and trees and all sunlight bearing plants, both daylight and nighttime) are guarded and protected by the elemental nature-based guardians, called "Diwata" (forest, and nature faeries). Tradition in pre-colonist animistic, nature-based belief systems in the island archipelago of the Philippines traditionally and originally refer to ancestor spirits of the land, sky and the sea, who protect and watch the land, elementals and the trees, rivers and all the spiritual dwellings of nature ("Diwata", "Nuno", "Nuno sa Puno" and "Nuno sa Punso", and many other ancestor's spirit guardians) are respectfully addressed in polite verbal invocation to be left at peace, never to be touched or disturbed in any way shape or form. It is believed that humans who are seeking something from the ancestor spirits and the nature guardians to pray and ask for blessings respectfully before any activity that will ignite their reactions ("po" after a protective invocation is said before any kind of interaction on the words and on the land). The ancestor spirits are traditionally believed to be appeased when the human is about to touch or step on the Anito's territory, and demands great respect when addressed in most nature-based systems when a human is traversing or stepping on any land that the Diwatas, Nuno, Nuno sa Puno (Ancestor Spirits) and Nuno sa Punso (Heart of Nature Guardians) reside in. A "Nuno sa Punso" "Nuno", ("land and elemental guardian" and "land ancestor") is believed to be left at peace and never to be disturbed in any circumstances in any dimensionality, else there will be some unfavorable consequences for the people who have disturbed the ancestors, and spirit guardians. Traditionally,most of the ancestor spirits, and guardians who keep the peace between the non-human world and the human world (Diwatas, Nuno, and Nuno sa Puno, Nuno sa Punso) are sent offerings of prayer in traditional pre-colonial animistic nature-based prayer circles, where offerings of fruit, gold, and precious metals, fermented coconut or coconut water, river water and tobacco are offered to appease the spirit dieties, so they can make Bathala (Traditional Pre-colonial Life Creator in the Philippines) is satisfied to maintain peace in the spiritual and human realms.

There are three general types of non-human spirits. The first are the environmental or nature spirits "bound" to a particular location or natural phenomenon (similar to genii loci). They "own" places and concepts like agricultural fields, forests, cliffs, seas, winds, lightning, or realms in the spirit world. Some were also "keepers" or totems of various animals and plants. They have inhuman and abstract qualities, reflecting their particular dominions. They do not normally appear in human form and are usually gender-less or androgynous. They rarely concern themselves with human affairs. Rituals involving these spirits are almost always conducted outdoors.[26][29]

The second type of spirits are the "unbound" spirits which have independent existence. They appear in animal (usually as birds) or human-like forms, have gender differentiation, and have personal names. They are most similar to the fairies of European folklore.[note 10] These are the most common types of spirits to become abyan (spirit guides of babaylan), as they are the most "sociable" and can take interest in human activities. These spirits are usually referred to as engkanto (from Spanish encanto) in modern Filipino folklore. Unlike the "bound" spirits, these spirits can be invited into human households, and their rituals can take place both outdoors and indoors.[26]

 
A fertility god of the Bontoc people in an ato (communal meeting circle)

The last is a class of malevolent spirits or demons, as well as supernatural beings, generally collectively known as aswang, yawa, or mangalos (also mangalok, mangangalek, or magalos) among Tagalogs and Visayans. There are numerous kinds of aswang with specific abilities, behavior, or appearance. Examples include sigbin, wakwak, tiyanak, and manananggal. The first two categories of diwata can also be malevolent, what sets the third category apart is that they can not be appealed to with offerings and they are utterly pitiless. Most practices associated with them is to ward them off, banish them, or destroy them. They are never addressed nor worshiped in religious rituals.[1][2][26][30][31][32]

Diwata are rarely spoken about openly for fear of attracting their attention. Instead they are referred to with euphemisms like "those unlike us" (Visayan: dili ingon nato) or various names, like banwaanon or taga-banwa,[note 11] that translate literally to "dweller of a place".[33][34][35] Among Tagalogs, non-human nature spirits are also euphemistically referred to as lamanglupa ("[dwellers of] the bowels of the earth") or lamangdagat ("[dwellers of] the depths of the sea"), depending on their domain.[36]

Diwata exist in both the material world and the spirit world. They can be formless or have a material body. They can also take over a body through spirit possession (Visayan: hola, hulak, tagdug, or saob; Tagalog: sanib), an ability essential for the séances in pag-anito. They are believed to be capable of shapeshifting (baliw or baylo), becoming invisible, or creating visions or illusions (anino or landung, lit. "shadow"). Their powers, however, are limited to their particular domain. A diwata of a forest, for instance, has no dominion over the sea. Most are generally benevolent or capriciously neutral, although they can cause misfortunes and illnesses if angered, disrespected, or mistakenly encountered.[2][30][31][32] Other common characteristics of diwata are that they are perceived as an invisible "cold" presence (in contrast to "warm" human spirits); that they leave no footprints (unlike human spirits); and that they sense the world and "eat" by means of smelling.[26][note 12] Diwata who take human form are said to be pale-skinned and could be distinguished from humans by the absence of a philtrum on the upper lip.[37][26]

 
Ifugao hogang in the Banaue Rice Terraces, guardian spirits carved from tree fern trunks usually placed along pathways and in village outskirts

Diwata are often depicted as appearing to unsuspecting people in human or animal form, sometimes causing unintentional harm. They can also deliberately play tricks on mortals, like seducing or abducting beautiful men and women into the spirit world.[1][26] Certain places are believed to be owned by diwata or are borders to the spirit world. These are normally avoided or only entered with precautions, especially during twilight when diwata are believed to cross over from the spirit world into the material world. Harm or illness caused by diwata are known as buyag in Visayan and usog in Tagalog.[1][26] People who were harmed by interactions with diwata are euphemistically described as having been "greeted" (Visayan: gibati, Tagalog: nabati) or "played with" (Visayan gidulaan, Tagalog: napaglaruan or nakatuwaan) by diwata.[36]

To avoid inadvertently angering a diwata, Filipinos perform a customary pasintabi sa nuno ("respectfully apologizing or asking permission from ancestors for passing").[note 13] This is done by saying the phrases "tao po" ("a human [is passing], elder), "tabi po" or "tabi apo" ("by your permission, elder")[note 14] when passing by a place believed to be inhabited by a diwata.[7][36]

Diwata are also believed to be able to mate with humans. People born with congenital disorders (like albinism or syndactyly) or display unusual beauty or behavior are commonly believed by local superstition to be the children of diwata who seduced (or sometimes raped) their mothers.[38][39]

During the Spanish period, diwata were syncretized with elves and fairies in European mythology and folklore, and were given names like duende (goblin or dwarf), encantador or encanto ("spell [caster]"), hechicero ("sorcerer"), sirena ("mermaid"), or maligno ("evil [spirit]").[1][36][40] In Islamized ethnic groups of the Philippines, these nature spirits are usually called jinn or saitan, due to the influence of Islamic mythology.[36][41][42]

Religious objects and places

Taotao figures

 
15th century bulul with a pamahan (ceremonial bowl) in the Louvre Museum

Ancestor spirits were usually represented by carved figures. These were known as taotao ("little human", also taotaohan, latawo, tinatao, or tatao),[note 15] bata-bata ("little child"), ladaw ("image" or "likeness"; also laraw, ladawang, lagdong, or larawan), or likha ("creation"; also likhak) in most of the Philippines. Other names include bulul (also bulol or bul-ul) among the Ifugao; tinagtaggu (also tinattaggu) among the Kankanaey and Tuwali Ifugao;[note 16] lablabbon among the Itneg;[43] manaug among the Lumad; and tagno among Bicolanos.[1][2][7][30][44][45] Among Tagalogs, taotao were also sometimes referred to as lambana ("altar" or "sacred place"),[note 17] after the location in which they are usually kept.[7][45]

 
Igorot hipag depicting war deities (c. 1900)

Taotao were usually austere roughly-carved figures made from wood, stone, or ivory. Some taoatao encountered by the Spanish were made from precious metals or ornamented with gold and jewelry, but these were very rare.[1][46] Taotao were almost always depicted in the squatting position with the arms crossed over the knees, which is reminiscent of the fetal position, the everyday conversing posture, and the position bodies are arranged during death among Ancient Filipinos. Some figures, however, are depicted standing or doing everyday activities like dancing, pounding rice, or nursing infants.[47][48]

 
A balaua, a large spirit house used for community rituals to anito among the Itneg people (1922)[22]

Most taotao represent an actual deceased person, usually carved by the community upon their funeral. As such, there can be hundreds of taotao in a single village, some of them centuries old.[48][49]

 
Salako (left) and palaan (right) ceremonial altars among the Itneg people (1922)[22]

In very rare cases, diwata can be depicted as taotao in anthropomorphic form, as chimeras or legendary creatures, or as animals.[7][48] These include a special class of figures called hipag among the Igorot which depict war deities, as well as kinabigat (carved houseposts) and hogang (carved tree fern posts used as boundary markers and as wards against harm).[48] As a rule, however, diwata are not usually depicted as taotao or by any man-made representations.[2]

Taotao were not intrinsically sacred. They were representations of the spirits, not the actual spirits themselves. They only became sacred during their use in a pag-anito ritual. Without the spirit they represent, they are treated as mundane carved pieces of wood or sculpted stone. The anonymous author of the 1572 Relación de la conquista de la isla de Luzón describes pag-anito rituals of the Tagalog people as such:[50]

When any chief is ill, he invites his kindred and orders a great meal to be prepared, consisting of fish, meat, and wine. When the guests are all assembled and the feast set forth in a few plates on the ground inside the house, they seat themselves also on the ground to eat. In the midst of the feast (called manganito or baylán in their tongue), they put the idol called Batala and certain aged women who are considered as priestesses, and some aged Indians—neither more nor less. They offer the idol some of the food which they are eating, and call upon him in their tongue, praying to him for the health of the sick man for whom the feast is held. The natives of these islands have no altars nor temples whatsoever. This manganito, or drunken revel, to give it a better name, usually lasts seven or eight days; and when it is finished they take the idols and put them in the corners of the house, and keep them there without showing them any reverence.

Regardless, very old taotao handed down through generations are prized as family heirlooms. Among the Igorot, pieces of taotao may also be chipped off and boiled into a medicinal tea.[48]

Taotao were commonly kept in corners or small shelves inside houses or granaries. Spanish missionaries recorded that taotao were present in every Filipino household, no matter how poor.[1][2][44][45]

When Spanish missionaries arrived in the Philippines, the word "anito" came to be associated with these physical representations of spirits that featured prominently in pag-anito rituals. During the American rule of the Philippines (1898–1946), the meaning of the Spanish word idolo ("a thing worshiped") was further conflated with the English word "idol". Thus in the modern Filipino language, anito has come to refer almost exclusively to the carved taotao figures, instead of the actual spirits themselves.[1][51]

Shrines, altars, and sacred areas

 
Diwata are believed to inhabit this 400-year old balete tree in Lazi, Siquijor with a natural spring between its roots

Ancient Filipinos and Filipinos who continue to adhere to the indigenous Philippine folk religions generally do not have so-called "temples" of worship under the context known to foreign cultures.[1][52][53] However, they do have sacred shrines, which are also called as spirit houses.[1] They can range in size from small roofed platforms, to structures similar to a small house (but with no walls), to shrines that look similar to pagodas, especially in the south where early mosques were also modeled in the same way.[54] These shrines were known in various indigenous terms, which depend on the ethnic group association.[note 18] They can also be used as places to store taotao and caskets of ancestors. Among Bicolanos, taotao were also kept inside sacred caves called moog.[1][55][56][57]

During certain ceremonies, anito are venerated through temporary altars near sacred places. These were called latangan or lantayan in Visayan and dambana or lambana in Tagalog.[note 19] These bamboo or rattan altars are identical in basic construction throughout most of the Philippines. They were either small roof-less platforms or standing poles split at the tip (similar to a tiki torch). They held halved coconut shells, metal plates, or martaban jars as receptacles for offerings. Taotao may sometimes also be placed on these platforms.[1][30]

Other types of sacred places or objects of worship of diwata include the material manifestation of their realms. The most widely venerated were balete trees (also called nonok, nunuk, nonoc, etc.) and anthills or termite mounds (punso). Other examples include mountains, waterfalls, tree groves, reefs, and caves.[1][2][7][58][59]

Spirit animals

 
Bakunawa pommel from a Visayan tenegre sword

Some animals like crocodiles, snakes, monitor lizards, tokay geckos, and various birds were also venerated as servants or manifestations of diwata, or as powerful spirits themselves. These include legendary creatures like the dragon or serpent Bakunawa, the giant bird Minokawa of the Bagobo, and the colorful Sarimanok of the Maranao.[1][2][7][58][37]

Omen birds were particularly important. The most common omen birds were doves with green or blue iridescent feathers called limokon (usually the common emerald dove, imperial pigeons, or brown doves).[note 20] Other omen birds include fairy-bluebirds (tigmamanukan, balan tikis, balatiti, or bathala among Tagalogs; and batala among Kapampangans); kingfishers (salaksak among the Ilocano, Igorot, and Sambal); and flowerpeckers (pitpit, ichaw, ido, or labeg among the Igorot).[7][30][60]

Rituals and shamans

 
A 1922 photograph of an Itneg shaman making an offering to an apdel, a guardian anito of her village. Apdel are believed to reside in the water-worn stones known as pinaing.[22]

Anitism was not a religion about worship. Aside from good ancestor spirits and the few benevolent diwata, most anito were feared, not venerated. To an ordinary person, diwata were regarded as dangerous beings to be avoided or appeased. When interaction was necessary, they performed a ritual known as pag-anito (also mag-anito or anitohan). These are usually directed at ancestor spirits. When the pag-anito ceremony is for a diwata, the ritual is known as pagdiwata (also magdiwata or diwatahan).[1][2]

Minor pag-anito rituals like praying for better weather or banishing minor ill luck can be performed by any householder. However, major pag-anito rituals required the services of the community shaman (Visayan babaylan or baylan; Tagalog katalonan or manganito).[1][note 21]

These shamans were believed to have been "chosen" by a specific diwata who become their spirit guides.[note 22] This was presumed to happen after they pass the initiation rites of an older shaman they were apprenticed to (usually a relative). In some cases, some shamans acquire their status after they recover from a serious illness or a bout of insanity.[1][25][34][26][42][61] In most Filipino ethnic groups, shamans were almost always female. The few males who gain shaman status were usually asog or bayok,[note 23] trans women.[1][30][26][61]

 
Itneg people launching spirit boats (taltalabong) bearing offerings for anito (1922)

Major pag-anito rituals are centered around a séance. Because of their special relationship with their companion spirits, shamans can act as mediums for other anito, allowing spirits to temporarily possess their bodies. This possession happens after the shaman goes into a trance-like state. This allows the spirit to communicate verbally with the participants as well as physically act out events in the spirit world. At the moment of possession, shamans display a change in behavior and voice. They can sometimes go into seizures and become violent enough that restraints are required. The ritual ends when the spirit leaves and the shaman is awakened.[1]

Spirits were invited into the ritual through offerings and sacrifices during and after the ceremonies. These depended on what spirit was being summoned, but offerings are usually a small portion of the harvests, cooked food, wine, gold ornaments, and betel nut. Blood from an animal was also usually part of the offerings, poured directly on the taotao or in a bowl before them. These commonly come from chickens or pigs, but can also be from carabaos or dogs.[1][2] Salt and spices are usually avoided, as they are believed to be distasteful to anito.[26] There is no record of human sacrifices being offered to anito during the Spanish period of the Philippines,[1][44][37] except among the Bagobo people in southern Mindanao where it was prevalent until the early 20th century.[62][63][note 24]

Another common pag-anito ritual throughout most of the Philippine ethnic groups involves the use of spirit boats. These were usually miniature boats laden with offerings set adrift from riverbanks and shorelines.[2][6][22]

Pag-anito can be conducted on its own or in conjunction with other rituals and celebrations. They can be personal or family rituals or seasonal community events. They can vary considerably between different ethnic groups. The most common pag-anito were entreaties for bountiful harvests, cures for illnesses, victory in battle, prayers for the dead, or blessings.[1][30]

Different ethnic groups had different diwata pantheons and rituals associated with them, though sometimes deities are shared in neighboring ethnic groups. Moreover, different communities also each have their own local patron diwata.[2][note 25]

Historical accounts

Historical accounts of anito in Spanish records include the following:

 
A figurine of Lumawig, a cultural hero and the supreme being in the pantheon of the Bontoc people
  • "Most of the Indians are heathens...They believe in their ancestors, and when about to embark upon some enterprise commend themselves to these, asking them for aid." – Francisco de Sande, Relacion de las Yslas Filipinas (1576)
  • "Which treats of the rites and ceremonies observed by the Moros in the vicinity of Manilla, and of their social conditions. The god Batala. According to the religion formerly observed by these Moros, they worshiped a deity called among them Batala, which properly means “God.” They said that they adored this Batala because he was the Lord of all, and had created human beings and villages. They said that this Batala had many agents under him, whom he sent to this world to produce, in behalf of men, what is yielded here. These beings were called anitos, and each anito had a special office. Some of them were for the fields, and some for those who journey by sea; some for those who went to war, and some for diseases. Each anito was therefore named for his office; there was, for instance, the anito of the fields, and the anito of the rain. To these anitos the people offered sacrifices, when they desired anything—to each one according to his office. The mode of sacrifice was like that of the Pintados. They summoned a catalonan, which is the same as the vaylan among the Pintados, that is, a priest. He offered the sacrifice, requesting from the anito whatever the people desired him to ask, and heaping up great quantities of rice, meat, and fish. His invocations lasted until the demon entered his body, when the catalonan fell into a swoon, foaming at the mouth. The Indians sang, drank, and feasted until the catalonan came to himself, and told them the answer that the anito had given to him. If the sacrifice was in behalf of a sick person, they offered many golden chains and ornaments, saying that they were paying a ransom for the sick person’s health. This invocation of the anito continued as long as the sickness lasted."
"When the natives were asked why the sacrifices were offered to the anito, and not to the Batala, they answered that the Batala was a great lord, and no one could speak to him. He lived in the sky; but the anito, who was of such a nature that he came down here to talk with men, was to the Batala as a minister, and interceded for them. In some places and especially in the mountain districts, when the father, mother, or other relative dies, the people unite in making a small wooden idol, and preserve it. Accordingly there is a house which contains one hundred or two hundred of these idols. These images also are called anitos; for they say that when people die, they go to serve the Batala. Therefore they make sacrifices to these anitos, offering them food, wine, and gold ornaments; and request them to be intercessors for them before the Batala, whom they regard as God." – Miguel de Loarca, Relacion de las Yslas Filipinas (1582)
 
Small ornate pottery houses used as offerings for rice anito among the Itneg people
  • "They held the cayman in the utmost veneration; and, whenever they made any statement about it, when they descried it in the water, they called it Nono, which means "grandfather." They softly and tenderly besought it not to harm them; and to this end offered it a part of what they carried in their boats, casting the offering into the water. There was no old tree to which they did not attribute divinity; and it was a sacrilege to cut such a tree for any purpose. What more did they adore? the very stones, cliffs, and reefs, and the headlands of the shores of the sea or the rivers; and they made some offering when they passed by these, going to the stone or rock, and placing the offering upon it. I saw many times in the river of Manila a rock which for many years was an idol of that wretched people... While sailing along the island of Panai I beheld on the promontory called Nasso, near Potol, plates and other pieces of earthenware, laid upon a rock, the offering of voyagers. In the island of Mindanao between La Canela and the river [i.e., Rio Grande], a great promontory projects from a rugged and steep coast; always at these points there is a heavy sea, making it both difficult and dangerous to double them. When passing by this headland, the natives, as it was so steep, offered their arrows, discharging them with such force that they penetrated the rock itself. This they did as a sacrifice, that a safe passage might be accorded them." – Fr. Pedro Chirino, Relacion de las Islas Filipinas (1604)
  • "They also adored private idols, which each one inherited from his ancestors. The Visayans called them divata, and the Tagálogs anito. Of those idols some had jurisdiction over the mountains and open country, and permission was asked from them to go thither. Others had jurisdiction over the sowed fields, and the fields were commended to them so that they might prove fruitful; and besides the sacrifices they placed articles of food in the fields for the anitos to eat, in order to place them under greater obligations. There was an anito of the sea, to whom they commended their fisheries and navigations; an anito of the house, whose favor they implored whenever an infant was born, and when it was suckled and the breast offered to it. They placed their ancestors, the invocation of whom was the first thing in all their work and dangers, among these anitos. In memory of their ancestors they kept certain very small and very badly made idols of stone, wood, gold, or ivory, called licha or laravan. Among their gods they reckoned also all those who perished by the sword, or who were devoured by crocodiles, as well as those killed by lightning. They thought that the souls of such immediately ascended to the blest abode by means of the rainbow, called by them balañgao. Generally, whoever could succeed in it attributed divinity to his aged father at his death. The aged themselves died in that presumptuous delusion, and during their sickness and at their death guided all their actions with what they imagined a divine gravity and manner. Consequently, they chose as the place for their grave some assigned spot, like one old man who lived on the seacoast between Dulac and Abuyog, which is in the island of Leyte. He ordered himself placed there in his coffin (as was done) in a house standing alone and distant from the settlement, in order that he might be recognized as a god of navigators, who were to commend themselves to him. Another had himself buried in certain lands in the mountains of Antipolo, and through reverence to him no one dared to cultivate those lands (for they feared that he who should do so would die), until an evangelical minister removed that fear from them, and now they cultivate them without harm or fear." – Fr. Francisco Colin, Labor Evangelica (1663)

In popular culture

 
A performer depicting a shaman in the 2015 Babaylan Festival of Bago, Negros Occidental

Festivals

Film and television

  • Amaya, a historical television series about the precolonial Philippines. It depicts diwata as goddesses.[66]
  • Diwata (1987), a movie directed by Tata Esteban and written by Rei Nicandro showed the mythical life of the deities. Actress Olga Miranda played the main role, together with the other cast Lala Montelibano, Dick Israel and George Estregan.[67]
  • Encantadia and Mulawin, two television series (with film adaptations) in a shared universe depicts diwatas as a race of supernatural being living in Encantadia, a dimension beyond the human world.[68]
  • Faraway (2014), an independent film focuses on a woman and her quest to find the Diwata tribe.[69]
  • Indio, a television series with a protagonist that is the son of a mortal man and a diwata woman.[70]
  • Okay Ka, Fairy Ko!, a television fantasy situational comedy series (with film adaptations) that revolves around a mortal man married to a diwata.[71]

Games

Literature

  • One of the main characters from the play Speech & Debate written by Stephen Karam is a woman with Filipino ancestry named Diwata.
  • Marvel Comics has introduced the "Diwatas" as a pantheon of gods similar to the Asgardians and Olympians. These Diwatas include Aman Sinaya, Amihan, Anitun, Apo Laki, Aswang, Bathala, Mayari and Tala.[75]

Music

Science

Notes

  1. ^ Among most Filipino ethnic groups, a person is believed to be composed of at least two souls – the breath of life, will, or awareness (ginhawa or hininga, which stays with the living body) and the astral soul (kalag or kaluluwa, which can travel to the spirit world). The concept of soul dualism is sometimes referred to as "twin souls" or "double souls" and is a common belief in Austronesian cultures and other shamanistic cultures. Other names for the life soul include nyawa or nyawalihan (Tausug, niyawa (Maranao), niyawa-lihan (Jama Mapun), lennawa (Batad Ifugao), and nawa (T'boli). Other names for the astral soul include kaluha, dungan (Visayan); kalag (Bicol); kaduwa (Isneg), ab-abiik (Kankanaey), karurua (Ilocano), ikaruruwa (Ibanag), karaduwa (Mangyan), kiyaraluwa (Tagbanwa), makatu (Bukidnon), and kadengan-dengan or gimokud (Manobo). (Scott, 1994; Tan, 2008; Mercado, 1991; Talavera, 2014) Most of the terms for the astral soul literally translate to "twin" or "double", from PAN *duSa, "two". (Yu, 2000; Blust, 2010)
  2. ^ Compare with the Greek underworld
  3. ^ After Spanish contact, various spirit worlds were syncretized into the Christian concept of heaven and hell in dictionaries and Bible translations. They struggled in determining which terminology to use because of the absence of the heaven and hell dichotomy in the Filipino concept of the spirit world. Spanish missionaries and European authors usually equated heaven with maca and calualhatian; and hell with casan (also casanaan, casauaan, or catanaan; sometimes misread as kasamaan). However, in the Boxer Codex maca and casan were synonyms for the Visayan and Tagalog underworlds. The 1754 version of Vocabulario de la lengua tagala used casanaan for both heaven and hell; with casanaan nang hirap as hell, and casanaan nang tova as heaven. Calualhatian (modern spelling: kaluwalhatian) was simply a region in the Tagalog spirit world that souls can enter by crossing a torrential river on a narrow plank. (Rath, 2013)
  4. ^ Also mua, mamaw, mamanhig, pamahoy, mamamahoy (McCoy, 1982); later multo. from Spanish muerto, "dead person" (Tan, 2008)
  5. ^ e.g. Nuno sa punso, a dwarf-like anito that lives in anthills; and Dayang Masalanta, the Tagalog diwata of Mount Makiling
  6. ^ e.g. Mayari, the Tagalog goddess of the moon; Barangaw, the Visayan god of rainbows; and Makapatag, the Visayan god of vengeance
  7. ^ e.g. Bathala, the chief deity of the Tagalogs; Magbabaya, the supreme creator of the Lumad people; and Pilandok, trickster spirit of the Maranao
  8. ^ Tagalogs differentiated between Diwata, the universal supreme being, and life creator Bathala, the supreme deity exclusive to them (Hislop, 1971)
  9. ^ The most widespread names for these spirits in various Philippine ethnic groups are diwata or anito. Other names of diwata or specific types of diwata include fieu awas, kahoynon (B'laan); mahomanay, tahamaling (Bagobo); panya'en (Batak); tawong lipod, magindara (Bikol); magtitima, tawo sa talonan (Bukidnon); aled (Gaddang); annani (Ibanag); bakayauwan, monduntug, palasekan, pili, pinading (Ifugao); mangmangkit, katataoan/katawtaw-an, kibaan, litao (Ilocano); apdel, sasailo (Itneg); tumungaw (Kankana-ey); laman labuad, manglilili (Kapampangan); kama-kama/kamakaon (Karay-a); tuglinsau, tagbusau, mandangum (Mandaya); andagaw (Mangyan); tawagenen, manaog (Manobo); karibang (Maranao); kaybaan (Pangasinan); kamanan-daplak (Sambal); dayamdam, piritay (Tagalog); tawo sa talonan (Tagbanwa); lewenri, bawa, katao/kataw, tumawo/tamawo, tawong lupa (Visayan); and guban-on, digkusanon, dalaketnon (Waray).
  10. ^ With strong parallels to human-like beings like elves and aos sí, as well as diminutive human-like beings like brownies and pixies. (Buenconsejo, 2002)
  11. ^ Not to be confused with the Tagbanwa and Mamanwa ethnic groups, all derived from PAN *banua, "home" or "homeland". In modern Filipino languages, banwa has been supplanted by Spanish lugar, thus taglugar is used in place of tagabanwa (Hislop, 1971; Tan, 2008).
  12. ^ Diwata can cause harm by "eating" (smelling) the "vital force" or "breath" (ginhawa) of human beings. They are also said to be annoyed by perfume, as well as salt and spices. (Buenconsejo, 2002)
  13. ^ From sintabi, "to respectfully ask permission" or "to give due respect", cf. "excuse me"
  14. ^ In Ilocano, the traditional phrase is "bari bari, apo", with the same meaning (Tan, 2008)
  15. ^ From Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *tau, ultimately from Proto-Austronesian *Cau, "human" or "person"; compare with Toraja tau tau statues
  16. ^ Tinagtaggu is a cognate of taotao in the Tuwali language; from tagu, "human"
  17. ^ The term lambana was later syncretized with fairies, commonly depicted as tiny winged beings in modern illustrations, even though no similarly winged beings existed in native Filipino folklore (Potet, 2017). Conversely, the alternate term dambana has come to mean "shrine" or "chapel" in modern Tagalog
  18. ^ Known as magdantang in Visayan and ulango or simbahan in Tagalog. Among the Itneg, shrines are known tangpap, pangkew, or alalot (for various small roofed altars); and balaua or kalangan (for larger structures). In Mindanao, shrines are known among the Subanen as maligai ; among the Teduray as tenin (only entered by shamans); and among the Bagobo as buis (for those built near roads and villages) and parabunnian (for those built near rice fields).(Kroeber, 1918)
  19. ^ Also saloko or palaan (Itneg); sakolong (Bontoc); salagnat (Bicolano); sirayangsang (Tagbanwa); ranga (Teduray); and tambara, tigyama, or balekat (Bagobo)
  20. ^ Limokon in most of Visayas and among the Lumad; also almúgan (Blaan), alimúkun (Cebuano), alimúkeng (Ilocano); limoken (Maranao); muhen (T'boli); lemuguen (Teduray); and limukun (Subanen)
  21. ^ Other terms include balyana, paraanito, or paradiwata (Bicolano); balian, balyan, or mabalian (Lumad); balian or tanguilin (Subanen); bawalyan or babaylan (Tagbanwa); beljan (Palaw'an); baglan, mangoodan, or manilao (Ilocano);bahasa (Yakan); dukun, kalamat, or papagan (Sama-Bajau); mandadawak, dawak, insupak, mon-lapu, tumunoh, alpogan, or mumbaki (Igorot); anitu (Aeta); and ma-aram (Karay-a)
  22. ^ Terms for spirit guides of shamans include bantay, abyan (Visayan); alagad, gabay (Tagalog); abyan, umli, sugujen, or inajew (Lumad); saro (Bicolano); and jinn (Sama-Bajau)
  23. ^ Asog is the term used for transvestite male shamans in most of the Visayas and in the Bicol Region. In the rest of Luzon, they are known as bayok (bayoc), bayog, or bayogin (bayoguin or bayoquin). Notably among the Sambal, the highest-ranking shaman was a bayok. They are also known as labia among the Subanen, though they were not necessarily shamans (Kroeber, 1918). There are also similar trans women shamans among the Dayak people of Borneo (Baldick, 2013). Also see Bakla
  24. ^ Some anthropologists consider the headhunting traditions of the Igorot as a form of human sacrifice. In the funeral rites for celebrated warriors or nobles among Visayans and Tagalogs, favorite slaves may also sometimes be executed and buried (hogot) to accompany the deceased into the spirit world (Scott, 1994; Benedict, 1916)
  25. ^ In modern Christianized Filipinos, this practice was transferred unto community patron saints and religious icons, which are often celebrated and worshiped in a very similar way (Hislop, 1971), cf. Ati-Atihan, Obando Fertility Rites

See also

References

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External links

  • Pagdiwata Ritual of the Tagbanwa in the ICH Digital Archives, ICHCAP, UNESCO

anito, this, article, about, various, uses, specific, religious, term, ethnic, religions, philippines, general, indigenous, religious, beliefs, philippines, diwata, redirects, here, other, uses, diwata, disambiguation, lambana, redirects, here, moth, genus, la. This article is about the various uses of the specific religious term Anito For the ethnic religions of the Philippines in general see Indigenous religious beliefs of the Philippines Diwata redirects here For other uses see Diwata disambiguation Lambana redirects here For the moth genus see Lambana moth Anito also spelled anitu refers to ancestor spirits nature spirits and deities in the indigenous Philippine folk religions from the precolonial age to the present although the term itself may have other meanings and associations depending on the Filipino ethnic group It can also refer to carved humanoid figures the taotao made of wood stone or ivory that represent these spirits 1 2 Anito a term predominantly used in Luzon is also sometimes known as diwata in certain ethnic groups especially among Visayans 3 Various Igorot bulul depicting ancestor spirits c 1900 Taotao carvings sold in a souvenir shop in Siquijor Island Pag anito refers to a seance often accompanied by other rituals or celebrations in which a shaman Visayan babaylan Tagalog katalonan acts as a medium to communicate directly with the spirits When a nature spirit or deity is specifically involved the ritual is called pagdiwata The act of worship or a religious sacrifice to a spirit is also sometimes simply referred to as anito 1 4 5 The belief in anito are sometimes referred to as Anitism in scholarly literature Spanish anitismo or aniteria 2 Contents 1 Spirits 1 1 Ancestor spirits 1 2 Nature spirits and deities 2 Religious objects and places 2 1 Taotao figures 2 2 Shrines altars and sacred areas 2 3 Spirit animals 3 Rituals and shamans 4 Historical accounts 5 In popular culture 5 1 Festivals 5 2 Film and television 5 3 Games 5 4 Literature 5 5 Music 5 6 Science 6 Notes 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksSpirits EditPre colonial Filipinos were animistic They believed that everything has a spirit from rocks and trees to animals and humans to natural phenomena 2 6 7 These spirits are collectively known as anito derived from Proto Malayo Polynesian qanitu and Proto Austronesian qaNiCu spirit of the dead Cognates in other Austronesian cultures include the Micronesian aniti Malaysian and Indonesian hantu or antu Nage nitu and Polynesian atua and aitu As well as Tao anito Taivoan alid Seediq and Atayal utux Bunun hanitu or hanidu and Tsou hicu among Taiwanese aborigines 6 8 9 Anito can be divided into two main categories the ancestor spirits ninuno and deities and nature spirits diwata 1 2 10 Ancestor spirits Edit The Neolithic Manunggul burial jar from the Tabon Caves Palawan depicts a soul and a psychopomp journeying to the spirit world in a boat c 890 710 BCE The ninuno lit ancestor can be the spirits of actual ancestors cultural heroes or generalized guardian spirits of a family Pre colonial Filipinos believed that upon death the free soul Visayan kalag Tagalog kaluluwa note 1 of a person travels to a spirit world usually by voyaging across an ocean on a boat a bangka or baloto 1 11 12 13 14 15 16 Manang carved images of household guardian spirits from the Mandaya people There can be multiple locations in the spirit world varying in different ethnic groups note 2 Which place souls end up in depends on how they died the age at death or the conduct of the person when they were alive There was no concept of heaven or hell prior to the introduction of Christianity and Islam note 3 rather the spirit world is usually depicted as an otherworld that exists alongside the material world Souls reunite with deceased relatives in the spirit world and lead normal lives in the spirit world as they did in the material world In some cases the souls of evil people undergo penance and cleansing before they are granted entrance into a particular spirit realm Souls would eventually reincarnate after a period of time in the spirit world 1 11 2 17 In some cultures like among the Kalinga people the acceptance of a soul by ancestors into a certain realm in the spirit world requires tattoos batok by which they can gauge the worthiness of a soul In other cultures tattoos illuminate and guide the spirits during the journey to the afterlife 18 19 20 21 Souls in the spirit world still retain a degree of influence in the material world and vice versa Pag anito may be used to invoke good ancestor spirits for protection intercession kalara or kalda or advice Ancestor spirits that become intercessors with deities are known as pintakasi or pitulon Vengeful spirits of the dead can manifest as apparitions or ghosts mantiw note 4 and cause harm to living people Pag anito can be used to appease or banish them 1 2 7 10 Ancestor spirits also figured prominently during illness or death as they were believed to be the ones who call the soul to the spirit world guide the soul a psychopomp or meet the soul upon arrival 1 Ancestor spirits are also known as kalading among the Igorot 22 tonong among the Maguindanao and Maranao 23 umboh among the Sama Bajau 24 nuno or umalagad among Tagalogs and Visayans nono among Bicolanos 25 umagad or umayad among the Manobo 26 and tiladmanin among the Tagbanwa 27 Nature spirits and deities Edit See also Deities of Philippine mythology and Philippine mythical creatures A golden anito figurine of the Igorot people from the mines of Suyoc Mankayan Benguet 1909 28 Spirits that have never been human are differentiated in some ethnic groups as diwata These spirits can range from simple spirits like the diwata of a particular inanimate object plant animal or place note 5 to deities who personify abstract concepts and natural phenomena note 6 to deities who are part of an actual pantheon note 7 They are also known as dewatu divata duwata ruwata dewa dwata diya etc in various Philippine languages including Tagalog diwa spirit or essence from pre colonial Philippines meaning spiritual faery However what entities are considered diwata varies by ethnic group In some ethnic groups like the B laan Cuyonon Visayans and the Tagalog Diwata refers to the Magical Spirits of the Elements of the Land and the Nature Ancestor Guardian Spirits in the pre colonial nature based animistic pantheon note 8 in which case there are different terms for non human spirits 1 2 note 9 In traditional pre colonial nature based Philippines many of the syncretic animist traditions pay respect to the ancestor spirits who are believed to be elemental dwellers The traditional pre colonial belief of the Filipino people call magical spirit guardians who protect and watch the children the land and the elementals earth wind water fire and trees and all sunlight bearing plants both daylight and nighttime are guarded and protected by the elemental nature based guardians called Diwata forest and nature faeries Tradition in pre colonist animistic nature based belief systems in the island archipelago of the Philippines traditionally and originally refer to ancestor spirits of the land sky and the sea who protect and watch the land elementals and the trees rivers and all the spiritual dwellings of nature Diwata Nuno Nuno sa Puno and Nuno sa Punso and many other ancestor s spirit guardians are respectfully addressed in polite verbal invocation to be left at peace never to be touched or disturbed in any way shape or form It is believed that humans who are seeking something from the ancestor spirits and the nature guardians to pray and ask for blessings respectfully before any activity that will ignite their reactions po after a protective invocation is said before any kind of interaction on the words and on the land The ancestor spirits are traditionally believed to be appeased when the human is about to touch or step on the Anito s territory and demands great respect when addressed in most nature based systems when a human is traversing or stepping on any land that the Diwatas Nuno Nuno sa Puno Ancestor Spirits and Nuno sa Punso Heart of Nature Guardians reside in A Nuno sa Punso Nuno land and elemental guardian and land ancestor is believed to be left at peace and never to be disturbed in any circumstances in any dimensionality else there will be some unfavorable consequences for the people who have disturbed the ancestors and spirit guardians Traditionally most of the ancestor spirits and guardians who keep the peace between the non human world and the human world Diwatas Nuno and Nuno sa Puno Nuno sa Punso are sent offerings of prayer in traditional pre colonial animistic nature based prayer circles where offerings of fruit gold and precious metals fermented coconut or coconut water river water and tobacco are offered to appease the spirit dieties so they can make Bathala Traditional Pre colonial Life Creator in the Philippines is satisfied to maintain peace in the spiritual and human realms There are three general types of non human spirits The first are the environmental or nature spirits bound to a particular location or natural phenomenon similar to genii loci They own places and concepts like agricultural fields forests cliffs seas winds lightning or realms in the spirit world Some were also keepers or totems of various animals and plants They have inhuman and abstract qualities reflecting their particular dominions They do not normally appear in human form and are usually gender less or androgynous They rarely concern themselves with human affairs Rituals involving these spirits are almost always conducted outdoors 26 29 The second type of spirits are the unbound spirits which have independent existence They appear in animal usually as birds or human like forms have gender differentiation and have personal names They are most similar to the fairies of European folklore note 10 These are the most common types of spirits to become abyan spirit guides of babaylan as they are the most sociable and can take interest in human activities These spirits are usually referred to as engkanto from Spanish encanto in modern Filipino folklore Unlike the bound spirits these spirits can be invited into human households and their rituals can take place both outdoors and indoors 26 A fertility god of the Bontoc people in an ato communal meeting circle The last is a class of malevolent spirits or demons as well as supernatural beings generally collectively known as aswang yawa or mangalos also mangalok mangangalek or magalos among Tagalogs and Visayans There are numerous kinds of aswang with specific abilities behavior or appearance Examples include sigbin wakwak tiyanak and manananggal The first two categories of diwata can also be malevolent what sets the third category apart is that they can not be appealed to with offerings and they are utterly pitiless Most practices associated with them is to ward them off banish them or destroy them They are never addressed nor worshiped in religious rituals 1 2 26 30 31 32 Diwata are rarely spoken about openly for fear of attracting their attention Instead they are referred to with euphemisms like those unlike us Visayan dili ingon nato or various names like banwaanon or taga banwa note 11 that translate literally to dweller of a place 33 34 35 Among Tagalogs non human nature spirits are also euphemistically referred to as lamanglupa dwellers of the bowels of the earth or lamangdagat dwellers of the depths of the sea depending on their domain 36 Diwata exist in both the material world and the spirit world They can be formless or have a material body They can also take over a body through spirit possession Visayan hola hulak tagdug or saob Tagalog sanib an ability essential for the seances in pag anito They are believed to be capable of shapeshifting baliw or baylo becoming invisible or creating visions or illusions anino or landung lit shadow Their powers however are limited to their particular domain A diwata of a forest for instance has no dominion over the sea Most are generally benevolent or capriciously neutral although they can cause misfortunes and illnesses if angered disrespected or mistakenly encountered 2 30 31 32 Other common characteristics of diwata are that they are perceived as an invisible cold presence in contrast to warm human spirits that they leave no footprints unlike human spirits and that they sense the world and eat by means of smelling 26 note 12 Diwata who take human form are said to be pale skinned and could be distinguished from humans by the absence of a philtrum on the upper lip 37 26 Ifugao hogang in the Banaue Rice Terraces guardian spirits carved from tree fern trunks usually placed along pathways and in village outskirts Diwata are often depicted as appearing to unsuspecting people in human or animal form sometimes causing unintentional harm They can also deliberately play tricks on mortals like seducing or abducting beautiful men and women into the spirit world 1 26 Certain places are believed to be owned by diwata or are borders to the spirit world These are normally avoided or only entered with precautions especially during twilight when diwata are believed to cross over from the spirit world into the material world Harm or illness caused by diwata are known as buyag in Visayan and usog in Tagalog 1 26 People who were harmed by interactions with diwata are euphemistically described as having been greeted Visayan gibati Tagalog nabati or played with Visayan gidulaan Tagalog napaglaruan or nakatuwaan by diwata 36 To avoid inadvertently angering a diwata Filipinos perform a customary pasintabi sa nuno respectfully apologizing or asking permission from ancestors for passing note 13 This is done by saying the phrases tao po a human is passing elder tabi po or tabi apo by your permission elder note 14 when passing by a place believed to be inhabited by a diwata 7 36 Diwata are also believed to be able to mate with humans People born with congenital disorders like albinism or syndactyly or display unusual beauty or behavior are commonly believed by local superstition to be the children of diwata who seduced or sometimes raped their mothers 38 39 During the Spanish period diwata were syncretized with elves and fairies in European mythology and folklore and were given names like duende goblin or dwarf encantador or encanto spell caster hechicero sorcerer sirena mermaid or maligno evil spirit 1 36 40 In Islamized ethnic groups of the Philippines these nature spirits are usually called jinn or saitan due to the influence of Islamic mythology 36 41 42 Religious objects and places EditTaotao figures Edit 15th century bulul with a pamahan ceremonial bowl in the Louvre Museum Ancestor spirits were usually represented by carved figures These were known as taotao little human also taotaohan latawo tinatao or tatao note 15 bata bata little child ladaw image or likeness also laraw ladawang lagdong or larawan or likha creation also likhak in most of the Philippines Other names include bulul also bulol or bul ul among the Ifugao tinagtaggu also tinattaggu among the Kankanaey and Tuwali Ifugao note 16 lablabbon among the Itneg 43 manaug among the Lumad and tagno among Bicolanos 1 2 7 30 44 45 Among Tagalogs taotao were also sometimes referred to as lambana altar or sacred place note 17 after the location in which they are usually kept 7 45 Igorot hipag depicting war deities c 1900 Taotao were usually austere roughly carved figures made from wood stone or ivory Some taoatao encountered by the Spanish were made from precious metals or ornamented with gold and jewelry but these were very rare 1 46 Taotao were almost always depicted in the squatting position with the arms crossed over the knees which is reminiscent of the fetal position the everyday conversing posture and the position bodies are arranged during death among Ancient Filipinos Some figures however are depicted standing or doing everyday activities like dancing pounding rice or nursing infants 47 48 A balaua a large spirit house used for community rituals to anito among the Itneg people 1922 22 Most taotao represent an actual deceased person usually carved by the community upon their funeral As such there can be hundreds of taotao in a single village some of them centuries old 48 49 Salako left and palaan right ceremonial altars among the Itneg people 1922 22 In very rare cases diwata can be depicted as taotao in anthropomorphic form as chimeras or legendary creatures or as animals 7 48 These include a special class of figures called hipag among the Igorot which depict war deities as well as kinabigat carved houseposts and hogang carved tree fern posts used as boundary markers and as wards against harm 48 As a rule however diwata are not usually depicted as taotao or by any man made representations 2 Taotao were not intrinsically sacred They were representations of the spirits not the actual spirits themselves They only became sacred during their use in a pag anito ritual Without the spirit they represent they are treated as mundane carved pieces of wood or sculpted stone The anonymous author of the 1572 Relacion de la conquista de la isla de Luzon describes pag anito rituals of the Tagalog people as such 50 When any chief is ill he invites his kindred and orders a great meal to be prepared consisting of fish meat and wine When the guests are all assembled and the feast set forth in a few plates on the ground inside the house they seat themselves also on the ground to eat In the midst of the feast called manganito or baylan in their tongue they put the idol called Batala and certain aged women who are considered as priestesses and some aged Indians neither more nor less They offer the idol some of the food which they are eating and call upon him in their tongue praying to him for the health of the sick man for whom the feast is held The natives of these islands have no altars nor temples whatsoever This manganito or drunken revel to give it a better name usually lasts seven or eight days and when it is finished they take the idols and put them in the corners of the house and keep them there without showing them any reverence Regardless very old taotao handed down through generations are prized as family heirlooms Among the Igorot pieces of taotao may also be chipped off and boiled into a medicinal tea 48 Taotao were commonly kept in corners or small shelves inside houses or granaries Spanish missionaries recorded that taotao were present in every Filipino household no matter how poor 1 2 44 45 When Spanish missionaries arrived in the Philippines the word anito came to be associated with these physical representations of spirits that featured prominently in pag anito rituals During the American rule of the Philippines 1898 1946 the meaning of the Spanish word idolo a thing worshiped was further conflated with the English word idol Thus in the modern Filipino language anito has come to refer almost exclusively to the carved taotao figures instead of the actual spirits themselves 1 51 Shrines altars and sacred areas Edit Main article Dambana Diwata are believed to inhabit this 400 year old balete tree in Lazi Siquijor with a natural spring between its roots Ancient Filipinos and Filipinos who continue to adhere to the indigenous Philippine folk religions generally do not have so called temples of worship under the context known to foreign cultures 1 52 53 However they do have sacred shrines which are also called as spirit houses 1 They can range in size from small roofed platforms to structures similar to a small house but with no walls to shrines that look similar to pagodas especially in the south where early mosques were also modeled in the same way 54 These shrines were known in various indigenous terms which depend on the ethnic group association note 18 They can also be used as places to store taotao and caskets of ancestors Among Bicolanos taotao were also kept inside sacred caves called moog 1 55 56 57 During certain ceremonies anito are venerated through temporary altars near sacred places These were called latangan or lantayan in Visayan and dambana or lambana in Tagalog note 19 These bamboo or rattan altars are identical in basic construction throughout most of the Philippines They were either small roof less platforms or standing poles split at the tip similar to a tiki torch They held halved coconut shells metal plates or martaban jars as receptacles for offerings Taotao may sometimes also be placed on these platforms 1 30 Other types of sacred places or objects of worship of diwata include the material manifestation of their realms The most widely venerated were balete trees also called nonok nunuk nonoc etc and anthills or termite mounds punso Other examples include mountains waterfalls tree groves reefs and caves 1 2 7 58 59 Spirit animals Edit Bakunawa pommel from a Visayan tenegre sword Some animals like crocodiles snakes monitor lizards tokay geckos and various birds were also venerated as servants or manifestations of diwata or as powerful spirits themselves These include legendary creatures like the dragon or serpent Bakunawa the giant bird Minokawa of the Bagobo and the colorful Sarimanok of the Maranao 1 2 7 58 37 Omen birds were particularly important The most common omen birds were doves with green or blue iridescent feathers called limokon usually the common emerald dove imperial pigeons or brown doves note 20 Other omen birds include fairy bluebirds tigmamanukan balan tikis balatiti or bathala among Tagalogs and batala among Kapampangans kingfishers salaksak among the Ilocano Igorot and Sambal and flowerpeckers pitpit ichaw ido or labeg among the Igorot 7 30 60 Rituals and shamans EditMain article Philippine shamans A 1922 photograph of an Itneg shaman making an offering to an apdel a guardian anito of her village Apdel are believed to reside in the water worn stones known as pinaing 22 Anitism was not a religion about worship Aside from good ancestor spirits and the few benevolent diwata most anito were feared not venerated To an ordinary person diwata were regarded as dangerous beings to be avoided or appeased When interaction was necessary they performed a ritual known as pag anito also mag anito or anitohan These are usually directed at ancestor spirits When the pag anito ceremony is for a diwata the ritual is known as pagdiwata also magdiwata or diwatahan 1 2 Minor pag anito rituals like praying for better weather or banishing minor ill luck can be performed by any householder However major pag anito rituals required the services of the community shaman Visayan babaylan or baylan Tagalog katalonan or manganito 1 note 21 These shamans were believed to have been chosen by a specific diwata who become their spirit guides note 22 This was presumed to happen after they pass the initiation rites of an older shaman they were apprenticed to usually a relative In some cases some shamans acquire their status after they recover from a serious illness or a bout of insanity 1 25 34 26 42 61 In most Filipino ethnic groups shamans were almost always female The few males who gain shaman status were usually asog or bayok note 23 trans women 1 30 26 61 Itneg people launching spirit boats taltalabong bearing offerings for anito 1922 Major pag anito rituals are centered around a seance Because of their special relationship with their companion spirits shamans can act as mediums for other anito allowing spirits to temporarily possess their bodies This possession happens after the shaman goes into a trance like state This allows the spirit to communicate verbally with the participants as well as physically act out events in the spirit world At the moment of possession shamans display a change in behavior and voice They can sometimes go into seizures and become violent enough that restraints are required The ritual ends when the spirit leaves and the shaman is awakened 1 Spirits were invited into the ritual through offerings and sacrifices during and after the ceremonies These depended on what spirit was being summoned but offerings are usually a small portion of the harvests cooked food wine gold ornaments and betel nut Blood from an animal was also usually part of the offerings poured directly on the taotao or in a bowl before them These commonly come from chickens or pigs but can also be from carabaos or dogs 1 2 Salt and spices are usually avoided as they are believed to be distasteful to anito 26 There is no record of human sacrifices being offered to anito during the Spanish period of the Philippines 1 44 37 except among the Bagobo people in southern Mindanao where it was prevalent until the early 20th century 62 63 note 24 Another common pag anito ritual throughout most of the Philippine ethnic groups involves the use of spirit boats These were usually miniature boats laden with offerings set adrift from riverbanks and shorelines 2 6 22 Pag anito can be conducted on its own or in conjunction with other rituals and celebrations They can be personal or family rituals or seasonal community events They can vary considerably between different ethnic groups The most common pag anito were entreaties for bountiful harvests cures for illnesses victory in battle prayers for the dead or blessings 1 30 Different ethnic groups had different diwata pantheons and rituals associated with them though sometimes deities are shared in neighboring ethnic groups Moreover different communities also each have their own local patron diwata 2 note 25 Historical accounts EditHistorical accounts of anito in Spanish records include the following A figurine of Lumawig a cultural hero and the supreme being in the pantheon of the Bontoc people Most of the Indians are heathens They believe in their ancestors and when about to embark upon some enterprise commend themselves to these asking them for aid Francisco de Sande Relacion de las Yslas Filipinas 1576 Which treats of the rites and ceremonies observed by the Moros in the vicinity of Manilla and of their social conditions The god Batala According to the religion formerly observed by these Moros they worshiped a deity called among them Batala which properly means God They said that they adored this Batala because he was the Lord of all and had created human beings and villages They said that this Batala had many agents under him whom he sent to this world to produce in behalf of men what is yielded here These beings were called anitos and each anito had a special office Some of them were for the fields and some for those who journey by sea some for those who went to war and some for diseases Each anito was therefore named for his office there was for instance the anito of the fields and the anito of the rain To these anitos the people offered sacrifices when they desired anything to each one according to his office The mode of sacrifice was like that of the Pintados They summoned a catalonan which is the same as the vaylan among the Pintados that is a priest He offered the sacrifice requesting from the anito whatever the people desired him to ask and heaping up great quantities of rice meat and fish His invocations lasted until the demon entered his body when the catalonan fell into a swoon foaming at the mouth The Indians sang drank and feasted until the catalonan came to himself and told them the answer that the anito had given to him If the sacrifice was in behalf of a sick person they offered many golden chains and ornaments saying that they were paying a ransom for the sick person s health This invocation of the anito continued as long as the sickness lasted When the natives were asked why the sacrifices were offered to the anito and not to the Batala they answered that the Batala was a great lord and no one could speak to him He lived in the sky but the anito who was of such a nature that he came down here to talk with men was to the Batala as a minister and interceded for them In some places and especially in the mountain districts when the father mother or other relative dies the people unite in making a small wooden idol and preserve it Accordingly there is a house which contains one hundred or two hundred of these idols These images also are called anitos for they say that when people die they go to serve the Batala Therefore they make sacrifices to these anitos offering them food wine and gold ornaments and request them to be intercessors for them before the Batala whom they regard as God Miguel de Loarca Relacion de las Yslas Filipinas 1582 Small ornate pottery houses used as offerings for rice anito among the Itneg people They held the cayman in the utmost veneration and whenever they made any statement about it when they descried it in the water they called it Nono which means grandfather They softly and tenderly besought it not to harm them and to this end offered it a part of what they carried in their boats casting the offering into the water There was no old tree to which they did not attribute divinity and it was a sacrilege to cut such a tree for any purpose What more did they adore the very stones cliffs and reefs and the headlands of the shores of the sea or the rivers and they made some offering when they passed by these going to the stone or rock and placing the offering upon it I saw many times in the river of Manila a rock which for many years was an idol of that wretched people While sailing along the island of Panai I beheld on the promontory called Nasso near Potol plates and other pieces of earthenware laid upon a rock the offering of voyagers In the island of Mindanao between La Canela and the river i e Rio Grande a great promontory projects from a rugged and steep coast always at these points there is a heavy sea making it both difficult and dangerous to double them When passing by this headland the natives as it was so steep offered their arrows discharging them with such force that they penetrated the rock itself This they did as a sacrifice that a safe passage might be accorded them Fr Pedro Chirino Relacion de las Islas Filipinas 1604 They also adored private idols which each one inherited from his ancestors The Visayans called them divata and the Tagalogs anito Of those idols some had jurisdiction over the mountains and open country and permission was asked from them to go thither Others had jurisdiction over the sowed fields and the fields were commended to them so that they might prove fruitful and besides the sacrifices they placed articles of food in the fields for the anitos to eat in order to place them under greater obligations There was an anito of the sea to whom they commended their fisheries and navigations an anito of the house whose favor they implored whenever an infant was born and when it was suckled and the breast offered to it They placed their ancestors the invocation of whom was the first thing in all their work and dangers among these anitos In memory of their ancestors they kept certain very small and very badly made idols of stone wood gold or ivory called licha or laravan Among their gods they reckoned also all those who perished by the sword or who were devoured by crocodiles as well as those killed by lightning They thought that the souls of such immediately ascended to the blest abode by means of the rainbow called by them balangao Generally whoever could succeed in it attributed divinity to his aged father at his death The aged themselves died in that presumptuous delusion and during their sickness and at their death guided all their actions with what they imagined a divine gravity and manner Consequently they chose as the place for their grave some assigned spot like one old man who lived on the seacoast between Dulac and Abuyog which is in the island of Leyte He ordered himself placed there in his coffin as was done in a house standing alone and distant from the settlement in order that he might be recognized as a god of navigators who were to commend themselves to him Another had himself buried in certain lands in the mountains of Antipolo and through reverence to him no one dared to cultivate those lands for they feared that he who should do so would die until an evangelical minister removed that fear from them and now they cultivate them without harm or fear Fr Francisco Colin Labor Evangelica 1663 In popular culture Edit A performer depicting a shaman in the 2015 Babaylan Festival of Bago Negros Occidental Festivals Edit The Babaylan Festival of Bago Negros Occidental with the accompanying Diwata sang Bago beauty pageant is a street dancing festival celebrating the Visayan traditions of anito and shamans 64 The Kamarikutan Pagdiwata Arts Festival of Puerto Princesa is inspired by the preserved ritual of pagdiwata among the Tagbanwa people of Palawan 65 Film and television Edit Amaya a historical television series about the precolonial Philippines It depicts diwata as goddesses 66 Diwata 1987 a movie directed by Tata Esteban and written by Rei Nicandro showed the mythical life of the deities Actress Olga Miranda played the main role together with the other cast Lala Montelibano Dick Israel and George Estregan 67 Encantadia and Mulawin two television series with film adaptations in a shared universe depicts diwatas as a race of supernatural being living in Encantadia a dimension beyond the human world 68 Faraway 2014 an independent film focuses on a woman and her quest to find the Diwata tribe 69 Indio a television series with a protagonist that is the son of a mortal man and a diwata woman 70 Okay Ka Fairy Ko a television fantasy situational comedy series with film adaptations that revolves around a mortal man married to a diwata 71 Games Edit Anito Defend a Land Enraged is a role playing game released in 2003 by Anino Entertainment It was the first video game to be produced and designed entirely by a team of Filipino game developers and is credited for helping spawn the birth of the game development industry in the Philippines One of the abilities of the character Titania added on August 19 2016 in Warframe is a sword known as diwata 72 73 Project Tadhana a tabletop role playing game released in 2017 features Diwata as one of its playable races or lahi together with Engkanto Tikbalang Aswang and Tao 74 Makia Tales of the Forest a visual novel released in 2020 explores the story ofLiterature Edit One of the main characters from the play Speech amp Debate written by Stephen Karam is a woman with Filipino ancestry named Diwata Marvel Comics has introduced the Diwatas as a pantheon of gods similar to the Asgardians and Olympians These Diwatas include Aman Sinaya Amihan Anitun Apo Laki Aswang Bathala Mayari and Tala 75 Music Edit Diwata a song released by rapper Abra featuring Parokya Ni Edgar vocalist Chito Miranda from his self titled debut album 76 Science Edit Diwata 1 and Diwata 2 the first Philippine microsatellites launched in 2016 and 2018 respectively were named after diwata 77 78 Notes Edit Among most Filipino ethnic groups a person is believed to be composed of at least two souls the breath of life will or awareness ginhawa or hininga which stays with the living body and the astral soul kalag or kaluluwa which can travel to the spirit world The concept of soul dualism is sometimes referred to as twin souls or double souls and is a common belief in Austronesian cultures and other shamanistic cultures Other names for the life soul include nyawa or nyawalihan Tausug niyawa Maranao niyawa lihan Jama Mapun lennawa Batad Ifugao and nawa T boli Other names for the astral soul include kaluha dungan Visayan kalag Bicol kaduwa Isneg ab abiik Kankanaey karurua Ilocano ikaruruwa Ibanag karaduwa Mangyan kiyaraluwa Tagbanwa makatu Bukidnon and kadengan dengan or gimokud Manobo Scott 1994 Tan 2008 Mercado 1991 Talavera 2014 Most of the terms for the astral soul literally translate to twin or double from PAN duSa two Yu 2000 Blust 2010 Compare with the Greek underworld After Spanish contact various spirit worlds were syncretized into the Christian concept of heaven and hell in dictionaries and Bible translations They struggled in determining which terminology to use because of the absence of the heaven and hell dichotomy in the Filipino concept of the spirit world Spanish missionaries and European authors usually equated heaven with maca and calualhatian and hell with casan also casanaan casauaan or catanaan sometimes misread as kasamaan However in the Boxer Codex maca and casan were synonyms for the Visayan and Tagalog underworlds The 1754 version of Vocabulario de la lengua tagala used casanaan for both heaven and hell with casanaan nang hirap as hell and casanaan nang tova as heaven Calualhatian modern spelling kaluwalhatian was simply a region in the Tagalog spirit world that souls can enter by crossing a torrential river on a narrow plank Rath 2013 Also mua mamaw mamanhig pamahoy mamamahoy McCoy 1982 later multo from Spanish muerto dead person Tan 2008 e g Nuno sa punso a dwarf like anito that lives in anthills and Dayang Masalanta the Tagalog diwata of Mount Makiling e g Mayari the Tagalog goddess of the moon Barangaw the Visayan god of rainbows and Makapatag the Visayan god of vengeance e g Bathala the chief deity of the Tagalogs Magbabaya the supreme creator of the Lumad people and Pilandok trickster spirit of the Maranao Tagalogs differentiated between Diwata the universal supreme being and life creator Bathala the supreme deity exclusive to them Hislop 1971 The most widespread names for these spirits in various Philippine ethnic groups are diwata or anito Other names of diwata or specific types of diwata include fieu awas kahoynon B laan mahomanay tahamaling Bagobo panya en Batak tawong lipod magindara Bikol magtitima tawo sa talonan Bukidnon aled Gaddang annani Ibanag bakayauwan monduntug palasekan pili pinading Ifugao mangmangkit katataoan katawtaw an kibaan litao Ilocano apdel sasailo Itneg tumungaw Kankana ey laman labuad manglilili Kapampangan kama kama kamakaon Karay a tuglinsau tagbusau mandangum Mandaya andagaw Mangyan tawagenen manaog Manobo karibang Maranao kaybaan Pangasinan kamanan daplak Sambal dayamdam piritay Tagalog tawo sa talonan Tagbanwa lewenri bawa katao kataw tumawo tamawo tawong lupa Visayan and guban on digkusanon dalaketnon Waray With strong parallels to human like beings like elves and aos si as well as diminutive human like beings like brownies and pixies Buenconsejo 2002 Not to be confused with the Tagbanwa and Mamanwa ethnic groups all derived from PAN banua home or homeland In modern Filipino languages banwa has been supplanted by Spanish lugar thus taglugar is used in place of tagabanwa Hislop 1971 Tan 2008 Diwata can cause harm by eating smelling the vital force or breath ginhawa of human beings They are also said to be annoyed by perfume as well as salt and spices Buenconsejo 2002 From sintabi to respectfully ask permission or to give due respect cf excuse me In Ilocano the traditional phrase is bari bari apo with the same meaning Tan 2008 From Proto Malayo Polynesian tau ultimately from Proto Austronesian Cau human or person compare with Toraja tau tau statues Tinagtaggu is a cognate of taotao in the Tuwali language from tagu human The term lambana was later syncretized with fairies commonly depicted as tiny winged beings in modern illustrations even though no similarly winged beings existed in native Filipino folklore Potet 2017 Conversely the alternate term dambana has come to mean shrine or chapel in modern Tagalog Known as magdantang in Visayan and ulango or simbahan in Tagalog Among the Itneg shrines are known tangpap pangkew or alalot for various small roofed altars and balaua or kalangan for larger structures In Mindanao shrines are known among the Subanen as maligai among the Teduray as tenin only entered by shamans and among the Bagobo as buis for those built near roads and villages and parabunnian for those built near rice fields Kroeber 1918 Also saloko or palaan Itneg sakolong Bontoc salagnat Bicolano sirayangsang Tagbanwa ranga Teduray and tambara tigyama or balekat Bagobo Limokon in most of Visayas and among the Lumad also almugan Blaan alimukun Cebuano alimukeng Ilocano limoken Maranao muhen T boli lemuguen Teduray and limukun Subanen Other terms include balyana paraanito or paradiwata Bicolano balian balyan or mabalian Lumad balian or tanguilin Subanen bawalyan or babaylan Tagbanwa beljan Palaw an baglan mangoodan or manilao Ilocano bahasa Yakan dukun kalamat or papagan Sama Bajau mandadawak dawak insupak mon lapu tumunoh alpogan or mumbaki Igorot anitu Aeta and ma aram Karay a Terms for spirit guides of shamans include bantay abyan Visayan alagad gabay Tagalog abyan umli sugujen or inajew Lumad saro Bicolano and jinn Sama Bajau Asog is the term used for transvestite male shamans in most of the Visayas and in the Bicol Region In the rest of Luzon they are known as bayok bayoc bayog or bayogin bayoguin or bayoquin Notably among the Sambal the highest ranking shaman was a bayok They are also known as labia among the Subanen though they were not necessarily shamans Kroeber 1918 There are also similar trans women shamans among the Dayak people of Borneo Baldick 2013 Also see Bakla Some anthropologists consider the headhunting traditions of the Igorot as a form of human sacrifice In the funeral rites for celebrated warriors or nobles among Visayans and Tagalogs favorite slaves may also sometimes be executed and buried hogot to accompany the deceased into the spirit world Scott 1994 Benedict 1916 In modern Christianized Filipinos this practice was transferred unto community patron saints and religious icons which are often celebrated and worshiped in a very similar way Hislop 1971 cf Ati Atihan Obando Fertility RitesSee also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anito Philippine mythology Atua the Polynesian derivative belief of Anito Gaba Genius loci Daemon classical mythology Hantu Hyang Kaharingan Kami Kodama Kupua Menehune Moai Nuku mai tore Patupaiarehe Soul dualism Taotao Mona Toraja Tiki Yōkai YorishiroReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad William Henry Scott 1994 Barangay Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society Quezon City Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 9715501354 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Stephen K Hislop 1971 Anitism a survey of religious beliefs native to the Philippines PDF Asian Studies 9 2 144 156 Archived from the original PDF on July 7 2018 Retrieved May 10 2018 Guillermo Artemio R 2012 Historical Dictionary of the Philippines Scarecrow Press p 140 ISBN 9780810872462 Demetrio Francisco R Cordero Fernando Gilda Nakpil Zialcita Roberto B Feleo Fernando 1991 The Soul Book Introduction to Philippine Pagan Religion GCF Books Quezon City ASIN B007FR4S8G Antonio Sanchez de la Rosa 1895 Diccionario Hispano Bisaya para las provincias de Samar y Leyte Volumes 1 2 Tipo Litografia de Chofre y Comp p 414 a b c Virgil Mayor Apostol 2010 Way of the Ancient Healer Sacred Teachings from the Philippine Ancestral Traditions North Atlantic Books ISBN 9781583945971 a b c d e f g h i Jean Paul G Potet 2017 Ancient Beliefs and Customs of the Tagalogs Lulu Press Inc p 235 ISBN 9780244348731 Julian Baldick ed 2013 Ancient Religions of the Austronesian World From Australasia to Taiwan I B Tauris p 3 ISBN 9780857733573 Leberecht Funk 2014 Entanglements between Tao People and Anito on Lanyu Island Taiwan In Y Musharbash amp G H Presterudstuen ed Monster Anthropology in Australasia and Beyond Palgrave Macmillan pp 143 159 doi 10 1057 9781137448651 9 ISBN 9781137448651 a b Maria Christine N Halili 2004 Philippine History Rex Bookstore Inc pp 58 59 ISBN 9789712339349 a b How to Travel the Underworld of Philippine Mythology The Aswang Project Retrieved May 11 2018 The Soul According to the Ethnolinguistic Groups of the Philippines The Aswang Project Retrieved May 11 2018 Leonardo N Mercado 1991 Soul and Spirit in Filipino Thought Philippine Studies 39 3 287 302 JSTOR 42633258 Jose Vidamor B Yu 2000 Inculturation of Filipino Chinese Culture Mentality Interreligious and Intercultural Investigations Vol 3 Editrice Pontifica Universita Gregoriana pp 148 149 ISBN 9788876528484 Robert Blust amp Stephen Trussel Austronesian Comparative Dictionary du Austronesian Comparative Dictionary Retrieved July 7 2018 Talavera Maria Jezia 2014 Tears of the Soul A Reconstruction of Proto Philippine forms on death and afterlife University of the Philippines Imke Rath 2013 Depicting Netherworlds or the Treatment of the Afterlife in a Colonial Contact Zone The Paete Case In Astrid Windus amp Eberhard Crailsheim ed Image Object Performance Mediality and Communication in Cultural Contact Zones of Colonial Latin America and the Philippines Waxmann Verlag ISBN 9783830979296 Salvador Amores Analyn June 2011 Batok Traditional Tattoos in Diaspora The Reinvention of a Globally Mediated Kalinga Identity South East Asia Research 19 2 293 318 doi 10 5367 sear 2011 0045 S2CID 146925862 Ragragio Andrea Malaya M Paluga Myfel D August 22 2019 An Ethnography of Pantaron Manobo Tattooing Pangotoeb Towards a Heuristic Schema in Understanding Manobo Indigenous Tattoos Southeast Asian Studies 8 2 259 294 doi 10 20495 seas 8 2 259 Alvina C S 2001 Colors and patterns of dreams In Oshima Neal M Paterno Maria Elena eds Dreamweavers Makati City Philippines Bookmark pp 46 58 ISBN 9715694071 The Preconquest Filipino Tattoos Datu Press January 10 2018 Retrieved August 10 2021 a b c d e Fay Cooper Cole amp Albert Gale 1922 The Tinguian Social Religious and Economic life of a Philippine tribe Field Museum of Natural History Anthropological Series 14 2 235 493 Mindanao Customs and Beliefs SEAsite Northern Illinois University Retrieved May 11 2018 Rodney C Jubilado Hanafi Hussin amp Maria Khristina Manueli 2011 The Sama Bajaus of Sulu Sulawesi Seas perspectives from linguistics and culture Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 15 1 83 95 a b Fenella Cannell 1999 Power and Intimacy in the Christian Philippines Cambridge Studies in Social and Cultural Anthropology Volume 109 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521646222 a b c d e f g h i j k Jose S Buenconsejo 2013 Jennifer C Post ed Songs and Gifts at the Frontier Current Research in Ethnomusicology Outstanding Dissertations Volume 4 Routledge pp 98 99 ISBN 9781136719806 Robert B Fox 2013 Pagdiwata Ritual PDF In Jesus T Peralta ed Pinagmulan Enumeration from the Philippine Inventory of Intangible Cultural Heritage National Commission for Culture and the Arts NCCA Republic of the Philippines amp International Information and Networking Centre for Intangible Cultural Heritage in the Asia Pacific Region under the auspices of UNESCO pp 167 171 Isabelo de los Reyes y Florentino 1909 La Religion Antigua de los Filipinos El Renacimiento Dario Novellino 2003 Contrasting Landscapes Conflicting Ontologies Assessing Environmental Conservation on Palawan Island The Philippines In David G Anderson amp Eeva Berglund ed Ethnographies of Conservation Environmentalism and the Distribution of Privilege Berghahn Books pp 171 188 ISBN 9780857456748 a b c d e f g A L Kroeber 1918 The History of Philippine Civilization as Reflected in Religious Nomenclature Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History XXI Part II 35 37 a b Paul A Rodell 2002 Culture and Customs of the Philippines Culture and Customs of Asia Greenwood Publishing Group pp 30 32 ISBN 9780313304156 a b A Compendium of Creatures amp Mythical Beings from Philippine Folklore amp Mythology The Aswang Project Retrieved May 11 2018 Dili ingon nato Binisaya com Retrieved May 12 2018 a b Augusto Jose B Gatmaytan 2013 Indigenous Autonomy Amid Counter Insurgency Cultural Citizenship in a Philippine Frontier PDF PhD Department of Anthropology London School of Economics and Political Science Alex G Paman 2010 Filipino Ghost Stories Spine Tingling Tales of Supernatural Encounters and Hauntings Tuttle Publishing ISBN 9781462900916 a b c d e Michael L Tan 2008 Revisiting Usog Pasma Kulam University of the Philippines Press ISBN 9789715425704 a b c Alfred W McCoy 1982 Baylan animist religion and Philippine peasant ideology Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 10 3 141 194 JSTOR 29791761 Magkakapatid na albino anak ng engkanto Patrol ph ABS CBN News June 19 2017 Retrieved November 23 2018 Santisteban Bong June 13 2018 What it s like to live with albinism Rappler Retrieved November 23 2018 Cynthia A Strong amp David K Strong 2006 Dwarves Elves and Vampires An Exploration of Syncretism in Metro Manila In Gailyn Van Rheenen ed Contextualization and Syncretism Navigating Cultural Currents Evangelical Missiological Society No 13 William Carey Library ISBN 9780878083879 Clifford Sather 2006 Sea Nomads and Rainforest Hunter Gatherers Foraging Adaptations in the Indo Malaysian Archipelago The Sama Bajau In Peter Bellwood James J Fox Darrell Tryon eds The Austronesians Historical and Comparative Perspectives ANU E Press pp 257 264 ISBN 9781920942854 a b Hanafi Hussin 2010 Balancing the Spiritual and Physical Worlds Memory Responsibility and Survival in the Rituals of the Sama Dilaut Bajau laut in Sitangkai Tawi Tawi Southern Philippines and Semporna Sabah Malaysia PDF In Birgit Abels Morag Josephine Grant Andreas Waczkat eds Oceans of Sound Sama Dilaut Performing Arts Gottinger Studien zur Musikwissenschaft Volume 3 Villanueva Cristina B 2016 Classification and Indexing of Philippine Indigenous Materials with Emphasis on the Cordillera PDF University of the Philippines Baguio a b c Gregorio F Zaide 1975 Philippine Political and Cultural History Philippine Political and Cultural History Vol 1 Philippine Education Company p 68 a b c Ferdinand Blumentritt 1894 Alphabetisches Verzeichnis der bei den philippinischen Eingeborenen ublichen Eigennamen welche auf Religion Opfer und priesterliche Titel und Amtsverrichtungen sich beziehen Fortsetzung Wiener Zeitschrift fur die Kunde des Morgenlandes Vol 8 Orientalisches Institut Universitat Wien p 147 Teodoro A Agoncillo 1974 Introduction to Filipino History Radiant Star Pub p 21 Aurora Roxas Lim 1973 Art in Ifugao Society PDF Asian Studies 11 2 47 74 a b c d e Gallery of Exhibits Museum of Cordilleran Sculpture Retrieved May 11 2018 Gregorio F Zaide 2017 Filipinos Before the Spanish Conquest Possessed a Well Ordered and Well Thought Out Religion In Tanya Storch ed Religions and Missionaries around the Pacific 1500 1900 The Pacific World Lands Peoples and History of the Pacific 1500 1900 Volume 17 Routledge ISBN 9781351904780 Blair Emma Helen Robertson James Alexander eds 1903 Relation of the Conquest of the Island of Luzon The Philippine Islands 1493 1898 Vol 3 Ohio Cleveland Arthur H Clark Company p 145 Frederic H Sawyer 1900 The Inhabitants of the Philippines Charles Scribner s Sons Stephen K Hislop 1971 Anitism a survey of religious beliefs native to the Philippines PDF Asian Studies 9 2 144 156 Ferdinand Blumentritt 1894 Alphabetisches Verzeichnis der bei den philippinischen Eingeborenen ublichen Eigennamen welche auf Religion Opfer und priesterliche Titel und Amtsverrichtungen sich beziehen Fortsetzung Wiener Zeitschrift fur die Kunde des Morgenlandes 8 Orientalisches Institut Universitat Wien p 147 Madale N T 2003 In Focus A Look at Philippine Mosques National Commission for Culture and the Arts A L Kroeber 1918 The History of Philippine Civilization as Reflected in Religious Nomenclature Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History XXI Part II 35 37 Cole Fay Cooper Gale Albert 1922 The Tinguian Social Religious and Economic life of a Philippine tribe Field Museum of Natural History Anthropological Series 14 2 235 493 Gregorio F Zaide 2017 Filipinos Before the Spanish Conquest Possessed a Well Ordered and Well Thought Out Religion In Tanya Storch ed Religions and Missionaries around the Pacific 1500 1900 The Pacific World Lands Peoples and History of the Pacific 1500 1900 Volume 17 Routledge ISBN 9781351904780 a b Teodoro A Agoncillo amp Oscar M Alfonso 1969 History of the Filipino People Malaya Books p 42 Francisco R Demetrio 1973 Philippine Shamanism and Southeast Asian Parallels PDF Asian Studies 11 2 128 154 Gregory Forth 2012 What s in a Bird s Name Relationships among Ethno ornithological Terms in Nage and Other Malayo Polynesian Languages In Sonia Tidemann amp Andrew Gosler ed Ethno ornithology Birds Indigenous Peoples Culture and Society Earthscan ISBN 9781849774758 a b 6 Guidelines for Becoming a Filipino Shaman The Aswang Project Retrieved May 12 2018 Joachim Schliesinger 2017 Traditional Human Sacrifices in Southeast Asia and Beyond White Elephant Press p 75 ISBN 9781946765710 Laura Watson Benedict 1916 A Study of Bagobo Ceremonial Magic and Myth Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 25 1 1 308 doi 10 1111 j 1749 6632 1916 tb55170 x hdl 2027 miun afy4779 0001 001 S2CID 222087174 Belle Piccio January 30 2014 Babaylan Festival of Bago City ChoosePhilippines Retrieved May 21 2018 Maricar Cinco December 3 2009 Palawan art gets closer to community Philippine Daily Inquirer 24 358 Amaya GMA Entertainment Retrieved February 9 2020 Diwata 1987 IMDb Retrieved February 9 2020 I Juander Naniniwala pa ba sa diwata si Juan GMA News July 15 2013 Faraway 2014 IMDb Retrieved February 9 2020 Bong proud to be called Indio Manila Standard January 27 2013 Retrieved February 9 2020 Okay ka fairy ko IMDb Retrieved February 9 2020 Andrivet Sebastien Titania class warframe Writeups org Retrieved February 9 2020 Woodyatt Danielle Langton Ami Early launch of the Kuva lich plus Grendel warframe lays foundation for Empyrean in Waframe s The Old Blood update Gamasutra Retrieved February 9 2020 Logarta Michael November 8 2017 Tadhana is a Filipino tabletop RPG that beautifully encapsulates local myths GMA Network Retrieved February 9 2020 Anthony Flamini Greg Pak Fred Van Lente amp Paul Cornell w Kevin Sharpe p Kevin Sharpe i Thor amp Hercules Encyclopaedia Mythologica 1 July 2009 Marvel Comics MYXclusive ABRA Talks About His Hit Music Video Diwata MYX YOUR CHOICE YOUR MUSIC Myxph com Retrieved February 22 2015 The Philippines 50 kg class microsatellite DIWATA 1 has been received DIWATA 1 will be released from Kibo this spring Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency February 3 2016 Retrieved November 7 2020 DIWATA 2 Ready to Launch into Space Philippine Council for Industry Energy and Emerging Technology Research and Development DOST PCIEERD October 25 2018 Retrieved November 7 2020 External links EditPagdiwata Ritual of the Tagbanwa in the ICH Digital Archives ICHCAP UNESCO Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anito amp oldid 1118516103, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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