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Iloilo City

Iloilo City, officially the City of Iloilo (Hiligaynon: Siyudad/Dakbanwa sang Iloilo; Filipino: Lungsod ng Iloilo), is a 1st class highly urbanized city in the Western Visayas region of the Philippines on the island of Panay. It is the capital city of the province of Iloilo, where it is geographically situated and grouped under the Philippine Statistics Authority, but remains politically independent in terms of government and administration. In addition, it is the center of the Iloilo–Guimaras Metropolitan Area, as well as the regional center and primate city of the Western Visayas region. According to the 2020 census, Iloilo City has a population of 457,626 people. [6] For the metropolitan area, the total population is 1,007,945 people.[8]

Iloilo City
City of Iloilo
Nickname(s): 

Most Loyal and Noble City,
Queen City of the South,
City of Love, and others
Motto(s): 
La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad de Iloílo
(The Most Loyal and Noble City of Iloilo)[1]
Map of Western Visayas with Iloilo City highlighted
OpenStreetMap
Iloilo City
Location within the Philippines
Coordinates: 10°43′N 122°34′E / 10.72°N 122.57°E / 10.72; 122.57Coordinates: 10°43′N 122°34′E / 10.72°N 122.57°E / 10.72; 122.57
CountryPhilippines
RegionWestern Visayas
ProvinceIloilo (geographically only)
District Lone district
Founded1566 (Spanish settlement)
CityhoodOctober 5, 1889
ReincorporatedJuly 16, 1937
Highly urbanized cityDecember 22, 1979
Barangays180 (see Barangays and districts)
City geographical districts
Government
[2]
 • TypeSangguniang Panlungsod
 • MayorJerry P. Treñas (NUP)
 • Vice MayorJeffrey P. Ganzon (NUP)
 • City RepresentativeJulienne L. Baronda (NUP)
 • City Council
Members
 • Electorate330,470 voters (2022)
Area
 • City78.34 km2 (30.25 sq mi)
 • Urban
91 km2 (35 sq mi)
 • Metro
1,105.53 km2 (426.85 sq mi)
Elevation
21 m (69 ft)
Highest elevation
175 m (574 ft)
Lowest elevation
−1 m (−3 ft)
Population
 (2020 census) [6]
 • City457,626
 • Density5,800/km2 (15,000/sq mi)
 • Urban
574,000[4]
 • Metro
1,007,945
 • Metro density910/km2 (2,400/sq mi)
 • Households
104,313[5]
Demonym(s)Ilonggo (masculine)
Ilongga (feminine)
Economy
 • Income class1st city income class
 • Poverty incidence3.48% (2018)[7]
 • Revenue₱3,436,836,060.20 (2020)
 • Assets₱9,408,121,924.49 (2020)
 • Expenditure₱2,278,854,146.17 (2020)
 • Liabilities₱2,082,494,199.77 (2020)
Service provider
 • ElectricityMonte Oro Resource Electric and Power Corporation (MORE)
 • WaterMetro Pacific Iloilo Water (MPIW)
Time zoneUTC+8 (PST)
ZIP code
5000
PSGC
063022000
IDD:area code+63 (0)33
Native languagesHiligaynon/Ilonggo
Catholic dioceseArchdiocese of Jaro
Patron saintNuestra Señora de la Candelaria (Our Lady of the Candles) – Official Roman Catholic Patron of Western Visayas and Romblon.
Websitewww.iloilocity.gov.ph

Iloilo City is a conglomeration of former towns, which are now the geographical or administrative districts consisting of: Villa de Arevalo, Iloilo City Proper, Jaro (an independent city before), La Paz, Mandurriao, and Molo. The district of Lapuz, a former part of La Paz, was declared a separate district in 2008.[9]

Iloilo was the second Spanish colonial center after Cebu in the Philippine Islands. It was founded in 1566 when the Spanish established a colony area between the towns of Ogtong (present-day Oton) and La Villa Rica de Arevalo (present-day city district). It was one of the royal Spanish cities in the Philippines in the Spanish East Indies. The honorific royal title, "La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad" which translates to The Most Loyal and Noble City, was given by the Queen Regent of Spain, Maria Christina, for the city's loyalty to the Spanish crown during the Philippine Revolution, the second city to have such a byname in the country after the City of Manila. At the turn of the 20th century, Iloilo was second next to Manila in terms of economic importance in the country.[10][11] Before the Treaty of Paris ceded the Philippines to the United States in 1898, Iloilo served as the Spanish Empire's last capital in Asia and the Pacific.[12] Iloilo was also the capital of the Federal State of the Visayas, a short-lived state in the central Philippines patterned after the United States federalism and the Swiss confederacy.[13] In modern times, the city remains one of the Philippines' most influential cities in terms of its history, culture, and economy.

The city is the regional hub of education, culinary, religion, healthcare, tourism, culture, industry and economy in Western Visayas. A thriving academic center, Iloilo City is a melting pot which draws foreign and local students from various parts of the country and abroad. Central Philippine University (CPU), a university founded by American Protestants through a grant of John D. Rockefeller as the first Baptist and second American institution of higher learning in Asia, attracts 15,000 enrollees from different parts of the Philippines and twenty-seven foreign countries annually, the largest for a single campus university in the Western Visayan region.[14]

The city's excellent urban planning and the continuing increase in real estate, financing, and business process outsourcing (BPO) demand have been attributed to its being one of the most livable cities in the country with an economic boom. In March 2022, Colliers Philippines named Iloilo among the top locations for the expansion of outsourcing activity outside Metro Manila.[15] According to CBRE Group, by 2025, it is projected to become the third largest hub for the IT-BPO industry in the country.[16]

Etymology

The name "Iloilo" is derived from the older name "Ilong-ilong" (Philippine Spanish: Ilong̃-ílong̃) meaning "nose-like", referring to the promontory between two rivers (Iloilo and Batiano) where the Fort San Pedro and the 17th-century Spanish port were located.[17][18][19][20]

History

Pre-colonial period

 
 
 
Images from the Boxer Codex (c. 1595), illustrating ancient Visayans
 
The territorial expansion of Iloilo City.

Nothing is known historically about the region prior to the arrival of the Spanish. In Historia natural del sitio, fertilidad y calidad de las Islas e Indios de Bisayas (1668), the Jesuit missionary Francisco Ignacio Alcina (1668) identifies the origin of the Hiligaynon people of "Oton" (Panay) as the island of Leyte, which correlates with the linguistic subgrouping of the Hiligaynon language.[21]

Numerous legends and fabrications, however, exist on the origins of the Hiligaynon people. Among them is the epic Maragtas by Pedro Monteclaro (first published in 1907), which describes how ten datu and their families, led by Datu Puti, left the "kingdom of Borneo" to escape the cruel reign of Sultan Makatunaw. They arrived in the island of Panay and negotiated a sale of the lowlands with King Marikudo of the Ati people. The price is said to be a golden salakot for Marikudo and a long golden necklace for his queen, Maniwan-tiwan. A pact of friendship was then forged between the two peoples, and the Atis performed their native songs and dances, which is then said to be the origin of the Ati-Atihan Festival. According to Augustinian Friar Rev. Fr. Santaren recording in the Spanish era of this Pre-Spanish legendary history, that Datu Macatunao or Rajah Makatunao who was the "sultan of the Moros," and a relative of Datu Puti who seized the properties and riches of the ten datus was eventually killed by the warriors named Labaodungon and Paybare, after learning of this injustice from their father-in-law Paiburong (Datu of Iloilo), sailed to Odtojan in Borneo where Makatunaw ruled. The warriors sacked the city, killed Makatunaw and his family, retrieved the stolen properties of the 10 datus, enslaved the remaining population of Odtojan, and sailed back to Panay. Labaw Donggon and his wife, Ojaytanayon, later settled in a place called Moroboro.[22] The Maragtas also goes on to describe other settlements by "Malay datu" in other areas in the Visayas and Luzon.[23][24]

While once widely accepted and included in school textbooks, Maragtas (as well as the Code of Kalantiaw) is now regarded by modern scholars to be an early 20th century hoax. The historicity of the epic was first challenged by the historian William Henry Scott in 1968.[23] Scott successfully defended his criticism before a panel of experts in Filipino history (including Gregorio Zaide, Teodoro Agoncillo, etc.), some of whom had once promoted the inclusion of Maragtas in books on Philippine history.[24]

A more recent 2019 thesis, "Mga Maragtas ng Panay: Comparative Analysis of Documents about the Bornean Settlement Tradition" (Talaguit, 2019)[22] has uncovered a slightly earlier account of the Bornean migration myth by the Augustinian Friar, Rev. Fr. Tomas Santaren. His account, Bisayan Accounts of Early Bornean Settlements, was first published in 1902 as an appendix to the book Igorrotes: estudio geográfico y etnográfico sobre algunos distritos del norte de Luzon by Fr. Angel Perez. Santaren's account is allegedly a direct Spanish translation from two manuscripts acquired from locals in Iloilo sometime after 1858 when he was stationed there. The details on Santaren's account corroborate most of Monteclaro's. However, the manuscripts that Santaren translated from were presumably only written during the colonial era in romanized Hiligaynon, since pre-colonial Visayans transmitted history via oral tradition, not in writing. Thus it is still unlikely that they are of pre-colonial origin. It is, however, accurate to regard the Maragtas (or at least elements of it) as being derived from local folk history, rather than authentic history or simply fabrications by Monteclaro.[22][25]

There was a mention of Iloilo's current town of Oton in Yuan Dynasty records in the 1300s when Oton was called in Hokkien Chinese: 啞陳; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: A-tân.[26]

In Panay, according to Friar Gaspar de San Agustín, O.S.A., "...in the ancient times, there was a trading center and a court of the most illustrious nobility in the whole island."[27]

Early Spanish colonial period

In 1519, King Charles I of Spain already acquired and inherited Catholic kingdoms. He is the King of all Spain, King of Germany and Holy Roman Emperor, Duke of Burgundy and Luxembourg, Count of Holland, Count of Barcelona, Count of Flanders, Prince of Asturias, Archduke of Austria, King of Aragon, King of Jerusalem, Catalonia, Valencia, Naples, two Sicilies, Corsica and Sardinia. King of the Western and Eastern Indies, of the Islands and Mainland of the Ocean Sea. King of Italy, King of Bohemia and Hungary. He commissioned Ferdinand Magellan to circumnavigate the globe especially to establish International Trade in Spice Island. The dangerous and uncertain voyage as 5 ships with 270 men departs from Seville and by 1520, the expedition have traversed for months calm Ocean they called Pacifico or Peaceful.[28] The mountains of Samar and Leyte was visible as they drew closed which the crew called " Las Velas " or the Sails. They disembark in unpopulated Homonhon Island for a week from a long journey for food and water and call the place "Buenas Senas" or good sign. They navigated through the Strait of Siargapo and at landed Limasawa Island and were received peacefully by locals. Delighted, the Spaniards planted a cross on a hill and the first mass was celebrated. It was the first Spanish settlement and the birthplace of Christianity in the Philippines. The locals were introduced to visit another kinsman chieftain along the Butuan River. The King of Butuan received the Spaniards on April 8, 1521. Returning to Limasawa, The Prince of Limasawa also told them about 3 powerful Kedatuan – in Sugbu, Yrong-yrong and Tondo. On March 17, 1521, Magellan named the newly discovered Island as " Las islas de San Lázaro". By April 7, Magellan arrived in Sugbu. Datu Zula of Mactan sent Magellan 2 goats.

"On Friday, April twenty-six, Zula, the second chief of the island of Mactan, sent one of his sons to present two goats to the captain-general, and to say that he would send him all that he had promised, but that he had not been able to send it to him because of the other chief Lapu-Lapu, who refused to obey the king of Spain."[29]

Humabon tricked Magellan to kill Lapu Lapu, the Datu or chieftain of nearby Mactan Island.[30] The men of Humabon who accompanied Magellan did not engage in battle with Lapu-Lapu. Magellan was hit by a poisoned arrow he turned toward his men who were returning to the ships and fell down. The next day, Rajah Humabon of Sugbu offered a Banquet for Spaniards. Twenty-seven Spanish sailors died due to poisoning by Cebuanos. Rajah Humabon restored friendly relations with Lapu-Lapu, as he is married to Hara Humamay, Lapu-lapu niece.

Under Philip II, in 1565, the Spaniards in Mexico returned to Cebu to avenge Magellan's death against the treachery of Cebuanos. Miguel López de Legazpi pillaged and burned houses in Cebu for days. Cebuanos retreated, fearing the heavily armored Spaniards now with formidable reformed-infantry called Tercios composed of alabardero, alférez with a sword and Arcabucero with gunpowder.[31] Miguel López de Legazpi directed Felipe de Salcedo along with Spanish Friar Martín de Rada and other Augustinian missionaries to look for food. They disembarked in Iloilo and established a temporary settlement in Araut somewhere in Dumangas. In 1566, they founded a settlement in the areas between Ogtong (Oton) and the present-day La Villa Rica de Arevalo district of Iloilo City. Though founded in 1566, Oton, which forms a big part of the area in the said settlement with Arevalo, was established formally in 1572 as the second official Spanish colonial outpost after Cebu City. The city was founded by 80 pure Spaniards from Europe[32] and reinforced by 169 Mexican soldiers from Latin America.[33]

Unlike the Indianized Cebuanos who were neutral to the Spaniards or the partially Islamized Tagalogs of Manila who were more hostile, the people of Madja-as welcomed the Iberians as allies since at that time period, Madja-as was locked in a war against the invading Muslims, especially with the Sultanate of Brunei and its vassal states, the Sultanate of Sulu and the Kingdom of Maynila which, according to Spanish Governor-General Francisco de Sande, are their blood-cousins.[34] The people then fervently accepted Christianity as they supplied the bulk of the mercenaries used in the conquest of partially Islamized Manila, whose rulers were related to the Sultan of Brunei.[35]

When the Spaniards came to the Visayas, they noted that the pirates among them were more terrifying than the Mohammedans of Jolo and Mindanao. All year long, after the harvest, they would sail toward faraway places to hunt slaves and make surprise attacks on settlements. Those who did not live along the rivers, would make their raids in the months of February, March, April, October and November, going deeper into the interior parts of the islands, sacking the villages. These raiding expeditions are called panggubat (noun) or manggubat (gerund verb form).[36]

 
The Plan of the Fort of Iloilo in 1738, formerly called Fortificación de Nuestra Señora del Rosario en el Puerto de Yloylo, Provincia de Oton, in the early 1700s.

However, upon Christianization and Hispanization, the fiercest slave-raiders among the Philippine islands, the people Panay and the other Christianized peoples of the archipelago were converted and reformed and they abandoned the practice of slaving, piracy and raiding and contented themselves to be simple soldiers or farmers.[37][38]

In 1581, Ronquillo moved the colonial center from Ogtong to approximately 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) eastward due to recurrent raids by Moro pirates and Dutch and English privateers. He renamed this new colonial seat La Villa Rica de Arévalo in honor of his hometown in Ávila, Spain.[39] Ronquillo also settled groups of Spanish and Mexican soldiers to become the first colonists of Arevalo as he built his mansion in the area.[40] The Chinese traders supplying the colonists then established themselves in Iloilo's parian Molo.[41] Meanwhile, Jaro was soon filled up with various kinds of mestizos (Mixed raced people) and Mandurriao hosted the growing Indian community near the Nanak Darbar Indian Sikh Temple.[42]

In the early days of the Spanish period; the first Manila Galleons were originally constructed at the port of Oton to the west of Iloilo. Since there was no precedent in Spain for the immensity of a Manila-Galleon, it could be argued that the proto-type Manila galleons were of Visayan design since the Visayans were already constructing huge multi-masted 4 to 5 decked caracoas in their wars against the other kingdoms and thus, the technical know-how to construct the first Manila galleons was an amelioration of Visayan shipbuilding with Spanish shipbuilding. Oton built the first Manila galleons before operations were eventually transferred to the Bicol and Cavite shipyards.

1600s–1700s

In the year 1600, a large Muslim attack on Iloilo City was launched, with a force of 70 ships and 4,000 warriors, raiding and attacking several Visayan islands in order to abduct slaves. However, the attack was repulsed by a force of 1,000 Visayan warriors and 70 Mexican arquebusiers under the command of the Don Juan Garcia de Sierra (the Spanish alcalde mayor), who died in battle.[43] With the increase in Moro incursions toward the end of the sixteenth century, Spanish defenses in the Visayas were strengthened by the construction of a fort at Iloilo staffed by two companies of (Mexican) soldiers.[44]

In 1635, in an effort to check the Islamic slave-raiding into the Visayas islands, the Christian Visayans from Iloilo together with Spanish officers and their Latino soldiers from Peru[45] soon founded Zamboanga City and settled in it, using it as a fortress to prevent Moro attacks in the Visayas, and as a staging ground for Christian campaigns into Muslim Mindanao.

In 1700, due to ever-increasing attacks especially from the Dutch and the Moros, the Spaniards again moved their seat of power some 25 kilometres (16 miles) eastward to the village of Irong-Irong, which had natural and strategic defense against raids. At the mouth of the river that snakes through Panay, the Spaniards built the Fortificación de Nuestra Señora del Rosario en el Puerto de Yloylo, Provincia de Oton[46] (now called Fort San Pedro) to better guard against the raids which were now the only threat to their hold on the islands. Irong-Irong or Ilong-Ilong was shortened to Iloilo. Later, the natural port area quickly became the capital of the province.[39]

Sugar boom era and the late Spanish colonial period (1800s)

 
Aduana de Iloilo (Iloilo Customs House) is the second-biggest customs house in the Philippines after the old Spanish Aduana (Intendencia) de Manila in Intramuros and the American era built Aduana de Manila (Manila Customs House).

Spanish colonial local government in Iloilo allowed Chinese migrants which worked among the city's industries (the Locsin, Lopez, Jalandoni, Lim and Sy families) and Latin Americans from across the Pacific (Viceroyalty of New Spain) to man its military fortifications (the Araneta, De Rama and Arroyo families). In the late 18th century, the development of large-scale weaving industry started the movement of Iloilo's surge in trade and economy in the Visayas.

Sometimes referred to as the "Textile Capital of the Philippines",[47] the products were exported to Manila and other foreign places. Sinamay, piña, and jusi are examples of the products produced by the looms of Iloilo. Because of the rise of the textile industry, there was also a rise of the upper middle class. However, with the introduction of cheap textile from the UK and the emergence of the sugar economy, the industry waned in the mid-19th century.

 
Mansion de Lopez (Nelly's Garden), which is regaled as the "Queen of all heritage houses in Iloilo" and Panay, is one of the grand mansions in the heritage district of Jaro that resulted from the sugar boom.

The waning textile industry was replaced, however, by the opening of Iloilo's port to the world market in 1855. Because of this, Iloilo's industry and agriculture was put on direct access to foreign markets. But what triggered the economic boom of Iloilo in the 19th century was the development of the sugar industry in Iloilo and its neighboring island of Negros. Sugar during the 19th century was of high demand. Nicholas Loney, the British vice-consul in Iloilo, developed the industry by giving loans, constructing warehouses in the port, and introducing new technologies in sugar farming. The rich families of Iloilo developed large areas of Negros, which were later called haciendas, because of sugar's high demand in the world market. Because of the increase in commercial activity, infrastructures, recreational facilities, educational institutions, banks, foreign consulates, commercial firms and much more sprouted in Iloilo.

City Status

 
Queen Regent Maria Cristina of Spain and her son King Alfonso XIII. The Queen Regent raised the status of Iloilo as a City, on October 5, 1889, in the name of King Alfonso XIII, who was still a minor.

On October 5, 1889, a royal decree raised Iloilo's status from a town to a city, this on account of growing development in commerce and industry making her second to Manila in importance.[48][49] Iloilo thus succeeded Manila, Cebu and Vigan as officially declared cities.[50][51] Through the Becerra Law of 1889, the ayuntamiento of Iloilo was established on January 7, 1890, its inauguration led by the former Governor-General Valeriano Weyler.[52] [53] Iloilo City was the second-most important city in the archipelago at the end of the Spanish Regime.[54]

The Revolutionary Period (1896)

The immediate reaction of Ilonggo elite to the outbreak of the 1896 rebellion in Manila was that of surprise. They immediately responded with protestations of outrage and affirmed their loyalty to Spain. The Ilonggos themselves were united in their support of Spain during the first two years of the revolutionary period.[55]

Shortly after the Cry of Balintawak, the Jaro Ayuntamiento (another colonial city adjacent to Iloilo City), composed of native Ilonggos,[56] convened a special session on September 1, 1896, where the Manila uprising was condemned as an unpatriotic act "that finds no echo in the noble hearts of Jareños, who do not forget the immense gratitude they owe Spain who, from nothing, raised us to a life of civilization and progress."[57]

The Ayuntamiento of Iloilo[58] also affirmed its allegiance and loyalty to Spain and made a similar protestation. Condemning the uprising, the city's letter to the Governor General says:

"Those dark betrayals, the mere notion of which embarrasses good and loyal Filipinos, have produced a unanimous sentiment of protest and indignation among the Ilongo people, who engrave its most honorable blazon in the sacred and inextinguishable love that it professes to the glorious Spanish nationality that it legitimately feels proud of. The Ilongos are Spaniards, Your Excellency, and Spaniards will they be until death, because they do not want to live and die in another way than under the shadow of the august Castillan standard, to which they owe being dignified and free men now."[59]

The foreign community in the city also asked its representatives to visit local authorities and to elevate their protests against the revolt. And so did the Filipino parish priests of Jaro, Molo, Mandurriao, and Arévalo.[60] Towns in Iloilo province also condemned the Manila uprising, and those of the neighboring provinces of Cápiz and Antique, as well as the island of Negros, followed suit. This emboldened the Ilonggo elite to initiate the organization of volunteers to be sent to quell what was seen as a mostly-Tagalog rebellion. The move was backed by the Spanish and foreign communities of Iloilo.[61] A battalion of five hundred native volunteers was raised, which was divided into two companies, and placed under the cadre of mostly Spanish officers.[62] They arrived in Manila on January 16, 1897.[63] They were one of the largest native contingent to serve the government forces against Katipunan troops led by Emilio Aguinaldo, in the battlegrounds of Cavite province.[64]

 
Seminario de San Vicente Ferrer in Jaro, Iloilo City, the oldest institution of higher education in Western Visayas region. It is the fifth oldest and the last seminary established by Spaniards in the Philippines.

The Ilonggo volunteers established for themselves a distinguished combat record in Cavite. Once the Pact of Biak-na-Bato was signed, they returned to Iloilo. In April 1898 their homecoming, just like their departure, was met with much fanfare. This galvanized the Ilonggos into more public outpourings and manifestations of loyalty to Spain.[65]

Due to the loyalty of the Ilonggos, the city of Iloilo was honored with the perpetual[64] title of Muy Noble (Most Noble). The Royal Decree granting this title was signed on March 1, 1898, by Queen Regent Maria Cristina.[66][67] Over time, this title earned for Iloilo City the reputation of it being the Queen's Favored City in the South or simply Queen's City in the South, being the second Spanish port of importance next to Manila, and being located south of the archipelago's Capital. On a side note, at the beginning of the American period until the Second World War, Cebu became the second port of importance (Iloilo having been partly ravaged by bombardment, fire, and riots during the American occupation of Iloilo City).

Yet, it was also during this period of Philippine history that Iloilo was more popularly known as the Queen City of the South. This points to the fact that the moniker was associated with the Queen Regent's favor and with the honorary title granted to Iloilo City as La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad (The Most Loyal and Noble City), due to the loyalty of its citizens to the Spanish Crown.[68] Besides, the Ilonggos, who were among the first allies of the Spanish Crown in the archipelago, contributed in the Spanish conquest of Luzon. It was in Arevalo (later, a district of Iloilo City), Panay that the conquest of Luzon was planned and launched, on May 8, 1570, with the help of seafaring inhabitants of the Island.[69]

 
Modern day Plaza Libertad (formerly Plaza Alfonso XII [El Duodécimo]) at night.

After the defeat of the Spanish forces at the Battle of Manila Bay during the Spanish–American War, the Capital of the Spanish East Indies was transferred to Iloilo, with General Diego de los Rios as the new Governor General residing in the city. A truce was declared between the American and the Spanish forces pending the negotiations of the joint commission of both warring Countries in Paris, France for the terms of peace. Meanwhile, General Aguinaldo sent several small vessels to Panay with Tagalog revolutionaries in order to stir up rebellion in the Visayas. He was anxious to secure all territories he could before the conditions for peace should be settled in Paris. At stake was the hope that actual possession of territories would influence the final decision.[70]

By October 1898, fresh Tagalog expeditions were sent to Panay and coerced or persuaded its people to rise in greater force than ever, until finally, General de los Rios had to fall back to Iloilo. By the middle of November, after having secured the support of the inhabitants of the towns outside Iloilo through the leadership of General Martín Delgado, practically the whole island of Panay, except for Iloilo (the City Proper), Jaro, La Paz, and Molo, was under the revolutionary dominion. By December, de los Rios held only the city and port of Iloilo.[71]

On December 25, 1898 (fifteen days after the signing of the Treaty of Paris on December 10),[72] the Spanish government surrendered to the Ilonggo revolutionaries at Plaza Alfonso XII (Plaza Libertad today), making Iloilo the last capital of the Spanish Empire in Asia and the Pacific. Military Provincial Governor Ricardo Monet, who was representing Governor General de los Rios, together with Lt. Col. Agustín Solís, formally handed over Plaza Alfonso XII to Delgado, who represented Emilio Aguinaldo, president of the newly established Philippine Republic, in Iloilo. Delgado was named provincial governor afterwards.

The newly found freedom of the Ilonggos would be short-lived. The American forces arrived in Iloilo on December 27, 1898, under the command of General Marcus P. Miller, and were afterwards reinforced up to a total strength of about 3,000 troops and two ships,[73] to take possession of the territory in accordance with the Treaty of Paris.[74]

The Federal State of the Visayas was established on December 2, 1898, to promote the ideal of federation for an independent Philippine nation. It was composed of the Cantonal governments of Bohol and Negros, as well as the Provisional Government in the Visayas, which exercised powers over Panay and Romblon. The government of the federal state was patterned after the United States federalism and the Swiss confederacy.[13] The government was reportedly created following consultations with Emilio Aguinaldo. Roque Lopez, who was the president of the provisional government in Panay, became the federal state's president and Iloilo City was designated as the Visayas capital.[75]

Filipino–American War

After the Spanish forces left the city, the revolutionary forces made a formal entry amidst music and banners. A government was constituted. On January 17, 1899, an election placed Raymundo Melliza, of a notable family from Molo that was respected by both the natives and foreigners, to office as Mayor. However, the influence of the new regime established by the government of Aguinaldo did not have effective extent far beyond a day's march from the Capital. At the threshold of the City and Province of Iloilo, the Americans were waiting for a signal from Manila. Two more ships supplemented the U.S. forces, even though no clashes with the revolutionaries took place after the Spaniards abandoned the city. Miller expressed demands for the surrender of Iloilo but no gun was fired. The Americans were waiting for the right moment, for it was not until February 6, 1899, that the American Senate ratified the Treaty of Paris.[76]

On February 4, hostilities broke out between Aguinaldo's forces and the Americans in Luzon. Emissaries brought Aguinaldo's message to the Ilonggos to hold the City against the enemies. The demand for surrender was renewed by Miller, on February 7, upon receipt of orders from Manila, with the threat to bombard Iloilo by the 12th day of the month if no surrender would take place.[77]

 
General Martín Teófilo Delgado marching in 1901 ahead of 30 officers and 140 men to surrender to Brig. Gen. Robert P. Hughes, regional commander of the US imperialist forces occupying the country.

As the Americans were preparing to attack the city, the 1,650 native troops under General Martin Delgado became uncontrollable and insolent to their officers. They were promised a monthly remuneration of Php4 and food, but only received Php1. Threats of mutiny, sacking and burning of the city, forced the Generals to collect money from the towns of Panay in order to appease the Visayan contingents. The same thing happened to the Tagalog component of the troops. The danger of riots in the city and the attitude of native soldiers fomented fear among the inhabitants. Chinese merchants closed their stores leaving only a small hole for transacting business. Many prominent families, who were in constant fear for their safety, went over to Negros Island in small schooners that flew the Philippine flag, without having any trouble with the American ships on standby in the waters between the two islands.[77]

On February 10, an Extraordinary Session at the City Hall discussed plans for the impending bombardment of the city. There was a proposal to burn Iloilo, but the Mayor protested to this barbarous plan. A majority in the meeting was in favor of burning, which was seen as an invitation to despoil, lay waste and slay. The instigators who had no property interests in Iloilo, but who were so jealous of those who have, found a ready response of the Tagalog mercenaries, who had no local attachment to the city.[78]

The Americans fired the first shell on February 11, 1899. Foreign eyewitnesses observed that the bombardment damaged quite a few buildings. In the meantime, from early morning, the withdrawing native soldiers, followed by a riffraff mob, were observed to have rushed hither and thither, throwing firebrands on to petroleum-washed houses. The Chinese had to barricade themselves to no use since fire burned their bazaars. Europeans and the Spanish half-castes had to defend themselves with every means possible, including bribing the rioters with a few pesos. Two British warships in the roadstead sent boats ashore and landed a party of marines, who made a gallant effort to save foreign properties,[78] as the United Kingdom had a strong business interest in Iloilo and a Consulate.

By 1 o'clock of the same day, the Americans made a landing and restored order. Sentinels were stationed to protect what still remained of the townspeople's goods. In due course, indemnity claims were forwarded to the American military authorities, but were all rejected.[79]

Ten years later, an article published in the local paper Nuevo Heraldo summarized the downfall of the Queen City in these words:

"The fire left behind only the name Iloilo, as the main part of the city was reduced to ashes by the retreating Ilongo troops. That event was the cause of the ruin of such a beautiful city, second only to Manila, where, if there was not a surplus of money, neither the people's welfare was wanting, and life was prosperous and peaceful. If the brain who planted such an unqualified act had measured the consequences... maybe he would never have dared doing it..."[80]

By February 1899, the Americans had started mobilizing to colonize anew the City and Province. They continued to meet resistance from the Ilonggos, which lasted up to 1901. In which case, Iloilo was also among the last cities to fall to Americans.[81] Many leaders surrendered to the new regime and were reintegrated to the Ilonggo society without conditions. Among them was General Martin Delgado, who accepted the position of Governor of the Province of Iloilo from 1901 to 1904, under the American flag. He was, at that time, the highest-paid Governor in the whole Archipelago, receiving $3,000 gold annually.[82]

Local government was established in some towns of Iloilo by April 11, 1901. Jose Maria Gay was appointed Alcalde, Matias Hibiernas was teniente alcalde of Iloilo;Jose Yusay was President of Molo; Pablo Borromeo was President of Arevalo; Ruperto Montinola was the lone representative of Jaro, but was not its president; Madurriao's president was Emigdio Mesa. Emilio Magbanua was appointed its police delegate. It was observed by Juan de Leon, judge of the Court of First Instance that there existed a rivalry between the pueblos of Iloilo, Jaro and Molo, which are adjacent to and are only half an hour travel by carriage from each other. Besides, Molo and Jaro are residential pueblos, and Iloilo was the business town for both. It was also recommended that Arevalo be joined to Molo, and La Paz to Jaro. The aggregate population of these territories was at 100,000 in 1901.[83] Presidents and other representatives were also appointed for the towns of Alimodian, Miag-ao, Janiuay, Mina, Oton, Passi, Guimbal, Pototan, San Joaquin, Santa Barbara, San Miguel, Pavia, Sara, Nagaba (currently known as Nueva Valencia), San Enrique, Lambunao, Cordoba (a barangay of Tigbauan today), Cabatuan, Leganes, Tigbauan, Banate, Buena Vista, Navalas, Tubungan, Duenas, Mandurriao, Maasin, Lucena, and Leon. Other formerly existing ones, like Anilao and Barotac Viejo, were fused with other towns.[83]

As the aftermath of the revolution and the Filipino–American War, it was clear to all the most sober-minded and best-educated Ilonggos that Aguinaldo's government was a failure in Panay at least. Visayans of position, with property interests at stake, were convinced that absolute independence without any control or protection from some established political power was premature and doomed to disaster. The Visayan grudge against the Tagalog predominance was also a factor that contributed to the failure of Aguinaldo's government. But the aggravating factor was the dictatorial air and brutal conduct of the Tagalog troops, which destroyed the theory of fraternal unity.[84] Ananias Diocno, the Tagalog contingents' leader known for severity in his Capiz and Iloilo campaigns, left a lasting non-commendable remembrance in the history of Panay.[77][85]

American colonial era and advent of Protestantism and counter-reformation (1900–1941)

 
Central Philippine University was founded in 1905 through a grant given by the American industrialist, oil magnate and philanthropist John D. Rockefeller, by the Baptist American missionaries; it is the first Baptist-founded and second American university in the Philippines and in Asia.
 
Aerial view of Iloilo, circa early 1900s.

In 1900, no Americans reverted the city's status into a township. By virtue of Act No. 719 of 1903, the municipalities of Jaro, La Paz, Mandurriao, and Molo, were incorporated into the municipality of Iloilo.[86] Pavia was also incorporated into Iloilo from Santa Barbara by virtue of Act No. 1333 19 April 1905.[87] Later, Executive Order No. 64 24 December 1907 separated Pavia and Jaro from Iloilo and constituted them as the municipality of Jaro with effect on February 15, 1908.[88] La Paz was re-established as a separate municipality in 1920 by virtue of Executive Order No. 70 signed on October 11, 1919.

The Americans initiated the construction of the Baluarte and Arroyo streets, the extension of Delgado Street to Valeria and from Fuentes and Jalandoni streets up to the present-day U.P. in the Visayas. Quezon and Mabini streets were asphalted while their sidewalks were also constructed. More significant was the installation of streetlights all throughout the city in 1921. In 1926, the widening of important streets, like General Luna, J.M. Basa and Ledesma, was started. In 1927, an improved street, Valeria-Ledesma (formerly known as Weyler), was inaugurated (David 1937).[89]

During the American colonial regime that time in the Philippine islands, the Americans brought with them their Protestant faith. A comity agreement was made in 1898 that the Philippine islands would be divided into different Protestant denominations for missionary works to avoid future conflicts; Iloilo is one of the first favored places in the country where the early Protestant sects came because of the city's economic prominence and importance next to Manila during such time.[90] Western Visayas and Negros, in accordance with the comity agreement, was given to the religious jurisdictions of the Baptists, although other Protestant sects were allowed to do missions in the same area.

The Protestant missionaries initiated large-scale enterprises in the predominantly Catholic province. The Presbyterians established the first Protestant and American hospital in the country, the Iloilo Mission Hospital. Supposedly it came also that Iloilo is the original location for foundation of Silliman University, the first Protestant and American university in the country and in Asia. However, due to the Catholic opposition where the school will stand, the founder, David Hibbard, prospected some new locations. He went to Cebu and later had a side trip in Dumaguete City, where he had a decision to establish and where Silliman University is presently located.[91]

Baptists on the other hand, established institutions like Central Philippine University in 1905, as the first Baptist-founded and second American university in Asia; the Jaro Evangelical Church, the first Baptist church in the Philippines; and the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches, the oldest Baptist organizational body in the Philippines.[92] Later, the Seventh-day Adventists established the Jaro Adventist Center, the first organized Seventh-day Adventist church outside Manila.

Central Philippine University was established through a grant given by the then richest American industrialist and oil magnate John D. Rockefeller.[93][94][95][96][97] Central Philippine University pioneered the work-study program in the country which was later patterned and followed by other institutions and has also established the first and oldest student governing body in South East Asia modeled on the American civil government, the Central Philippine University Republic in 1906 after the Jaro Industrial School, CPU's forerunner, was established.

 
Founded in 1901 by Protestant Presbyterian American missionary and physician Joseph Andrew Hall, CPU–Iloilo Mission Hospital is the first American and Protestant founded hospital in the Philippines.

Under the auspices of the Presbyterian Church in the United States in 1901, the Sabine Haines Memorial Union Mission Hospital (Union Mission Hospital) was established by American missionary doctor Joseph Andrew Hall and his wife Jane Russell Hall. The hospital is also the first hospital for soldiers and the constabulary (predecessor of the Philippine National Police) during the American colonial regime in the country. The hospital pioneered the nursing education in the country through the establishment of the Union Mission Hospital Training School for Nurses, the first nursing school in the Philippines. Later, the hospital was handed over to the Protestant Baptists. In 1931, the Union Mission Hospital moved to its present site in a property bought by the Baptists, thus a year later in 1932, the hospital changed its name to Iloilo Mission Hospital along with its nursing school. The school was later transferred and became and organic academic unit of the Central Philippine University (the present-day Central Philippine University College of Nursing. Iloilo Mission Hospital has over the years associated with Central Philippine University as its university hospital (CPU-Iloilo Mission Hospital).

Up to the present, the various evangelical Protestant denominations (composing around 2.8% of the Filipinos) and their educational institutions also serve Catholic students in Iloilo, who make up 83% of the population.[98]

Seizure of friar lands and parishes and the above-mentioned Protestant activities gave the American and Filipino public an impression of an anti-Catholic stance of the U.S. occupation of the Islands during the first years of the American rule. The Taft Commission, the sole legislative body of the American government for the Philippines (then known as the Philippine Islands under the sovereign control of the United States) while still under the Philippine–American War, were attacked by Catholic press in New York for anti-Catholic bigotry. Soon, pressures from influential Catholics in the United States, and also in Ireland caused President Theodore Roosevelt to appoint a Catholic in the commission to defend Catholic interest in the Philippines. Influential Catholics in Manila followed suit. Worries about Catholic vote in national elections moved the civil government to send the commission to the Vatican to negotiate exploring workable to solutions to the Catholic question in the newly acquired territory. Before coming to Rome, the head of the Commission personally visited the Cardinal Archbishop of Baltimore.[99] Pace by pace, acceptable solutions were employed. In 1902, the President of the United States of America commissioned two American Augustian friars to pioneer a movement to send American priests out to the Philippines to replace the Spanish friars,[100] who diminished in number (1,013 in 1898 to 246 in 1903) due to normal loss of personnel due to death or retirement, death caused by native hostilities, or voluntary return to Spain.[101]

 
Old Spanish-era structure of Colegio de San Agustín, the present day University of San Agustin. It waS built to counter Protestantism by Spanish Roman Catholic Augustinian friars through their American confreres.

In Iloilo, American Catholics countered the Protestant American missions and the American Catholic bishops, like Frederick Rooker, Dennis Joseph Dougherty, and James McCloskey, were named for the Roman Catholic See of Jaro in Iloilo City. These bishops sustained the educational achievements of the Spanish friars by bringing in American and European Catholic missionaries, among whom were the Sisters of Charity of St. Paul, and Augustinian missionary priests. The Augustinians, who were the first to bring the Christian faith in the Philippines as well as in Panay island, and who built the centuries-old heritage churches in this island,[102] established the Collegio de San Agustín in 1904, which eventually became the only university of the Augustinian Order in Asia. During the American regime, their confreres from the United States developed evermore this institution, which later became the first university in Iloilo. The American Catholic Bishops also maintained and upgraded the St. Vincent Ferrer Seminary (established in 1869 as the Collegio-Seminario de San Vicente Ferrer), which was the first institution of higher learning in Western Visayas. Despite the Augustinians being Catholics and Baptists being Protestants, they mutually enriched each other through dialogue mainly because Augustinian ideals were the foundations of Protestantism since the first Protestant was Martin Luther and he was a former Augustinian priest himself and the Protestant zeal for reformation from corruption even started some reform in the church itself. Saint Ezekiel Moreno who was ordained in the Minor Orders in Jaro, Iloilo had walked the fine line between reform, obedience and leadership since he ministered and walked hand in hand with condemned rebels and criminals in the Iwahig Prison and Penal Farm, he was also obedient to his superiors in the Order of Augustinian Recollects, a reform or "Recollection" movement in the Augustinian Order, which took elements from the Protestant Reformation. Saint Ezekiel Moreno also became the leader of a political movement when he became a Bishop of Pasto, Colombia.[103]

The visitation of Saint Ezekiel Moreno is a harmonized incarnation of the ancient Convivència in Spain when different religions and kingdoms; Pagan, Christian, Jewish and Muslim lived side by side and struggled to maintain their perspective purity, contested with each other and yet also mutually enriched each other without turning into a mongrelized melting pot of a mixed up and confused morass. Coincidentally, Saint Ezekiel Moreno was ordained in the Minor Orders in the then church of Jaro which housed a Virgin Mary statue under the Title of "Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria de Jaro". An image with complex Convivència alluding properties due to the confluence of many symbols from various cultures simultaneously present in the image but it is likely not earthly of nature and is a pure grace direct from heaven or an image "Not carved by human hands" due to its miraculous nature which was found floating in a river, shifting in weight and growing in size.

 
A market in Iloilo, in the 1910s.

The Paulinian Sisters took charge of St. Paul Hospital, originally owned by the Catholic Diocese of Jaro. Bishop Dennis Joseph Dougherty, who later became Cardinal Archbishop of Philadelphia, gave the medical facilities to the Sisters. To commemorate the bishop's generosity, the hospital named a more recent section of the facilities after him: the CADMA (Cardinal Dougherty Medical Annex). To meet the growing need to provide nurses for their hospital, the Paulinians also opened a nursing school. Today, this institution has also become a university (St. Paul University Iloilo), and has ever since supplied high-quality healthcare professionals known worldwide for their skills and dedication to work.

 
St. Paul's Hospital Iloilo (circa 1920). Established during the American colonial period in 1911 by the Daughters of St. Paul or Chartres, it is the oldest existing hospital under the said Roman Catholic order in the Philippine islands.

During the American colonial occupation, one of the platforms by the colonial government was first to establish and implement a public education system in the islands and the Thomasites were deployed and commissioned by the American government to teach in the public schools that will be established. The Thomasites tolerated religious freedom, which is one of the foundations of the United States constitution and legacy to the Philippines, while commissioned and under their tutelage to teach in public schools during the colonial period. Public schools that were established when the Thomasites came to Iloilo are Iloilo Normal School, the present-day West Visayas State University (formally established in 1924 but dates back its founding in 1902 as part of the Philippine Normal School System in the Philippines); the Iloilo National High School, the first public provincial high school in the islands; and Baluarte Elementary School, the first public elementary school in the islands.

Commonwealth Act No. 57 was passed in 1936 granting city status to Iloilo; this charter was immediately amended by Commonwealth Act No. 158 some days later to incorporate the municipalities of La Paz and Arevalo as part of the new city's territory.[104] Iloilo regained cityhood status on July 16, 1937, through Commonwealth Act 158. Incorporated as part of Iloilo City were the towns of La Paz and Arévalo and inaugurated on August 25, 1937. The municipality of Jaro, on the other hand, was incorporated into Iloilo City some years later by virtue of Commonwealth Act No. 604 22 August 1940, which amended the city charter of Iloilo to include, into Iloilo City, the municipality of Jaro "on the date that the President of the Philippines may set by proclamation".[105] To that effect, President Manuel L. Quezon issued Proclamation No. 663 on January 7, 1941, giving January 16 as the date of Jaro's incorporation into Iloilo City.[106] Sugar's demand was declining, labor unrests in the port area scared the investors away, and the opening of the sub-port of Pulupandan in Negros Occidental moved the sugar importation closer to the sugar farms.

Japanese occupation (1942–1945)

 
Central Philippine University's main campus north-eastern side aerial view in the 1960s. During the onset of World War II, Central's entire properties on its main campus were heavily destroyed. The war torned university's main campus was rebuilt after the post-war, resulting for a well-laid campus plan dotted with palm and acacia trees and home to a plethora of century-old colonial American heritage structures built in the early 1900s.

By 1942, the Japanese invaded Panay and the economy moved into a standstill. During World War II, Iloilo was controlled by several Japanese battalions. Japan's ultimate goal was to entrench itself deeply into the Philippines so that at the close of the war they could occupy it just as the Spanish and the Americans had years before.

When Iloilo was liberated by Filipino and American forces from Japanese military occupation on March 25, 1945, the remnants of these battalions were held in Jaro Plaza as a makeshift detention facility.[81]

Post-war decline

The war heavily damaged the infrastructure in Iloilo. However, the continuing conflict between the labor unions in the port area, declining sugar economy, and the deteriorating peace and order situation in the countryside, the exodus of Ilonggos to other cities, provinces/regions and islands that offered better opportunities and business. People were moving to other cities such as Bacolod, Cebu, and Manila that led to Iloilo's decline in economic importance in central Philippines. Rural agricultural areas continued to help the local economy. For years, because of this exodus of investors, Iloilo's economy progressed in a moderate pace.[107]

Change slowly came. First came the construction of the fishing port and a new international seaport. One by one, commercial business firms invested in Iloilo, spurring on the city to its eventual recovery.

Iloilo became a highly urbanized city on December 22, 1979, by the virtue of Batas Pambansa Blg. 51. Corollary to this new status, its residents effectively lost their eligibility to vote for provincial officials.[108]

21st century and economic boom

After the opening of the new commercial and business center in Mandurriao district and with the construction of a national highway that traverses this area, big businesses like the SM Supermalls, SM Prime Holdings, Megaworld Corporation, Gaisano Capital, Robinsons Land, Ayala Corporation, and Filinvest poured in huge investments in the city, giving impetus and catalyst toward future progress.

Geography

 
Sunrise on the Iloilo River with the esplanade.

Iloilo City is located in the southern shores of Panay Island. The city faces Iloilo Strait and Guimaras Island across it, making it a natural harbor and a safe anchorage for ships. It is bordered by the towns of Oton in the west, Pavia in the north and Leganes in the northeast. Just across the Iloilo Strait in its eastern and southern coastlines, are the towns of Buenavista and Jordan in the island-province of Guimaras .

The city lies on a flat alluvial plain, reclaimed mostly from the swampy areas due to urbanization and industrialization in the late 19th century until the present. Traversing the city are the rivers of Iloilo, Batiano, Jaro and Dungon Creek. Iloilo River is an estuary that separates the districts of City Proper, Molo and Villa Arevalo from the rest of the city. On the other hand, Jaro River is fed by its tributary rivers, Aganan and Tigum. Lately, a new escape channel for floodwaters coming from these two rivers to Iloilo Straight was developed, the Jaro Floodway. Iloilo City is 337.6 nautical miles (630 km) from Manila, 116 kilometres (72 mi) from Roxas City, 158 kilometres (98 mi) from Kalibo, and 97 kilometres (60 mi) from San Jose de Buenavista. The city has a total land area of 70.3 square kilometres (27.1 sq mi).[109]

The city is divided into seven geographical districts. All of the districts were once individual towns, excluding Lapuz, which was a sub-district of La Paz until 2008.[110] All districts have their own town centers complete with a plaza, a Roman Catholic church, a fire station, a police station and a public market. City Proper is a commercial area and the political center of the city and the Province of Iloilo and the Regional Government Center of Western Visayas.

Iloilo City is the center of the only officially recognized Metropolitan Area in Western Visayas.[a] The metropolitan area is composed of the City of Iloilo, the municipalities of Leganes, Pavia, Santa Barbara, Cabatuan, San Miguel, Oton, the Island Province of Guimaras and its five municipalities, namely – Sibunag, San Lorenzo, Nueva Valencia, Buenavista and Jordan.

Barangays and districts

 
District map of Iloilo City showing its seven districts.

The city of Iloilo has one legislative district and is further divided into seven administrative districts, which are also subdivided into barangays (barrios), with a total of 180 city barangays.

District Area Population

(2020)

Density Barangays
km2 sq mi /km2 /sq mi
Arevalo 7.58 2.93 55,476 7,300 19,000 13 (list)
City Proper 3.73 1.44 46,350 12,000 31,000 45 (list)
Jaro 27.48 10.61 130,700 4,800 12,000 42 (list)
La Paz 11.33 4.37 54,720 4,800 12,000 25 (list)
Lapuz 3.25 1.25 31,747 9,800 25,000 12 (list)
Mandurriao 13.78 5.32 62,240 4,500 12,000 18 (list)
Molo 5.54 2.14 76,393 14,000 36,000 25 (list)

Climate

Iloilo City has a tropical wet and dry climate as according to the Köppen climate classification system, with pronounced wet season from June throughout November; then dry season from December to May.[109]

Climate data for Iloilo, Philippines (1961–1990, extremes 1903–2012)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 34.7
(94.5)
35.5
(95.9)
39.0
(102.2)
37.5
(99.5)
37.8
(100.0)
37.5
(99.5)
35.2
(95.4)
34.8
(94.6)
37.8
(100.0)
35.4
(95.7)
34.8
(94.6)
34.5
(94.1)
39.0
(102.2)
Average high °C (°F) 29.7
(85.5)
30.2
(86.4)
31.7
(89.1)
33.1
(91.6)
33.1
(91.6)
31.6
(88.9)
30.7
(87.3)
30.4
(86.7)
30.8
(87.4)
31.1
(88.0)
30.9
(87.6)
30.2
(86.4)
31.1
(88.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) 26.1
(79.0)
26.5
(79.7)
27.6
(81.7)
28.9
(84.0)
29.1
(84.4)
28.1
(82.6)
27.6
(81.7)
27.5
(81.5)
27.6
(81.7)
27.7
(81.9)
27.5
(81.5)
26.8
(80.2)
27.6
(81.7)
Average low °C (°F) 22.7
(72.9)
22.7
(72.9)
23.5
(74.3)
24.6
(76.3)
25.1
(77.2)
24.7
(76.5)
24.4
(75.9)
24.5
(76.1)
24.4
(75.9)
24.2
(75.6)
24.0
(75.2)
23.4
(74.1)
24.0
(75.2)
Record low °C (°F) 16.5
(61.7)
16.7
(62.1)
18.6
(65.5)
20.0
(68.0)
20.2
(68.4)
21.0
(69.8)
19.5
(67.1)
20.0
(68.0)
19.8
(67.6)
19.2
(66.6)
19.4
(66.9)
18.3
(64.9)
16.5
(61.7)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 39.9
(1.57)
19.1
(0.75)
27.1
(1.07)
47.7
(1.88)
117.9
(4.64)
255.2
(10.05)
313.2
(12.33)
363.7
(14.32)
266.8
(10.50)
264.1
(10.40)
174.8
(6.88)
64.2
(2.53)
1,953.7
(76.92)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.1 mm) 11 7 7 6 14 18 21 20 19 18 15 14 170
Average relative humidity (%) 82 80 75 73 77 82 85 85 85 84 84 83 81
Source 1: Climate Charts[111]
Source 2: Deutscher Wetterdienst (rainy days),[112] PAGASA (records)[113]

Demographics

Population census of Iloilo City
YearPop.±% p.a.
1903 52,472—    
1918 77,925+2.67%
1939 116,277+1.92%
1948 110,122−0.60%
1960 151,266+2.68%
1970 209,738+3.32%
1975 227,027+1.60%
1980 244,827+1.52%
1990 309,505+2.37%
1995 334,539+1.47%
2000 366,391+1.97%
2007 418,710+1.86%
2010 424,619+0.51%
2015 447,992+1.03%
2020 457,626+0.42%
Source: Philippine Statistics Authority[114][115][116][117]

Language

Hiligaynon is the dominant language of Iloilo City.[118] English is used as the language of business and education. In addition, other local languages such as Karay-a (also known as Kinaray-a or obsolete Haraya) is also spoken by the minority. Spanish, once widely spoken during the colonial era up to the 1980s, is dying out, though a broken Spanish creole is spoken by a few of some Spanish-blood families and elderly sugar barons.

Hiligaynon is spoken in Panay, Guimaras and Negros islands, and is part of the Visayan language family of the Malayo-Polynesian languages. Because Iloilo was a former Spanish colony for 300 years, Hiligaynon is heavily influenced by the Spanish language with a plethora of loaned words (Guerra, Puerta, Golpe, Aguanta, Puerto, Calle, and Edificio, among others). Hiligaynon is mainly concentrated in the provinces of Iloilo, Guimaras and Negros Occidental. The language is referred to as "Ilonggo" (Spanish: Ilongo/Ylongo) in Iloilo and Negros Occidental. More precisely, "Ilonggo" is the ethno-linguistic group referring to the inhabitants of Iloilo and the culture associated with native Hiligaynon speakers. The distinction between the terms, Ilonggo and Hiligaynon, is unclear however, as many townspeople state that Hiligaynon is the language being spoken and Ilonggo is a term used to refer a person living in Iloilo or its associated culture and ethnicity.

Population

Based on the 2010 Census of Population and Housing (CPH), Iloilo City, a highly urbanized city in the province of Iloilo, posted a total population of 424,619 persons as of May 1, 2010. This is larger by 58,228 persons compared to its total population of 366,391 persons counted in the 2000 CPH. The increase in the population count from 2000 to 2010 translated to an average annual population growth rate (PGR) of 1.49 percent. This is lower than the 1.70 percent annual PGR of the city between the census years 1990 and 2000.

If the average annual PGR recorded at 1.49 percent during the period 2000 to 2010 continues, the population of Iloilo City would double in 47 years.

Forty years ago, the population of Iloilo City was only 209,738 persons. This population size is one-half of the population of the city in the 2010 CPH.

Among the 180 barangays comprising Iloilo City, barangay Calumpang was the most populous. Its population size was 2.6 percent of the total population of the city. San Juan came in second in terms of population size, with 2.3 percent share. This was followed by Balabago and Tabuc Suba (Jaro) with 2.0 percent each, Calaparan and So-oc with 1.9 percent each, Molo Boulevard with 1.8 percent, Santo Niño Sur with 1.7 percent, Cubay and Obrero-Lapuz with 1.6 percent each, and Bolilao with 1.5 percent. The rest of the barangays contributed less than 1.5 percent each.

The least populated barangay was Roxas Village with less than 0.1 percent share to the total population of the city. It was also the least populated barangay in 2000.

Religion

 
Jaro Cathedral or National Shrine of Our Lady of Candles is the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Jaro and the Seat of Roman Catholicism in Western Visayas.

As the second National Shrine in the Visayas and Mindanao (first in Western Visayas and second Marian dedicated church to do so in Visayas and Mindanao), Jaro Metropolitan Cathedral is widely known as the seat of Roman Catholicism in Western Visayas.

 
Jose Romeo O. Lazo, the incumbent Roman Catholic Archbishop of Jaro.

Iloilo City is one of the notable centers of faith in the Philippines. Due to the heavy religions missions during the 300 years of Spanish colonialization, the city's population is predominant Catholic with over 90% belonging to the Roman Catholic Church. Other religious minorities such as Protestants (5%), Iglesia ni Cristo (2%) and Aglipayans (1%) (also a form of Episcopal Protestantism) have a significant presence at the city.[119]

The former city of Jaro (one of the present districts (boroughs) of Iloilo City) is the seat of bishopric and pioneer Christian institutions not only in Western Visayas but in the whole Philippines established through the Spanish colonization. The Spaniards which brought the Catholic faith established the Roman Catholic metropolitan see of the Archdiocese of Jaro with its diocesan cathedral while the Americans which brought the Protestantism established the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches (the first and oldest Baptist churches organization in the Philippines), the Jaro Evangelical Church (the first Baptist church in the Philippine islands), and Jaro Adventist Center (first organized Adventist church in the Philippines).

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese is one of the oldest and largest bishopric sees in the country. It was established as a parish in 1587 initially covering Catmon, Cabatuan and Maasin. It was created a diocese by virtue of a papal bull of Pope Pius IX on May 27, 1865. It has jurisdiction over sufragan bishops of Mindoro, Palawan, Zamboanga, the province of Iloilo, Negros Oriental, Guimaras, San Jose de Buenavista, Capiz, Bacolod, San Carlos and Kabankalan in Negros Occidental.

 
The statue of Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria (Our Lady of Candles) in Jaro Cathedral, the Roman Catholic patron of Western Visayas. Crowned personally during the apostolic visit of pope and saint John Paul II in 1981, it is the first marian image to receive such recognition without a papal legate in the Philippines and Asia.

It lost some of its territory to establish the Diocese of Zamboanga and Apostolic Prefecture of Palawan. Much later, three other ecclesiastical jurisdictions were established from parts of its territory: Diocese of Bacolod (July 15, 1932), Apostolic Prefecture of Mindoro (July 2, 1936), and Diocese of Capiz (January 27, 1951). The diocese was elevated into a Metropolitan Archdiocese by Pope Pius XII. Later, on March 24, 1962, it lost further some of its territory that resulted to the establishment the Territorial Prelature of San Jose de Antique (but still a part of it at present).

 
Jaro Evangelical Church, the First Baptist Church in the Philippines (first Protestant church outside Manila).

The Jaro Cathedral (National Shrine of the Our Lady of Candles) is the seat of the Archdiocese of Jaro. Saint Elizabeth of Hungary and the Our Lady of Candles is the official Catholic patronesses of the Archdiocese. The Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria or Our Lady of the Candles is the official patron of the whole Western Visayas and Romblon.

Being designated as a National Shrine, Jaro Cathedral is likewise widely known as the seat of Roman Catholicism in Western Visayas. The said designation (National Shrine) by the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines is the first of its kind in the region, the second in the Visayas (after Cebu), and the first Marian-dedicated church outside of Luzon.

Protestantism formed as the second-largest faith in the City of Iloilo. Protestant sects were brought by the Americans when the Philippines was ceded to American rule by Spain through the 1898 Treaty of Paris.

The said faith brought by the United States in the heavily Roman Catholic Iloilo has gained adherents and still continues to grow at present. Iloilo which is one of the pioneering places in the country where Protestants set foot strongly contributed due to its economic importance on the international scene in the early 1900s. The American colonial government tolerated religious freedom that even to this day Iloilo is still predominantly Catholic.

Presbyterians and Baptists are among the first Protestant sects that arrived in Iloilo. The arrival of the American Protestant denominations resulted in the establishment of notable pioneering institutions in Iloilo. The Presbyterians established the Iloilo Mission Hospital in 1901 (the first American and Protestant hospital in the Philippines) while Baptists established the American John D. Rockefeller-funded Central Philippine University in 1905 (the first Baptist and second American university in the Philippines and in Asia), Jaro Evangelical Church in 1900 (the first Baptist church in the Philippines and also the first Protestant church outside Manila (2nd in the Philippines after the Central United Methodist Church in Manila), and the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches (the first and oldest Baptist churches organized in the Philippines).

The Seventh-day Adventists did not join the comity agreement with the early Protestant sects for jurisdictional division on the Philippine islands for missionary works, because they wanted to go to any parts of the country. They arrived years later following the advent of Protestant missions in the Philippines in the early 1900s in Iloilo. Their arrival resulted in the founding of Jaro Adventist Center, the first organized Seventh-day Adventist church outside Manila.

There are other Christian sects such as Iglesia ni Cristo and Church of Christ of Latter Day Saints or Mormon and communities of non-Christian sects like Islam which brought by Muslim-Filipinos from the south, Sikhism by the Indian immigrants, and Taoism and Buddhism which brought by Chinese immigrants.

Economy

 
Panoramic view of Iloilo City's downtown area in Iloilo City Proper

Iloilo City is a hub for trade, commerce, finance, technology, medical tourism, hospitality, real estate, tourism, education, and industry in the Western Visayas region. Major industries in the city include management of port facilities, telecommunications infrastructure and utilities, banking and finance, retail trading, real estate, tourism and business process outsourcing. The local government has provided incentives to businesses in certain investment areas, such as income tax holidays and free issuance of permits and licenses.[127] It is the home of Mang Inasal, headquartered in Iloilo.

During the Spanish colonial period, sugar was the main export product of Iloilo. The said industry brought immense wealth to the city alongside when its port was opened to the international trade. As a result, known and old-rich families' wealth was propelled by sugarcane plantations. It yielded affluent clans that are known in the region and the country up to today, which originated in Iloilo—Lacson, Locsin, Ledesma, Montinola, Lopez, to name a few. After World War II, the sugar industry in Iloilo waned, and the importance of the city as the second most important economic center next to Manila diminished.

It was in the 21st century that economic activity in Iloilo flourished after years that it slept in the corner. The opening of the Iloilo International Airport in 2007, which replaced the old Iloilo Airport in Mandurriao, paved the way for the city to prosper. The acquisition of the old airport after it was decommissioned and the construction of a business park on its site by the real estate giant Megaworld Corporation, became a catalyst for some land developers to invest in Iloilo.

 
Skyline view of Iloilo City's midtown area in Mandurriao district

As a thriving economic hub in the Western Visayas region, an adequate and growing number of banks establishing branches leads the metropolis as the city with the most bank savings deposits and accounts in the Western Visayas region (third in the Philippines); the modernly built Iloilo International Airport is the fifth busiest airport in the country; the Port of Iloilo, which is one of the historical ports in the Philippine islands, is now one of the busiest ports and natural harbors in the country by terms of passenger movement and cargo handling; and with the on-going building construction boom, especially in the real estate and retail sectors.[128] Iloilo City has the lowest crime rate in the Philippines,[129] the lowest level of corruption, the highest life expectancy in Visayas and Mindanao, a large concentration of middle class, ranks first in the happiness index,[130] and the most business-friendly city.[131]

Trade and industry

There were 8,407 business establishments as of December 2003 in Iloilo City, of which 1,182 are new. Total capital investments for new business establishments is P365,506,020.92. However, both new and renewed capital investments for the year 2003 amounted to ₱13.02 billion.[109] Of the employed person by type of industry from primary occupation 82% belongs to service sector, 14% belongs industry sector and only 4% are in agriculture (as of April 2003 FIES, NSO).[109] Average annual family income (at current prices) is P 283,604 or a percentage increase of 32.3 between 1994 and 1997 while Average Annual Family Expenditures is P 226,887 or a 25.6% increase (2000 FIES).

Average per Capita Income is P 65,136 and Average Per Capita Expenditures is P 51,557 (FIES 2000). Average Inflation Rate is 3.2, the Average Purchasing Power of the Peso is 0.62 and the Average Consumer Price Index (CPI) is 162.6 in 2003. (Source: NSO, Prices Section).[109]

Banking and finance

The banking industry in Iloilo dates back during the Spanish times. The establishment of banks during such time is hinge to Iloilo's importance as an international gateway when its port was open for foreign ships to dock in, and the sugar-boom. The first Banco Español-Filipino (now Bank of the Philippines), opened its first branch outside of Manila in Iloilo. The first Philippine National Bank branch outside Manila also opened in the city. With that, there are also international banks implying the city's importance in banking history in the Philippines, that opened in Iloilo during Spanish-American times that ceased their operations in the city: the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC), first HSBC branch outside Manila; and Standard Chartered (first Standard Chartered Bank branch outside Manila).

At present, Iloilo ranks 3rd in the country as the city with most deposits or savings account, fueled by OFW remittances, IT-BPO industry, and the local industries. The surge of microfinancial and other lending institutions in the city has also sprouted. It is the headquarters of LifeBank MFI, the Iloilo's largest homegrown microfinancial institution (3rd largest microfinancial institution in the country) with ~500 branches across the Philippines.

Queen City Development Bank (QueenBank) which is owned by the Florete Group, is one of the founding member of Megalink (the first bank outside of Manila to become a member of it) has its headquarters and 1st branch in Iloilo City.

Tourism

As a gateway to the Western Visayan region, tourism plays a major part as a catalyst in contributing to Iloilo City's economy. The metropolis hosts notable festivals which entice thousands of tourists annually especially during the Dinagyang, Paraw Regatta (Asia's oldest sailing event), and Fiesta de Candelaria festivals seasons. Iloilo City's bannered monickers like "City of Love" and "City of Mansions" and intensified local government's programs such as beautification of major thoroughfares in the city and building of parks, has played a role in attracting local and foreign visitors also. There are myriad of selections of attractions in the city that tourists can visit – heritage landmarks, museums, art galleries, parks, and restaurants, to name a few. Nightlife in the metro with Smallville Complex as the mecca for party-goers is flocked by revellers every night especially on Friday and weekends.

A well known Philippine heritage city built during the Spanish era, heritage tourism adds also to the city's charm which magnets visitors. Centuries old churches, old edifices and mansions of well known Ilonggo families, magnets sightseers from different places who wants to discover Iloilo City's rich and glorious past. Iloilo City is also respected gastronomic capital with famous dishes originated in the area that gained popularity throughout the country – La Paz Batchoy, Pancit Molo, Kansi, Laswa, and KBL (Kadyos, Baboy kag Langka).

In 2018 alone, the widespread promotions of Iloilo City paid off as it attracted the highest tourist arrivals in Western Visayas, posting 1,242,087 total arrivals including 1,154,550 domestic visitors; 70,787 foreign guests, and 16,750 overseas workers. Following in 2019, it garnered an 11.59% increase in the previous year's data.[132] In 2020, the city again achieved its target with 1.4 million arrivals.[133]

Information technology

The IT-BPO and KPO industry has spurred employment in the metropolis. IT-BPO and KPO locators are attracted to Iloilo because of the literacy rate and the number of graduates per year.[134] With continuous influx of business process outsourcing (BPO) and knowledge process outsourcing (KPO) industry, Iloilo has fast becoming a "Silicon Valley" backed by its political leaders.[135] BPO investors are attracted to Iloilo due to stable energy source, availability of building spaces, high number of graduates and English Proficiency.

 
iQor Iloilo in the Festive Walk Parade.

Megaworld's Iloilo Business Park – One Global Center, Two Global Center, and Three Techno Place are Iloilo operation sites of Transcom Asia, StarTek, WNS Global and Convergent powered by Nearsol, respectively. While Richmonde Tower is where Reed Elsevier is operates.[136][137] Other IT-BPO and KPO locators are Callbox (the largest homegrown IT-BPO company in Iloilo), Fair Trade Outsourcing (Rethink Staffing) (an American IT & BPM/BPO Company), Telus International, Legato Health Technologies, Asurion, Conectys, TeleTech Holdings, Inc., Crawford & Company, Savant Technologies (A non-voice KPO and BPO company), Eversun Philippines (a non voice KPO and BPO), Reed Elsevier, SPI-Global (Now Inspiro), WorldSource Inc., Vista Health Solutions, Xilium Professional Services, WNS, Hinduja Global Solutions, iXL Solution, RS2, Prosync (Process Synergy), Trusttel Customer Care, OneVirtual Global Business Solutions, Bluu Qatar Philippines, POWRD Solutions, iQor Iloilo, Accentline, Voiceless Technologies (Now Leadgen), XtendOps (Extend BPO), and Yazaki-Philippine EDS Techno Service.

Inspiro (formerly SPI Global and PLDT E-Ventus) and Callbox are the two pioneering IT-BPO companies that first set their foot in Iloilo City.

Fair Trade Outsourcing (FTO), a United States based IT-BPO company headquartered in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania opened its first global site in Iloilo (now its Philippine operations headquarters) in October 2015 as MODph. It was renamed Rethink Staffing in August 2016 and eventually to its present name in February 2018, Fair Trade Outsourcing. From a 300-600 employee size company it continued to grow and has now a workforce of 1000+ staff. It opened two more sites in the metro to buffer up its global expansion, the Iloilo – Molo, and Iloilo – Guanco sites. Other than Iloilo it has sites in Bacolod (Doña Juliana Avenue) and in Davao (MetroLifestyle Complex across the Department of Education Regional Office XI). Outside the Philippines, it operates in Accra in Ghana; and Guadalajara and Chihuahua in Mexico.

Fair Trade Outsourcing (FTO) plans to open new sites in Colombia (Medellin) and Kenya, and another one in Ghana. In November 2022, company opened its 2nd site in the United States in McAllen, Texas.

The Department of Science and Technology-Information and Communications Technology Office (DOST-ICTO) and Business Processing Association of the Philippines (BPAP) has named Iloilo City one of the next wave cities.[138]

Iloilo City is a "City of Excellence" as it rivals the cities of Manila and Cebu in terms of economic progress. It has also a number of IT/BPO and KPO centers except for the ones in Iloilo Business Park, and among them is the Ayala Techno Hub Iloilo, Amigo Plaza Mall, SM City Iloilo, and Plazuela de Iloilo.[139][140]

Some of the known IT/BPO centers in Iloilo Business Park, both by Megaworld Corporation while the Iloilo City Center by the Gaisano Group has business process outsourcing (BPO) office buildings undergoing construction for future IT-BPO and KPO locators occupancy.[141]

Shopping and retail

 
The Festive Walk Iloilo, the first (full-scale) Megaworld Lifestyle Mall outside Luzon.

As the shopping hub of Western Visayas, retail industry has a big relevant presence in Iloilo City since Spanish and American colonial times. Proliferated after Philippines gained Independence from United States of America.

In 1877, the first department store in the Philippines was Hoskyn Department Store started at Calle Real (or Royal Street) which stretches from Plaza Libertad to Plazoleta Gay.[142][143] It was first to employ the "fixed pricing" for its commodities in merchandising. Since it was "the store that sold everything from needle to anchor", people of Iloilo and even Bacolod flocked buying from its goods such as English wool imported from England. It offered groceries, hardware, stationery, toys, watches, jewelry, machinery, buttons, threads, etc.[144] It was described as "a great store" and "the best in the islands", Dauncey recounted how she bought "pieces of furniture, some groceries, china, glass, and so forth" from Hoskyn's "at low prices, as they have such an immense business, even being able to compete with the shops in Manila..." by Enid Rolanda Dauncey, wife of Iloilo-based British businessman Campbell Dauncey, in her 1906 memoirs "An Englishwoman in the Philippines". "It has long been a commercial landmark in the Bisayas, people call on it for everything and always get what they want," incorporated in 1925.[145] After the World War II, Que Family acquired Hoskyns and renaimed it to " Washington Commercial " as their second store. They have "Washington Grocery" in Iznart Street. Subsequently, it was renamed "Washington Supermart".

Marymart Shopping Center opened in 1972 in called Weyler ( renamed later as Valeria (Ledesma), owner of the land) by Jamora Brothers. Henry Sy purchased land an adjacent lot in Valeria and founded the SM Iloilo now called SM Delgado, is the first SM outside Manila, which started operating in 1979 while Cebu only opened 14 years after in 1993 and Bacolod in 2007.[146] In 1993, Jimenez family sold their property and Atrium Shopping Center was opened beside Caza Plaza Hotel. It was first shopping center to have a combination of hotel, restobar, Saloon, Supermarket and Restaurants in the whole Philippines.

With the growing demand of consumerism and real estate, Philippine companies such as – SM Prime Holdings, Robinsons Land Corporation, Megaworld Corporation, and Ayala has fueled the popularity of mall culture in Iloilo.

SM City Iloilo by SM Prime Holdings, the largest SM Supermall in Western Visayas (one of the largest in the Philippines); Robinsons Place Iloilo and Robinsons Place Jaro – both by Robinsons Land Corporation; & by Megaworld Corporation's – Festive Walk Iloilo, the first (full-scale) Megaworld Lifestyle Mall outside Luzon and Festive Walk Parade, the longest dining strip in the Philippines.[147][148][149]

Government

 
The Iloilo City Hall (Ayuntamiento de Iloilo).

Iloilo City is the regional capital of Western Visayas region and the provincial capital of Iloilo province. It is one of the important economic centers in the Philippines and regional and provincial offices of national government agencies has offices in the city. It is classified as a first income class and highly urbanized city (HUC). Due to such status and classification, it is independent from the province of Iloilo, thus its citizens does not have the power to elect for political provincial officials.

 
Former seal of Iloilo City, in use since 1950. The central seal, often mistaken as the "coat of arms" of the city, was granted when Iloilo achieved its status as a royal city on October 5, 1889, through a decree issued by the Queen Regent Maria Cristina, on behalf of her son King Alfonso XIII of Spain, who was still a minor in that year.[49][48]

The city dates back its founding in 1566 through a settlement established by the Spaniards in the areas of Oton and Villa de Arevalo and received its cityhood status thrice – first on October 5, 1889 (effectivity in 1890) through a Spanish royal decree issued by the Queen Regent of Spain, Maria Christina, secondly in 1893 through a legal declaration by the virtue of Bacura/Becerra Law ratifying the first royal decree and establishing the city government of Iloilo, and the third through a virtue of Commonwealth Act No. 158 on July 16, 1937, formally inaugurated on August 25, 1937, as a chartered city, by consolidating the existing City of Iloilo with the towns of Arevalo, Mandurriao, Molo, and La Paz, while the City of Jaro was officially annexed on January 7, 1941, through the virtue of Commonwealth Act No. 604 of August 22, 1940, issued by President Manuel L. Quezon. By such decrees, the City of Iloilo is the first legal city in the Philippines because no law ratifies and established by the government that creates and enacts an edict declaring or elevating a town into a status of a city during Spanish and early American colonial periods.

The city acquired its royal title "La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad" (The Most Loyal and Noble City) on March 1, 1898, given by Queen Regent Maria Christina of Spain due to the loyalty stand by the Ilonggos to the Spanish crown during the Philippine war of independence. It is likewise one of the few Spanish Royal Cities in the Philippines during the Spanish colonial era in the Philippines.

The Mayor of Iloilo City (Alcalde) is the chief executive and is assisted by the vice mayor (vice-alcalde) which governs the city. The city is also represented by a congressman in the House of Representatives of the Philippines. The Iloilo City Council (Filipino: Sangguniang Panglungsod ng Iloilo and Spanish: Consejo de Ciudad de Iloilo) is the local legislative assembly. Its 15-member council is elected concurrently with general elections, held at the same time with the national elections including for the city and vice mayors. The Council convenes every month at the Iloilo City Hall (Ayuntamiento de Iloílo), and the meetings are open to the public. The matters on which the councillors decide have generally already been drafted and discussed by various boards and committees.[150]

Iloilo city is sub-divided into 180 barangays or "barrios" each govern by a Barangay Captain or Chairman held through a national barangay election.

In 1955, through the efforts for a liberal appointing of a new city mayor, Rodolfo Ganzon became the first mayor that won through a popular election process. Ganzon is widely remembered by his constituents for having authored and sponsored the Iloilo City Freedom Law which restored to the people of Jaro, La Paz, Molo, Arevalo, Manduriao and Iloilo City proper their constitutional right to elect their own mayor, vice mayor and 10 councilors.[151][152]

City Government of Iloilo
Representative
Julienne "Jam-Jam" L. Baronda (NUP)
Mayor
Jerry P. Treñas (NUP)
Vice Mayor
Jeffrey P. Ganzon (NUP)
Sangguniang Panglungsod Members
Sedfrey L. Cabaluna (NUP) Rex Marcus B. Sarabia (NUP)
Jose Maria Miguel S. Treñas (NUP) Candice Magdalane A. Tupas (LDP)
Alan Acepcion Zaldivar (NUP) Johnny Y. Young (NUP)
Frances Grace V. Parcon-Torres (NUP) Romel D. Duron (NUP)
Urminico M. Baronda Jr. (NUP) Ely A. Estante Jr. (NUP)
Rudolph Jeffrey O. Ganzon (NUP) Plaridel C. Nava (PROMDI)
ABC President
vacant
SK Federation President
vacant

Culture

Cultures and traditions has a crucial role that shaped Iloilo's cultural and heritage sphere apart from the being the Regional Center of the Western Visayas region. Cultural and heritage consciousness is held in much broad public attention and fervor among the various stakeholders with the help of the government. Iloilo holds many cultural institutions especially national ones and heritage houses and mansions that contributed to Iloilo's long held monikers as "Museum City of the Philippines" and the "City of Mansions."

Museums

 
The National Museum of the Philippines – Western Visayas housed in the old Iloilo Provincial Jail turned museum.

The city has a number of museums ranging from fields of ancient and contemporary art, cultural and economic history to science. Museums and art galleries are the repositories of Iloilo's rich and glorious history and culture. Various notable Philippine artists trace their roots from Iloilo. Unearthed artifacts like potteries, porcelain, gold and plates had been excavated in many parts of Iloilo predating Spanish Era are now showcased in various museums in Iloilo.

 
The Casa de Emperador in Iloilo Business Park houses the (ILOMOCA) Iloilo Museum of Contemporary Art, first modern and contemporary art museum in Visayas in Mindanao; and Emperador Brandy Museum, the first brandy museum in the Philippines.

Collaborative efforts of the city government with various stakeholders to uplift the cultural cognizance of the Ilonggo people led to the establishment of the Western Visayas Regional Museum of the National Museum of the Philippines in the restored and adoptive reuse of old Iloilo Provincial Jail and their regional headquarters in the restored old Municipio de Jaro (Jaro Municipal Hall). There are other museums that showcase memorabilias of notable person and families, artworks and artifacts.

The other notable museums and art galleries in the city in which some are under some academic institutions which include the Museo Iloilo (the first government built museum outside Manila); Museum of Philippine Economic History; Iloilo Museum of Contemporary Art (housed at the Casa de Emperador at Iloilo Business Park); The Henry Luce III (Museum and Library) of Central Philippine University, University of San Agustin Museum, UPV Art Gallery, John B. Lacson Foundation Museum of Maritime Culture and Craft, Rosendo Mejica Museum, among others.

The Iloilo Museum of Contemporary Art (ILOMOCA), the first museum project of the property giant Megaworld Corporation, is the first museum dedicated to modern and contemporary art in Visayas and Mindanao. The museum of 3,000 square meters of space is housed at the Casa de Emperador which includes five exhibit rooms and souvenir and merchandise shop. The ground floor is The Hulot Exhibit which showcase exhibits of local and international artists. Works by notable and renowned international artists like Salvador Dalí, Marc Chagall, and Joan Miró are exhibit in some of its art collections.[153][154][155]

 
The Henry Luce III (Museum and Library) of Central Philippine University, the largest library in the Western Visayas (one of the largest in the Philippines). It houses collection on Asian arts and artifacts, the CPU Meyer Asian Collection.

The Museum of Philippine Economic History, the first economic history museum in the Philippines, has a wide array of exhibits and collections showcasing the economic history of the Philippine throughout the different colonial eras. The structure, restored by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines and where the museum is housed is formerly owned by one of the country's biggest trading firms, the Ynchausti y Compania, of the Familia Ynchausti. The firm's name was synonymous with its products like Yco Floor Wax, Tanduay and Yco Paints. The museum has 13 galleries throughout the 2 storey structure.

The location of the Museum of Philippine Economic History in Iloilo City is due to the city and province being called the Queen City of the South during the Spanish and early American colonial era because of its economic importance next to Manila.

Other than the hundred decades-old artifacts and items on display at the Philippine Museum of Economic History, visitors can find in the museum looms from the oldest weavers of Miag-ao in Iloilo, which was known then as the Textile Capital of the Philippines, and also showcases artifacts coming from other regions such as T'nalak from Mindanao and decades-old gold, necklace and other accessories from Pampanga; old photographs and maps, and other interesting remnants of the past.

The Henry Luce III (Library and Museum) on Central Philippine University's main campus which was built through a benevolent grant given by the Henry Luce Foundation though Henry Luce III, the eldest son of the founder of Time Inc. Henry Luce. It holds an array of special museum collections categorized into various sections and types of collections – Meyer Asian Collection, the Elizabeth Knox Sacred Music Collection, rare collections of Second World War documents, Asian archaeological artifacts and historical exhibits, and artworks from known artists. A Henry Luce III (the main library of CPU Library system) sole book holding implies it as the largest library in the Western Visayas region.

Festivals

 
An Ati dancer-warrior performs at the annual Dinagyang Festival.

The Ilonggos cultural identity is deeply rooted and influenced by the Hispanic culture. Iloilo is known as Festival(s) Capital of the Philippines with various renowned festivals in the country celebrated in the city showcasing the city's rich cultural and historical past. Iloilo is highlighted with various festivals in which big three is Dinagyang Festival – held every fourth Sunday of January in honor of the Holy Child Jesus (Santo Niño de Jesus) in a venerated image of Santo Niño de Cebu.

The Jaro Fiesta (Fiesta de Jaro) or Fiesta de Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria (Fiesta de Candelaria) which is held every February 2 in honor of Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria (Virgin of Candelaria) the patron of Western Visayas and Romblon, is the largest marian dedicated festival outside Luzon.

Jaro Fiesta is famous for its pomp and pageantry. The fiesta chooses its annual Reyna del Fiesta de Jaro or Jaro Carnival Queen from among the maiden member of prominent and notable old-rich Spanish-Filipino or wealthy families of the town. The annual fiesta includes a cockfighting held during the fiesta day (largest cockfighting competition in the Philippines) at the Iloilo Coliseum and an agro-industrial and charity fair in Plaza Jaro which starts from September and a week after the fiesta day.

Iloilo with its number of mainland Chinese expatriates who came for trading and settled in the city hundreds of years ago, celebrates the annual Iloilo Chinese Lunar New Year. It is considered as the largest Chinese New Year celebration outside Binondo, Manila, the oldest Chinatown in the world.

In contrast with the city's celebration of the annual Chinese New Year, Iloilo with the advent of Chinese settlers before or during the Spanish Colonial period, settled in what is now the Molo District or Parian, a town established for Sangleyes or Chinese Ilonggos by the Spanish colonial government. Though only a town where Chinese people were organized to settle, Molo is considered as second-oldest Chinatown after Binondo, Manila.

During the holiday season after the all saints (Dia de Todos Los Santos) and all souls days (Dia de los Muertos), various landmarks such as schools are adorned with yuletide lights spectacles. Flocked during its opening night in the first week of December by thousands of spectators, the annual Festival of Lights and Music at Central on the campus of Central Philippine University is the longest running university based Christmas festival of lights in the Western Visayas region since 1991. Trees, major edifices, and places of interests like the CPU Church on the university's 24 hectare main campus in Jaro, Iloilo City are festooned with holiday lights and displays of Christmas icons like Santa Claus, Nativity Scene, and Pasko sa Nayon. It is opened to the public until every January 6 of the next year. Carnival rides, a Christmas Bazaar and food stalls are also found catering to the tourists visiting the campus of the university in the said event.

Paraw Regatta, which is also one of the main festivals of Iloilo and held every February, is the sailing event in Asia (oldest traditional boat sailing event in Asia). The festivities during the said festival includes Samba de Regatta, Miss Paraw Regatta pageant, Lighted Paraw and the annual Paraw Regatta sailing competition held in La Villa Rica de Arevalo (Villa de Arevalo)

In thrive for the city's endeavor as the Art Capital of the Philippines, the Iloilo Summer Arts Festival was launched in 2020 which runs from April to May.[156] The latest addition to such venture is the Iloilo Arts Festival which opened in December 2021. It is a nearly a month long event showcasing the best of Ilonggo artistry in visual arts exhibited in notable city museums and performing arts in theaters across the metropolis.

Public arts

The local government has initiated efforts to promote the city as the "Art Capital of the Philippines". It has established several programs through the help of local artists like turning the blank and public spaces in the metropolis as canvasses for murals and paintings depicting the city's rich history and culture.

A fine example of this is the 3D Mural depicting the Dinagyang warriors dancing in the street in Iloilo River Esplanade 1. Real estate developers also play a role in supporting such programs by rolling out plans to elevate the cultural consciousness of the Ilonggos through public art displays and mural paintings.

Entertainment, film and performing arts

The colonial influence of Spanish and American culture has created an imprint in the entertainment, performing arts, and film sectors and scenes in Iloilo. The city and province has produced a notable people in the field of cinema and entertainment. The arts and entertainment sectors in Iloilo flourished during the time when Iloilo was opened to international trade when the Puerto de Iloilo (Port of Iloilo) was opened to foreign ships to dock from different countries. The annual Iloilo Film Festival, which is held during the Dinagyang Festival, has a plethora of films being screened during the festival's event.

 
The Rose Memorial Auditorium in Central Philippine University, the largest theater in Western Visayas.

The Iloilo Convention Center is a state-of-the-art convention center located in the Iloilo Business Park by Megaworld Corporation in Mandurriao. Its construction was completed in September 2015 in time for the APEC 2015. It is a two-story structure with a total floor area of 11,832 square meters. The main hall on the ground floor has a 3,700-seat capacity and 500-seat function rooms on the second floor. A rooftop of 1,500 sqm is available for outdoor functions.[157]

The convention center was designed by Ilonggo architect William Coscolluela. The design was inspired by Iloilo's Dinagyang and Paraw Regatta festivals.

Iloilo has various facilities also for international and local musical, band, and solo performances or concerts. Rose Memorial Auditorium or Rose on Central Philippine University's main campus is the largest and notable auditorium or theater Western Visayas region. It hosted concerts held by famous Filipino and international singers, bands and cultural groups and is also the venue of the annual national Bombo Music Festival that draws homegrown music artists from all over the Philippines.[158][159][160][161]

The auditorium is a 2-storey structure and can occupy or has a maximum capacity of 4,000+ spectators. Rose Memorial along with Central Philippine University has been and is the only theater/auditorium and university in the Western Visayas region that has been designated (one of the first batch of nine) Cultural Center of the Philippines Regional Art Centers (or Kaisa sa Sining Regional Art Centers) in 2014 in the whole Philippines.[162][163][164][165][166][167]

There had been old cinema theaters in the old central business district of Calle Real, but they do not now operate because of the development of modern shopping malls with cinemas in the metropolis which replaced their once and glorious days in the heritage zone of Calle Real in the city center. Modern day cinemas in the metropolis screens with a wide array of present-day films both national and from foreign countries. The arts and entertainment initiatives with the Film Development Council of the Philippines under the office of the Philippine President city has established its presence in the city as the regional cultural and arts center of Western Visayas through the establishment of Cinematheque theater which showcases various screened films.

Cultural representations in the perspective of performing and visual arts holds numerous concerts throughout the year with some showcased by universities cultural groups and organizations in the city.

University's in Iloilo on the other hand, has a vital role with various established cultural and art groups that gain foothold that held and performed in various cultural performances nationally and internationally in which some are sponsored National Cultural government agencies. The University of San Agustin has established the USA Troubadours while Central Philippine University the CPU Bahandi Singers, CPU Handbell Choir (the first 8 octave handbell choir in the Philippines) and the CPU Sari-Saot Dance Troupe.

Cuisine

 
A bowl of La Paz Batchoy. Famous throughout the Philippines, it is an Ilonggo delicacy that originated from the La Paz district of Iloilo City.

With Iloilo being hailed as the Food Haven of the Philippines, its local cuisines are well-loved and recognized by many Filipinos across the country, including from different parts of the world.[168] Food in Iloilo is a blend of east-and-west due to the contact of locals with the foreign cultures because of Iloilo's central most location and one of the most important port cities in the Philippines. The three hundred years of Spanish influence in the Iloilo's culture left a heavy imprint in the Ilonggo cuisine that resulted to the cuisines that are the same with other Hispanic influenced countries like Menudo, Afritada, Lechon, Adobo, Estofado, among others. Because of Ilonggos roots as Asians, rice is a staple diet food, and is usually served plain with other dishes.

The city has a variety of restaurants specialized in serving foreign cuisines (Italian, American, Japanese, Chinese, Vietnamese, German, and Thai cuisines). The rise of international and luxury hotels brought high-end buffet and exclusive dining experience to tourists and locals.

Chinese influenced played also a vital role in influencing the Ilonggo cuisine and because of it, famous dishes like the La Paz Batchoy and Pancit Molo born-out because of such influence which became well known throughout the Philippines that originated from Iloilo. Notable Chinese restaurants in the city include Roberto's and Kong Kee.

Iloilo has also been the founding location of the first branch of Mang Inasal fast-food chain of restaurants in the country. It was founded by Edgar Sia, a Japanese-Chinese-Filipino businessman in 2003 and has expanded with its opening of branches throughout the Philippines.[169]

 
A bowl of Pancit Molo.

La Paz Batchoy is one of Iloilo's signature dishes, a delicacy served in restaurants all over Iloilo City. The said noodle soup is made with miki, (round noodles), pork organs (liver, spleen, kidneys and heart), chicken stock, beef loin, shrimp stock, and garnished with chicharon (pork cracklings). It is best eaten at the batchoyan (batchoy stalls) in La Paz Market where it originated. The most famous places to eat batchoy are Ted's, Deco's, Netong's, and Inggo's. The "original" creator of the dish is not certain, but you may judge for yourself which among them serves the tastiest. When served with a bowl of batchoy, most Ilonggos would finish the kaldo (broth) first. It is customary to request additional refills of kaldo before finishing the meal.[170]

The Spanish influence brought baking techniques to the locals which established century-old notable baking institutions in which Iloilo is famous for – Panaderia ni Paa (founded in the 1900s) and Deocampo: The Original Barquillos (Los Barquillos Originales) (founded in the 1800s) are both located in Jaro and Panaderia de Molo (founded in the 1800s) in Molo. Sweet delicacies like Biscocho and Barquillos are one of the innumerable influences of the Spaniards. Barquillos is a thin rolled cookies while Biscocho is a hardened baked sliced bread with milk and margarine. In the whole archipelago of the Philippines, Iloilo stands out for serving the first and most popular barquillos and biscocho.[171]

Media

The city and the province of Iloilo is served by mostly tabloid-type English newspapers such as Panay News, The Daily Guardian, News Express, and Sunstar Iloilo. Hublas of Panay News is the sole Hiligaynon tabloid newspaper. Iloilo has a glossy full color lifestyle magazine named Cream Magazine published monthly since 1989.

Iloilo City is the main headquarters of Bombo Radyo Philippines, which owns Bombo Radio AM stations and Star FM stations across the country. Being the urban center of the province, most of the AM and FM radio stations serve the province of Iloilo and Guimaras, mostly local stations of national radio stations.

Television arrived in the city in 1964 when DYAF-TV began airing, serving Iloilo City and the neighboring towns in the province. In 1998, with the frequency transfer to Channel 10, ABS-CBN separated its news team from the Bacolod news team and launched TV Patrol Iloilo (today TV Patrol Panay). In 1967, TV-6 Iloilo (a TV5 affiliate) stated its initial broadcast in Jaro, Iloilo City. By 1974 it changed its affiliation to GMA Network as their local television station. The channel started upgrading its facilities and relocated their TV tower to Guimaras and began serving Iloilo City, Panay and Guimaras, as well as some parts of Negros Occidental in 1998. Studio 23 Iloilo (UHF 38) (changed its name to ABS-CBN Sports and Action on January 18, 2014) initiated its broadcast in 1999. The government television station, PTV (VHF 2) in 1992 and IBC (VHF 12) in 1977 are also broadcasting local programs for Iloilo. In the first quarter of 2010, QTV-28 Iloilo (UHF 28) (changed its name to GMA News TV on February 28, 2011) and UNTV-42 (UHF 42) commenced operations in the city. In second quarter of 2012, TV5 Iloilo (UHF 36) and AksyonTV Iloilo (UHF 46) commenced operation, serving the southern part of Western Visayas that includes southern Panay, Iloilo City and Guimaras, also formerly, Negros Occidental, and at the same time started its News5 team coverage. In 1995, RMN launch a UHF TV CTV (Cinema Television) and Iloilo UHF 26 was born. It started its initial broadcast with limited coverage area. In 1997, RMN 26 rebrand to E! Philippines with general entertainment format. But in 2003, RMN cease it operations. Until BEAM an affiliate of RMN return to test broadcast on July 3, 2010, and rebrand to BEAM TV. In 2012, BEAM TV 26 relocate its transmitter to Jordan, Guimaras from RMN Broadcast Center in Lapaz, Iloilo City, and increase its transmitting power from 500 watts to current power 5,000watts in analog and during that time also initial broadcast its digital terrestrial television at UHF 42 with the power of 1,000 watts.

Nicknames

 
Philippines International Fair souvenir journal in 1953, acknowledging Iloilo's being the Queen City of the South. The city's La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad title can be seen in the journal as well.

Like the country's capital, Manila, Iloilo City is recognized by a number of nicknames, aliases, sobriquets, and slogans, both present and past. Though it is now more widely known as the City of Love, it was once renowned as the Queen City of the South. The city's official moniker is La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad (Most Loyal and Noble City), which is also depicted on the city's official seal.

  • Most Loyal and Noble City (Spanish: La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad), the royal title acquired on March 1, 1898, after being given by Queen Regent Maria Christina of Spain. This is an inscription in the city's coat of arms from the royal decree of 1896 in recognition of the people's loyalty to the Spanish crown. A replica of the Spanish crown architectural structure can be seen in the present Arevalo district of the city.[1][172]
  • Queen City of the South (Spanish: La Reina Ciudad del Sur), initially the Queen's City in the South, an honor it earned after being Queen Regent Maria Christina's favorite city in the capital's south. At the turn of the 20th century, the title evolved to what is now known as the Queen City of the South, after the city became second to the country's primate city of Manila in terms of economic importance. Following the city's economic downfall in the mid-1900s as a result of World War II destruction, Cebu City also adopted the title. City officials, however, disagree with Cebu's claim because the title is historically significant to Iloilo alone, and not for which city is the next country's second-largest economic center.[173][172]
  • City of Love (Hiligaynon: Siyudad sang Paghigugma), also the Asia's City of Love, referring to the city's citizens' Ilonggo accents, which are very soothing to the ears, as well as their well-known presumption of being the most loving, friendly, kind-hearted, and soft-spoken Filipinos. The city's great river and old architectural structures also lend the city's romantic ambiance.[174][175]
  • Textile Capital of the Philippines (Spanish: Capital Textil de Filipinas), referring to the development of a large-scale weaving industry that started in Iloilo and its surge in trade and economy in the Visayas in the late 18th century. Sinamay, piña, and jusi are some examples of the products produced by the looms of Iloilo and were exported to Manila and other foreign places.[176]
  • Heart of the Philippines, referring to the city's human heart-shaped territory as well as its geographical location at the center of the Philippine archipelago. The main flagpole of the Central Philippine University (CPU) in Jaro district is considered the center of the Philippines by longitude and latitude.[177]
  • Royal City of the South (Spanish: Ciudad Real del Sur), in reference to the city's being a royal Spanish city in the south of the capital, Manila, during the Spanish colonial era in the Philippines.[178]
  • City of Mansions, in reference to the city's being home to many well-preserved heritage houses built by the hacienderos and sugar barons way back in the pre-war era.[179]
  • Museum City of the Philippines, or simply the Museum City, referring to the city's abundance of historical sites and various types of museums.[180]
  • Athens of the Philippines, particularly referring to the Molo district, which produced many of the best political leaders and philosophers in the Philippines.[181]
  • Where the Past is Always Present, a recent nickname and tourism slogan coined by the Department of Tourism (DOT) in 2015, in reference to the city's numerous centuries-old houses and buildings that have coexisted with the city's present modern architecture.[182]
  • City of Many Firsts, from the information compiled by the late Norberto Baylen of the Visayan Tribune in the 1970s, in reference to the city's many firsts in the country and being a pioneer in many fields.[183]
  • Festival Capital of the Philippines, in reference to the city's various popular and innovative festivals, including the Dinagyang and Paraw Regatta festivals, that are flocked and celebrated in the city by the thousands to millions of tourists. Each district in the city also has its own festivals or fiestas, also known as district fiestas, celebrated annually within the district's territory. The most popular one is the Feast of Our Lady of Candles of Jaro district.[178][184]
  • Bike Capital of the Philippines, in reference to the city's having the Philippines' longest protected bike lane, as well as being the most bike-friendly city in the country.[185]
  • Food Haven of the Philippines, a new tagline declared by the city council and supported by the Department of Tourism (DOT) in 2021, recognizing the city as a gastronomic hotspot with its dozens of popular local cuisines and dishes, including the La Paz Batchoy and Pancit Molo.[186][187]

Cityscape

 
A city landmark, Edificio de Villanueva is one of the heritage edifices that lines the historic Calle Real (Royal Street) Heritage Zone in Iloilo's downtown area.

The city's modern-day appearance is shaped by the key role it has played as a trading hub for centuries. Iloilo City has a multitude of districts, each with its distinctive character and representing colonial influence. Iloilo's other distinctive features include its cityscape surrounded with water features such as rivers and is bounded by a sea; bicycle paths and ornamental trees that line most city streets; and its many open spaces, gardens and parks.

Iloilo spreads out with its location in a plain land in south eastern side of Panay Island. It is bounded in the south east side by Iloilo-Guimaras Strait and Guimaras Island which makes the city as a natural harbor for ships. The two main rivers of Iloilo and Batiano snakes through the city and empties out of the Iloilo-Guimaras Strait.

Iloilo is a conglomerate of former separate towns which includes the former city of Jaro established during the Spanish colonial times, thus the layout of the towns civic centers follows a typical Spanish colonial town center composed of a Plaza (Public Square), church, municipal hall and other religious, academic and government instrumentalities offices. A modern development is clustered in an organized form in the city's premises but is strongly concentrated in the Mandurriao district to protect the city's initiatives in protecting the city's skyline, heritage zones and environment. Present modern developments spread out outside the city in neighboring towns that are a part of Metropolitan Iloilo.

Architecture

 
Nelly's Garden or Lopez Mansion (Mansion de Lopez) in Jaro is regaled as the "Queen of all Heritage Houses in Western Visayas".

Iloilo City's urban planning and architecture reflect the plans of the Spanish and the American colonial administrations. Since Iloilo City is a conglomeration of towns, the districts have their own plazas which are surrounded by establishments of political and ecclesiastical influence, such as churches and old administrative halls. In 1930, Juan M. Arellano of the Bureau of Public Works designed the schematic plan for Iloilo City, which was influenced by Ebenezer Howard's "Garden City."[188]

 
The Beaux-Arts Villa Lizares (Lizares Mansion) in the district of Jaro.

The Spanish colonial influence is strongly imprinted not only in Iloilo's history and cultural background but also the architectural perspective.

The city's regaled status during the Spanish colonial era until the turn of the 20th century is implied during by the sugar boom with ubiquitous stately mansions and edifices built by the old money Ilonggo Sugar Baron and elite families which contrast to the city's economic importance as a second city next to Manila during the said era in the Philippines. The city's other moniker – City of Mansions is likewise implied because Iloilo holds 240 mansions in which 30 of it are grand mansions built during the Spanish and American colonial eras.

 
Campanario de Jaro (Jaro Belfry), one of the few free-standing bell towers in the Philippines that is detached from the church.

The ravaged Fuerte de San Pedro (Fort San Pedro) is Iloilo's ground zero as there was no Iloilo City back in the 1600s. As a fortress, Fort San Pedro was built solely by the Spaniards to protect Iloilo from the marauding pirates and privateers. The fort is the second Spanish built fort after the one in Cebu (also Fort San Pedro) in the Philippines and Asia. The foundation of the Fort San Pedro was substantial to the Spanish Empire's stronghold as Panay Island with Iloilo as their second colonial center established through the Iloilo precursor towns of Oton (1566) and La Villa Rica de Arevalo (1581). Oton which was founded as early as 1566 but formally established in 1572 was the actual second seat of Spanish colonial powers but due to pirate attacks, they moved the capital eastward and established the La Villa Rica de Arevalo.

The town of La Villa Rica de Arevalo holds some of the fine example of Spanish built mansions like the mansion of the Spanish Governor General, but were destroyed when the pirates ransacked and destroyed the town. It was in the said frequent events of pirate attacks that the Spaniards moved finally the capital further eastward in the mouth of Rio de Iloilo (Iloilo River) which is flanked and protected by Guimaras Island across it.

 
Casa de Emperador in Iloilo Business Park, an example of modern built classical styled edifice.

It was in the said establishment of the city on the mouth of Iloilo River that as years go by, the city flourished to its heights especially in the economic and regal importance in the Spanish and American eras. La Villa Rica de Arevalo (Arevalo) is the first Spanish named town in the Philippine islands. It is also in Arevalo that the third oldest image of Holy Child Jesus (Señor Santo Niño) in the Philippines was brought by the Spaniards. Notable present-day structures that are repositories that attest to the town's former glory as a Spanish precursor town of Iloilo is the mansion of Camiña Balay nga Bato and the Convento de Arevalo.

During the Spanish and American eras, the city developed its own unique charm that exudes a typical European city in the east which differed it from other cities just like the old Manila in the Philippines. It was in the said eras that architectural perspective of Iloilo flourished with European styled edifices and stately mansions was built which stands of Iloilo's once economic and political importance in its heyday.

 
Aduana de Iloilo (Iloilo Customs House) with the Muelle Loney (Loney Dock) which was used as a wharf and port of call berthing ships that plied international routes when the Puerto de Iloilo (Port of Iloilo) was opened to the world market on September 29, 1855, by Queen Isabella II of Spain.

Calle Real (Royal Street) which stretches from Plazoleta Gay up to Plaza Alfonso XII (Plaza Libertad) is Iloilo's Escolta (a heritage street in Manila) lined with commercial edifices that possesses European designs. Calle Real is Iloilo's old Central Business District and is considered as the second-most preserved heritage business district in the Philippines. The street during the Iloilo's economic heyday during the late 19th and early 20th centuries when the Puerto de Iloilo (Port of Iloilo) was opened to the international trade is a melting pot and common ground for people of different walks of life, race and color. Stores back then in Calle Real sells luxury goods and items from all over the world.

Iloilo also possesses structures built during the prelude of the American colonial period in the Philippines. Aduana de Iloilo (Iloilo Customs House) and old Iloilo City Hall are notable of the structures built during the said colonial period. Iloilo Customs House, the second-largest customs house after the Aduana in Manila was built the Filipino Architect Juan M. Arellano.

In farther north is the town of Jaro, the largest of all the district of the City of Iloilo. Once a separate city before it merged with the City of Iloilo in the 1940s, is considered as a town of piousness, old rich and grandeur. Many notable Spanish Ilonggos settled and the said area and built their grand mansions and villas. The town's architecture is heavily influenced by the Hispanic and American cultures.

 
Iglesia de Molo (St. Anne Parish), the first Gothic and feminist church outside Manila.

Grand mansions with imposing European styled facades and motifs of 'Buena Familias' or "Old-rich families" (Spanish-Chinese-Filipino families) of Jaro like the Lopez, Ledesma, Lizares, Jalandoni, Javellana and Locsin families that some of it lines the first millionaire row in the Philippine islands still stands to this day. Two of notable mansions that attest to Jaro's importance as an old rich town that developed out of the sugar boom during the Spanish colonial period is the Mansion de Lopez (Lopez Mansion) or Nelly Garden and the beaux-art styled Villa Lizares (Lizares Mansion) which houses at present the Angelicum School Iloilo of the Dominicans.

Religion is also a crucial factor that influenced Jaro's architectural and town plan perspective as it is the cradle of Christian faith in Western Visayas. The Spanish which brought the Roman Catholic faith established the Jaro Cathedral (National Shrine of the Our Lady Candles) with its separate belfry located across it (one of the few churches in the Philippines with a detached belfry) and the Seminario-Colegio de San Vicente Ferrer (the first institution of Higher Learning in Western Visayas). The advent of American colonialization which brought Protestantism has resulted also to the establishment of institutions.

 
Torre del Reloj (The Clock Tower) of Festive Walk Parade at Iloilo Business Park. Its construction is a result of the economic boom of the City of Iloilo since 2010.

Fine examples of institutions with edifices possessing American architecture and influence includes the Central Philippine University by the Protestant Baptists in 1905 which holds century-old American colonial-styled edifices, the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches which housed at the European styled former (Rupert) Montinola Mansion in Fajardo, Jaro, and the Jaro Evangelical Church (the first Baptist Church in the Philippine Islands), are among the few of the notable institutions that holds a number of structures that possesses American architectural influence design.

The town of Molo located westward of the "La Punta" (City Proper) is sometimes called "Parian" or Chinese town during the Spanish colonial times. Old rich Molo influential families helped shaped the town's not only economical but political and architectural sphere. The town just like the more Spanish or Mestizo town of Jaro has also a plethora of mansions built by old-rich Chinese-Spanish-Ilonggo Locsin, Lacson, Sayson, Layson and Pison families. The Molo Church "(Iglesia de Santa Ana)" which was built under the supervision of some of the members of notable Molo families like the "Locsins", is the first and only feminist church outside Manila with its imposing façade with gothic influence facing the "Plaza Molo". The "Yusay-Consing" Mansion or Molo Mansion located just across the Plaza Molo and Molo Church was bought by the retail and real estate giant SM Group has been refurbished and restored to its former glory and is now a houses several cultural stores and a mini-museum which exhibits several artworks and native products.

The present economic boom of the 21st century has spurred modern developments across the city. Huge investments of big real estate developers built modern malls and shopping centers, tall and modern edifices and skyscrapers which sprouted up especially in the new city's Central Business Center which occupies a huge land area in the town of Mandurriao. The first tallest skyscraper in Western Visayas, the Injap Tower of the Double Dragon Properties could be found in the area. Hotels and condominiums and tree-lined avenues with jogging and bicycle lanes have also been built during the city's economic renaissance up to the present. The Iloilo's festival inspired iconic Iloilo Convention Center is also located in the Iloilo Business Park.

Sustainability

 
The Iloilo Provincial Capitol, National Museum – Western Visayas Regional Museum, and Iloilo Hall of Justice with the Iloilo River in the foreground. Iloilo River, which snakes through the metropolis, is home to 22 of 35 species of mangroves endemic to the Philippines.

The city has been a champion in air quality initiatives which further solidified when it won the 2017 Clean Air City Award given by the Clean Air Philippine Movement. The award is given to urban centers and cities whose initiatives in good urban planning is to maintain a good air quality for its citizens to be a more livable and air pollution Philippines cities.[189][190]

For the second time, Iloilo City has been conferred the Galing Pook Award for its entry the Iloilo Batiano River Development Project.[191] The award recognizes best local government practices worthy of replication by other local government units (LGUs).

The city's government continued initiatives to lessen its impact on the global carbon footprint, resulted in enacting of various environmental laws in the metropolis such as banning of plastic straws in the city, strict compliance of establishments along the stretch of Iloilo river to install waste water treatment facilities, and segregation of bio-degradable and degradable rubbishes. Restaurants such as the ones that are serving fast-food in the city use oxo-degradable plastic bags and recycled paper-boxes. Iloilo City has also tree planting programs such as the government and various stakeholders continued forestation of endemic and ornamental trees along the city's major thoroughfares and mangroves along the city's creeks, estuaries, waterfront areas and rivers.

The Iloilo city government's continued efforts for green sustainability through building of parks, open spaces and making the metropolis clean and conducive to tourists, bagged the city the ASEAN Clean Tourist City award in 2020.[192]

Parks and recreation

 
Diversion Road, which stretches from Infante in Molo district to Sambag in Jaro district, has a dedicated elevated bricked bicycle and jogging lane, the longest in the country.

The city is endowed with various parks, open spaces and gardens which contribute the city's government initiatives in protecting and preserving its urbanscape for city dwellers for them to benefit from. The Iloilo River Esplanade which stretches on both sides of Iloilo River which has been designed a renowned Filipino Architect Paulo Alcazaren who designed Clarke Quay in Singapore, is the longest linear park and riverside boulevard in the Philippines. The Iloilo River Esplanade along its stretch is dense with mangrove trees where 22 of the 35 species of mangroves that is endemic to the Philippines can be found. The mangroves along the Iloilo River Esplanade is also a breeding ground for marine species.

Iloilo city before is re-incorporation is a conglomerate of former separate towns during the Spanish up to the American colonial eras thus they have their own civic centers or Plazas equipped with ornamental gardens and endemic ornamental and non-ornamental or fruit trees. Plazas have long been played the role for the city dwellers to socialize and recreate.

There are also numerous recent development initiatives that the city government is pushing through for its continued efforts for more parks and open spaces in the city such as the redevelopment of Iloilo City Civic Center which includes the Iloilo City Hall with the revitalization of the former 'Plaza de Aduana' or Sunburst Park and the relocation and building of the new Freedom Grandstand at the Muelle Loney (Loney Wharf) with pocket size and mini gardens. The said same initiative is also being laid-out and undertaken with the Provincial capitol complex of the Iloilo Provincial Government with initial phase of the Iloilo Provincial Jail being renovated and restored becoming the National Museum of the Philippines – Western Visayas regional Museum and the landscaping of the provincial capitol complex.

 
The Iloilo River Esplanade at night. Stretching for about 8-9 kilometers on both banks of the Iloilo River, it is the longest river esplanade and linear park in the Philippines.

Smart City Initiative

Iloilo City is closer to being a smart city[193] as it is providing free internet access in public areas,[194] aiming to decrease its carbon emission, higher efficiency and productivity to underscore Iloilo as a livable city. Electric vehicles are operating in the city. Pumping Stations were installed to prevent flooding.[195] Air quality is being monitored and graded as clean per international standards. Taxis are advised to use an automotive navigation system to inform passengers of their location and for navigation through streets and alleys. Oher services include, phone calls for emergency rescue, device charging stations, local wayfinding, free housing in Sooc, Lanit and San Isidro and more. All barangays of Iloilo City have installed Closed-circuit television to predict traffic police requirements and for public safety.[196]

The city has banned the use of plastic straws in the city, strict compliance of establishments along the stretch of Iloilo river to install waste water treatment facilities, and segregation of bio-degradable and degradable rubbish. Restaurants and fast-food stores use oxo-degradable plastic bags and recycled paper-boxes. Iloilo city sustained its tree-planting programs through forestation of endemic and ornamental trees along the city's major thoroughfares and mangroves along the city's creeks, estuaries, waterfront areas and rivers and clean-up drive.

The city was awarded in 2017 with Clean Air City Award by the Clean Air Philippine Movement. The award is recognition of Iloilo urban planning in diligence for maintaining the good air quality[189][190]

For the second time, Iloilo City has been conferred the Galing Pook Award for its entry the Iloilo Batiano River Development Project.[191] The award recognizes best local government practices worthy of replication by other local government units (LGUs).

Healthcare

 
CPU–Iloilo Mission Hospital which was founded in 1901 by the Presbyterian American missionary doctor Joseph Andrew Hall, is the first American and Protestant hospital in the Philippines (oldest operating hospital in the Western Visayas region). It serves as the university hospital of Central Philippine University. (Photo above is the IMH Medical Arts Building of the hospital)

Iloilo City is the leading healthcare center of the Western Visayas region and is rapidly becoming one of the medical tourism hubs in the Philippines. The Iloilo City Health Office and the Department of Health (Philippines) is responsible for the implementation and planning of the health care programs provided by the city government. The three government-run hospitals in the city are the West Visayas State University Medical Center (WVSUMC), Western Visayas Medical Center (WVMC), and the Iloilo City Hospital. The Iloilo City Health Office operates and supervises Health Centers in barrios or barangays in the city.

The city provides free immunization programs for children, specifically targeted against the seven major diseases – smallpox, diphtheria, tetanus, yellow fever, whooping cough, polio, and measles.

Iloilo's healthcare is also largely provided by private and church-affiliated corporations. Private hospitals that operates in the city are the following:

  • CPU–Iloilo Mission Hospital (CPU IMH)
  • St. Paul's Hospital Iloilo (SPH Iloilo)
  • The Medical City-Iloilo (TMC Iloilo)
  • Metro Iloilo Hospital and Medical Center (MIHMC)
  • Medicus Medical Center (MMC)
  • Qualimed Hospital Iloilo (QHI)
  • Iloilo Doctors' Hospital (IDH)
  • Medicus Cancer Institute (MCI)
  • Asia Pacific Medical Center – Iloilo (APMC Iloilo)
  • Seamen's AMEOSUP Hospital
 
Qualimed Hospital Iloilo of AC Health (Ayala Corporation), the first Ayala/Qualimed Hospital in Visayas and Mindanao.

There are also notable maternity clinics and centers in the city which include the La Paz Maternity and Reproductive Health Center (LMRHC) and CPU Birthing Center of the Central Philippine University.

The oldest running hospital in Iloilo City is the CPU–Iloilo Mission Hospital. It was founded as Union Mission Hospital in 1901 by the Presbyterian American missionary Joseph Andrew Hall as "the first Protestant and American hospital in the Philippines". Iloilo Mission Hospital serves as the university hospital of Central Philippine University. The hospital pioneered nursing education in the Philippines when it established the Union Mission Hospital Training School for Nurses in 1906, the present-day Central Philippine University - College of Nursing, the first school of Nursing in the country. The nursing school produced the first three nursing graduates, the first rank number one topnotcher and the first number one top-performing school in the history of nursing licensure and education in the Philippines.

Saint Paul's Hospital Iloilo which was founded in 1911 by the French catholic missionaries through the help of the American Catholics, is the oldest running hospital founded by Daughters of Saint Paul of Chartres in the Philippines. At present, it serves as an affiliated hospital of the St. Paul University Iloilo. Both St. Paul's Hospital Iloilo and CPU–Iloilo Mission Hospital are considered notable heritage healthcare institutions in Iloilo.

The two hospitals in the city, the Qualimed Hospital – Iloilo and The Medical City – Iloilo are newly built ones of the two of the renowned hospital groups based in Manila in the country. The Qualimed Hospital – Iloilo of the Ayala Corporation and Mercado General Hospital, Inc. is the first Ayala-Qualimed hospital outside Luzon, while The Medical City – Iloilo is likewise the first The Medical City hospital in Visayas and Mindanao of the group of healthcare institution giant, The Medical City Group. Both hospitals are equipped with state-of-the-art medical facilities catering to the community in general.

There are three public hospitals in the city operated and managed by the government:

The West Visayas State University Medical Center (WVSU Medical Center), commonly referred to as Don Benito, is a government-run hospital administered under the West Visayas State University. It primarily serves the indigent populace in the city and region, has auxiliary centers established by the national government for the Western Visayas region through the Department of Health of the Philippines – the WVSU/DOH Regional Cancer Center and the soon to be built 10 storey facility WVSU/DOH Regional Lung and Heart Center.

The Western Visayas Medical Center is the largest referral public hospital in the Western Visayas region. It is operated by the Department of Health. The hospital facilities include a 6 storey heart & lung specialty building, 3 storey dialysis building, a 2 storey main building which houses the administrative and emergency and other auxiliary health units of the hospital, and the WVMC annex building (5-6 storey).

The Iloilo City Hospital which is undergoing construction in San Pedro, Molo, is the city government's project to cope with the healthcare demand of the metropolis's indigent citizens. Components of the hospital include a 5 storey main hall, a medical arts building, and USWAG Iloilo City Molecular Laboratory.

Transportation

 
Passad Jeepneys of Iloilo City.

Public transport

Iloilo City is served mostly by passenger jeepneys, white metered taxis and tricycles within the city limits. The passad jeepneys of Iloilo are known for their sleek and sedan-like design. These often serve fixed routes and mostly travel on the city's major and secondary roads. Jeepneys are also the main mode of transportation to Metropolitan Iloilo areas. Tricycles serve most secondary roads and city communities. Large passad jeepneys and buses link Iloilo City to the rest of the province and the island of Panay. Buses bound for Metro Manila, Mindoro, Batangas, Cebu, Negros and Mindanao are also available via the Roll-on, Roll-off ferry services of the Strong Republic Nautical Highway. Mini-shuttle vans also serve major points in Panay Island.

Iloilo is one of the few cities in the Philippines that recently initiated to adopt the mini-bus like type modern PUJ or modern Jeepneys in contrast to the President Rodrigo Duterte's administration to phase out the old dilapidated jeepneys as the mode of mass public transportation in the Philippines.[197][198]

In March 2019, the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board announced the opening of a new Premium Point-to-Point Bus Service in Iloilo City with express bus services to the airports in Cabatuan, Kalibo and Boracay (Caticlan).[199]

Integrated transport terminals

 
Infante Flyover in Iloilo City – the first flyover outside Manila.

Iloilo City has five Major Integrated Transport Terminals located at the city's perimeter areas: the Iloilo North ITS (Integrated Transport System) Terminal/Iloilo North Ceres Bus Terminal (NCBT) located at Tagbak, Jaro District is the transport hub serving passengers to/from north western municipalities of Iloilo, City of Passi and northwestern Panay (Capiz and Aklan including Boracay Island); Iloilo Central Line ITS (Integrated Transport System) Terminal/Pavia Peoples Terminal (PPT) in Ungka, Jaro District is the transport terminal for passengers to/from central municipalities of Iloilo; Aleonsan ITS (Integrated Transport System) Terminal at Hibao – and in Mandurriao for those to/from the upland municipalities of San Miguel, Alimodian and Leon (including Bucari, Leon); Iloilo South ITS (Integrated Transport System) Terminal/Iloilo South Ceres Bus Terminal (SCBT) located at Mohon in Villa de Arevalo for going to/from the southern municipalities of Iloilo and to/from the province of Antique; and Iloilo North Coast ITS (Integrated Transport System) Terminal at Ticud, Lapaz District for those going to/from the northern coastal municipalities of Iloilo (including Sicogon Island and Isla de Gigante all part of Carles, Iloilo).

Cycling

 
Jaro West Diversion Road (Benigno S. Aquino Avenue).

The city has been hailed and earned its reputation as the Bicycling capital of the Philippines, a yielded effort through the recent modern economic renaissance of Iloilo City by the local and the national government units and different stakeholders by educating the city locals on the importance of a bike-able city and building dedicated bicycle lanes on city main thoroughfares.[200] The metropolis has a network of nearly 100 kilometers of bicycle lanes and the longest of which is located along the stretch of Diversion Road. The annual Iloilo Bike Festival has drawn bicycling enthusiasts throughout the country.[201][202] By 2019, Dutch Government helped out iloilo City to become a bike-friendly city.[203]

Railway

 
Engine of the Panay Railways on display in the City Proper's plaza, Plaza Libertad (formerly Plaza Alfonso XII).

From 1907 to the 1980s, Panay Railways operated a railroad from Roxas City to the port area of Muelle Loney along the Iloilo River in Iloilo City.[204] In 2022, Panay Railways announced its opening to foreign ownership to reconstruct its former train lines, which will reconnect the major cities in Panay, including Caticlan in Malay, Aklan.[205]

Airport

Iloilo International Airport is the 4th busiest in the Philippines[206] with international flight to Singapore and Hong Kong and vice versa serving passengers from Western Visayas Region, Palawan and Mindanao.[207] For domestic flights to/from Metro Manila, Caticlan, Cebu, Cuyo, Puerto Princesa, Sipalay, General Santos City, Cagayan de Oro and Davao City, Iloilo International Airport is the airport serving the general area of Metropolitan IloiloGuimaras, the province of Antique and the rest of Iloilo Province. It is located 19 kilometres (12 miles) northwest of Iloilo City on a 188 hectares (460 acres) site in the town of Cabatuan. It opened to commercial traffic on June 14, 2007, replacing the Old Iloilo Airport at the Mandurriao District. The new airport inherited its IATA and ICAO airport codes.[208] It is linked to the city through Sen. Benigno S. Aquino Jr. Avenue and served by metered taxis, airport shuttle vans and multicabs.

Recently, the national government has approved the ₱791 million budget for the expansion of the Iloilo International Airport.

Seaport

The Port of Iloilo is the port serving the general area of Iloilo and the premier port in the Western Visayas Region. The new Port of Iloilo is located on a site away from the older port facilities. It is situated in the southern coast of Panay Island, in the Panay Gulf. With Guimaras Island guarding the port from violent storms, it has one of the safest and most natural harbors in the Philippines

The Iloilo International Port Complex (IIPC) is located on 20.8 hectares of reclaimed land. It has modern facilities that include 11,400 sq. meters of open space for unhampered operations, supplemented by a backup area of 97,000 sq. meters, a crane, rails of 348 lineal meters; roll-on-roll-off support; a 7,800 container freight stations; and a 720 sq. meter passenger shed. The port complex is ideal for ships plying international routes having a berth length of 400 meters, a width of 26.26 meters and a berthing depth of 10.50 meters. It is currently expanding with the reclamation of the west side sea front portion of the complex

The Iloilo Domestic Port Complex (IDPC), located near Fort San Pedro and formerly the Old Foreign Pier, serves inter-island passenger and cargo ferries which serves the routes Manila, Palawan, Cebu, Zamboanga and Cagayan de Oro. It is located near the mouth of Iloilo River at the vicinity of the Western Visayas Regional Government Center at the City Proper District. It is also the port of call for several domestic shipping companies such as SuperFerry or 2GO Travel, Negros Navigation, Sulpicio Lines, Cokaliong Shipping, Trans-Asia Shipping Lines and others. The colloquial name "Fort San Pedro" refers to the old Spanish fortress beside it that was destroyed during World War II and soon to be restored by the Department of Tourism (DOT) under TIEZA.

 
The Jalandoni Bridge over the Iloilo River.

Muelle Loney or Iloilo River Wharf is the original port of the city. Opened to international trade in 1855, it has served as the trans-shipment docks for muscovado sugar in the late 19th to the first half of the 20th century. It has undergone several times of expansion and improvement. Today, it serves smaller cargo ships, roll-on roll-off ferries bound for Guimaras and Negros Island and fast ferries that ply Iloilo-Bacolod route regularly. In September 2014, the newly opened Iloilo River Port Complex (IRPC) at Lapuz District started its operation to replace the Iloilo River Wharf.[209]

Iloilo-Guimaras Jetty Ports for Guimaras outrigger ferries are located at Calle Ortiz and Parola. The terminal at Calle Ortiz serves Jordan, Guimaras-bound passenger and cargo outrigger boats, while Parola terminal serve Buenavista, Guimaras-bound ferries. Soon the Iloilo Jetty Port Complex (IJPC) at the Western Visayas Regional Government Center will replace the two jetty ports, the complex is complete with a modern passenger terminal building, a pumpboat fuel refilling station, a 1.3 hectares (3.2 acres) children's park with a marine museum and a CityMall complex by Double Drangon Properties. This project of the City Government was achieved through public-private partnership.[210]

Roll-on/roll-off ferry service, known in as RO-RO, is available from to Iloilo City. There is also a ro-ro service to Cebu via Negros. It is ranked third in terms of ship calls at 11,853, fourth in cargo throughout at 491,719 million metric tons and fourth in passenger traffic at 2.4 million annually.

The Iloilo Fish Port Complex (IFPC) is the only and the major center of fish trading and marine products processing in all of Visayas. The port complex is the traditional landing site of bagnetters and other fishing bancas in Iloilo City and nearby towns. This strategic location has made the port the major fish/marine source of major supermarkets, hotels and restaurants and local public markets in the country and abroad.

Its services includes, unloading and marketing facilities for fish and other fishery/aquatic products both for local and foreign markets; services and facilities for harbor operations such drydocking/repair shop, fuel, oil, water and ice conveyance and for transshipping products; processing, refrigeration and other post-harvest services including product pre-processing, freezing through contact freezer, cold storages and top-grade facilities for the processing of marine products such as prawn, abalone, cuttlefish, lobster, nylon shell, octopus, slippertail, squid, whiting and bangus; and raw land for the establishment of fishery-related factories.[211]

The complex is situated in a 21-hectare reclamation at southern part of the City Proper District. In March 2022, the fish port complex was granted ₱570 million for the expansion of its facilities which will include the construction of a new fish processing plant, establishment of a fish canning facility and the construction of an alternative energy source.[212][213]

Utilities

 
The Panay Energy and Development Corporation's Coal power plant in Ingore, La Paz (district) of Iloilo City.

A 72 MW Diesel Fuel Power Plant operated by Panay Power Corporation and a 164 MW coal power plant operated by Panay Energy Development Corporation (PEDC) provides power generation for Iloilo City, both situated in Barangay Ingore in Lapaz district.[214][215] PEDC plans for a third coal-fired power generation facility. The newest generator will be on top of the existing 164-MWs for an additional 150-megawatt to be generated that will help produce a total of 404 MW supply for the Panay and Guimaras islands.[216]

Power distribution had been facilitated by Panay Electric Company (PECO) since 1923 as one of the oldest private electricity distributor companies in the Philippines, but MORE Electric and Power Corporation (MORE Power) of the Spanish Filipino Billionaire Enrique K. Razon, has taken over PECO's operations and acts as the sole power distributor in Iloilo City.[217]

Metro Pacific Iloilo Water (MPIW), the metropolis' sole water distributor, has established a joint venture with Metro Pacific Water (MPW) and Metro Iloilo Water District (MIWD), to bolster the former's service of supplying potable water to the city and the whole Metro Iloilo.[218][219][220][221][222]

Education

Being the center of education in Western Visayas Region, the city and the province of Iloilo has a total of ten major universities.

 
Central Philippine University which was founded as legacy institution of the American titan, John D. Rockefeller, is the first Baptist and second American founded university in the Philippines and in Asia. CPU has been ranked as one of the top universities in Asia and in the world by Quacquarelli Symonds, one of the big two world university ranking agencies along with Times Higher Education, the first to do so in Western Visayas region.[223] (Aerial view above is the main campus of CPU)

Iloilo City alone hosts to 8 universities such as the Central Philippine University (CPU), University of the Philippines Visayas (UPV), which houses the University of the Philippines High School in Iloilo (UPHSI), University of San Agustin (USAI), West Visayas State University (WVSU), Iloilo Science and Technology University (formerly WVCST) (ISAT-U),[224] University of Iloilo (UI), St. Paul University Iloilo (SPUI), and John B. Lacson Foundation Maritime University (JBLFMU).

Three of the universities which are private in the city are founded by Christian religious orders and sects. Roman Catholics established the University of San Agustin (Spanish), St. Paul University Iloilo (American through their French confreres) and the Protestants who founded the Central Philippine University (American Baptist).

 
University of the Philippines Visayas – Iloilo City campus's main hall.
  • Central Philippine University – The first and only Western Visayan university in the list of the top universities in Asia and the world for 2021 to 2023 by Quacquarelli Symonds, one of the two biggest world university ranking agencies after Times Higher Education,[223][225] is the largest university in the metropolis with a population of nearly 15,000+ enrollees on its 24-hectare main campus in Jaro, Iloilo City. Formally founded in 1905 (but dates back its establishment in 1901 when CPU–Iloilo Mission Hospital, its university hospital, was opened by Presbyterian Protestant Americans) under the auspices of the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society through a grant given by the American industrialist and philanthropist, John D. Rockefeller, when the Americans brought their Protestant faith prior and after the Spanish–American War and the Treaty of Paris (1898) which ceded the bureaucracy of Philippines from Spain to the United States. The university is the first Baptist and Second American university in the Philippines and Asia (after Silliman University (1901) in Dumaguete City). The university ranks number one in Western Visayas region with 2 Commission on Higher Education (Philippines) Centers of Excellence designated programs in Agriculture and Business Administration and 4 Commission on Higher Education (Philippines) Centers of Development designated programs in Chemical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Electronics Engineering, & Teacher Education.[226][227][228][229]
 
Central Philippine University College of Nursing which was founded as Union Mission Hospital Training School for Nurses (Iloilo Mission Hospital) in 1906 is the First School of Nursing in the Philippines.

Central Philippine University holds many firsts in the Philippines in some of the units that it established – the CPU Philippine Center for Packaging Engineering and Technology (CPU PC-PET) (first of its kind in South East Asia); Central Philippine University College of Agriculture, Resources and Environmental Sciences (first government recognized agricultural school outside Luzon); Central Philippine University Republic (CPU Republic) (first and oldest organized student government in South East Asia); CPU TV Channel (first university-based TV Channel in Asia); Central Philippine University College of Theology (first Baptist theological seminary in the Philippines); and Iloilo Mission Hospital (the university hospital of the university) (first American and Protestant hospital in the Philippines).

The university enrolls and is widely known to foreign students who wants to study in Panay and Western Visayas with 216 foreign students studying from 27 foreign countries.[230] The university is associated and has produced people who became notable in their respective fields – Rodolfo Ganzon (Senator and first popularly elected Mayor of Iloilo City), Jovito Salonga (Senator), Perfecto R. Yasay, Jr. (Secretary of Foreign Affairs of the Philippines), National Artists Ramon Muzones (for Literature) and Leonor Orosa-Goquingco (for Dance), Leonor Briones (Secretary of Education of the Philippines under President Duterte's administration), Gilopez Kabayao (Musician and Ramon Magsaysay Award laureate (Asian Nobel Prize), and Jose Vasquez Aguilar (The first Filipino recipient of the Ramon Magsaysay Award and also first recipient of the award for Government Service category for his work as the "Father of the Community School Movement"), among others.

  • University of San Agustin – founded in 1904 by the oldest Roman Catholic religious who came to the Philippines – The Order of St. Augustin, is the First Augustinian University in Asia and the Pacific. It received its university status in March 1953 which also holds the distinction as the First university in Western Visayas.
  • St. Paul University Iloilo – Founded in the 1940s as a subject to the propagation of Catholicism in the American regime in the Philippines supported the spread of Protestant religion with the help of the American Catholics by their French confreres under the order of St. Paul or Chartres. St. Paul Hospital of Iloilo, the university hospital of the university which was founded in 1911 predates the university's founding.

The city universities of University of the Philippines Visayas – Iloilo City College Campus, West Visayas State University and Iloilo Science and Technology University are all controlled and subsidized by the government or as state universities.

The university's alumni have excelled and became notable in their fields which include – Franklin Drilon; Miriam Defensor Santiago, Senator and first Asian to be nominated for a seat in the International Criminal Court; Myrtle Sarrosa, celebrity and TV host; and Jed Patrick Mabilog, 2014 World Mayor Award – Top 5 best Mayor.[231]

  • West Visayas State University – formally established under the tutelage of the Thomasites in 1924 but dates back its founding in 1902 through the Philippine Normal School system during the American regime. The campus in Iloilo City is the main campus that encompasses the university system. West excels in Nursing, Medicine and Teacher Education annual licensure examinations through the topnotchers that it produces and being on the list of top performing school. The main campus has been declared as Commission on Higher Education (Philippines) Center of Excellence in Teacher Education and Center of Development in Nursing.
  • Iloilo Science and Technology University – founded in 1905 as Iloilo School of Arts and Trade by the Americans to continue the School of Arts and Trade that was built during the Spanish colonial era that was closed is focused in technological and technical courses. Its Education academic program has been designated by the Commission on Higher Education (Philippines) as Center of Development in Teacher Education.

Other private universities in the city include:

The Ateneo Graduate School of Business under the Ateneo de Manila University has a satellite campus in Iloilo City housed at the Ateneo de Iloilo Main Campus. The Ateneo Graduate School of Business – Iloilo offers Master of Business Administration (MBA) – Regis program. It is an initial part of the Ateneo educational system's plan in offering collegiate courses to make Ateneo de Iloilo a full university in the future.

Other universities that maintain units offering off-campus extension programs in Iloilo City include the Philippine Christian University (through a partnership with St. Roberts International College) and Guimaras State University.

The Iloilo City Community College (ICCC), a city project for the city to have its own community-city public college, is administered by the Iloilo City Government through the Commission on Higher Education. It offers undergraduate degrees in business, information technology and travel management.

Iloilo is also home to numerous private colleges and schools such as the Iloilo Doctors College (IDC), one PAREF-affiliated high school, the Westbridge School for Boys, St. Therese – MTC Colleges (ST-MTCC), Western Institute of Technology (WIT), De Paul College (DPC) (defunct), ABE International College of Business and Economics, ACLC College of Iloilo, Computer College of the Visayas, Dominican College of Iloilo, Great Saviour College, AMA Computer College – Iloilo Campus, STI College – Iloilo, Interface Computer College – Iloilo, IMAPF – School of Midwifery, Philippine College of Aeronautics, Science and Technology, ACSI College – Iloilo, ABBA Institute of Technology, Iloilo Scholastic Academy, Hua Siong College of Iloilo, Sun Yat Sen High School, Cabalum Western College, St. Anne College of Iloilo, St. Augustine School of Nursing – Iloilo, Assumption Iloilo (run by the Congregation of the Religious of the Assumption).

Others include Ateneo de Iloilo – Santa Maria Catholic School (run by the Society of Jesus), Angelicum School Iloilo (run by the Order of Preachers), Philippine Science High School-Western Visayas, Colegio de las Hijas de Jesus (or simply Hijas de Jesus which is run by the Congregation of the Daughters of Jesus), San Jose Catholic School (which is run by the Order of St. Agustin), Colegio de San Jose (CSJ) and Colegio del Sagrado Corazon de Jesus (CSCJ) which are both run by the Congregation of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul, and Asian College of Aeronautics. Colegio de San Jose is the oldest school for girls in Western Visayas which is now 141 years old. Iloilo is also home to numerous religious formation houses, St. Joseph Regional Seminary for Theologate studies, the 148-year-old St. Vincent Ferrer Seminary for Collegiate studies and Mill Hill Formation House of the Mill Hill Missionaries. In June 2012, the city government opened the Iloilo City Community College at Molo, Iloilo City.

The Department of Education – Division of Iloilo City covers 88 private schools[232] and 52 public schools.[233]

Notable people

Sister cities

Local
International

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Presidential Executive Order No. 559 of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo signed on August 28, 2006

References

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  46. ^ Planos de las Plazas, Presidios, y Fortificaciones en todo el Distrito de las Provincias, que sugeta al Real Dominio en las Yslas Philipinas: Relación de Artillería, Tren de manejo, Pertrechos de Guerra, Tropas regladas de Dotación: Raciones, y Municiones, con Liquidación, y Separación de su Importación en el Año: Producto de las Rentas y Consignaciones que se reporta segun el estado presente, dated 1738 (Manuscript drawn by Order of the Field Marshall Don Fernando Valdes y Tamon, Governor of the Philippine Islands from 1729 to 1739. The document is currently under the custody of the Archives of the Naval Museum in Madrid, Spain, p. 41.
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  56. ^ The members of the Jaro Ayuntamiento who signed the act of protestation against the uprising were: Mariano Villalobos, Tranquilino Gonzales, Severino Argüelles, Raimundo Escarilla, Vidal Jabelona, Ruperto Jalandoni, Esteban Jalandoni, Juan Ledesma, Pablo Ledesma, and León Jereos (Secretary). Cf. September 7, 1896, issue of El Porvenir de Bisayas
  57. ^ Policarpio F. Hernadez, Iloilo, the Most Noble City: History and Development (1566–1898), p. 144. The actual text of the letter of the members of the Jaro Ayuntamiento addressed to the Governor General of the Philippines (published in the September 7, 1896, issue of El Porvenir de Bisayas) says: Estos hechos de sedición, doblemente criminales en las dolorosas circunstancias que afligen a la Patria común, que allá, al otro lado de los mares, en los Campos de Cuba, está vertiendo sin tasa la generosa sangre de sus leales hijos que otros hijos integrados la hacen derramar; no pueden levantar eco en los corazones nobles de los Jareños, que no olvidan la inmensa gratitud que deben a España que, de la nada... los hizos nacer a la vida de la civilización y del progreso.
  58. ^ The officials of the City of Iloilo who signed the letter of protestation were as follows: Victoriano Mapa (Primer Alcalde), Emilio Escay (Primer Teniente Alcalde), Arcadio Conde Otegui (Segundo Teniente Alcalde), Vanancio Conception, José María Aguilar, Félix de la Rama, Severino Durán, Eduardo Arjanuate, Francisco Aguado, Francisco Ortiz, Lorenzo Guevara, Ramón Roco, and Mariano Teaño - regidores. Cf. September 7, 1896, issue of El Porvenir de Bisayas.
  59. ^ Esas negras traiciones, cuya sola idea avergüenza a los Filipinos buenos y leales, han producido un sentimiento unánime de protesta e indignación en el pueblo Ilongo, que cifra su más honroso blasón en el inextinguible y sacrosanto amor que profesa a la gloriosa nacionalidad española de que se siente legitimamente orgulloso. Españoles son los Ilongos, Ex.cmo. Señor, y españoles seran hasta la muerte, porque no quieren vivir ni morir de otro modo que a la sombra de la augusta enseña castillana, a la cual deben el ser hoy hombres dignos y libres. 7 September 1896 issue of El Porvenir de Bisayas.
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iloilo, city, officially, city, iloilo, hiligaynon, siyudad, dakbanwa, sang, iloilo, filipino, lungsod, iloilo, class, highly, urbanized, city, western, visayas, region, philippines, island, panay, capital, city, province, iloilo, where, geographically, situat. Iloilo City officially the City of Iloilo Hiligaynon Siyudad Dakbanwa sang Iloilo Filipino Lungsod ng Iloilo is a 1st class highly urbanized city in the Western Visayas region of the Philippines on the island of Panay It is the capital city of the province of Iloilo where it is geographically situated and grouped under the Philippine Statistics Authority but remains politically independent in terms of government and administration In addition it is the center of the Iloilo Guimaras Metropolitan Area as well as the regional center and primate city of the Western Visayas region According to the 2020 census Iloilo City has a population of 457 626 people 6 For the metropolitan area the total population is 1 007 945 people 8 Iloilo CityHighly urbanized cityCity of IloiloFrom top left to right Mandurriao district skyline Calle Real Molo Church Lopez Mansion Nelly s Garden Iloilo Customs House Jaro Cathedral Lizares Mansion Iloilo RiverFlagSealNickname s Most Loyal and Noble City Queen City of the South City of Love and othersMotto s La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad de Iloilo The Most Loyal and Noble City of Iloilo 1 Map of Western Visayas with Iloilo City highlightedOpenStreetMapIloilo CityLocation within the PhilippinesCoordinates 10 43 N 122 34 E 10 72 N 122 57 E 10 72 122 57 Coordinates 10 43 N 122 34 E 10 72 N 122 57 E 10 72 122 57CountryPhilippinesRegionWestern VisayasProvinceIloilo geographically only DistrictLone districtFounded1566 Spanish settlement CityhoodOctober 5 1889ReincorporatedJuly 16 1937Highly urbanized cityDecember 22 1979Barangays180 see Barangays and districts City geographical districtsList ArevaloCity ProperJaroLa PazLapuzMandurriaoMoloGovernment 2 TypeSangguniang Panlungsod MayorJerry P Trenas NUP Vice MayorJeffrey P Ganzon NUP City RepresentativeJulienne L Baronda NUP City CouncilMembers Sedfrey L CabalunaJose Maria Miguel S TrenasAlan A ZaldivarFrances Grace V Parcon TorresUrminico M Baronda Jr Rudolph Jeffrey O GanzonRex Marcus B SarabiaCandice Magdalane A TupasJohnny Y YoungRomel D DuronEly A Estante Jr Plaridel C Nava Electorate330 470 voters 2022 Area 3 City78 34 km2 30 25 sq mi Urban91 km2 35 sq mi Metro1 105 53 km2 426 85 sq mi Elevation21 m 69 ft Highest elevation175 m 574 ft Lowest elevation 1 m 3 ft Population 2020 census 6 City457 626 Density5 800 km2 15 000 sq mi Urban574 000 4 Metro1 007 945 Metro density910 km2 2 400 sq mi Households104 313 5 Demonym s Ilonggo masculine Ilongga feminine Economy Income class1st city income class Poverty incidence3 48 2018 7 Revenue 3 436 836 060 20 2020 Assets 9 408 121 924 49 2020 Expenditure 2 278 854 146 17 2020 Liabilities 2 082 494 199 77 2020 Service provider ElectricityMonte Oro Resource Electric and Power Corporation MORE WaterMetro Pacific Iloilo Water MPIW Time zoneUTC 8 PST ZIP code5000PSGC063022000IDD area code 63 0 33Native languagesHiligaynon IlonggoCatholic dioceseArchdiocese of JaroPatron saintNuestra Senora de la Candelaria Our Lady of the Candles Official Roman Catholic Patron of Western Visayas and Romblon Websitewww wbr iloilocity wbr gov wbr phIloilo City is a conglomeration of former towns which are now the geographical or administrative districts consisting of Villa de Arevalo Iloilo City Proper Jaro an independent city before La Paz Mandurriao and Molo The district of Lapuz a former part of La Paz was declared a separate district in 2008 9 Iloilo was the second Spanish colonial center after Cebu in the Philippine Islands It was founded in 1566 when the Spanish established a colony area between the towns of Ogtong present day Oton and La Villa Rica de Arevalo present day city district It was one of the royal Spanish cities in the Philippines in the Spanish East Indies The honorific royal title La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad which translates to The Most Loyal and Noble City was given by the Queen Regent of Spain Maria Christina for the city s loyalty to the Spanish crown during the Philippine Revolution the second city to have such a byname in the country after the City of Manila At the turn of the 20th century Iloilo was second next to Manila in terms of economic importance in the country 10 11 Before the Treaty of Paris ceded the Philippines to the United States in 1898 Iloilo served as the Spanish Empire s last capital in Asia and the Pacific 12 Iloilo was also the capital of the Federal State of the Visayas a short lived state in the central Philippines patterned after the United States federalism and the Swiss confederacy 13 In modern times the city remains one of the Philippines most influential cities in terms of its history culture and economy The city is the regional hub of education culinary religion healthcare tourism culture industry and economy in Western Visayas A thriving academic center Iloilo City is a melting pot which draws foreign and local students from various parts of the country and abroad Central Philippine University CPU a university founded by American Protestants through a grant of John D Rockefeller as the first Baptist and second American institution of higher learning in Asia attracts 15 000 enrollees from different parts of the Philippines and twenty seven foreign countries annually the largest for a single campus university in the Western Visayan region 14 The city s excellent urban planning and the continuing increase in real estate financing and business process outsourcing BPO demand have been attributed to its being one of the most livable cities in the country with an economic boom In March 2022 Colliers Philippines named Iloilo among the top locations for the expansion of outsourcing activity outside Metro Manila 15 According to CBRE Group by 2025 it is projected to become the third largest hub for the IT BPO industry in the country 16 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Pre colonial period 2 2 Early Spanish colonial period 2 3 1600s 1700s 2 4 Sugar boom era and the late Spanish colonial period 1800s 2 4 1 City Status 2 5 The Revolutionary Period 1896 2 6 Filipino American War 2 7 American colonial era and advent of Protestantism and counter reformation 1900 1941 2 8 Japanese occupation 1942 1945 2 9 Post war decline 2 10 21st century and economic boom 3 Geography 3 1 Barangays and districts 3 2 Climate 4 Demographics 4 1 Language 4 2 Population 4 3 Religion 5 Economy 5 1 Trade and industry 5 2 Banking and finance 5 3 Tourism 5 4 Information technology 5 5 Shopping and retail 6 Government 7 Culture 7 1 Museums 7 2 Festivals 7 3 Public arts 7 4 Entertainment film and performing arts 7 5 Cuisine 7 6 Media 7 7 Nicknames 8 Cityscape 8 1 Architecture 8 2 Sustainability 8 3 Parks and recreation 8 4 Smart City Initiative 9 Healthcare 10 Transportation 10 1 Public transport 10 2 Integrated transport terminals 10 3 Cycling 10 4 Railway 10 5 Airport 10 6 Seaport 11 Utilities 12 Education 13 Notable people 14 Sister cities 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 18 External linksEtymology EditThe name Iloilo is derived from the older name Ilong ilong Philippine Spanish Ilong ilong meaning nose like referring to the promontory between two rivers Iloilo and Batiano where the Fort San Pedro and the 17th century Spanish port were located 17 18 19 20 History EditPre colonial period Edit See also Hinilawod Images from the Boxer Codex c 1595 illustrating ancient Visayans The territorial expansion of Iloilo City Nothing is known historically about the region prior to the arrival of the Spanish In Historia natural del sitio fertilidad y calidad de las Islas e Indios de Bisayas 1668 the Jesuit missionary Francisco Ignacio Alcina 1668 identifies the origin of the Hiligaynon people of Oton Panay as the island of Leyte which correlates with the linguistic subgrouping of the Hiligaynon language 21 Numerous legends and fabrications however exist on the origins of the Hiligaynon people Among them is the epic Maragtas by Pedro Monteclaro first published in 1907 which describes how ten datu and their families led by Datu Puti left the kingdom of Borneo to escape the cruel reign of Sultan Makatunaw They arrived in the island of Panay and negotiated a sale of the lowlands with King Marikudo of the Ati people The price is said to be a golden salakot for Marikudo and a long golden necklace for his queen Maniwan tiwan A pact of friendship was then forged between the two peoples and the Atis performed their native songs and dances which is then said to be the origin of the Ati Atihan Festival According to Augustinian Friar Rev Fr Santaren recording in the Spanish era of this Pre Spanish legendary history that Datu Macatunao or Rajah Makatunao who was the sultan of the Moros and a relative of Datu Puti who seized the properties and riches of the ten datus was eventually killed by the warriors named Labaodungon and Paybare after learning of this injustice from their father in law Paiburong Datu of Iloilo sailed to Odtojan in Borneo where Makatunaw ruled The warriors sacked the city killed Makatunaw and his family retrieved the stolen properties of the 10 datus enslaved the remaining population of Odtojan and sailed back to Panay Labaw Donggon and his wife Ojaytanayon later settled in a place called Moroboro 22 The Maragtas also goes on to describe other settlements by Malay datu in other areas in the Visayas and Luzon 23 24 While once widely accepted and included in school textbooks Maragtas as well as the Code of Kalantiaw is now regarded by modern scholars to be an early 20th century hoax The historicity of the epic was first challenged by the historian William Henry Scott in 1968 23 Scott successfully defended his criticism before a panel of experts in Filipino history including Gregorio Zaide Teodoro Agoncillo etc some of whom had once promoted the inclusion of Maragtas in books on Philippine history 24 A more recent 2019 thesis Mga Maragtas ng Panay Comparative Analysis of Documents about the Bornean Settlement Tradition Talaguit 2019 22 has uncovered a slightly earlier account of the Bornean migration myth by the Augustinian Friar Rev Fr Tomas Santaren His account Bisayan Accounts of Early Bornean Settlements was first published in 1902 as an appendix to the book Igorrotes estudio geografico y etnografico sobre algunos distritos del norte de Luzon by Fr Angel Perez Santaren s account is allegedly a direct Spanish translation from two manuscripts acquired from locals in Iloilo sometime after 1858 when he was stationed there The details on Santaren s account corroborate most of Monteclaro s However the manuscripts that Santaren translated from were presumably only written during the colonial era in romanized Hiligaynon since pre colonial Visayans transmitted history via oral tradition not in writing Thus it is still unlikely that they are of pre colonial origin It is however accurate to regard the Maragtas or at least elements of it as being derived from local folk history rather than authentic history or simply fabrications by Monteclaro 22 25 There was a mention of Iloilo s current town of Oton in Yuan Dynasty records in the 1300s when Oton was called in Hokkien Chinese 啞陳 Pe h ōe ji A tan 26 In Panay according to Friar Gaspar de San Agustin O S A in the ancient times there was a trading center and a court of the most illustrious nobility in the whole island 27 Early Spanish colonial period Edit Charles V of Spain In 1519 King Charles I of Spain already acquired and inherited Catholic kingdoms He is the King of all Spain King of Germany and Holy Roman Emperor Duke of Burgundy and Luxembourg Count of Holland Count of Barcelona Count of Flanders Prince of Asturias Archduke of Austria King of Aragon King of Jerusalem Catalonia Valencia Naples two Sicilies Corsica and Sardinia King of the Western and Eastern Indies of the Islands and Mainland of the Ocean Sea King of Italy King of Bohemia and Hungary He commissioned Ferdinand Magellan to circumnavigate the globe especially to establish International Trade in Spice Island The dangerous and uncertain voyage as 5 ships with 270 men departs from Seville and by 1520 the expedition have traversed for months calm Ocean they called Pacifico or Peaceful 28 The mountains of Samar and Leyte was visible as they drew closed which the crew called Las Velas or the Sails They disembark in unpopulated Homonhon Island for a week from a long journey for food and water and call the place Buenas Senas or good sign They navigated through the Strait of Siargapo and at landed Limasawa Island and were received peacefully by locals Delighted the Spaniards planted a cross on a hill and the first mass was celebrated It was the first Spanish settlement and the birthplace of Christianity in the Philippines The locals were introduced to visit another kinsman chieftain along the Butuan River The King of Butuan received the Spaniards on April 8 1521 Returning to Limasawa The Prince of Limasawa also told them about 3 powerful Kedatuan in Sugbu Yrong yrong and Tondo On March 17 1521 Magellan named the newly discovered Island as Las islas de San Lazaro By April 7 Magellan arrived in Sugbu Datu Zula of Mactan sent Magellan 2 goats On Friday April twenty six Zula the second chief of the island of Mactan sent one of his sons to present two goats to the captain general and to say that he would send him all that he had promised but that he had not been able to send it to him because of the other chief Lapu Lapu who refused to obey the king of Spain 29 Humabon tricked Magellan to kill Lapu Lapu the Datu or chieftain of nearby Mactan Island 30 The men of Humabon who accompanied Magellan did not engage in battle with Lapu Lapu Magellan was hit by a poisoned arrow he turned toward his men who were returning to the ships and fell down The next day Rajah Humabon of Sugbu offered a Banquet for Spaniards Twenty seven Spanish sailors died due to poisoning by Cebuanos Rajah Humabon restored friendly relations with Lapu Lapu as he is married to Hara Humamay Lapu lapu niece Under Philip II in 1565 the Spaniards in Mexico returned to Cebu to avenge Magellan s death against the treachery of Cebuanos Miguel Lopez de Legazpi pillaged and burned houses in Cebu for days Cebuanos retreated fearing the heavily armored Spaniards now with formidable reformed infantry called Tercios composed of alabardero alferez with a sword and Arcabucero with gunpowder 31 Miguel Lopez de Legazpi directed Felipe de Salcedo along with Spanish Friar Martin de Rada and other Augustinian missionaries to look for food They disembarked in Iloilo and established a temporary settlement in Araut somewhere in Dumangas In 1566 they founded a settlement in the areas between Ogtong Oton and the present day La Villa Rica de Arevalo district of Iloilo City Though founded in 1566 Oton which forms a big part of the area in the said settlement with Arevalo was established formally in 1572 as the second official Spanish colonial outpost after Cebu City The city was founded by 80 pure Spaniards from Europe 32 and reinforced by 169 Mexican soldiers from Latin America 33 Unlike the Indianized Cebuanos who were neutral to the Spaniards or the partially Islamized Tagalogs of Manila who were more hostile the people of Madja as welcomed the Iberians as allies since at that time period Madja as was locked in a war against the invading Muslims especially with the Sultanate of Brunei and its vassal states the Sultanate of Sulu and the Kingdom of Maynila which according to Spanish Governor General Francisco de Sande are their blood cousins 34 The people then fervently accepted Christianity as they supplied the bulk of the mercenaries used in the conquest of partially Islamized Manila whose rulers were related to the Sultan of Brunei 35 When the Spaniards came to the Visayas they noted that the pirates among them were more terrifying than the Mohammedans of Jolo and Mindanao All year long after the harvest they would sail toward faraway places to hunt slaves and make surprise attacks on settlements Those who did not live along the rivers would make their raids in the months of February March April October and November going deeper into the interior parts of the islands sacking the villages These raiding expeditions are called panggubat noun or manggubat gerund verb form 36 The Plan of the Fort of Iloilo in 1738 formerly called Fortificacion de Nuestra Senora del Rosario en el Puerto de Yloylo Provincia de Oton in the early 1700s However upon Christianization and Hispanization the fiercest slave raiders among the Philippine islands the people Panay and the other Christianized peoples of the archipelago were converted and reformed and they abandoned the practice of slaving piracy and raiding and contented themselves to be simple soldiers or farmers 37 38 In 1581 Ronquillo moved the colonial center from Ogtong to approximately 12 kilometres 7 5 mi eastward due to recurrent raids by Moro pirates and Dutch and English privateers He renamed this new colonial seat La Villa Rica de Arevalo in honor of his hometown in Avila Spain 39 Ronquillo also settled groups of Spanish and Mexican soldiers to become the first colonists of Arevalo as he built his mansion in the area 40 The Chinese traders supplying the colonists then established themselves in Iloilo s parian Molo 41 Meanwhile Jaro was soon filled up with various kinds of mestizos Mixed raced people and Mandurriao hosted the growing Indian community near the Nanak Darbar Indian Sikh Temple 42 In the early days of the Spanish period the first Manila Galleons were originally constructed at the port of Oton to the west of Iloilo Since there was no precedent in Spain for the immensity of a Manila Galleon it could be argued that the proto type Manila galleons were of Visayan design since the Visayans were already constructing huge multi masted 4 to 5 decked caracoas in their wars against the other kingdoms and thus the technical know how to construct the first Manila galleons was an amelioration of Visayan shipbuilding with Spanish shipbuilding Oton built the first Manila galleons before operations were eventually transferred to the Bicol and Cavite shipyards 1600s 1700s Edit In the year 1600 a large Muslim attack on Iloilo City was launched with a force of 70 ships and 4 000 warriors raiding and attacking several Visayan islands in order to abduct slaves However the attack was repulsed by a force of 1 000 Visayan warriors and 70 Mexican arquebusiers under the command of the Don Juan Garcia de Sierra the Spanish alcalde mayor who died in battle 43 With the increase in Moro incursions toward the end of the sixteenth century Spanish defenses in the Visayas were strengthened by the construction of a fort at Iloilo staffed by two companies of Mexican soldiers 44 In 1635 in an effort to check the Islamic slave raiding into the Visayas islands the Christian Visayans from Iloilo together with Spanish officers and their Latino soldiers from Peru 45 soon founded Zamboanga City and settled in it using it as a fortress to prevent Moro attacks in the Visayas and as a staging ground for Christian campaigns into Muslim Mindanao In 1700 due to ever increasing attacks especially from the Dutch and the Moros the Spaniards again moved their seat of power some 25 kilometres 16 miles eastward to the village of Irong Irong which had natural and strategic defense against raids At the mouth of the river that snakes through Panay the Spaniards built the Fortificacion de Nuestra Senora del Rosario en el Puerto de Yloylo Provincia de Oton 46 now called Fort San Pedro to better guard against the raids which were now the only threat to their hold on the islands Irong Irong or Ilong Ilong was shortened to Iloilo Later the natural port area quickly became the capital of the province 39 Sugar boom era and the late Spanish colonial period 1800s Edit Aduana de Iloilo Iloilo Customs House is the second biggest customs house in the Philippines after the old Spanish Aduana Intendencia de Manila in Intramuros and the American era built Aduana de Manila Manila Customs House Spanish colonial local government in Iloilo allowed Chinese migrants which worked among the city s industries the Locsin Lopez Jalandoni Lim and Sy families and Latin Americans from across the Pacific Viceroyalty of New Spain to man its military fortifications the Araneta De Rama and Arroyo families In the late 18th century the development of large scale weaving industry started the movement of Iloilo s surge in trade and economy in the Visayas Sometimes referred to as the Textile Capital of the Philippines 47 the products were exported to Manila and other foreign places Sinamay pina and jusi are examples of the products produced by the looms of Iloilo Because of the rise of the textile industry there was also a rise of the upper middle class However with the introduction of cheap textile from the UK and the emergence of the sugar economy the industry waned in the mid 19th century Mansion de Lopez Nelly s Garden which is regaled as the Queen of all heritage houses in Iloilo and Panay is one of the grand mansions in the heritage district of Jaro that resulted from the sugar boom The waning textile industry was replaced however by the opening of Iloilo s port to the world market in 1855 Because of this Iloilo s industry and agriculture was put on direct access to foreign markets But what triggered the economic boom of Iloilo in the 19th century was the development of the sugar industry in Iloilo and its neighboring island of Negros Sugar during the 19th century was of high demand Nicholas Loney the British vice consul in Iloilo developed the industry by giving loans constructing warehouses in the port and introducing new technologies in sugar farming The rich families of Iloilo developed large areas of Negros which were later called haciendas because of sugar s high demand in the world market Because of the increase in commercial activity infrastructures recreational facilities educational institutions banks foreign consulates commercial firms and much more sprouted in Iloilo City Status Edit Queen Regent Maria Cristina of Spain and her son King Alfonso XIII The Queen Regent raised the status of Iloilo as a City on October 5 1889 in the name of King Alfonso XIII who was still a minor On October 5 1889 a royal decree raised Iloilo s status from a town to a city this on account of growing development in commerce and industry making her second to Manila in importance 48 49 Iloilo thus succeeded Manila Cebu and Vigan as officially declared cities 50 51 Through the Becerra Law of 1889 the ayuntamiento of Iloilo was established on January 7 1890 its inauguration led by the former Governor General Valeriano Weyler 52 53 Iloilo City was the second most important city in the archipelago at the end of the Spanish Regime 54 The Revolutionary Period 1896 Edit Further information Philippine Revolution The immediate reaction of Ilonggo elite to the outbreak of the 1896 rebellion in Manila was that of surprise They immediately responded with protestations of outrage and affirmed their loyalty to Spain The Ilonggos themselves were united in their support of Spain during the first two years of the revolutionary period 55 Shortly after the Cry of Balintawak the Jaro Ayuntamiento another colonial city adjacent to Iloilo City composed of native Ilonggos 56 convened a special session on September 1 1896 where the Manila uprising was condemned as an unpatriotic act that finds no echo in the noble hearts of Jarenos who do not forget the immense gratitude they owe Spain who from nothing raised us to a life of civilization and progress 57 The Ayuntamiento of Iloilo 58 also affirmed its allegiance and loyalty to Spain and made a similar protestation Condemning the uprising the city s letter to the Governor General says Those dark betrayals the mere notion of which embarrasses good and loyal Filipinos have produced a unanimous sentiment of protest and indignation among the Ilongo people who engrave its most honorable blazon in the sacred and inextinguishable love that it professes to the glorious Spanish nationality that it legitimately feels proud of The Ilongos are Spaniards Your Excellency and Spaniards will they be until death because they do not want to live and die in another way than under the shadow of the august Castillan standard to which they owe being dignified and free men now 59 The foreign community in the city also asked its representatives to visit local authorities and to elevate their protests against the revolt And so did the Filipino parish priests of Jaro Molo Mandurriao and Arevalo 60 Towns in Iloilo province also condemned the Manila uprising and those of the neighboring provinces of Capiz and Antique as well as the island of Negros followed suit This emboldened the Ilonggo elite to initiate the organization of volunteers to be sent to quell what was seen as a mostly Tagalog rebellion The move was backed by the Spanish and foreign communities of Iloilo 61 A battalion of five hundred native volunteers was raised which was divided into two companies and placed under the cadre of mostly Spanish officers 62 They arrived in Manila on January 16 1897 63 They were one of the largest native contingent to serve the government forces against Katipunan troops led by Emilio Aguinaldo in the battlegrounds of Cavite province 64 Seminario de San Vicente Ferrer in Jaro Iloilo City the oldest institution of higher education in Western Visayas region It is the fifth oldest and the last seminary established by Spaniards in the Philippines The Ilonggo volunteers established for themselves a distinguished combat record in Cavite Once the Pact of Biak na Bato was signed they returned to Iloilo In April 1898 their homecoming just like their departure was met with much fanfare This galvanized the Ilonggos into more public outpourings and manifestations of loyalty to Spain 65 Due to the loyalty of the Ilonggos the city of Iloilo was honored with the perpetual 64 title of Muy Noble Most Noble The Royal Decree granting this title was signed on March 1 1898 by Queen Regent Maria Cristina 66 67 Over time this title earned for Iloilo City the reputation of it being the Queen s Favored City in the South or simply Queen s City in the South being the second Spanish port of importance next to Manila and being located south of the archipelago s Capital On a side note at the beginning of the American period until the Second World War Cebu became the second port of importance Iloilo having been partly ravaged by bombardment fire and riots during the American occupation of Iloilo City Yet it was also during this period of Philippine history that Iloilo was more popularly known as the Queen City of the South This points to the fact that the moniker was associated with the Queen Regent s favor and with the honorary title granted to Iloilo City as La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad The Most Loyal and Noble City due to the loyalty of its citizens to the Spanish Crown 68 Besides the Ilonggos who were among the first allies of the Spanish Crown in the archipelago contributed in the Spanish conquest of Luzon It was in Arevalo later a district of Iloilo City Panay that the conquest of Luzon was planned and launched on May 8 1570 with the help of seafaring inhabitants of the Island 69 Modern day Plaza Libertad formerly Plaza Alfonso XII El Duodecimo at night After the defeat of the Spanish forces at the Battle of Manila Bay during the Spanish American War the Capital of the Spanish East Indies was transferred to Iloilo with General Diego de los Rios as the new Governor General residing in the city A truce was declared between the American and the Spanish forces pending the negotiations of the joint commission of both warring Countries in Paris France for the terms of peace Meanwhile General Aguinaldo sent several small vessels to Panay with Tagalog revolutionaries in order to stir up rebellion in the Visayas He was anxious to secure all territories he could before the conditions for peace should be settled in Paris At stake was the hope that actual possession of territories would influence the final decision 70 By October 1898 fresh Tagalog expeditions were sent to Panay and coerced or persuaded its people to rise in greater force than ever until finally General de los Rios had to fall back to Iloilo By the middle of November after having secured the support of the inhabitants of the towns outside Iloilo through the leadership of General Martin Delgado practically the whole island of Panay except for Iloilo the City Proper Jaro La Paz and Molo was under the revolutionary dominion By December de los Rios held only the city and port of Iloilo 71 On December 25 1898 fifteen days after the signing of the Treaty of Paris on December 10 72 the Spanish government surrendered to the Ilonggo revolutionaries at Plaza Alfonso XII Plaza Libertad today making Iloilo the last capital of the Spanish Empire in Asia and the Pacific Military Provincial Governor Ricardo Monet who was representing Governor General de los Rios together with Lt Col Agustin Solis formally handed over Plaza Alfonso XII to Delgado who represented Emilio Aguinaldo president of the newly established Philippine Republic in Iloilo Delgado was named provincial governor afterwards The newly found freedom of the Ilonggos would be short lived The American forces arrived in Iloilo on December 27 1898 under the command of General Marcus P Miller and were afterwards reinforced up to a total strength of about 3 000 troops and two ships 73 to take possession of the territory in accordance with the Treaty of Paris 74 The Federal State of the Visayas was established on December 2 1898 to promote the ideal of federation for an independent Philippine nation It was composed of the Cantonal governments of Bohol and Negros as well as the Provisional Government in the Visayas which exercised powers over Panay and Romblon The government of the federal state was patterned after the United States federalism and the Swiss confederacy 13 The government was reportedly created following consultations with Emilio Aguinaldo Roque Lopez who was the president of the provisional government in Panay became the federal state s president and Iloilo City was designated as the Visayas capital 75 Filipino American War Edit After the Spanish forces left the city the revolutionary forces made a formal entry amidst music and banners A government was constituted On January 17 1899 an election placed Raymundo Melliza of a notable family from Molo that was respected by both the natives and foreigners to office as Mayor However the influence of the new regime established by the government of Aguinaldo did not have effective extent far beyond a day s march from the Capital At the threshold of the City and Province of Iloilo the Americans were waiting for a signal from Manila Two more ships supplemented the U S forces even though no clashes with the revolutionaries took place after the Spaniards abandoned the city Miller expressed demands for the surrender of Iloilo but no gun was fired The Americans were waiting for the right moment for it was not until February 6 1899 that the American Senate ratified the Treaty of Paris 76 On February 4 hostilities broke out between Aguinaldo s forces and the Americans in Luzon Emissaries brought Aguinaldo s message to the Ilonggos to hold the City against the enemies The demand for surrender was renewed by Miller on February 7 upon receipt of orders from Manila with the threat to bombard Iloilo by the 12th day of the month if no surrender would take place 77 General Martin Teofilo Delgado marching in 1901 ahead of 30 officers and 140 men to surrender to Brig Gen Robert P Hughes regional commander of the US imperialist forces occupying the country As the Americans were preparing to attack the city the 1 650 native troops under General Martin Delgado became uncontrollable and insolent to their officers They were promised a monthly remuneration of Php4 and food but only received Php1 Threats of mutiny sacking and burning of the city forced the Generals to collect money from the towns of Panay in order to appease the Visayan contingents The same thing happened to the Tagalog component of the troops The danger of riots in the city and the attitude of native soldiers fomented fear among the inhabitants Chinese merchants closed their stores leaving only a small hole for transacting business Many prominent families who were in constant fear for their safety went over to Negros Island in small schooners that flew the Philippine flag without having any trouble with the American ships on standby in the waters between the two islands 77 On February 10 an Extraordinary Session at the City Hall discussed plans for the impending bombardment of the city There was a proposal to burn Iloilo but the Mayor protested to this barbarous plan A majority in the meeting was in favor of burning which was seen as an invitation to despoil lay waste and slay The instigators who had no property interests in Iloilo but who were so jealous of those who have found a ready response of the Tagalog mercenaries who had no local attachment to the city 78 The Americans fired the first shell on February 11 1899 Foreign eyewitnesses observed that the bombardment damaged quite a few buildings In the meantime from early morning the withdrawing native soldiers followed by a riffraff mob were observed to have rushed hither and thither throwing firebrands on to petroleum washed houses The Chinese had to barricade themselves to no use since fire burned their bazaars Europeans and the Spanish half castes had to defend themselves with every means possible including bribing the rioters with a few pesos Two British warships in the roadstead sent boats ashore and landed a party of marines who made a gallant effort to save foreign properties 78 as the United Kingdom had a strong business interest in Iloilo and a Consulate By 1 o clock of the same day the Americans made a landing and restored order Sentinels were stationed to protect what still remained of the townspeople s goods In due course indemnity claims were forwarded to the American military authorities but were all rejected 79 Ten years later an article published in the local paper Nuevo Heraldo summarized the downfall of the Queen City in these words The fire left behind only the name Iloilo as the main part of the city was reduced to ashes by the retreating Ilongo troops That event was the cause of the ruin of such a beautiful city second only to Manila where if there was not a surplus of money neither the people s welfare was wanting and life was prosperous and peaceful If the brain who planted such an unqualified act had measured the consequences maybe he would never have dared doing it 80 By February 1899 the Americans had started mobilizing to colonize anew the City and Province They continued to meet resistance from the Ilonggos which lasted up to 1901 In which case Iloilo was also among the last cities to fall to Americans 81 Many leaders surrendered to the new regime and were reintegrated to the Ilonggo society without conditions Among them was General Martin Delgado who accepted the position of Governor of the Province of Iloilo from 1901 to 1904 under the American flag He was at that time the highest paid Governor in the whole Archipelago receiving 3 000 gold annually 82 Local government was established in some towns of Iloilo by April 11 1901 Jose Maria Gay was appointed Alcalde Matias Hibiernas was teniente alcalde of Iloilo Jose Yusay was President of Molo Pablo Borromeo was President of Arevalo Ruperto Montinola was the lone representative of Jaro but was not its president Madurriao s president was Emigdio Mesa Emilio Magbanua was appointed its police delegate It was observed by Juan de Leon judge of the Court of First Instance that there existed a rivalry between the pueblos of Iloilo Jaro and Molo which are adjacent to and are only half an hour travel by carriage from each other Besides Molo and Jaro are residential pueblos and Iloilo was the business town for both It was also recommended that Arevalo be joined to Molo and La Paz to Jaro The aggregate population of these territories was at 100 000 in 1901 83 Presidents and other representatives were also appointed for the towns of Alimodian Miag ao Janiuay Mina Oton Passi Guimbal Pototan San Joaquin Santa Barbara San Miguel Pavia Sara Nagaba currently known as Nueva Valencia San Enrique Lambunao Cordoba a barangay of Tigbauan today Cabatuan Leganes Tigbauan Banate Buena Vista Navalas Tubungan Duenas Mandurriao Maasin Lucena and Leon Other formerly existing ones like Anilao and Barotac Viejo were fused with other towns 83 As the aftermath of the revolution and the Filipino American War it was clear to all the most sober minded and best educated Ilonggos that Aguinaldo s government was a failure in Panay at least Visayans of position with property interests at stake were convinced that absolute independence without any control or protection from some established political power was premature and doomed to disaster The Visayan grudge against the Tagalog predominance was also a factor that contributed to the failure of Aguinaldo s government But the aggravating factor was the dictatorial air and brutal conduct of the Tagalog troops which destroyed the theory of fraternal unity 84 Ananias Diocno the Tagalog contingents leader known for severity in his Capiz and Iloilo campaigns left a lasting non commendable remembrance in the history of Panay 77 85 American colonial era and advent of Protestantism and counter reformation 1900 1941 Edit Central Philippine University was founded in 1905 through a grant given by the American industrialist oil magnate and philanthropist John D Rockefeller by the Baptist American missionaries it is the first Baptist founded and second American university in the Philippines and in Asia Aerial view of Iloilo circa early 1900s In 1900 no Americans reverted the city s status into a township By virtue of Act No 719 of 1903 the municipalities of Jaro La Paz Mandurriao and Molo were incorporated into the municipality of Iloilo 86 Pavia was also incorporated into Iloilo from Santa Barbara by virtue of Act No 1333 19 April 1905 87 Later Executive Order No 64 24 December 1907 separated Pavia and Jaro from Iloilo and constituted them as the municipality of Jaro with effect on February 15 1908 88 La Paz was re established as a separate municipality in 1920 by virtue of Executive Order No 70 signed on October 11 1919 The Americans initiated the construction of the Baluarte and Arroyo streets the extension of Delgado Street to Valeria and from Fuentes and Jalandoni streets up to the present day U P in the Visayas Quezon and Mabini streets were asphalted while their sidewalks were also constructed More significant was the installation of streetlights all throughout the city in 1921 In 1926 the widening of important streets like General Luna J M Basa and Ledesma was started In 1927 an improved street Valeria Ledesma formerly known as Weyler was inaugurated David 1937 89 During the American colonial regime that time in the Philippine islands the Americans brought with them their Protestant faith A comity agreement was made in 1898 that the Philippine islands would be divided into different Protestant denominations for missionary works to avoid future conflicts Iloilo is one of the first favored places in the country where the early Protestant sects came because of the city s economic prominence and importance next to Manila during such time 90 Western Visayas and Negros in accordance with the comity agreement was given to the religious jurisdictions of the Baptists although other Protestant sects were allowed to do missions in the same area The Protestant missionaries initiated large scale enterprises in the predominantly Catholic province The Presbyterians established the first Protestant and American hospital in the country the Iloilo Mission Hospital Supposedly it came also that Iloilo is the original location for foundation of Silliman University the first Protestant and American university in the country and in Asia However due to the Catholic opposition where the school will stand the founder David Hibbard prospected some new locations He went to Cebu and later had a side trip in Dumaguete City where he had a decision to establish and where Silliman University is presently located 91 Baptists on the other hand established institutions like Central Philippine University in 1905 as the first Baptist founded and second American university in Asia the Jaro Evangelical Church the first Baptist church in the Philippines and the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches the oldest Baptist organizational body in the Philippines 92 Later the Seventh day Adventists established the Jaro Adventist Center the first organized Seventh day Adventist church outside Manila Central Philippine University was established through a grant given by the then richest American industrialist and oil magnate John D Rockefeller 93 94 95 96 97 Central Philippine University pioneered the work study program in the country which was later patterned and followed by other institutions and has also established the first and oldest student governing body in South East Asia modeled on the American civil government the Central Philippine University Republic in 1906 after the Jaro Industrial School CPU s forerunner was established Founded in 1901 by Protestant Presbyterian American missionary and physician Joseph Andrew Hall CPU Iloilo Mission Hospital is the first American and Protestant founded hospital in the Philippines Under the auspices of the Presbyterian Church in the United States in 1901 the Sabine Haines Memorial Union Mission Hospital Union Mission Hospital was established by American missionary doctor Joseph Andrew Hall and his wife Jane Russell Hall The hospital is also the first hospital for soldiers and the constabulary predecessor of the Philippine National Police during the American colonial regime in the country The hospital pioneered the nursing education in the country through the establishment of the Union Mission Hospital Training School for Nurses the first nursing school in the Philippines Later the hospital was handed over to the Protestant Baptists In 1931 the Union Mission Hospital moved to its present site in a property bought by the Baptists thus a year later in 1932 the hospital changed its name to Iloilo Mission Hospital along with its nursing school The school was later transferred and became and organic academic unit of the Central Philippine University the present day Central Philippine University College of Nursing Iloilo Mission Hospital has over the years associated with Central Philippine University as its university hospital CPU Iloilo Mission Hospital Up to the present the various evangelical Protestant denominations composing around 2 8 of the Filipinos and their educational institutions also serve Catholic students in Iloilo who make up 83 of the population 98 Seizure of friar lands and parishes and the above mentioned Protestant activities gave the American and Filipino public an impression of an anti Catholic stance of the U S occupation of the Islands during the first years of the American rule The Taft Commission the sole legislative body of the American government for the Philippines then known as the Philippine Islands under the sovereign control of the United States while still under the Philippine American War were attacked by Catholic press in New York for anti Catholic bigotry Soon pressures from influential Catholics in the United States and also in Ireland caused President Theodore Roosevelt to appoint a Catholic in the commission to defend Catholic interest in the Philippines Influential Catholics in Manila followed suit Worries about Catholic vote in national elections moved the civil government to send the commission to the Vatican to negotiate exploring workable to solutions to the Catholic question in the newly acquired territory Before coming to Rome the head of the Commission personally visited the Cardinal Archbishop of Baltimore 99 Pace by pace acceptable solutions were employed In 1902 the President of the United States of America commissioned two American Augustian friars to pioneer a movement to send American priests out to the Philippines to replace the Spanish friars 100 who diminished in number 1 013 in 1898 to 246 in 1903 due to normal loss of personnel due to death or retirement death caused by native hostilities or voluntary return to Spain 101 Old Spanish era structure of Colegio de San Agustin the present day University of San Agustin It waS built to counter Protestantism by Spanish Roman Catholic Augustinian friars through their American confreres In Iloilo American Catholics countered the Protestant American missions and the American Catholic bishops like Frederick Rooker Dennis Joseph Dougherty and James McCloskey were named for the Roman Catholic See of Jaro in Iloilo City These bishops sustained the educational achievements of the Spanish friars by bringing in American and European Catholic missionaries among whom were the Sisters of Charity of St Paul and Augustinian missionary priests The Augustinians who were the first to bring the Christian faith in the Philippines as well as in Panay island and who built the centuries old heritage churches in this island 102 established the Collegio de San Agustin in 1904 which eventually became the only university of the Augustinian Order in Asia During the American regime their confreres from the United States developed evermore this institution which later became the first university in Iloilo The American Catholic Bishops also maintained and upgraded the St Vincent Ferrer Seminary established in 1869 as the Collegio Seminario de San Vicente Ferrer which was the first institution of higher learning in Western Visayas Despite the Augustinians being Catholics and Baptists being Protestants they mutually enriched each other through dialogue mainly because Augustinian ideals were the foundations of Protestantism since the first Protestant was Martin Luther and he was a former Augustinian priest himself and the Protestant zeal for reformation from corruption even started some reform in the church itself Saint Ezekiel Moreno who was ordained in the Minor Orders in Jaro Iloilo had walked the fine line between reform obedience and leadership since he ministered and walked hand in hand with condemned rebels and criminals in the Iwahig Prison and Penal Farm he was also obedient to his superiors in the Order of Augustinian Recollects a reform or Recollection movement in the Augustinian Order which took elements from the Protestant Reformation Saint Ezekiel Moreno also became the leader of a political movement when he became a Bishop of Pasto Colombia 103 The visitation of Saint Ezekiel Moreno is a harmonized incarnation of the ancient Convivencia in Spain when different religions and kingdoms Pagan Christian Jewish and Muslim lived side by side and struggled to maintain their perspective purity contested with each other and yet also mutually enriched each other without turning into a mongrelized melting pot of a mixed up and confused morass Coincidentally Saint Ezekiel Moreno was ordained in the Minor Orders in the then church of Jaro which housed a Virgin Mary statue under the Title of Nuestra Senora de la Candelaria de Jaro An image with complex Convivencia alluding properties due to the confluence of many symbols from various cultures simultaneously present in the image but it is likely not earthly of nature and is a pure grace direct from heaven or an image Not carved by human hands due to its miraculous nature which was found floating in a river shifting in weight and growing in size A market in Iloilo in the 1910s The Paulinian Sisters took charge of St Paul Hospital originally owned by the Catholic Diocese of Jaro Bishop Dennis Joseph Dougherty who later became Cardinal Archbishop of Philadelphia gave the medical facilities to the Sisters To commemorate the bishop s generosity the hospital named a more recent section of the facilities after him the CADMA Cardinal Dougherty Medical Annex To meet the growing need to provide nurses for their hospital the Paulinians also opened a nursing school Today this institution has also become a university St Paul University Iloilo and has ever since supplied high quality healthcare professionals known worldwide for their skills and dedication to work St Paul s Hospital Iloilo circa 1920 Established during the American colonial period in 1911 by the Daughters of St Paul or Chartres it is the oldest existing hospital under the said Roman Catholic order in the Philippine islands During the American colonial occupation one of the platforms by the colonial government was first to establish and implement a public education system in the islands and the Thomasites were deployed and commissioned by the American government to teach in the public schools that will be established The Thomasites tolerated religious freedom which is one of the foundations of the United States constitution and legacy to the Philippines while commissioned and under their tutelage to teach in public schools during the colonial period Public schools that were established when the Thomasites came to Iloilo are Iloilo Normal School the present day West Visayas State University formally established in 1924 but dates back its founding in 1902 as part of the Philippine Normal School System in the Philippines the Iloilo National High School the first public provincial high school in the islands and Baluarte Elementary School the first public elementary school in the islands Commonwealth Act No 57 was passed in 1936 granting city status to Iloilo this charter was immediately amended by Commonwealth Act No 158 some days later to incorporate the municipalities of La Paz and Arevalo as part of the new city s territory 104 Iloilo regained cityhood status on July 16 1937 through Commonwealth Act 158 Incorporated as part of Iloilo City were the towns of La Paz and Arevalo and inaugurated on August 25 1937 The municipality of Jaro on the other hand was incorporated into Iloilo City some years later by virtue of Commonwealth Act No 604 22 August 1940 which amended the city charter of Iloilo to include into Iloilo City the municipality of Jaro on the date that the President of the Philippines may set by proclamation 105 To that effect President Manuel L Quezon issued Proclamation No 663 on January 7 1941 giving January 16 as the date of Jaro s incorporation into Iloilo City 106 Sugar s demand was declining labor unrests in the port area scared the investors away and the opening of the sub port of Pulupandan in Negros Occidental moved the sugar importation closer to the sugar farms Japanese occupation 1942 1945 Edit Central Philippine University s main campus north eastern side aerial view in the 1960s During the onset of World War II Central s entire properties on its main campus were heavily destroyed The war torned university s main campus was rebuilt after the post war resulting for a well laid campus plan dotted with palm and acacia trees and home to a plethora of century old colonial American heritage structures built in the early 1900s By 1942 the Japanese invaded Panay and the economy moved into a standstill During World War II Iloilo was controlled by several Japanese battalions Japan s ultimate goal was to entrench itself deeply into the Philippines so that at the close of the war they could occupy it just as the Spanish and the Americans had years before When Iloilo was liberated by Filipino and American forces from Japanese military occupation on March 25 1945 the remnants of these battalions were held in Jaro Plaza as a makeshift detention facility 81 Post war decline Edit The war heavily damaged the infrastructure in Iloilo However the continuing conflict between the labor unions in the port area declining sugar economy and the deteriorating peace and order situation in the countryside the exodus of Ilonggos to other cities provinces regions and islands that offered better opportunities and business People were moving to other cities such as Bacolod Cebu and Manila that led to Iloilo s decline in economic importance in central Philippines Rural agricultural areas continued to help the local economy For years because of this exodus of investors Iloilo s economy progressed in a moderate pace 107 Change slowly came First came the construction of the fishing port and a new international seaport One by one commercial business firms invested in Iloilo spurring on the city to its eventual recovery Iloilo became a highly urbanized city on December 22 1979 by the virtue of Batas Pambansa Blg 51 Corollary to this new status its residents effectively lost their eligibility to vote for provincial officials 108 21st century and economic boom Edit After the opening of the new commercial and business center in Mandurriao district and with the construction of a national highway that traverses this area big businesses like the SM Supermalls SM Prime Holdings Megaworld Corporation Gaisano Capital Robinsons Land Ayala Corporation and Filinvest poured in huge investments in the city giving impetus and catalyst toward future progress Geography Edit Sunrise on the Iloilo River with the esplanade Iloilo City is located in the southern shores of Panay Island The city faces Iloilo Strait and Guimaras Island across it making it a natural harbor and a safe anchorage for ships It is bordered by the towns of Oton in the west Pavia in the north and Leganes in the northeast Just across the Iloilo Strait in its eastern and southern coastlines are the towns of Buenavista and Jordan in the island province of Guimaras The city lies on a flat alluvial plain reclaimed mostly from the swampy areas due to urbanization and industrialization in the late 19th century until the present Traversing the city are the rivers of Iloilo Batiano Jaro and Dungon Creek Iloilo River is an estuary that separates the districts of City Proper Molo and Villa Arevalo from the rest of the city On the other hand Jaro River is fed by its tributary rivers Aganan and Tigum Lately a new escape channel for floodwaters coming from these two rivers to Iloilo Straight was developed the Jaro Floodway Iloilo City is 337 6 nautical miles 630 km from Manila 116 kilometres 72 mi from Roxas City 158 kilometres 98 mi from Kalibo and 97 kilometres 60 mi from San Jose de Buenavista The city has a total land area of 70 3 square kilometres 27 1 sq mi 109 The city is divided into seven geographical districts All of the districts were once individual towns excluding Lapuz which was a sub district of La Paz until 2008 110 All districts have their own town centers complete with a plaza a Roman Catholic church a fire station a police station and a public market City Proper is a commercial area and the political center of the city and the Province of Iloilo and the Regional Government Center of Western Visayas Iloilo City is the center of the only officially recognized Metropolitan Area in Western Visayas a The metropolitan area is composed of the City of Iloilo the municipalities of Leganes Pavia Santa Barbara Cabatuan San Miguel Oton the Island Province of Guimaras and its five municipalities namely Sibunag San Lorenzo Nueva Valencia Buenavista and Jordan Barangays and districts Edit District map of Iloilo City showing its seven districts The city of Iloilo has one legislative district and is further divided into seven administrative districts which are also subdivided into barangays barrios with a total of 180 city barangays District Area Population 2020 Density Barangayskm2 sq mi km2 sq miArevalo 7 58 2 93 55 476 7 300 19 000 13 list City Proper 3 73 1 44 46 350 12 000 31 000 45 list Jaro 27 48 10 61 130 700 4 800 12 000 42 list La Paz 11 33 4 37 54 720 4 800 12 000 25 list Lapuz 3 25 1 25 31 747 9 800 25 000 12 list Mandurriao 13 78 5 32 62 240 4 500 12 000 18 list Molo 5 54 2 14 76 393 14 000 36 000 25 list Climate Edit Iloilo City has a tropical wet and dry climate as according to the Koppen climate classification system with pronounced wet season from June throughout November then dry season from December to May 109 Climate data for Iloilo Philippines 1961 1990 extremes 1903 2012 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 34 7 94 5 35 5 95 9 39 0 102 2 37 5 99 5 37 8 100 0 37 5 99 5 35 2 95 4 34 8 94 6 37 8 100 0 35 4 95 7 34 8 94 6 34 5 94 1 39 0 102 2 Average high C F 29 7 85 5 30 2 86 4 31 7 89 1 33 1 91 6 33 1 91 6 31 6 88 9 30 7 87 3 30 4 86 7 30 8 87 4 31 1 88 0 30 9 87 6 30 2 86 4 31 1 88 0 Daily mean C F 26 1 79 0 26 5 79 7 27 6 81 7 28 9 84 0 29 1 84 4 28 1 82 6 27 6 81 7 27 5 81 5 27 6 81 7 27 7 81 9 27 5 81 5 26 8 80 2 27 6 81 7 Average low C F 22 7 72 9 22 7 72 9 23 5 74 3 24 6 76 3 25 1 77 2 24 7 76 5 24 4 75 9 24 5 76 1 24 4 75 9 24 2 75 6 24 0 75 2 23 4 74 1 24 0 75 2 Record low C F 16 5 61 7 16 7 62 1 18 6 65 5 20 0 68 0 20 2 68 4 21 0 69 8 19 5 67 1 20 0 68 0 19 8 67 6 19 2 66 6 19 4 66 9 18 3 64 9 16 5 61 7 Average rainfall mm inches 39 9 1 57 19 1 0 75 27 1 1 07 47 7 1 88 117 9 4 64 255 2 10 05 313 2 12 33 363 7 14 32 266 8 10 50 264 1 10 40 174 8 6 88 64 2 2 53 1 953 7 76 92 Average rainy days 0 1 mm 11 7 7 6 14 18 21 20 19 18 15 14 170Average relative humidity 82 80 75 73 77 82 85 85 85 84 84 83 81Source 1 Climate Charts 111 Source 2 Deutscher Wetterdienst rainy days 112 PAGASA records 113 Demographics EditPopulation census of Iloilo CityYearPop p a 190352 472 191877 925 2 67 1939116 277 1 92 1948110 122 0 60 1960151 266 2 68 1970209 738 3 32 1975227 027 1 60 1980244 827 1 52 1990309 505 2 37 1995334 539 1 47 2000366 391 1 97 2007418 710 1 86 2010424 619 0 51 2015447 992 1 03 2020457 626 0 42 Source Philippine Statistics Authority 114 115 116 117 Language Edit Main article Hiligaynon language Hiligaynon is the dominant language of Iloilo City 118 English is used as the language of business and education In addition other local languages such as Karay a also known as Kinaray a or obsolete Haraya is also spoken by the minority Spanish once widely spoken during the colonial era up to the 1980s is dying out though a broken Spanish creole is spoken by a few of some Spanish blood families and elderly sugar barons Hiligaynon is spoken in Panay Guimaras and Negros islands and is part of the Visayan language family of the Malayo Polynesian languages Because Iloilo was a former Spanish colony for 300 years Hiligaynon is heavily influenced by the Spanish language with a plethora of loaned words Guerra Puerta Golpe Aguanta Puerto Calle and Edificio among others Hiligaynon is mainly concentrated in the provinces of Iloilo Guimaras and Negros Occidental The language is referred to as Ilonggo Spanish Ilongo Ylongo in Iloilo and Negros Occidental More precisely Ilonggo is the ethno linguistic group referring to the inhabitants of Iloilo and the culture associated with native Hiligaynon speakers The distinction between the terms Ilonggo and Hiligaynon is unclear however as many townspeople state that Hiligaynon is the language being spoken and Ilonggo is a term used to refer a person living in Iloilo or its associated culture and ethnicity Population Edit Based on the 2010 Census of Population and Housing CPH Iloilo City a highly urbanized city in the province of Iloilo posted a total population of 424 619 persons as of May 1 2010 This is larger by 58 228 persons compared to its total population of 366 391 persons counted in the 2000 CPH The increase in the population count from 2000 to 2010 translated to an average annual population growth rate PGR of 1 49 percent This is lower than the 1 70 percent annual PGR of the city between the census years 1990 and 2000 If the average annual PGR recorded at 1 49 percent during the period 2000 to 2010 continues the population of Iloilo City would double in 47 years Forty years ago the population of Iloilo City was only 209 738 persons This population size is one half of the population of the city in the 2010 CPH Among the 180 barangays comprising Iloilo City barangay Calumpang was the most populous Its population size was 2 6 percent of the total population of the city San Juan came in second in terms of population size with 2 3 percent share This was followed by Balabago and Tabuc Suba Jaro with 2 0 percent each Calaparan and So oc with 1 9 percent each Molo Boulevard with 1 8 percent Santo Nino Sur with 1 7 percent Cubay and Obrero Lapuz with 1 6 percent each and Bolilao with 1 5 percent The rest of the barangays contributed less than 1 5 percent each The least populated barangay was Roxas Village with less than 0 1 percent share to the total population of the city It was also the least populated barangay in 2000 Religion Edit Jaro Cathedral or National Shrine of Our Lady of Candles is the seat of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Jaro and the Seat of Roman Catholicism in Western Visayas As the second National Shrine in the Visayas and Mindanao first in Western Visayas and second Marian dedicated church to do so in Visayas and Mindanao Jaro Metropolitan Cathedral is widely known as the seat of Roman Catholicism in Western Visayas Jose Romeo O Lazo the incumbent Roman Catholic Archbishop of Jaro Iloilo City is one of the notable centers of faith in the Philippines Due to the heavy religions missions during the 300 years of Spanish colonialization the city s population is predominant Catholic with over 90 belonging to the Roman Catholic Church Other religious minorities such as Protestants 5 Iglesia ni Cristo 2 and Aglipayans 1 also a form of Episcopal Protestantism have a significant presence at the city 119 The former city of Jaro one of the present districts boroughs of Iloilo City is the seat of bishopric and pioneer Christian institutions not only in Western Visayas but in the whole Philippines established through the Spanish colonization The Spaniards which brought the Catholic faith established the Roman Catholic metropolitan see of the Archdiocese of Jaro with its diocesan cathedral while the Americans which brought the Protestantism established the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches the first and oldest Baptist churches organization in the Philippines the Jaro Evangelical Church the first Baptist church in the Philippine islands and Jaro Adventist Center first organized Adventist church in the Philippines The Roman Catholic Archdiocese is one of the oldest and largest bishopric sees in the country It was established as a parish in 1587 initially covering Catmon Cabatuan and Maasin It was created a diocese by virtue of a papal bull of Pope Pius IX on May 27 1865 It has jurisdiction over sufragan bishops of Mindoro Palawan Zamboanga the province of Iloilo Negros Oriental Guimaras San Jose de Buenavista Capiz Bacolod San Carlos and Kabankalan in Negros Occidental The statue of Nuestra Senora de la Candelaria Our Lady of Candles in Jaro Cathedral the Roman Catholic patron of Western Visayas Crowned personally during the apostolic visit of pope and saint John Paul II in 1981 it is the first marian image to receive such recognition without a papal legate in the Philippines and Asia It lost some of its territory to establish the Diocese of Zamboanga and Apostolic Prefecture of Palawan Much later three other ecclesiastical jurisdictions were established from parts of its territory Diocese of Bacolod July 15 1932 Apostolic Prefecture of Mindoro July 2 1936 and Diocese of Capiz January 27 1951 The diocese was elevated into a Metropolitan Archdiocese by Pope Pius XII Later on March 24 1962 it lost further some of its territory that resulted to the establishment the Territorial Prelature of San Jose de Antique but still a part of it at present Jaro Evangelical Church the First Baptist Church in the Philippines first Protestant church outside Manila The Jaro Cathedral National Shrine of the Our Lady of Candles is the seat of the Archdiocese of Jaro Saint Elizabeth of Hungary and the Our Lady of Candles is the official Catholic patronesses of the Archdiocese The Nuestra Senora de la Candelaria or Our Lady of the Candles is the official patron of the whole Western Visayas and Romblon Being designated as a National Shrine Jaro Cathedral is likewise widely known as the seat of Roman Catholicism in Western Visayas The said designation National Shrine by the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines is the first of its kind in the region the second in the Visayas after Cebu and the first Marian dedicated church outside of Luzon Protestantism formed as the second largest faith in the City of Iloilo Protestant sects were brought by the Americans when the Philippines was ceded to American rule by Spain through the 1898 Treaty of Paris The said faith brought by the United States in the heavily Roman Catholic Iloilo has gained adherents and still continues to grow at present Iloilo which is one of the pioneering places in the country where Protestants set foot strongly contributed due to its economic importance on the international scene in the early 1900s The American colonial government tolerated religious freedom that even to this day Iloilo is still predominantly Catholic Presbyterians and Baptists are among the first Protestant sects that arrived in Iloilo The arrival of the American Protestant denominations resulted in the establishment of notable pioneering institutions in Iloilo The Presbyterians established the Iloilo Mission Hospital in 1901 the first American and Protestant hospital in the Philippines while Baptists established the American John D Rockefeller funded Central Philippine University in 1905 the first Baptist and second American university in the Philippines and in Asia Jaro Evangelical Church in 1900 the first Baptist church in the Philippines and also the first Protestant church outside Manila 2nd in the Philippines after the Central United Methodist Church in Manila and the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches the first and oldest Baptist churches organized in the Philippines The Seventh day Adventists did not join the comity agreement with the early Protestant sects for jurisdictional division on the Philippine islands for missionary works because they wanted to go to any parts of the country They arrived years later following the advent of Protestant missions in the Philippines in the early 1900s in Iloilo Their arrival resulted in the founding of Jaro Adventist Center the first organized Seventh day Adventist church outside Manila There are other Christian sects such as Iglesia ni Cristo and Church of Christ of Latter Day Saints or Mormon and communities of non Christian sects like Islam which brought by Muslim Filipinos from the south Sikhism by the Indian immigrants and Taoism and Buddhism which brought by Chinese immigrants Economy EditPoverty Incidence of Iloilo City Source Philippine Statistics Authority 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 Panoramic view of Iloilo City s downtown area in Iloilo City Proper Iloilo City is a hub for trade commerce finance technology medical tourism hospitality real estate tourism education and industry in the Western Visayas region Major industries in the city include management of port facilities telecommunications infrastructure and utilities banking and finance retail trading real estate tourism and business process outsourcing The local government has provided incentives to businesses in certain investment areas such as income tax holidays and free issuance of permits and licenses 127 It is the home of Mang Inasal headquartered in Iloilo During the Spanish colonial period sugar was the main export product of Iloilo The said industry brought immense wealth to the city alongside when its port was opened to the international trade As a result known and old rich families wealth was propelled by sugarcane plantations It yielded affluent clans that are known in the region and the country up to today which originated in Iloilo Lacson Locsin Ledesma Montinola Lopez to name a few After World War II the sugar industry in Iloilo waned and the importance of the city as the second most important economic center next to Manila diminished It was in the 21st century that economic activity in Iloilo flourished after years that it slept in the corner The opening of the Iloilo International Airport in 2007 which replaced the old Iloilo Airport in Mandurriao paved the way for the city to prosper The acquisition of the old airport after it was decommissioned and the construction of a business park on its site by the real estate giant Megaworld Corporation became a catalyst for some land developers to invest in Iloilo Skyline view of Iloilo City s midtown area in Mandurriao district As a thriving economic hub in the Western Visayas region an adequate and growing number of banks establishing branches leads the metropolis as the city with the most bank savings deposits and accounts in the Western Visayas region third in the Philippines the modernly built Iloilo International Airport is the fifth busiest airport in the country the Port of Iloilo which is one of the historical ports in the Philippine islands is now one of the busiest ports and natural harbors in the country by terms of passenger movement and cargo handling and with the on going building construction boom especially in the real estate and retail sectors 128 Iloilo City has the lowest crime rate in the Philippines 129 the lowest level of corruption the highest life expectancy in Visayas and Mindanao a large concentration of middle class ranks first in the happiness index 130 and the most business friendly city 131 Trade and industry Edit There were 8 407 business establishments as of December 2003 in Iloilo City of which 1 182 are new Total capital investments for new business establishments is P365 506 020 92 However both new and renewed capital investments for the year 2003 amounted to 13 02 billion 109 Of the employed person by type of industry from primary occupation 82 belongs to service sector 14 belongs industry sector and only 4 are in agriculture as of April 2003 FIES NSO 109 Average annual family income at current prices is P 283 604 or a percentage increase of 32 3 between 1994 and 1997 while Average Annual Family Expenditures is P 226 887 or a 25 6 increase 2000 FIES Average per Capita Income is P 65 136 and Average Per Capita Expenditures is P 51 557 FIES 2000 Average Inflation Rate is 3 2 the Average Purchasing Power of the Peso is 0 62 and the Average Consumer Price Index CPI is 162 6 in 2003 Source NSO Prices Section 109 Banking and finance Edit The banking industry in Iloilo dates back during the Spanish times The establishment of banks during such time is hinge to Iloilo s importance as an international gateway when its port was open for foreign ships to dock in and the sugar boom The first Banco Espanol Filipino now Bank of the Philippines opened its first branch outside of Manila in Iloilo The first Philippine National Bank branch outside Manila also opened in the city With that there are also international banks implying the city s importance in banking history in the Philippines that opened in Iloilo during Spanish American times that ceased their operations in the city the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation HSBC first HSBC branch outside Manila and Standard Chartered first Standard Chartered Bank branch outside Manila At present Iloilo ranks 3rd in the country as the city with most deposits or savings account fueled by OFW remittances IT BPO industry and the local industries The surge of microfinancial and other lending institutions in the city has also sprouted It is the headquarters of LifeBank MFI the Iloilo s largest homegrown microfinancial institution 3rd largest microfinancial institution in the country with 500 branches across the Philippines Queen City Development Bank QueenBank which is owned by the Florete Group is one of the founding member of Megalink the first bank outside of Manila to become a member of it has its headquarters and 1st branch in Iloilo City Tourism Edit As a gateway to the Western Visayan region tourism plays a major part as a catalyst in contributing to Iloilo City s economy The metropolis hosts notable festivals which entice thousands of tourists annually especially during the Dinagyang Paraw Regatta Asia s oldest sailing event and Fiesta de Candelaria festivals seasons Iloilo City s bannered monickers like City of Love and City of Mansions and intensified local government s programs such as beautification of major thoroughfares in the city and building of parks has played a role in attracting local and foreign visitors also There are myriad of selections of attractions in the city that tourists can visit heritage landmarks museums art galleries parks and restaurants to name a few Nightlife in the metro with Smallville Complex as the mecca for party goers is flocked by revellers every night especially on Friday and weekends A well known Philippine heritage city built during the Spanish era heritage tourism adds also to the city s charm which magnets visitors Centuries old churches old edifices and mansions of well known Ilonggo families magnets sightseers from different places who wants to discover Iloilo City s rich and glorious past Iloilo City is also respected gastronomic capital with famous dishes originated in the area that gained popularity throughout the country La Paz Batchoy Pancit Molo Kansi Laswa and KBL Kadyos Baboy kag Langka In 2018 alone the widespread promotions of Iloilo City paid off as it attracted the highest tourist arrivals in Western Visayas posting 1 242 087 total arrivals including 1 154 550 domestic visitors 70 787 foreign guests and 16 750 overseas workers Following in 2019 it garnered an 11 59 increase in the previous year s data 132 In 2020 the city again achieved its target with 1 4 million arrivals 133 Information technology Edit The IT BPO and KPO industry has spurred employment in the metropolis IT BPO and KPO locators are attracted to Iloilo because of the literacy rate and the number of graduates per year 134 With continuous influx of business process outsourcing BPO and knowledge process outsourcing KPO industry Iloilo has fast becoming a Silicon Valley backed by its political leaders 135 BPO investors are attracted to Iloilo due to stable energy source availability of building spaces high number of graduates and English Proficiency iQor Iloilo in the Festive Walk Parade Megaworld s Iloilo Business Park One Global Center Two Global Center and Three Techno Place are Iloilo operation sites of Transcom Asia StarTek WNS Global and Convergent powered by Nearsol respectively While Richmonde Tower is where Reed Elsevier is operates 136 137 Other IT BPO and KPO locators are Callbox the largest homegrown IT BPO company in Iloilo Fair Trade Outsourcing Rethink Staffing an American IT amp BPM BPO Company Telus International Legato Health Technologies Asurion Conectys TeleTech Holdings Inc Crawford amp Company Savant Technologies A non voice KPO and BPO company Eversun Philippines a non voice KPO and BPO Reed Elsevier SPI Global Now Inspiro WorldSource Inc Vista Health Solutions Xilium Professional Services WNS Hinduja Global Solutions iXL Solution RS2 Prosync Process Synergy Trusttel Customer Care OneVirtual Global Business Solutions Bluu Qatar Philippines POWRD Solutions iQor Iloilo Accentline Voiceless Technologies Now Leadgen XtendOps Extend BPO and Yazaki Philippine EDS Techno Service Inspiro formerly SPI Global and PLDT E Ventus and Callbox are the two pioneering IT BPO companies that first set their foot in Iloilo City Fair Trade Outsourcing FTO a United States based IT BPO company headquartered in Philadelphia Pennsylvania opened its first global site in Iloilo now its Philippine operations headquarters in October 2015 as MODph It was renamed Rethink Staffing in August 2016 and eventually to its present name in February 2018 Fair Trade Outsourcing From a 300 600 employee size company it continued to grow and has now a workforce of 1000 staff It opened two more sites in the metro to buffer up its global expansion the Iloilo Molo and Iloilo Guanco sites Other than Iloilo it has sites in Bacolod Dona Juliana Avenue and in Davao MetroLifestyle Complex across the Department of Education Regional Office XI Outside the Philippines it operates in Accra in Ghana and Guadalajara and Chihuahua in Mexico Fair Trade Outsourcing FTO plans to open new sites in Colombia Medellin and Kenya and another one in Ghana In November 2022 company opened its 2nd site in the United States in McAllen Texas The Department of Science and Technology Information and Communications Technology Office DOST ICTO and Business Processing Association of the Philippines BPAP has named Iloilo City one of the next wave cities 138 Iloilo City is a City of Excellence as it rivals the cities of Manila and Cebu in terms of economic progress It has also a number of IT BPO and KPO centers except for the ones in Iloilo Business Park and among them is the Ayala Techno Hub Iloilo Amigo Plaza Mall SM City Iloilo and Plazuela de Iloilo 139 140 Some of the known IT BPO centers in Iloilo Business Park both by Megaworld Corporation while the Iloilo City Center by the Gaisano Group has business process outsourcing BPO office buildings undergoing construction for future IT BPO and KPO locators occupancy 141 Shopping and retail Edit Main articles SM City Iloilo Festive Walk Mall Gaisano Capital and Robinsons Malls The Festive Walk Iloilo the first full scale Megaworld Lifestyle Mall outside Luzon As the shopping hub of Western Visayas retail industry has a big relevant presence in Iloilo City since Spanish and American colonial times Proliferated after Philippines gained Independence from United States of America In 1877 the first department store in the Philippines was Hoskyn Department Store started at Calle Real or Royal Street which stretches from Plaza Libertad to Plazoleta Gay 142 143 It was first to employ the fixed pricing for its commodities in merchandising Since it was the store that sold everything from needle to anchor people of Iloilo and even Bacolod flocked buying from its goods such as English wool imported from England It offered groceries hardware stationery toys watches jewelry machinery buttons threads etc 144 It was described as a great store and the best in the islands Dauncey recounted how she bought pieces of furniture some groceries china glass and so forth from Hoskyn s at low prices as they have such an immense business even being able to compete with the shops in Manila by Enid Rolanda Dauncey wife of Iloilo based British businessman Campbell Dauncey in her 1906 memoirs An Englishwoman in the Philippines It has long been a commercial landmark in the Bisayas people call on it for everything and always get what they want incorporated in 1925 145 After the World War II Que Family acquired Hoskyns and renaimed it to Washington Commercial as their second store They have Washington Grocery in Iznart Street Subsequently it was renamed Washington Supermart Marymart Shopping Center opened in 1972 in called Weyler renamed later as Valeria Ledesma owner of the land by Jamora Brothers Henry Sy purchased land an adjacent lot in Valeria and founded the SM Iloilo now called SM Delgado is the first SM outside Manila which started operating in 1979 while Cebu only opened 14 years after in 1993 and Bacolod in 2007 146 In 1993 Jimenez family sold their property and Atrium Shopping Center was opened beside Caza Plaza Hotel It was first shopping center to have a combination of hotel restobar Saloon Supermarket and Restaurants in the whole Philippines With the growing demand of consumerism and real estate Philippine companies such as SM Prime Holdings Robinsons Land Corporation Megaworld Corporation and Ayala has fueled the popularity of mall culture in Iloilo SM City Iloilo by SM Prime Holdings the largest SM Supermall in Western Visayas one of the largest in the Philippines Robinsons Place Iloilo and Robinsons Place Jaro both by Robinsons Land Corporation amp by Megaworld Corporation s Festive Walk Iloilo the first full scale Megaworld Lifestyle Mall outside Luzon and Festive Walk Parade the longest dining strip in the Philippines 147 148 149 Government Edit The Iloilo City Hall Ayuntamiento de Iloilo Iloilo City is the regional capital of Western Visayas region and the provincial capital of Iloilo province It is one of the important economic centers in the Philippines and regional and provincial offices of national government agencies has offices in the city It is classified as a first income class and highly urbanized city HUC Due to such status and classification it is independent from the province of Iloilo thus its citizens does not have the power to elect for political provincial officials Former seal of Iloilo City in use since 1950 The central seal often mistaken as the coat of arms of the city was granted when Iloilo achieved its status as a royal city on October 5 1889 through a decree issued by the Queen Regent Maria Cristina on behalf of her son King Alfonso XIII of Spain who was still a minor in that year 49 48 The city dates back its founding in 1566 through a settlement established by the Spaniards in the areas of Oton and Villa de Arevalo and received its cityhood status thrice first on October 5 1889 effectivity in 1890 through a Spanish royal decree issued by the Queen Regent of Spain Maria Christina secondly in 1893 through a legal declaration by the virtue of Bacura Becerra Law ratifying the first royal decree and establishing the city government of Iloilo and the third through a virtue of Commonwealth Act No 158 on July 16 1937 formally inaugurated on August 25 1937 as a chartered city by consolidating the existing City of Iloilo with the towns of Arevalo Mandurriao Molo and La Paz while the City of Jaro was officially annexed on January 7 1941 through the virtue of Commonwealth Act No 604 of August 22 1940 issued by President Manuel L Quezon By such decrees the City of Iloilo is the first legal city in the Philippines because no law ratifies and established by the government that creates and enacts an edict declaring or elevating a town into a status of a city during Spanish and early American colonial periods The city acquired its royal title La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad The Most Loyal and Noble City on March 1 1898 given by Queen Regent Maria Christina of Spain due to the loyalty stand by the Ilonggos to the Spanish crown during the Philippine war of independence It is likewise one of the few Spanish Royal Cities in the Philippines during the Spanish colonial era in the Philippines The Mayor of Iloilo City Alcalde is the chief executive and is assisted by the vice mayor vice alcalde which governs the city The city is also represented by a congressman in the House of Representatives of the Philippines The Iloilo City Council Filipino Sangguniang Panglungsod ng Iloilo and Spanish Consejo de Ciudad de Iloilo is the local legislative assembly Its 15 member council is elected concurrently with general elections held at the same time with the national elections including for the city and vice mayors The Council convenes every month at the Iloilo City Hall Ayuntamiento de Iloilo and the meetings are open to the public The matters on which the councillors decide have generally already been drafted and discussed by various boards and committees 150 Iloilo city is sub divided into 180 barangays or barrios each govern by a Barangay Captain or Chairman held through a national barangay election In 1955 through the efforts for a liberal appointing of a new city mayor Rodolfo Ganzon became the first mayor that won through a popular election process Ganzon is widely remembered by his constituents for having authored and sponsored the Iloilo City Freedom Law which restored to the people of Jaro La Paz Molo Arevalo Manduriao and Iloilo City proper their constitutional right to elect their own mayor vice mayor and 10 councilors 151 152 City Government of IloiloRepresentativeJulienne Jam Jam L Baronda NUP MayorJerry P Trenas NUP Vice MayorJeffrey P Ganzon NUP Sangguniang Panglungsod MembersSedfrey L Cabaluna NUP Rex Marcus B Sarabia NUP Jose Maria Miguel S Trenas NUP Candice Magdalane A Tupas LDP Alan Acepcion Zaldivar NUP Johnny Y Young NUP Frances Grace V Parcon Torres NUP Romel D Duron NUP Urminico M Baronda Jr NUP Ely A Estante Jr NUP Rudolph Jeffrey O Ganzon NUP Plaridel C Nava PROMDI ABC PresidentvacantSK Federation PresidentvacantCulture EditCultures and traditions has a crucial role that shaped Iloilo s cultural and heritage sphere apart from the being the Regional Center of the Western Visayas region Cultural and heritage consciousness is held in much broad public attention and fervor among the various stakeholders with the help of the government Iloilo holds many cultural institutions especially national ones and heritage houses and mansions that contributed to Iloilo s long held monikers as Museum City of the Philippines and the City of Mansions Museums Edit The National Museum of the Philippines Western Visayas housed in the old Iloilo Provincial Jail turned museum The city has a number of museums ranging from fields of ancient and contemporary art cultural and economic history to science Museums and art galleries are the repositories of Iloilo s rich and glorious history and culture Various notable Philippine artists trace their roots from Iloilo Unearthed artifacts like potteries porcelain gold and plates had been excavated in many parts of Iloilo predating Spanish Era are now showcased in various museums in Iloilo The Casa de Emperador in Iloilo Business Park houses the ILOMOCA Iloilo Museum of Contemporary Art first modern and contemporary art museum in Visayas in Mindanao and Emperador Brandy Museum the first brandy museum in the Philippines Collaborative efforts of the city government with various stakeholders to uplift the cultural cognizance of the Ilonggo people led to the establishment of the Western Visayas Regional Museum of the National Museum of the Philippines in the restored and adoptive reuse of old Iloilo Provincial Jail and their regional headquarters in the restored old Municipio de Jaro Jaro Municipal Hall There are other museums that showcase memorabilias of notable person and families artworks and artifacts The other notable museums and art galleries in the city in which some are under some academic institutions which include the Museo Iloilo the first government built museum outside Manila Museum of Philippine Economic History Iloilo Museum of Contemporary Art housed at the Casa de Emperador at Iloilo Business Park The Henry Luce III Museum and Library of Central Philippine University University of San Agustin Museum UPV Art Gallery John B Lacson Foundation Museum of Maritime Culture and Craft Rosendo Mejica Museum among others The Iloilo Museum of Contemporary Art ILOMOCA the first museum project of the property giant Megaworld Corporation is the first museum dedicated to modern and contemporary art in Visayas and Mindanao The museum of 3 000 square meters of space is housed at the Casa de Emperador which includes five exhibit rooms and souvenir and merchandise shop The ground floor is The Hulot Exhibit which showcase exhibits of local and international artists Works by notable and renowned international artists like Salvador Dali Marc Chagall and Joan Miro are exhibit in some of its art collections 153 154 155 The Henry Luce III Museum and Library of Central Philippine University the largest library in the Western Visayas one of the largest in the Philippines It houses collection on Asian arts and artifacts the CPU Meyer Asian Collection The Museum of Philippine Economic History the first economic history museum in the Philippines has a wide array of exhibits and collections showcasing the economic history of the Philippine throughout the different colonial eras The structure restored by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines and where the museum is housed is formerly owned by one of the country s biggest trading firms the Ynchausti y Compania of the Familia Ynchausti The firm s name was synonymous with its products like Yco Floor Wax Tanduay and Yco Paints The museum has 13 galleries throughout the 2 storey structure The location of the Museum of Philippine Economic History in Iloilo City is due to the city and province being called the Queen City of the South during the Spanish and early American colonial era because of its economic importance next to Manila Other than the hundred decades old artifacts and items on display at the Philippine Museum of Economic History visitors can find in the museum looms from the oldest weavers of Miag ao in Iloilo which was known then as the Textile Capital of the Philippines and also showcases artifacts coming from other regions such as T nalak from Mindanao and decades old gold necklace and other accessories from Pampanga old photographs and maps and other interesting remnants of the past The Henry Luce III Library and Museum on Central Philippine University s main campus which was built through a benevolent grant given by the Henry Luce Foundation though Henry Luce III the eldest son of the founder of Time Inc Henry Luce It holds an array of special museum collections categorized into various sections and types of collections Meyer Asian Collection the Elizabeth Knox Sacred Music Collection rare collections of Second World War documents Asian archaeological artifacts and historical exhibits and artworks from known artists A Henry Luce III the main library of CPU Library system sole book holding implies it as the largest library in the Western Visayas region Festivals Edit An Ati dancer warrior performs at the annual Dinagyang Festival The Ilonggos cultural identity is deeply rooted and influenced by the Hispanic culture Iloilo is known as Festival s Capital of the Philippines with various renowned festivals in the country celebrated in the city showcasing the city s rich cultural and historical past Iloilo is highlighted with various festivals in which big three is Dinagyang Festival held every fourth Sunday of January in honor of the Holy Child Jesus Santo Nino de Jesus in a venerated image of Santo Nino de Cebu The Jaro Fiesta Fiesta de Jaro or Fiesta de Nuestra Senora de la Candelaria Fiesta de Candelaria which is held every February 2 in honor of Nuestra Senora de la Candelaria Virgin of Candelaria the patron of Western Visayas and Romblon is the largest marian dedicated festival outside Luzon Jaro Fiesta is famous for its pomp and pageantry The fiesta chooses its annual Reyna del Fiesta de Jaro or Jaro Carnival Queen from among the maiden member of prominent and notable old rich Spanish Filipino or wealthy families of the town The annual fiesta includes a cockfighting held during the fiesta day largest cockfighting competition in the Philippines at the Iloilo Coliseum and an agro industrial and charity fair in Plaza Jaro which starts from September and a week after the fiesta day Iloilo with its number of mainland Chinese expatriates who came for trading and settled in the city hundreds of years ago celebrates the annual Iloilo Chinese Lunar New Year It is considered as the largest Chinese New Year celebration outside Binondo Manila the oldest Chinatown in the world In contrast with the city s celebration of the annual Chinese New Year Iloilo with the advent of Chinese settlers before or during the Spanish Colonial period settled in what is now the Molo District or Parian a town established for Sangleyes or Chinese Ilonggos by the Spanish colonial government Though only a town where Chinese people were organized to settle Molo is considered as second oldest Chinatown after Binondo Manila During the holiday season after the all saints Dia de Todos Los Santos and all souls days Dia de los Muertos various landmarks such as schools are adorned with yuletide lights spectacles Flocked during its opening night in the first week of December by thousands of spectators the annual Festival of Lights and Music at Central on the campus of Central Philippine University is the longest running university based Christmas festival of lights in the Western Visayas region since 1991 Trees major edifices and places of interests like the CPU Church on the university s 24 hectare main campus in Jaro Iloilo City are festooned with holiday lights and displays of Christmas icons like Santa Claus Nativity Scene and Pasko sa Nayon It is opened to the public until every January 6 of the next year Carnival rides a Christmas Bazaar and food stalls are also found catering to the tourists visiting the campus of the university in the said event Paraw Regatta which is also one of the main festivals of Iloilo and held every February is the sailing event in Asia oldest traditional boat sailing event in Asia The festivities during the said festival includes Samba de Regatta Miss Paraw Regatta pageant Lighted Paraw and the annual Paraw Regatta sailing competition held in La Villa Rica de Arevalo Villa de Arevalo In thrive for the city s endeavor as the Art Capital of the Philippines the Iloilo Summer Arts Festival was launched in 2020 which runs from April to May 156 The latest addition to such venture is the Iloilo Arts Festival which opened in December 2021 It is a nearly a month long event showcasing the best of Ilonggo artistry in visual arts exhibited in notable city museums and performing arts in theaters across the metropolis Public arts Edit The local government has initiated efforts to promote the city as the Art Capital of the Philippines It has established several programs through the help of local artists like turning the blank and public spaces in the metropolis as canvasses for murals and paintings depicting the city s rich history and culture A fine example of this is the 3D Mural depicting the Dinagyang warriors dancing in the street in Iloilo River Esplanade 1 Real estate developers also play a role in supporting such programs by rolling out plans to elevate the cultural consciousness of the Ilonggos through public art displays and mural paintings Entertainment film and performing arts Edit The colonial influence of Spanish and American culture has created an imprint in the entertainment performing arts and film sectors and scenes in Iloilo The city and province has produced a notable people in the field of cinema and entertainment The arts and entertainment sectors in Iloilo flourished during the time when Iloilo was opened to international trade when the Puerto de Iloilo Port of Iloilo was opened to foreign ships to dock from different countries The annual Iloilo Film Festival which is held during the Dinagyang Festival has a plethora of films being screened during the festival s event The Rose Memorial Auditorium in Central Philippine University the largest theater in Western Visayas The Iloilo Convention Center is a state of the art convention center located in the Iloilo Business Park by Megaworld Corporation in Mandurriao Its construction was completed in September 2015 in time for the APEC 2015 It is a two story structure with a total floor area of 11 832 square meters The main hall on the ground floor has a 3 700 seat capacity and 500 seat function rooms on the second floor A rooftop of 1 500 sqm is available for outdoor functions 157 The convention center was designed by Ilonggo architect William Coscolluela The design was inspired by Iloilo s Dinagyang and Paraw Regatta festivals Iloilo has various facilities also for international and local musical band and solo performances or concerts Rose Memorial Auditorium or Rose on Central Philippine University s main campus is the largest and notable auditorium or theater Western Visayas region It hosted concerts held by famous Filipino and international singers bands and cultural groups and is also the venue of the annual national Bombo Music Festival that draws homegrown music artists from all over the Philippines 158 159 160 161 The auditorium is a 2 storey structure and can occupy or has a maximum capacity of 4 000 spectators Rose Memorial along with Central Philippine University has been and is the only theater auditorium and university in the Western Visayas region that has been designated one of the first batch of nine Cultural Center of the Philippines Regional Art Centers or Kaisa sa Sining Regional Art Centers in 2014 in the whole Philippines 162 163 164 165 166 167 There had been old cinema theaters in the old central business district of Calle Real but they do not now operate because of the development of modern shopping malls with cinemas in the metropolis which replaced their once and glorious days in the heritage zone of Calle Real in the city center Modern day cinemas in the metropolis screens with a wide array of present day films both national and from foreign countries The arts and entertainment initiatives with the Film Development Council of the Philippines under the office of the Philippine President city has established its presence in the city as the regional cultural and arts center of Western Visayas through the establishment of Cinematheque theater which showcases various screened films Cultural representations in the perspective of performing and visual arts holds numerous concerts throughout the year with some showcased by universities cultural groups and organizations in the city University s in Iloilo on the other hand has a vital role with various established cultural and art groups that gain foothold that held and performed in various cultural performances nationally and internationally in which some are sponsored National Cultural government agencies The University of San Agustin has established the USA Troubadours while Central Philippine University the CPU Bahandi Singers CPU Handbell Choir the first 8 octave handbell choir in the Philippines and the CPU Sari Saot Dance Troupe Cuisine Edit A bowl of La Paz Batchoy Famous throughout the Philippines it is an Ilonggo delicacy that originated from the La Paz district of Iloilo City With Iloilo being hailed as the Food Haven of the Philippines its local cuisines are well loved and recognized by many Filipinos across the country including from different parts of the world 168 Food in Iloilo is a blend of east and west due to the contact of locals with the foreign cultures because of Iloilo s central most location and one of the most important port cities in the Philippines The three hundred years of Spanish influence in the Iloilo s culture left a heavy imprint in the Ilonggo cuisine that resulted to the cuisines that are the same with other Hispanic influenced countries like Menudo Afritada Lechon Adobo Estofado among others Because of Ilonggos roots as Asians rice is a staple diet food and is usually served plain with other dishes The city has a variety of restaurants specialized in serving foreign cuisines Italian American Japanese Chinese Vietnamese German and Thai cuisines The rise of international and luxury hotels brought high end buffet and exclusive dining experience to tourists and locals Chinese influenced played also a vital role in influencing the Ilonggo cuisine and because of it famous dishes like the La Paz Batchoy and Pancit Molo born out because of such influence which became well known throughout the Philippines that originated from Iloilo Notable Chinese restaurants in the city include Roberto s and Kong Kee Iloilo has also been the founding location of the first branch of Mang Inasal fast food chain of restaurants in the country It was founded by Edgar Sia a Japanese Chinese Filipino businessman in 2003 and has expanded with its opening of branches throughout the Philippines 169 A bowl of Pancit Molo La Paz Batchoy is one of Iloilo s signature dishes a delicacy served in restaurants all over Iloilo City The said noodle soup is made with miki round noodles pork organs liver spleen kidneys and heart chicken stock beef loin shrimp stock and garnished with chicharon pork cracklings It is best eaten at the batchoyan batchoy stalls in La Paz Market where it originated The most famous places to eat batchoy are Ted s Deco s Netong s and Inggo s The original creator of the dish is not certain but you may judge for yourself which among them serves the tastiest When served with a bowl of batchoy most Ilonggos would finish the kaldo broth first It is customary to request additional refills of kaldo before finishing the meal 170 The Spanish influence brought baking techniques to the locals which established century old notable baking institutions in which Iloilo is famous for Panaderia ni Paa founded in the 1900s and Deocampo The Original Barquillos Los Barquillos Originales founded in the 1800s are both located in Jaro and Panaderia de Molo founded in the 1800s in Molo Sweet delicacies like Biscocho and Barquillos are one of the innumerable influences of the Spaniards Barquillos is a thin rolled cookies while Biscocho is a hardened baked sliced bread with milk and margarine In the whole archipelago of the Philippines Iloilo stands out for serving the first and most popular barquillos and biscocho 171 Media Edit See also List of television and radio stations in Iloilo City The city and the province of Iloilo is served by mostly tabloid type English newspapers such as Panay News The Daily Guardian News Express and Sunstar Iloilo Hublas of Panay News is the sole Hiligaynon tabloid newspaper Iloilo has a glossy full color lifestyle magazine named Cream Magazine published monthly since 1989 Iloilo City is the main headquarters of Bombo Radyo Philippines which owns Bombo Radio AM stations and Star FM stations across the country Being the urban center of the province most of the AM and FM radio stations serve the province of Iloilo and Guimaras mostly local stations of national radio stations Television arrived in the city in 1964 when DYAF TV began airing serving Iloilo City and the neighboring towns in the province In 1998 with the frequency transfer to Channel 10 ABS CBN separated its news team from the Bacolod news team and launched TV Patrol Iloilo today TV Patrol Panay In 1967 TV 6 Iloilo a TV5 affiliate stated its initial broadcast in Jaro Iloilo City By 1974 it changed its affiliation to GMA Network as their local television station The channel started upgrading its facilities and relocated their TV tower to Guimaras and began serving Iloilo City Panay and Guimaras as well as some parts of Negros Occidental in 1998 Studio 23 Iloilo UHF 38 changed its name to ABS CBN Sports and Action on January 18 2014 initiated its broadcast in 1999 The government television station PTV VHF 2 in 1992 and IBC VHF 12 in 1977 are also broadcasting local programs for Iloilo In the first quarter of 2010 QTV 28 Iloilo UHF 28 changed its name to GMA News TV on February 28 2011 and UNTV 42 UHF 42 commenced operations in the city In second quarter of 2012 TV5 Iloilo UHF 36 and AksyonTV Iloilo UHF 46 commenced operation serving the southern part of Western Visayas that includes southern Panay Iloilo City and Guimaras also formerly Negros Occidental and at the same time started its News5 team coverage In 1995 RMN launch a UHF TV CTV Cinema Television and Iloilo UHF 26 was born It started its initial broadcast with limited coverage area In 1997 RMN 26 rebrand to E Philippines with general entertainment format But in 2003 RMN cease it operations Until BEAM an affiliate of RMN return to test broadcast on July 3 2010 and rebrand to BEAM TV In 2012 BEAM TV 26 relocate its transmitter to Jordan Guimaras from RMN Broadcast Center in Lapaz Iloilo City and increase its transmitting power from 500 watts to current power 5 000watts in analog and during that time also initial broadcast its digital terrestrial television at UHF 42 with the power of 1 000 watts Nicknames Edit See also List of city and municipality nicknames in the Philippines Philippines International Fair souvenir journal in 1953 acknowledging Iloilo s being the Queen City of the South The city s La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad title can be seen in the journal as well Like the country s capital Manila Iloilo City is recognized by a number of nicknames aliases sobriquets and slogans both present and past Though it is now more widely known as the City of Love it was once renowned as the Queen City of the South The city s official moniker is La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad Most Loyal and Noble City which is also depicted on the city s official seal Most Loyal and Noble City Spanish La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad the royal title acquired on March 1 1898 after being given by Queen Regent Maria Christina of Spain This is an inscription in the city s coat of arms from the royal decree of 1896 in recognition of the people s loyalty to the Spanish crown A replica of the Spanish crown architectural structure can be seen in the present Arevalo district of the city 1 172 Queen City of the South Spanish La Reina Ciudad del Sur initially the Queen s City in the South an honor it earned after being Queen Regent Maria Christina s favorite city in the capital s south At the turn of the 20th century the title evolved to what is now known as the Queen City of the South after the city became second to the country s primate city of Manila in terms of economic importance Following the city s economic downfall in the mid 1900s as a result of World War II destruction Cebu City also adopted the title City officials however disagree with Cebu s claim because the title is historically significant to Iloilo alone and not for which city is the next country s second largest economic center 173 172 City of Love Hiligaynon Siyudad sang Paghigugma also the Asia s City of Love referring to the city s citizens Ilonggo accents which are very soothing to the ears as well as their well known presumption of being the most loving friendly kind hearted and soft spoken Filipinos The city s great river and old architectural structures also lend the city s romantic ambiance 174 175 Textile Capital of the Philippines Spanish Capital Textil de Filipinas referring to the development of a large scale weaving industry that started in Iloilo and its surge in trade and economy in the Visayas in the late 18th century Sinamay pina and jusi are some examples of the products produced by the looms of Iloilo and were exported to Manila and other foreign places 176 Heart of the Philippines referring to the city s human heart shaped territory as well as its geographical location at the center of the Philippine archipelago The main flagpole of the Central Philippine University CPU in Jaro district is considered the center of the Philippines by longitude and latitude 177 Royal City of the South Spanish Ciudad Real del Sur in reference to the city s being a royal Spanish city in the south of the capital Manila during the Spanish colonial era in the Philippines 178 City of Mansions in reference to the city s being home to many well preserved heritage houses built by the hacienderos and sugar barons way back in the pre war era 179 Museum City of the Philippines or simply the Museum City referring to the city s abundance of historical sites and various types of museums 180 Athens of the Philippines particularly referring to the Molo district which produced many of the best political leaders and philosophers in the Philippines 181 Where the Past is Always Present a recent nickname and tourism slogan coined by the Department of Tourism DOT in 2015 in reference to the city s numerous centuries old houses and buildings that have coexisted with the city s present modern architecture 182 City of Many Firsts from the information compiled by the late Norberto Baylen of the Visayan Tribune in the 1970s in reference to the city s many firsts in the country and being a pioneer in many fields 183 Festival Capital of the Philippines in reference to the city s various popular and innovative festivals including the Dinagyang and Paraw Regatta festivals that are flocked and celebrated in the city by the thousands to millions of tourists Each district in the city also has its own festivals or fiestas also known as district fiestas celebrated annually within the district s territory The most popular one is the Feast of Our Lady of Candles of Jaro district 178 184 Bike Capital of the Philippines in reference to the city s having the Philippines longest protected bike lane as well as being the most bike friendly city in the country 185 Food Haven of the Philippines a new tagline declared by the city council and supported by the Department of Tourism DOT in 2021 recognizing the city as a gastronomic hotspot with its dozens of popular local cuisines and dishes including the La Paz Batchoy and Pancit Molo 186 187 Cityscape Edit A city landmark Edificio de Villanueva is one of the heritage edifices that lines the historic Calle Real Royal Street Heritage Zone in Iloilo s downtown area The city s modern day appearance is shaped by the key role it has played as a trading hub for centuries Iloilo City has a multitude of districts each with its distinctive character and representing colonial influence Iloilo s other distinctive features include its cityscape surrounded with water features such as rivers and is bounded by a sea bicycle paths and ornamental trees that line most city streets and its many open spaces gardens and parks Iloilo spreads out with its location in a plain land in south eastern side of Panay Island It is bounded in the south east side by Iloilo Guimaras Strait and Guimaras Island which makes the city as a natural harbor for ships The two main rivers of Iloilo and Batiano snakes through the city and empties out of the Iloilo Guimaras Strait Iloilo is a conglomerate of former separate towns which includes the former city of Jaro established during the Spanish colonial times thus the layout of the towns civic centers follows a typical Spanish colonial town center composed of a Plaza Public Square church municipal hall and other religious academic and government instrumentalities offices A modern development is clustered in an organized form in the city s premises but is strongly concentrated in the Mandurriao district to protect the city s initiatives in protecting the city s skyline heritage zones and environment Present modern developments spread out outside the city in neighboring towns that are a part of Metropolitan Iloilo Architecture Edit Nelly s Garden or Lopez Mansion Mansion de Lopez in Jaro is regaled as the Queen of all Heritage Houses in Western Visayas Iloilo City s urban planning and architecture reflect the plans of the Spanish and the American colonial administrations Since Iloilo City is a conglomeration of towns the districts have their own plazas which are surrounded by establishments of political and ecclesiastical influence such as churches and old administrative halls In 1930 Juan M Arellano of the Bureau of Public Works designed the schematic plan for Iloilo City which was influenced by Ebenezer Howard s Garden City 188 The Beaux Arts Villa Lizares Lizares Mansion in the district of Jaro The Spanish colonial influence is strongly imprinted not only in Iloilo s history and cultural background but also the architectural perspective The city s regaled status during the Spanish colonial era until the turn of the 20th century is implied during by the sugar boom with ubiquitous stately mansions and edifices built by the old money Ilonggo Sugar Baron and elite families which contrast to the city s economic importance as a second city next to Manila during the said era in the Philippines The city s other moniker City of Mansions is likewise implied because Iloilo holds 240 mansions in which 30 of it are grand mansions built during the Spanish and American colonial eras Campanario de Jaro Jaro Belfry one of the few free standing bell towers in the Philippines that is detached from the church The ravaged Fuerte de San Pedro Fort San Pedro is Iloilo s ground zero as there was no Iloilo City back in the 1600s As a fortress Fort San Pedro was built solely by the Spaniards to protect Iloilo from the marauding pirates and privateers The fort is the second Spanish built fort after the one in Cebu also Fort San Pedro in the Philippines and Asia The foundation of the Fort San Pedro was substantial to the Spanish Empire s stronghold as Panay Island with Iloilo as their second colonial center established through the Iloilo precursor towns of Oton 1566 and La Villa Rica de Arevalo 1581 Oton which was founded as early as 1566 but formally established in 1572 was the actual second seat of Spanish colonial powers but due to pirate attacks they moved the capital eastward and established the La Villa Rica de Arevalo The town of La Villa Rica de Arevalo holds some of the fine example of Spanish built mansions like the mansion of the Spanish Governor General but were destroyed when the pirates ransacked and destroyed the town It was in the said frequent events of pirate attacks that the Spaniards moved finally the capital further eastward in the mouth of Rio de Iloilo Iloilo River which is flanked and protected by Guimaras Island across it Casa de Emperador in Iloilo Business Park an example of modern built classical styled edifice It was in the said establishment of the city on the mouth of Iloilo River that as years go by the city flourished to its heights especially in the economic and regal importance in the Spanish and American eras La Villa Rica de Arevalo Arevalo is the first Spanish named town in the Philippine islands It is also in Arevalo that the third oldest image of Holy Child Jesus Senor Santo Nino in the Philippines was brought by the Spaniards Notable present day structures that are repositories that attest to the town s former glory as a Spanish precursor town of Iloilo is the mansion of Camina Balay nga Bato and the Convento de Arevalo During the Spanish and American eras the city developed its own unique charm that exudes a typical European city in the east which differed it from other cities just like the old Manila in the Philippines It was in the said eras that architectural perspective of Iloilo flourished with European styled edifices and stately mansions was built which stands of Iloilo s once economic and political importance in its heyday Aduana de Iloilo Iloilo Customs House with the Muelle Loney Loney Dock which was used as a wharf and port of call berthing ships that plied international routes when the Puerto de Iloilo Port of Iloilo was opened to the world market on September 29 1855 by Queen Isabella II of Spain Calle Real Royal Street which stretches from Plazoleta Gay up to Plaza Alfonso XII Plaza Libertad is Iloilo s Escolta a heritage street in Manila lined with commercial edifices that possesses European designs Calle Real is Iloilo s old Central Business District and is considered as the second most preserved heritage business district in the Philippines The street during the Iloilo s economic heyday during the late 19th and early 20th centuries when the Puerto de Iloilo Port of Iloilo was opened to the international trade is a melting pot and common ground for people of different walks of life race and color Stores back then in Calle Real sells luxury goods and items from all over the world Iloilo also possesses structures built during the prelude of the American colonial period in the Philippines Aduana de Iloilo Iloilo Customs House and old Iloilo City Hall are notable of the structures built during the said colonial period Iloilo Customs House the second largest customs house after the Aduana in Manila was built the Filipino Architect Juan M Arellano In farther north is the town of Jaro the largest of all the district of the City of Iloilo Once a separate city before it merged with the City of Iloilo in the 1940s is considered as a town of piousness old rich and grandeur Many notable Spanish Ilonggos settled and the said area and built their grand mansions and villas The town s architecture is heavily influenced by the Hispanic and American cultures Iglesia de Molo St Anne Parish the first Gothic and feminist church outside Manila Grand mansions with imposing European styled facades and motifs of Buena Familias or Old rich families Spanish Chinese Filipino families of Jaro like the Lopez Ledesma Lizares Jalandoni Javellana and Locsin families that some of it lines the first millionaire row in the Philippine islands still stands to this day Two of notable mansions that attest to Jaro s importance as an old rich town that developed out of the sugar boom during the Spanish colonial period is the Mansion de Lopez Lopez Mansion or Nelly Garden and the beaux art styled Villa Lizares Lizares Mansion which houses at present the Angelicum School Iloilo of the Dominicans Religion is also a crucial factor that influenced Jaro s architectural and town plan perspective as it is the cradle of Christian faith in Western Visayas The Spanish which brought the Roman Catholic faith established the Jaro Cathedral National Shrine of the Our Lady Candles with its separate belfry located across it one of the few churches in the Philippines with a detached belfry and the Seminario Colegio de San Vicente Ferrer the first institution of Higher Learning in Western Visayas The advent of American colonialization which brought Protestantism has resulted also to the establishment of institutions Torre del Reloj The Clock Tower of Festive Walk Parade at Iloilo Business Park Its construction is a result of the economic boom of the City of Iloilo since 2010 Fine examples of institutions with edifices possessing American architecture and influence includes the Central Philippine University by the Protestant Baptists in 1905 which holds century old American colonial styled edifices the Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches which housed at the European styled former Rupert Montinola Mansion in Fajardo Jaro and the Jaro Evangelical Church the first Baptist Church in the Philippine Islands are among the few of the notable institutions that holds a number of structures that possesses American architectural influence design The town of Molo located westward of the La Punta City Proper is sometimes called Parian or Chinese town during the Spanish colonial times Old rich Molo influential families helped shaped the town s not only economical but political and architectural sphere The town just like the more Spanish or Mestizo town of Jaro has also a plethora of mansions built by old rich Chinese Spanish Ilonggo Locsin Lacson Sayson Layson and Pison families The Molo Church Iglesia de Santa Ana which was built under the supervision of some of the members of notable Molo families like the Locsins is the first and only feminist church outside Manila with its imposing facade with gothic influence facing the Plaza Molo The Yusay Consing Mansion or Molo Mansion located just across the Plaza Molo and Molo Church was bought by the retail and real estate giant SM Group has been refurbished and restored to its former glory and is now a houses several cultural stores and a mini museum which exhibits several artworks and native products The present economic boom of the 21st century has spurred modern developments across the city Huge investments of big real estate developers built modern malls and shopping centers tall and modern edifices and skyscrapers which sprouted up especially in the new city s Central Business Center which occupies a huge land area in the town of Mandurriao The first tallest skyscraper in Western Visayas the Injap Tower of the Double Dragon Properties could be found in the area Hotels and condominiums and tree lined avenues with jogging and bicycle lanes have also been built during the city s economic renaissance up to the present The Iloilo s festival inspired iconic Iloilo Convention Center is also located in the Iloilo Business Park Sustainability Edit The Iloilo Provincial Capitol National Museum Western Visayas Regional Museum and Iloilo Hall of Justice with the Iloilo River in the foreground Iloilo River which snakes through the metropolis is home to 22 of 35 species of mangroves endemic to the Philippines The city has been a champion in air quality initiatives which further solidified when it won the 2017 Clean Air City Award given by the Clean Air Philippine Movement The award is given to urban centers and cities whose initiatives in good urban planning is to maintain a good air quality for its citizens to be a more livable and air pollution Philippines cities 189 190 For the second time Iloilo City has been conferred the Galing Pook Award for its entry the Iloilo Batiano River Development Project 191 The award recognizes best local government practices worthy of replication by other local government units LGUs The city s government continued initiatives to lessen its impact on the global carbon footprint resulted in enacting of various environmental laws in the metropolis such as banning of plastic straws in the city strict compliance of establishments along the stretch of Iloilo river to install waste water treatment facilities and segregation of bio degradable and degradable rubbishes Restaurants such as the ones that are serving fast food in the city use oxo degradable plastic bags and recycled paper boxes Iloilo City has also tree planting programs such as the government and various stakeholders continued forestation of endemic and ornamental trees along the city s major thoroughfares and mangroves along the city s creeks estuaries waterfront areas and rivers The Iloilo city government s continued efforts for green sustainability through building of parks open spaces and making the metropolis clean and conducive to tourists bagged the city the ASEAN Clean Tourist City award in 2020 192 Parks and recreation Edit Diversion Road which stretches from Infante in Molo district to Sambag in Jaro district has a dedicated elevated bricked bicycle and jogging lane the longest in the country The city is endowed with various parks open spaces and gardens which contribute the city s government initiatives in protecting and preserving its urbanscape for city dwellers for them to benefit from The Iloilo River Esplanade which stretches on both sides of Iloilo River which has been designed a renowned Filipino Architect Paulo Alcazaren who designed Clarke Quay in Singapore is the longest linear park and riverside boulevard in the Philippines The Iloilo River Esplanade along its stretch is dense with mangrove trees where 22 of the 35 species of mangroves that is endemic to the Philippines can be found The mangroves along the Iloilo River Esplanade is also a breeding ground for marine species Iloilo city before is re incorporation is a conglomerate of former separate towns during the Spanish up to the American colonial eras thus they have their own civic centers or Plazas equipped with ornamental gardens and endemic ornamental and non ornamental or fruit trees Plazas have long been played the role for the city dwellers to socialize and recreate There are also numerous recent development initiatives that the city government is pushing through for its continued efforts for more parks and open spaces in the city such as the redevelopment of Iloilo City Civic Center which includes the Iloilo City Hall with the revitalization of the former Plaza de Aduana or Sunburst Park and the relocation and building of the new Freedom Grandstand at the Muelle Loney Loney Wharf with pocket size and mini gardens The said same initiative is also being laid out and undertaken with the Provincial capitol complex of the Iloilo Provincial Government with initial phase of the Iloilo Provincial Jail being renovated and restored becoming the National Museum of the Philippines Western Visayas regional Museum and the landscaping of the provincial capitol complex The Iloilo River Esplanade at night Stretching for about 8 9 kilometers on both banks of the Iloilo River it is the longest river esplanade and linear park in the Philippines Smart City Initiative Edit Iloilo City is closer to being a smart city 193 as it is providing free internet access in public areas 194 aiming to decrease its carbon emission higher efficiency and productivity to underscore Iloilo as a livable city Electric vehicles are operating in the city Pumping Stations were installed to prevent flooding 195 Air quality is being monitored and graded as clean per international standards Taxis are advised to use an automotive navigation system to inform passengers of their location and for navigation through streets and alleys Oher services include phone calls for emergency rescue device charging stations local wayfinding free housing in Sooc Lanit and San Isidro and more All barangays of Iloilo City have installed Closed circuit television to predict traffic police requirements and for public safety 196 The city has banned the use of plastic straws in the city strict compliance of establishments along the stretch of Iloilo river to install waste water treatment facilities and segregation of bio degradable and degradable rubbish Restaurants and fast food stores use oxo degradable plastic bags and recycled paper boxes Iloilo city sustained its tree planting programs through forestation of endemic and ornamental trees along the city s major thoroughfares and mangroves along the city s creeks estuaries waterfront areas and rivers and clean up drive The city was awarded in 2017 with Clean Air City Award by the Clean Air Philippine Movement The award is recognition of Iloilo urban planning in diligence for maintaining the good air quality 189 190 For the second time Iloilo City has been conferred the Galing Pook Award for its entry the Iloilo Batiano River Development Project 191 The award recognizes best local government practices worthy of replication by other local government units LGUs Healthcare Edit CPU Iloilo Mission Hospital which was founded in 1901 by the Presbyterian American missionary doctor Joseph Andrew Hall is the first American and Protestant hospital in the Philippines oldest operating hospital in the Western Visayas region It serves as the university hospital of Central Philippine University Photo above is the IMH Medical Arts Building of the hospital Iloilo City is the leading healthcare center of the Western Visayas region and is rapidly becoming one of the medical tourism hubs in the Philippines The Iloilo City Health Office and the Department of Health Philippines is responsible for the implementation and planning of the health care programs provided by the city government The three government run hospitals in the city are the West Visayas State University Medical Center WVSUMC Western Visayas Medical Center WVMC and the Iloilo City Hospital The Iloilo City Health Office operates and supervises Health Centers in barrios or barangays in the city The city provides free immunization programs for children specifically targeted against the seven major diseases smallpox diphtheria tetanus yellow fever whooping cough polio and measles Iloilo s healthcare is also largely provided by private and church affiliated corporations Private hospitals that operates in the city are the following CPU Iloilo Mission Hospital CPU IMH St Paul s Hospital Iloilo SPH Iloilo The Medical City Iloilo TMC Iloilo Metro Iloilo Hospital and Medical Center MIHMC Medicus Medical Center MMC Qualimed Hospital Iloilo QHI Iloilo Doctors Hospital IDH Medicus Cancer Institute MCI Asia Pacific Medical Center Iloilo APMC Iloilo Seamen s AMEOSUP Hospital Qualimed Hospital Iloilo of AC Health Ayala Corporation the first Ayala Qualimed Hospital in Visayas and Mindanao There are also notable maternity clinics and centers in the city which include the La Paz Maternity and Reproductive Health Center LMRHC and CPU Birthing Center of the Central Philippine University The oldest running hospital in Iloilo City is the CPU Iloilo Mission Hospital It was founded as Union Mission Hospital in 1901 by the Presbyterian American missionary Joseph Andrew Hall as the first Protestant and American hospital in the Philippines Iloilo Mission Hospital serves as the university hospital of Central Philippine University The hospital pioneered nursing education in the Philippines when it established the Union Mission Hospital Training School for Nurses in 1906 the present day Central Philippine University College of Nursing the first school of Nursing in the country The nursing school produced the first three nursing graduates the first rank number one topnotcher and the first number one top performing school in the history of nursing licensure and education in the Philippines Saint Paul s Hospital Iloilo which was founded in 1911 by the French catholic missionaries through the help of the American Catholics is the oldest running hospital founded by Daughters of Saint Paul of Chartres in the Philippines At present it serves as an affiliated hospital of the St Paul University Iloilo Both St Paul s Hospital Iloilo and CPU Iloilo Mission Hospital are considered notable heritage healthcare institutions in Iloilo The two hospitals in the city the Qualimed Hospital Iloilo and The Medical City Iloilo are newly built ones of the two of the renowned hospital groups based in Manila in the country The Qualimed Hospital Iloilo of the Ayala Corporation and Mercado General Hospital Inc is the first Ayala Qualimed hospital outside Luzon while The Medical City Iloilo is likewise the first The Medical City hospital in Visayas and Mindanao of the group of healthcare institution giant The Medical City Group Both hospitals are equipped with state of the art medical facilities catering to the community in general There are three public hospitals in the city operated and managed by the government West Visayas State University Medical Center WVSUMC Western Visayas Medical Center WVMC Iloilo City Hospital ICH under construction The West Visayas State University Medical Center WVSU Medical Center commonly referred to as Don Benito is a government run hospital administered under the West Visayas State University It primarily serves the indigent populace in the city and region has auxiliary centers established by the national government for the Western Visayas region through the Department of Health of the Philippines the WVSU DOH Regional Cancer Center and the soon to be built 10 storey facility WVSU DOH Regional Lung and Heart Center The Western Visayas Medical Center is the largest referral public hospital in the Western Visayas region It is operated by the Department of Health The hospital facilities include a 6 storey heart amp lung specialty building 3 storey dialysis building a 2 storey main building which houses the administrative and emergency and other auxiliary health units of the hospital and the WVMC annex building 5 6 storey The Iloilo City Hospital which is undergoing construction in San Pedro Molo is the city government s project to cope with the healthcare demand of the metropolis s indigent citizens Components of the hospital include a 5 storey main hall a medical arts building and USWAG Iloilo City Molecular Laboratory Transportation Edit Passad Jeepneys of Iloilo City Public transport Edit Iloilo City is served mostly by passenger jeepneys white metered taxis and tricycles within the city limits The passad jeepneys of Iloilo are known for their sleek and sedan like design These often serve fixed routes and mostly travel on the city s major and secondary roads Jeepneys are also the main mode of transportation to Metropolitan Iloilo areas Tricycles serve most secondary roads and city communities Large passad jeepneys and buses link Iloilo City to the rest of the province and the island of Panay Buses bound for Metro Manila Mindoro Batangas Cebu Negros and Mindanao are also available via the Roll on Roll off ferry services of the Strong Republic Nautical Highway Mini shuttle vans also serve major points in Panay Island Iloilo is one of the few cities in the Philippines that recently initiated to adopt the mini bus like type modern PUJ or modern Jeepneys in contrast to the President Rodrigo Duterte s administration to phase out the old dilapidated jeepneys as the mode of mass public transportation in the Philippines 197 198 In March 2019 the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board announced the opening of a new Premium Point to Point Bus Service in Iloilo City with express bus services to the airports in Cabatuan Kalibo and Boracay Caticlan 199 Integrated transport terminals Edit Infante Flyover in Iloilo City the first flyover outside Manila Iloilo City has five Major Integrated Transport Terminals located at the city s perimeter areas the Iloilo North ITS Integrated Transport System Terminal Iloilo North Ceres Bus Terminal NCBT located at Tagbak Jaro District is the transport hub serving passengers to from north western municipalities of Iloilo City of Passi and northwestern Panay Capiz and Aklan including Boracay Island Iloilo Central Line ITS Integrated Transport System Terminal Pavia Peoples Terminal PPT in Ungka Jaro District is the transport terminal for passengers to from central municipalities of Iloilo Aleonsan ITS Integrated Transport System Terminal at Hibao and in Mandurriao for those to from the upland municipalities of San Miguel Alimodian and Leon including Bucari Leon Iloilo South ITS Integrated Transport System Terminal Iloilo South Ceres Bus Terminal SCBT located at Mohon in Villa de Arevalo for going to from the southern municipalities of Iloilo and to from the province of Antique and Iloilo North Coast ITS Integrated Transport System Terminal at Ticud Lapaz District for those going to from the northern coastal municipalities of Iloilo including Sicogon Island and Isla de Gigante all part of Carles Iloilo Cycling Edit Jaro West Diversion Road Benigno S Aquino Avenue The city has been hailed and earned its reputation as the Bicycling capital of the Philippines a yielded effort through the recent modern economic renaissance of Iloilo City by the local and the national government units and different stakeholders by educating the city locals on the importance of a bike able city and building dedicated bicycle lanes on city main thoroughfares 200 The metropolis has a network of nearly 100 kilometers of bicycle lanes and the longest of which is located along the stretch of Diversion Road The annual Iloilo Bike Festival has drawn bicycling enthusiasts throughout the country 201 202 By 2019 Dutch Government helped out iloilo City to become a bike friendly city 203 Railway Edit Main article Panay Railways Engine of the Panay Railways on display in the City Proper s plaza Plaza Libertad formerly Plaza Alfonso XII From 1907 to the 1980s Panay Railways operated a railroad from Roxas City to the port area of Muelle Loney along the Iloilo River in Iloilo City 204 In 2022 Panay Railways announced its opening to foreign ownership to reconstruct its former train lines which will reconnect the major cities in Panay including Caticlan in Malay Aklan 205 Airport Edit Main article Iloilo International Airport Iloilo International Airport is the 4th busiest in the Philippines 206 with international flight to Singapore and Hong Kong and vice versa serving passengers from Western Visayas Region Palawan and Mindanao 207 For domestic flights to from Metro Manila Caticlan Cebu Cuyo Puerto Princesa Sipalay General Santos City Cagayan de Oro and Davao City Iloilo International Airport is the airport serving the general area of Metropolitan Iloilo Guimaras the province of Antique and the rest of Iloilo Province It is located 19 kilometres 12 miles northwest of Iloilo City on a 188 hectares 460 acres site in the town of Cabatuan It opened to commercial traffic on June 14 2007 replacing the Old Iloilo Airport at the Mandurriao District The new airport inherited its IATA and ICAO airport codes 208 It is linked to the city through Sen Benigno S Aquino Jr Avenue and served by metered taxis airport shuttle vans and multicabs Recently the national government has approved the 791 million budget for the expansion of the Iloilo International Airport Seaport Edit Main article Port of Iloilo Iloilo International Port Loboc Wharf The Port of Iloilo is the port serving the general area of Iloilo and the premier port in the Western Visayas Region The new Port of Iloilo is located on a site away from the older port facilities It is situated in the southern coast of Panay Island in the Panay Gulf With Guimaras Island guarding the port from violent storms it has one of the safest and most natural harbors in the PhilippinesThe Iloilo International Port Complex IIPC is located on 20 8 hectares of reclaimed land It has modern facilities that include 11 400 sq meters of open space for unhampered operations supplemented by a backup area of 97 000 sq meters a crane rails of 348 lineal meters roll on roll off support a 7 800 container freight stations and a 720 sq meter passenger shed The port complex is ideal for ships plying international routes having a berth length of 400 meters a width of 26 26 meters and a berthing depth of 10 50 meters It is currently expanding with the reclamation of the west side sea front portion of the complexThe Iloilo Domestic Port Complex IDPC located near Fort San Pedro and formerly the Old Foreign Pier serves inter island passenger and cargo ferries which serves the routes Manila Palawan Cebu Zamboanga and Cagayan de Oro It is located near the mouth of Iloilo River at the vicinity of the Western Visayas Regional Government Center at the City Proper District It is also the port of call for several domestic shipping companies such as SuperFerry or 2GO Travel Negros Navigation Sulpicio Lines Cokaliong Shipping Trans Asia Shipping Lines and others The colloquial name Fort San Pedro refers to the old Spanish fortress beside it that was destroyed during World War II and soon to be restored by the Department of Tourism DOT under TIEZA The Jalandoni Bridge over the Iloilo River Muelle Loney or Iloilo River Wharf is the original port of the city Opened to international trade in 1855 it has served as the trans shipment docks for muscovado sugar in the late 19th to the first half of the 20th century It has undergone several times of expansion and improvement Today it serves smaller cargo ships roll on roll off ferries bound for Guimaras and Negros Island and fast ferries that ply Iloilo Bacolod route regularly In September 2014 the newly opened Iloilo River Port Complex IRPC at Lapuz District started its operation to replace the Iloilo River Wharf 209 Iloilo Guimaras Jetty Ports for Guimaras outrigger ferries are located at Calle Ortiz and Parola The terminal at Calle Ortiz serves Jordan Guimaras bound passenger and cargo outrigger boats while Parola terminal serve Buenavista Guimaras bound ferries Soon the Iloilo Jetty Port Complex IJPC at the Western Visayas Regional Government Center will replace the two jetty ports the complex is complete with a modern passenger terminal building a pumpboat fuel refilling station a 1 3 hectares 3 2 acres children s park with a marine museum and a CityMall complex by Double Drangon Properties This project of the City Government was achieved through public private partnership 210 Roll on roll off ferry service known in as RO RO is available from to Iloilo City There is also a ro ro service to Cebu via Negros It is ranked third in terms of ship calls at 11 853 fourth in cargo throughout at 491 719 million metric tons and fourth in passenger traffic at 2 4 million annually The Iloilo Fish Port Complex IFPC is the only and the major center of fish trading and marine products processing in all of Visayas The port complex is the traditional landing site of bagnetters and other fishing bancas in Iloilo City and nearby towns This strategic location has made the port the major fish marine source of major supermarkets hotels and restaurants and local public markets in the country and abroad Its services includes unloading and marketing facilities for fish and other fishery aquatic products both for local and foreign markets services and facilities for harbor operations such drydocking repair shop fuel oil water and ice conveyance and for transshipping products processing refrigeration and other post harvest services including product pre processing freezing through contact freezer cold storages and top grade facilities for the processing of marine products such as prawn abalone cuttlefish lobster nylon shell octopus slippertail squid whiting and bangus and raw land for the establishment of fishery related factories 211 The complex is situated in a 21 hectare reclamation at southern part of the City Proper District In March 2022 the fish port complex was granted 570 million for the expansion of its facilities which will include the construction of a new fish processing plant establishment of a fish canning facility and the construction of an alternative energy source 212 213 Utilities Edit The Panay Energy and Development Corporation s Coal power plant in Ingore La Paz district of Iloilo City A 72 MW Diesel Fuel Power Plant operated by Panay Power Corporation and a 164 MW coal power plant operated by Panay Energy Development Corporation PEDC provides power generation for Iloilo City both situated in Barangay Ingore in Lapaz district 214 215 PEDC plans for a third coal fired power generation facility The newest generator will be on top of the existing 164 MWs for an additional 150 megawatt to be generated that will help produce a total of 404 MW supply for the Panay and Guimaras islands 216 Power distribution had been facilitated by Panay Electric Company PECO since 1923 as one of the oldest private electricity distributor companies in the Philippines but MORE Electric and Power Corporation MORE Power of the Spanish Filipino Billionaire Enrique K Razon has taken over PECO s operations and acts as the sole power distributor in Iloilo City 217 Metro Pacific Iloilo Water MPIW the metropolis sole water distributor has established a joint venture with Metro Pacific Water MPW and Metro Iloilo Water District MIWD to bolster the former s service of supplying potable water to the city and the whole Metro Iloilo 218 219 220 221 222 Education EditMain articles List of universities and colleges in Iloilo List of colleges and universities in the Philippines and Education in the Philippines Being the center of education in Western Visayas Region the city and the province of Iloilo has a total of ten major universities Central Philippine University which was founded as legacy institution of the American titan John D Rockefeller is the first Baptist and second American founded university in the Philippines and in Asia CPU has been ranked as one of the top universities in Asia and in the world by Quacquarelli Symonds one of the big two world university ranking agencies along with Times Higher Education the first to do so in Western Visayas region 223 Aerial view above is the main campus of CPU Iloilo City alone hosts to 8 universities such as the Central Philippine University CPU University of the Philippines Visayas UPV which houses the University of the Philippines High School in Iloilo UPHSI University of San Agustin USAI West Visayas State University WVSU Iloilo Science and Technology University formerly WVCST ISAT U 224 University of Iloilo UI St Paul University Iloilo SPUI and John B Lacson Foundation Maritime University JBLFMU Three of the universities which are private in the city are founded by Christian religious orders and sects Roman Catholics established the University of San Agustin Spanish St Paul University Iloilo American through their French confreres and the Protestants who founded the Central Philippine University American Baptist University of the Philippines Visayas Iloilo City campus s main hall Central Philippine University The first and only Western Visayan university in the list of the top universities in Asia and the world for 2021 to 2023 by Quacquarelli Symonds one of the two biggest world university ranking agencies after Times Higher Education 223 225 is the largest university in the metropolis with a population of nearly 15 000 enrollees on its 24 hectare main campus in Jaro Iloilo City Formally founded in 1905 but dates back its establishment in 1901 when CPU Iloilo Mission Hospital its university hospital was opened by Presbyterian Protestant Americans under the auspices of the American Baptist Foreign Mission Society through a grant given by the American industrialist and philanthropist John D Rockefeller when the Americans brought their Protestant faith prior and after the Spanish American War and the Treaty of Paris 1898 which ceded the bureaucracy of Philippines from Spain to the United States The university is the first Baptist and Second American university in the Philippines and Asia after Silliman University 1901 in Dumaguete City The university ranks number one in Western Visayas region with 2 Commission on Higher Education Philippines Centers of Excellence designated programs in Agriculture and Business Administration and 4 Commission on Higher Education Philippines Centers of Development designated programs in Chemical Engineering Electrical Engineering Electronics Engineering amp Teacher Education 226 227 228 229 Central Philippine University College of Nursing which was founded as Union Mission Hospital Training School for Nurses Iloilo Mission Hospital in 1906 is the First School of Nursing in the Philippines Central Philippine University holds many firsts in the Philippines in some of the units that it established the CPU Philippine Center for Packaging Engineering and Technology CPU PC PET first of its kind in South East Asia Central Philippine University College of Agriculture Resources and Environmental Sciences first government recognized agricultural school outside Luzon Central Philippine University Republic CPU Republic first and oldest organized student government in South East Asia CPU TV Channel first university based TV Channel in Asia Central Philippine University College of Theology first Baptist theological seminary in the Philippines and Iloilo Mission Hospital the university hospital of the university first American and Protestant hospital in the Philippines The university enrolls and is widely known to foreign students who wants to study in Panay and Western Visayas with 216 foreign students studying from 27 foreign countries 230 The university is associated and has produced people who became notable in their respective fields Rodolfo Ganzon Senator and first popularly elected Mayor of Iloilo City Jovito Salonga Senator Perfecto R Yasay Jr Secretary of Foreign Affairs of the Philippines National Artists Ramon Muzones for Literature and Leonor Orosa Goquingco for Dance Leonor Briones Secretary of Education of the Philippines under President Duterte s administration Gilopez Kabayao Musician and Ramon Magsaysay Award laureate Asian Nobel Prize and Jose Vasquez Aguilar The first Filipino recipient of the Ramon Magsaysay Award and also first recipient of the award for Government Service category for his work as the Father of the Community School Movement among others University of San Agustin founded in 1904 by the oldest Roman Catholic religious who came to the Philippines The Order of St Augustin is the First Augustinian University in Asia and the Pacific It received its university status in March 1953 which also holds the distinction as the First university in Western Visayas St Paul University Iloilo Founded in the 1940s as a subject to the propagation of Catholicism in the American regime in the Philippines supported the spread of Protestant religion with the help of the American Catholics by their French confreres under the order of St Paul or Chartres St Paul Hospital of Iloilo the university hospital of the university which was founded in 1911 predates the university s founding The city universities of University of the Philippines Visayas Iloilo City College Campus West Visayas State University and Iloilo Science and Technology University are all controlled and subsidized by the government or as state universities University of the Philippines Visayas is one of the autonomous units of the University of the Philippines System with its main campus in Miag ao Iloilo The Iloilo City satellite campus is focused in Business Accountancy and social sciences academic courses The main hall of in the university s main campus used to be the old Iloilo City Hall and houses now the UPV Art Gallery UPV has been designated by the Commission on Higher Education Philippines as Center of Excellence in Chemistry The university s alumni have excelled and became notable in their fields which include Franklin Drilon Miriam Defensor Santiago Senator and first Asian to be nominated for a seat in the International Criminal Court Myrtle Sarrosa celebrity and TV host and Jed Patrick Mabilog 2014 World Mayor Award Top 5 best Mayor 231 West Visayas State University formally established under the tutelage of the Thomasites in 1924 but dates back its founding in 1902 through the Philippine Normal School system during the American regime The campus in Iloilo City is the main campus that encompasses the university system West excels in Nursing Medicine and Teacher Education annual licensure examinations through the topnotchers that it produces and being on the list of top performing school The main campus has been declared as Commission on Higher Education Philippines Center of Excellence in Teacher Education and Center of Development in Nursing Iloilo Science and Technology University founded in 1905 as Iloilo School of Arts and Trade by the Americans to continue the School of Arts and Trade that was built during the Spanish colonial era that was closed is focused in technological and technical courses Its Education academic program has been designated by the Commission on Higher Education Philippines as Center of Development in Teacher Education Other private universities in the city include University of Iloilo founded as a legacy institution of Lopez family of Iloilo it was purchased and is now under the management of PHINMA Group under its arm PHINMA Education Network John B Lacson Foundation Maritime University the first maritime university in the Philippines founded by Juan Bautista Lacson offers academic maritime courses The Ateneo Graduate School of Business under the Ateneo de Manila University has a satellite campus in Iloilo City housed at the Ateneo de Iloilo Main Campus The Ateneo Graduate School of Business Iloilo offers Master of Business Administration MBA Regis program It is an initial part of the Ateneo educational system s plan in offering collegiate courses to make Ateneo de Iloilo a full university in the future Other universities that maintain units offering off campus extension programs in Iloilo City include the Philippine Christian University through a partnership with St Roberts International College and Guimaras State University The Iloilo City Community College ICCC a city project for the city to have its own community city public college is administered by the Iloilo City Government through the Commission on Higher Education It offers undergraduate degrees in business information technology and travel management Iloilo is also home to numerous private colleges and schools such as the Iloilo Doctors College IDC one PAREF affiliated high school the Westbridge School for Boys St Therese MTC Colleges ST MTCC Western Institute of Technology WIT De Paul College DPC defunct ABE International College of Business and Economics ACLC College of Iloilo Computer College of the Visayas Dominican College of Iloilo Great Saviour College AMA Computer College Iloilo Campus STI College Iloilo Interface Computer College Iloilo IMAPF School of Midwifery Philippine College of Aeronautics Science and Technology ACSI College Iloilo ABBA Institute of Technology Iloilo Scholastic Academy Hua Siong College of Iloilo Sun Yat Sen High School Cabalum Western College St Anne College of Iloilo St Augustine School of Nursing Iloilo Assumption Iloilo run by the Congregation of the Religious of the Assumption Others include Ateneo de Iloilo Santa Maria Catholic School run by the Society of Jesus Angelicum School Iloilo run by the Order of Preachers Philippine Science High School Western Visayas Colegio de las Hijas de Jesus or simply Hijas de Jesus which is run by the Congregation of the Daughters of Jesus San Jose Catholic School which is run by the Order of St Agustin Colegio de San Jose CSJ and Colegio del Sagrado Corazon de Jesus CSCJ which are both run by the Congregation of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul and Asian College of Aeronautics Colegio de San Jose is the oldest school for girls in Western Visayas which is now 141 years old Iloilo is also home to numerous religious formation houses St Joseph Regional Seminary for Theologate studies the 148 year old St Vincent Ferrer Seminary for Collegiate studies and Mill Hill Formation House of the Mill Hill Missionaries In June 2012 the city government opened the Iloilo City Community College at Molo Iloilo City The Department of Education Division of Iloilo City covers 88 private schools 232 and 52 public schools 233 Notable people EditMain article List of people from IloiloSister cities EditLocalBacolod Negros Occidental 2010 234 Cebu City Cebu Davao City Davao del Sur General Santos South Cotabato 1980 234 Koronadal South Cotabato 2014 234 Makati Metro Manila 235 Mandaue Cebu 2007 234 Paranaque Metro Manila 234 Quezon City Metro Manila 1994 236 237 Rosario Batangas 2011 234 San Juan Metro Manila 2013 234 Tacurong Sultan Kudarat 2014 234 Taguig Metro Manila 234 International Bilbao Spain 234 Dededo Guam 1994 238 Kulim Malaysia 2013 Phnom Penh Cambodia Qingdao Shandong China 2003 239 Stockton California United States 1956 240 Yulin Guangxi China 2011 241 See also Edit Philippines portalCalle Real Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Jaro Iloilo City Proper Metro Iloilo GuimarasNotes Edit Presidential Executive Order No 559 of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo signed on August 28 2006References Edit a b Burgos Nestor P Jr June 11 2015 Groups see Iloilo title as badge of betrayal Philippine Daily Inquirer Archived from the original on June 13 2015 Retrieved April 14 2019 City of Iloilo DILG 2015 Census of Population Report No 3 Population Land Area and Population Density PDF Philippine Statistics Authority Quezon City Philippines August 2016 ISSN 0117 1453 Archived PDF from the original on May 25 2021 Retrieved July 16 2021 Demographia World Urban Areas PDF March 2020 PDF Demographia Retrieved November 24 2013 Housing Characteristics in the Philippines Results of the 2015 Census of Population Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved May 25 2020 a b Census of Population 2020 Region VI Western Visayas Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay PSA Retrieved July 8 2021 PSA Releases the 2018 Municipal and City Level Poverty Estimates Philippine Statistics Authority December 15 2021 Retrieved January 22 2022 Member Municipalities of Metro Iloilo Guimaras MIGEDC Metro Iloilo Guimaras Economic Development Council Retrieved September 7 2009 City to recognize Lapuz as separate district from La Paz Thenewstoday info December 22 2008 Retrieved on November 7 2011 Iloilo City History Tourist Spots Language and Festivals Philippines Cities Retrieved November 23 2022 Funtecha Henry F September 7 2007 Communication facilities in Iloilo early 20th C www thenewstoday info Archived from the original on September 27 2022 Retrieved September 27 2022 The end of the Spanish Empire in Iloilo Retrieved 24 October 2020 a b Greater Philippines Captaincy General of the Philippines Presidential Museum and Library Retrieved December 18 2017 CPU enrolment figures surpass that of last school year Retrieved 24 October 2020 Iloilo City may become PH s Most Livable City with real estate boom VisMin ph March 30 2022 Retrieved August 31 2022 ILOILO TIPPED FOR HUGE BPO BOOM City projected to be 3rd largest PH BPO hub www panaynews net August 23 2022 Retrieved August 31 2022 de Mentrida Alonso 1841 Diccionario De La Lengua Bisaya Hiligueina Y Haraya de la isla de Panay En La Imprenta De D Manuel Y De D Felis Dayot pp 202 203 Doeppers Daniel F 2017 The Development of Philippine Cities Before 1900 In Frost Lionel ed Urbanization and the Pacific World 1500 1900 Lands Peoples and History of the Pacific 1500 1900 Vol 15 Routledge ISBN 9781351876346 Law Gwillim 2015 Administrative Subdivisions of Countries A Comprehensive World Reference 1900 through 1998 McFarland p 289 ISBN 9781476604473 Romualdez Norberto 1908 A Bisayan Grammar and Notes on Bisayan Rhetoric and Poetics and Filipino Dialectology Tacloban Pag Pahayag Co Zorc R D 2010 Brown Keith Ogilvie Sarah eds Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World Elsevier p 492 ISBN 9780080877754 a b c Talaguit Christian Jeo N 2019 Mga Maragtas ng Panay Comparative Analysis of Documents about the Bornean Settlement Tradition PDF Thesis De La Salle University a b Scott William Henry 1968 Prehispanic Source Materials for the Study of Philippine Histor Manila University of Santo Tomas Press ISBN 978 9711002275 a b Duka Cecilio D 2008 Struggle for Freedom 2008 Ed Rex Bookstore Inc pp 21 23 ISBN 9789712350450 Tomas Santaren Bisayan Accounts of Early Bornean Settlements in the Philippines trans by Enriqueta Fox Chicago University of Chicago Philippine Studies Program 1954 ii Reading Song and Ming Records on the Precolonial History of the Philippines By Wang Zhenping Page 256 Mamuel Merino O S A ed Conquistas de las Islas Filipinas 1565 1615 Madrid Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas 1975 pp 374 376 Laurence Bergreen Over the Edge of the World Magellan s Terrifying Circumnavigation of the Globe HarperCollins Publishers 2003 Nowell Charles E 1962 Magellan s Voyage Around the World Three Contemporary Accounts Northwestern University Press Nowell Charles E 1962 Magellan s Voyage Around the World Three Contemporary Accounts Northwestern University Press Scott William Henry 1992 p 48 A History of the Philippines by David P Barrows In the Bisayas were the Cities of the Holy Name of God Cebu and on the island of Panay Arevalo or Iloilo The first maintained something of the importance attaching to the first Spanish settlement It had its stone fort and was also the seat of a bishopric It was visited by trading vessels from the Moluccas and by permit of the king enjoyed for a time the unusual privilege of sending annually a ship loaded with merchandise to New Spain Arevalo had about eighty Spanish inhabitants and a monastery of the Augustinians Convicts or Conquistadores Spanish Soldiers in the Seventeenth Century Pacific By Stephanie J Mawson AGI Mexico leg 25 num 62 AGI Filipinas leg 8 ramo 3 num 50 leg 10 ramo 1 num 6 leg 22 ramo 1 num 1 fos 408 r 428 v num 21 leg 32 num 30 leg 285 num 1 fos 30 r 41 v The Administration of the Law and Justice in Brunei before the British Part V The Borneo Bulletin on December 7 2013 continued with BA Hussaimiya s article on the Legal History of Brunei Darussalam Retrieved October 29 2016 permanent dead link Saunders 2002 p 57harvnb error no target CITEREFSaunders2002 help Reyes y Florentino Isabelo de los October 15 1889 Las islas Visayas en la epoca de la conquista Manila Tipo litografia de Chofre y ca via Internet Archive Schwalbenberg Henry M The Economics of Pre Hispanic Visayan Slave Raiding Philippine Studies 42 no 3 1994 376 84 Salman Michael Resisting Slavery in the Philippines Ambivalent Domestication and the Reversibility of Comparisons Slavery amp Abolition 25 no 2 2004 30 a b Fernandez Juan Jose Espinoza Jr 2006 Monografias de los pueblos de la Isla de Pan ay Iloilo City University of San Agustin Publishing House p 220 ISBN 978 971 0381 05 0 A History of the Philippines by David P Barrows Page 147 The few years of Ronquillo s reign were in other ways important A colony of Spaniards was established at Oton on the island of Panay which was given the name of Arevalo Iloilo Iloilo My City My Pride Archived from the original on January 21 2012 Retrieved January 21 2012 Nanak Darbar Iloilo Inc Gurudwaras of World Gurudwaras of World January 5 2021 Philippines A Unique Nation By Dr Sonia M Zaide 2015 p 150 All Nations Publishing Co Inc San Agustin Conquistas lib 2 cap 37 545 SECOND BOOK OF THE SECOND PART OF THE CONQUESTS OF THE FILIPINAS ISLANDS AND CHRONICLE OF THE RELIGIOUS OF OUR FATHER ST AUGUSTINE Zamboanga City History He Governor Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera brought a great reinforcements of soldiers many of them from Peru as he made his voyage to Acapulco from that kingdom Planos de las Plazas Presidios y Fortificaciones en todo el Distrito de las Provincias que sugeta al Real Dominio en las Yslas Philipinas Relacion de Artilleria Tren de manejo Pertrechos de Guerra Tropas regladas de Dotacion Raciones y Municiones con Liquidacion y Separacion de su Importacion en el Ano Producto de las Rentas y Consignaciones que se reporta segun el estado presente dated 1738 Manuscript drawn by Order of the Field Marshall Don Fernando Valdes y Tamon Governor of the Philippine Islands from 1729 to 1739 The document is currently under the custody of the Archives of the Naval Museum in Madrid Spain p 41 Visayan textiles RAFI Archived from the original on October 9 2014 Retrieved October 29 2016 a b The actual words of the Royal Decree says A propuesta del Ministro de Ultramar y teniendo en cuenta el creciente desarrollo que en la industria y el commercio ha alcanzado la cabecera de la provincia de Ilo Ilo la mas importante de las islas de Filipinas despues de la de Manila En nombre de mi Augusto Hijo el Rey D Alfonso XIII y como Reina Regente del Reino Vengo en conceder el titulo de la Ciudad a la cebecera de Ilo Ilo en dichas islas Dado en San Sebastian a cinco de Octubre de mil ochocientos ochenta y nueve Maria Cristina Cf Decreto Real de la Reina Regente Maria Cristina 5 Octubre 1889 en Gazeta de Madrid N 298 25 Octubre 1889 p 238 a b TIF file http pares mcu es ParesBusquedas20 catalogo description 431918 nm http pares mcu es ParesBusquedas20 catalogo description 434101 nm Oct 5 is Adlaw sang Ciudad de Iloilo Panay News October 5 2021 Retrieved September 13 2022 Funtecha Henry 2000 The Urbanization of the Town of Iloilo 1865 1900 Selected Papers on Cities in Philippine History Philippine National Historical Society 89 108 Humanities National Endowment for the April 15 1900 Omaha daily bee Omaha Neb 187 1922 April 15 1900 Image 19 p 7 via chroniclingamerica loc gov Policarpio F Hernadez Iloilo the Most Noble City History and Development 1566 1898 p 143 The members of the Jaro Ayuntamiento who signed the act of protestation against the uprising were Mariano Villalobos Tranquilino Gonzales Severino Arguelles Raimundo Escarilla Vidal Jabelona Ruperto Jalandoni Esteban Jalandoni Juan Ledesma Pablo Ledesma and Leon Jereos Secretary Cf September 7 1896 issue of El Porvenir de Bisayas Policarpio F Hernadez Iloilo the Most Noble City History and Development 1566 1898 p 144 The actual text of the letter of the members of the Jaro Ayuntamiento addressed to the Governor General of the Philippines published in the September 7 1896 issue of El Porvenir de Bisayas says Estos hechos de sedicion doblemente criminales en las dolorosas circunstancias que afligen a la Patria comun que alla al otro lado de los mares en los Campos de Cuba esta vertiendo sin tasa la generosa sangre de sus leales hijos que otros hijos integrados la hacen derramar no pueden levantar eco en los corazones nobles de los Jarenos que no olvidan la inmensa gratitud que deben a Espana que de la nada los hizos nacer a la vida de la civilizacion y del progreso The officials of the City of Iloilo who signed the letter of protestation were as follows Victoriano Mapa Primer Alcalde Emilio Escay Primer Teniente Alcalde Arcadio Conde Otegui Segundo Teniente Alcalde Vanancio Conception Jose Maria Aguilar Felix de la Rama Severino Duran Eduardo Arjanuate Francisco Aguado Francisco Ortiz Lorenzo Guevara Ramon Roco and Mariano Teano regidores Cf September 7 1896 issue of El Porvenir de Bisayas Esas negras traiciones cuya sola idea averguenza a los Filipinos buenos y leales han producido un sentimiento unanime de protesta e indignacion en el pueblo Ilongo que cifra su mas honroso blason en el inextinguible y sacrosanto amor que profesa a la gloriosa nacionalidad espanola de que se siente legitimamente orgulloso Espanoles son los Ilongos Ex cmo Senor y espanoles seran hasta la muerte porque no quieren vivir ni morir de otro modo que a la sombra de la augusta ensena castillana a la cual deben el ser hoy hombres dignos y libres 7 September 1896 issue of El Porvenir de Bisayas Cf September 3 1896 issue of El Porvenir de Bisayas Also cf Policarpio F Hernadez Iloilo the Most Noble City History and Development 1566 1898 p 145 Cf Policarpio F Hernadez Iloilo the Most Noble City History and Development 1566 1898 p 145 Cf December 30 1896 issue of El Eco de Panay Also cf Policarpio F Hernadez Iloilo the Most Noble City History and Development 1566 1898 pp 145 146 Cf January 16 1897 issue of Diario de Manila a b Cf Policarpio F Hernadez Iloilo the Most Noble City History and Development 1566 1898 p 147 Cf April 26 1898 issue of El Eco de Panay Cf also Policarpio F Hernadez Iloilo the Most Noble City History and Development 1566 1898 p 147 TIF file Queriendo dar una prueba de Mi Real aprecio a la ciudad de Ilo Ilo por su honroso proceder con motivo de haber sido la primera que presento voluntarios para combatir la insurreccion de Filipinas a propuesta del Ministro de Ultramar de acuerdo con Mi Consejo de Ministros En Nombre de Mi augusto Hijo el Rey D Alfonso XIII y como Reina Regente del Reino vengo en conceder a dicha ciudad el dictado de Muy Noble como recompensa a su conducta y estimulo para el porvenir Dado en Palacio a primero de Marzo de mil ocho cientos noventa y ocho These were the actual words in Spanish of the Royal Decree honoring the City with the title Muy Noble Most Noble Real Decreto de La Reina Regente Maria Cristina Marzo 1 1898 in Gaceta de Mardrid No 63 4 Marzo 1898 p 750 Foreman John The Philippine Islands a political geographical ethnographical social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago embracing the whole period of Spanish rule with an account of the succeeding American insular government New York 1907 C Scribner s Sons pp 518 526 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Cf Blair Emma Helen amp Robertson James Alexander eds 1911 The Philippine Islands 1493 1803 Volume 03 of 55 1493 1803 Historical introduction and additional notes by Edward Gaylord Bourne Cleveland Ohio Arthur H Clark Company ISBN 978 0554259598 OCLC 769945704 Explorations by early navigators descriptions of the islands and their peoples their history and records of the catholic missions as related in contemporaneous books and manuscripts showing the political economic commercial and religious conditions of those islands from their earliest relations with European nations to the beginning of the nineteenth century p 73 John Foreman The Philippine Islands a political geographical ethnographical social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago embracing the whole period of Spanish rule with an account of the succeeding American insular government New York 1907 C Scribner s Sons p 474 John Foreman The Philippine Islands a political geographical ethnographical social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago embracing the whole period of Spanish rule with an account of the succeeding American insular government New York 1907 C Scribner s Sons p 476 John Foreman The Philippine Islands a political geographical ethnographical social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago embracing the whole period of Spanish rule with an account of the succeeding American insular government New York 1907 C Scribner s Sons p 478 John Foreman The Philippine Islands a political geographical ethnographical social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago embracing the whole period of Spanish rule with an account of the succeeding American insular government New York 1907 C Scribner s Sons p 477 John Foreman February 7 2017 Treaty of Paris pp 479 783 in The Philippine Islands a political geographical ethnographical social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago embracing the whole period of Spanish rule with an account of the succeeding American insular government New York 1907 C Scribner s Sons Retrieved February 7 2017 This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Once There Was Federal Visayas Newsbreak Public Trust Media Group Inc August 1 2005 Retrieved December 18 2017 John Foreman The Philippine Islands a political geographical ethnographical social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago embracing the whole period of Spanish rule with an account of the succeeding American insular government New York 1907 C Scribner s Sons pp 511 512 a b c John Foreman The Philippine Islands a political geographical ethnographical social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago embracing the whole period of Spanish rule with an account of the succeeding American insular government New York 1907 C Scribner s Sons p 513 a b John Foreman The Philippine Islands a political geographical ethnographical social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago embracing the whole period of Spanish rule with an account of the succeeding American insular government New York 1907 C Scribner s Sons p 515 John Foreman The Philippine Islands a political geographical ethnographical social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago embracing the whole period of Spanish rule with an account of the succeeding American insular government New York 1907 C Scribner s Sons p 516 Nuevo Heraldo Iloilo February 11 1908 a b Lopez Group Foundation 2008 Iloilo A Rich and Noble Land Pasig Philippines Benpres Publishing p 278 ISBN 978 971 93904 0 4 The San Francisco Call April 12 1901 p 2 a b Annual report of the Philippine Commission Bureau of Insular Affairs War Department to the President of the United States Washington D C 1901 Vol I p 130 1 John Foreman The Philippine Islands a political geographical ethnographical social and commercial history of the Philippine Archipelago embracing the whole period of Spanish rule with an account of the succeeding American insular government New York 1907 C Scribner s Sons pp 516 517 N B For a detailed study regarding the history of war for independence in Iloilo and Panay as well as regarding the American occupation of the Island confer the paper of Jose Manuel Velmonte Ethnicity and the Revolution in Panay Archived September 22 2013 at the Wayback Machine in Kasarinlan Volume 14 No 1 Act No 719 Act reducing the fifty one municipalities of the Province of Iloilo to seventeen Supreme Court E Library retrieved December 31 2019 Act No 1333 An Act Amending Act Numbered Seven hundred and nineteen entitled An Act reducing the fifty one municipalities of the Province of Iloilo to seventeen Supreme Court E Library retrieved December 31 2019 Executive Order No 64 24 December 1907 see Executive Orders and Proclamations Issued by the Governor General During the Year 1907 Manila Bureau of Printing 1908 pp 125 126 Roads and bridges in Iloilo during the American rule Retrieved October 29 2016 Guillermo amp Verora pp 1 3 Carson 1965 p 4harvnb error no target CITEREFCarson1965 help The Convention of Philippine Baptist Churches Inc is the oldest Baptist organizational body in the Philippines Retrieved October 19 2012 A tight fisted businessman turned philanthropist Archived April 9 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved April 4 2015 John D Rockefeller American History USA Retrieved April 4 2015 The Philanthropists John D Rockefeller Retrieved April 4 2015 100 Leaders in World History John D Rockefeller Archived September 4 2017 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved April 4 2015 John D Rockefeller Retrieved April 4 2015 Philippines Demographics Profile 2018 www indexmundi com Frank T Reuter Catholic Influence on American Colonial Policies 1898 1904 Austin 2014 University of Texas Press pp 139 155 2 Frank T Reuter Catholic Influence on American Colonial Policies 1898 1904 Austin 2014 University of Texas Press p 151 3 Frank T Reuter Catholic Influence on American Colonial Policies 1898 1904 Austin 2014 University of Texas Press p 155 4 Cf Fr Juan Fernandez O S A Monografias de los pueblos de la isla de Panay in Monographs of the Towns of Panay Jose Espinosa Jr trans Iloilo City University of San Augustine 2006 Biblioteca Luis Angel Arango Archived from the original on December 1 2008 Retrieved April 24 2019 Commonwealth Act No 158 An Act to amend Commonwealth Act Numbered Fifty seven entitled An Act establishing a form of government for the City of Iloilo Supreme Court E Library retrieved December 31 2019 Commonwealth Act No 604 An Act to Amend Certain Sections of the Charter of the City of Iloilo Supreme Court E Library retrieved December 31 2019 Proclamation No 663 s 1941 Annexing the municipality of Jaro to the territorial jurisdiction of the city of Iloilo Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines retrieved December 31 2019 McCoy Alfred 1982 A Queen Dies Slowly Philippine Social History Ateneo de Manila University Press 289 358 Batas Pambansa Blg 51 An Act Providing For The Elective Or Appointive Positions In Various Local Governments And For Other Purposes Chan Robles Virtual Law Library December 22 1979 Retrieved February 27 2016 a b c d e Socio Economic Profile 2004 of Iloilo City The City Government of Iloilo 2004 In 1903 the municipalities of Jaro La Paz Mandurriao and Molo were incorporated into the municipality of Iloilo Pavia was also incorporated into Iloilo from Santa Barbara in 1905 In 1908 Pavia and Jaro were separated from Iloilo and constituted as the municipality of Jaro La Paz was re established as a separate municipality in 1920 In 1937 the town of Iloilo was amalgamated with the towns of La Paz and Arevalo as one chartered city The municipality of Jaro on the other hand was re incorporated into Iloilo City in 1941 Climate Average Weather Data Climate Charts Archived from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved March 13 2011 Klimatafel von Iloilo Insel Panay Philippinen PDF Baseline climate means 1961 1990 from stations all over the world in German Deutscher Wetterdienst Retrieved April 5 2017 Iloilo City Climatological Extremes Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration Archived from the original on October 14 2018 Retrieved October 14 2018 Census of Population 2015 Region VI Western Visayas Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay PSA Retrieved June 20 2016 Census of Population and Housing 2010 Region VI Western Visayas Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay NSO Retrieved June 29 2016 Censuses of Population 1903 2007 Region VI Western Visayas Table 1 Population Enumerated in Various Censuses by Province Highly Urbanized City 1903 to 2007 NSO Province of Iloilo Municipality Population Data Local Water Utilities Administration Research Division Retrieved December 17 2016 Language Research Center for Iloilo Statistics psa gov ph Retrieved October 15 2019 Poverty incidence PI Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved December 28 2020 https psa gov ph sites default files NSCB LocalPovertyPhilippines 0 pdf publication date 29 November 2005 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files 2003 20SAE 20of 20poverty 20 28Full 20Report 29 1 pdf publication date 23 March 2009 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files 2006 20and 202009 20City 20and 20Municipal 20Level 20Poverty 20Estimates 0 1 pdf publication date 3 August 2012 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files 2012 20Municipal 20and 20City 20Level 20Poverty 20Estima7tes 20Publication 20 281 29 pdf publication date 31 May 2016 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files City 20and 20Municipal level 20Small 20Area 20Poverty 20Estimates 202009 2C 202012 20and 202015 0 xlsx publication date 10 July 2019 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority PSA Releases the 2018 Municipal and City Level Poverty Estimates Philippine Statistics Authority December 15 2021 Retrieved January 22 2022 City Government of Iloilo 2010 Socio Economic Profile 2010 Research Center for Iloilo Research Center for Iloilo A walk through Iloilo Business Park philstar com Ilonggos Enjoyment Of Life Rates High In NSCB s HDI Ranking Manila Bulletin February 2 2013 Retrieved August 14 2019 via Yahoo Iloilo City ginpasidunggan nga 2019 Most Business Friendly LGU Bombo Radyo Iloilo Iloilo province s 2019 tourist arrivals up 11 59 Retrieved February 23 2022 2020 target 1 4M tourist arrivals in Iloilo City Retrieved February 23 2022 Yap Tara BPO spurs local employment rate Archived from the original on May 5 2016 Retrieved October 29 2016 BETTER TRANSPORT It is key to attract investors to Iloilo City Baronda www panaynews net April 22 2019 Retrieved October 13 2022 BPO friendly Iloilo City the Official Website of Iloilo Business Park BPO Towers the Official Website of Iloilo Business Park Agcaoili Lawrence BPAP DOST tag 10 next wave cities for IT BPO The Philippine Star Retrieved October 29 2016 ifit org ph Retrieved October 29 2016 Operating Economic Zones 277 Archived from the original on November 21 2011 Retrieved April 9 2019 Rendon Jennifer Megaworld allots P25 B for Iloilo project The Philippine Star Retrieved October 29 2016 The Royal Street of Iloilo Calle Real Retrieved October 30 2018 Calle Real Iloilo City s heritage street restored Retrieved October 30 2018 Articulos que ordinariamente reciben y venden Hoskyn y ca del comercio de Iloilo 1895 November 1938 issue of The American Chamber of Commerce Journal Vol XVIII No 11 page 6 More foreign retail property brands to enter Iloilo market Collier Retrieved October 30 2018 Megaworld set to open Festive Walk Mall in Iloilo Retrieved October 30 2018 Iloilo realty scene takes a festive walk Retrieved October 30 2018 Megaworld opens 1st lifestyle mall in VisMin Business World July 3 2018 Retrieved August 24 2020 THE ILOILO CITY COUNCIL Retrieved April 25 2019 Grand Timawa dies at 81 Retrieved April 25 2019 Senate of the Philippines Senator Profiles Retrieved April 25 2019 1st Contemporary Art Museum in VisMin opens in Iloilo City Retrieved March 7 2018 Megaworld s Iloilo Business Park Adds Art to the Township Retrieved March 7 2018 New Iloilo museum boosts region s art and culture scene abs cbn com Retrieved March 7 2018 Iloilo Summer Arts Festival 2020 launched Retrieved December 13 2021 Burgos Nestor Jr Iloilo set to turn into a convention hub Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved October 29 2016 12 finalists sa Bombo Music Festival napili na Archived January 12 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved Bombo Music Festival 2018 Updates Archived January 12 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved Estudyante mula QC itinanghal na kampeon sa Bombo Music Festival Archived January 12 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved Grand performance night ng Bombo Music Festival bukas handa na Archived January 12 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved CCP Launches Art Centers in the Provinces Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 5 2015 CCP expands regional art centers Retrieved January 5 2015 Kaisa sa Sining The CCP Regional Art Centers amp University College Art Associates Archived January 12 2017 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 5 2015 CCP expands its Kaisa sa Sining Regional Art Centers Archived February 7 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 5 2015 CCP launches art centers in the provinces Archived January 13 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 5 2015 Art centers in the provinces Retrieved January 5 2015 FOOD HAVEN OF PH Iloilo cuisine a gastronomic delight for food lovers www panaynews net October 12 2022 Retrieved December 1 2022 Mang Inasal History Retrieved April 30 2019 The Best La Paz Batchoy in Iloilo Retrieved April 29 2019 DEOCAMPO THE ORIGINAL BARQUILLOS Retrieved April 30 2019 a b Vego Herber August 22 2011 A glimpse into Iloilo City s colorful past The Daily Guardian Archived from the original on April 14 2019 Retrieved April 14 2019 Funtecha Henry F 1992 THE MAKING OF A QUEEN CITY THE CASE OF ILOILO 1890s 1930s Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 20 2 3 107 132 ISSN 0115 0243 JSTOR 29792083 Santiagudo Emme Rose September 19 2018 City of Love still peaceful orderly The Daily Guardian Archived from the original on September 20 2018 Retrieved April 14 2019 Blog Travel Travel Blog Iloilo The City Of Love Travel Blog Retrieved May 30 2022 Habol Panay Gallery National Museum Retrieved May 25 2022 iloilo City to Host the East Asian Seas Congress this November Department of Environment and Natural Resources June 1 2018 Retrieved April 14 2019 Known as the Heart of the Philippines Iloilo has successfully hosted international assemblies such as the 2015 APEC High Level Policy Dialogue on Food Security and the Blue Economy and ASEAN in the past a b Iloilo Getting to Know the Royal City of the South Retrieved March 5 2019 Conserva Louine Hope April 16 2018 CULTURAL HERITAGE CONSERVATION U S Embassy launches training course in Iloilo City The Daily Guardian Archived from the original on April 14 2019 Retrieved April 14 2019 Iloilo City dubbed as the City of Mansions is an ideal venue as it is a home to well preserved heritage structures during the Spanish and American period such as churches ancestral houses and commercial buildings A tour of Iloilo s museums August 1 2019 The Museum of Philippine Economic History which is a first of its kind in the country opened last February 2019 Molo Athens of the Philippines www thenewstoday info Retrieved May 25 2022 Iloilo Where the past is always present Inquirer Lifestyle January 29 2016 Retrieved May 25 2022 Iloilo City of love October 3 2004 Iloilo City can also be proud of its many firsts in the country as compiled by the late Norberto Baylen Iloilo had the first commercial airline luxury liner car assembly plant elementary school and the first modern cinema house outside of Manila 2020 Iloilo Dinagyang Schedule Festival Guide Explore Iloilo Retrieved May 29 2022 Iloilo City wins 2 bike friendly titles November 30 2021 Iloilo City has cemented its status as the bike capital of the country after winning two major awards Iloilo is Philippines food haven SUNSTAR November 22 2021 Retrieved December 1 2022 Lena Perla November 11 2021 Iloilo City marketed as PH s food haven Philippine News Agency Iloilo City Cultural Heritage Conservation Council Republic of the Philippines Iloilo City Conservation Planning and Development Guidelines for the Downtown Central Business District CBD Heritage Zone pp 16 17 retrieved November 4 2010 a b Iloilo to receive Clean Air City award Retrieved July 30 2018 a b Iloilo City bags Clean Air Award The Daily Guardian Retrieved July 30 2018 a b ILOILO CITY BAGS GALING POOK AWARD FOR CLEANING RIVER League Online News Retrieved November 6 2018 Iloilo City Won the ASEAN Clean Tourist City Award November 29 2019 Is Iloilo City closer to becoming a Smart City June 16 2019 Free public Wi Fi up in Iloilo City SunStar July 5 2018 Iloilo City Esplanade Project update amp Pumping Stations 07 23 2019 HD Archived from the original on November 13 2021 via www youtube com Abello Carolyn Jane July 17 2018 CCTV cameras in Iloilo City need enhancement SunStar Modern jeepneys to ply 3 new Iloilo routes Retrieved October 26 2018 Modernized jeeps start plying Iloilo routes Retrieved October 26 2018 San Juan Alexandria Dennise March 19 2019 LTFRB opens 28 P2P routes for franchise Manila Bulletin Retrieved March 23 2019 Tour on two wheels Seeing Iloilo City s historic sights by bike Retrieved October 26 2018 In Iloilo they bike for fun exercise and good causes Retrieved October 26 2018 How do you build a city that is sweet to its cyclists Retrieved October 26 2018 Dutch gov t to harness Iloilo s bike friendly environment Manila Bulletin Panay Railways www thenewstoday info Retrieved July 19 2022 Guardian Daily March 23 2022 Panay Railways chief open to foreign ownership to rehab defunct rail system Daily Guardian Retrieved July 19 2022 Old Iloilo airport sees last of happy landings INQUIRER net Philippine News for Filipinos Archived September 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine Philippines Iloilo airport readies for int l flights Archived from the original on November 10 2012 Retrieved October 29 2016 Philippine Airports Passenger Movement CY 2009 Report PDF Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines March 1 2010 Archived from the original PDF on June 1 2010 Retrieved October 26 2010 Sun Star Iloilo September 4 2014 Pendon Lydia August 24 2010 International firms eye Iloilo infra projects SunStar Iloilo Iloilo City Philippines Archived from the original on August 25 2010 Retrieved October 26 2010 Iloilo Fish Port Complex pfda gov ph Retrieved August 5 2022 Sun Star Daily March 19 2014 PFDA Panay Energy Development Corporation Archived from the original on May 17 2014 Yap Tara Mix of coal and diesel still cheapest for Iloilo electricity Archived from the original on October 30 2016 Retrieved October 29 2016 PEDC plans for a third coal fired power generation facility Philippine News Agency Archived from the original on May 17 2014 Retrieved April 19 2013 First Philippine Holdings Corporation Archived from the original on May 10 2013 Joint venture firm takes over water distribution in Iloilo Retrieved October 17 2020 Metro Pacific Iloilo Water MIW Retrieved October 17 2020 Metro Pacific Iloilo Water MIWD provide more COVID 19 relief assistance to Iloilo City Retrieved October 17 2020 Metro Pacific Water MIWD donate COVID 19 test kits supplies and water for Iloilo Retrieved October 17 2020 MPIC led firm takes over Iloilo water distribution Retrieved October 17 2020 a b QS Asian Rankings 2021 Central Philippine University Retrieved November 27 2020 Data PDF www senate gov ph Retrieved October 15 2019 14 Philippine universities among world s best in QS 2021 ranking Retrieved November 27 2020 College of Business and Accountancy up by 204 enrollees Archived April 16 2013 at archive today Retrieved 01 16 13 University rankings Find out how your school does by Philstar Archived July 3 2017 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved September 27 2015 Commission on Higher Education Philippines Regional Centers of Development Retrieved January 5 2015 Commission on Higher Education Business and Administration and Related Retrieved September 27 2015 CPU Celebrates International Day Retrieved November 15 2018 Mabilog is Top 5 in 2014 World Mayor awards SUNSTAR February 4 2015 Retrieved August 5 2022 Philippine Department of Education Masterlist of Private Schools Schools in Region VI SY 2007 2008 Archived from the original on March 23 2012 Retrieved November 3 2010 Philippine Department of Education Masterlist of Public Schools Schools in Region VI SY 2007 2008 Archived from the original on March 23 2012 Retrieved November 3 2010 a b c d e f g h i j Tayona Glenda Silubrico Ruby August 25 2018 Iloilo to showcase culture to sister cities tonight Panay News Archived from the original on April 9 2019 Retrieved April 9 2019 Iloilo City invites sister cities for Charter Day anniversary www pna gov ph Retrieved May 22 2022 Sister Cities The Local Government of Quezon City Archived from the original on October 1 2017 Retrieved April 9 2019 Quezon City Philippines amp Maui Hawaii Washington DC Sister Cities International Archived from the original on June 10 2015 Retrieved February 4 2015 10 05 2012 Iloilo Mayors Sign Sister city Agreements With Guam Villages Philippine Consulate General in Agana Guam 2012 Retrieved February 4 2015 a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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