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Lapulapu

Lapulapu[2][3][4] (fl. 1521) or Lapu-Lapu, whose name was first recorded as Çilapulapu,[5] was a datu (chief) of Mactan (today part of the Philippines).

Lapulapu
Imaginary posthumous portrait of Lapulapu by Carlo Caacbay for the National Historical Commission of the Philippines, 2019
Datu of Mactan
Reignfl. 1521
PredecessorRajah Mangal
SuccessorRajah Mangubat[1]

Lapulapu is known for the Battle of Mactan: on April 26, 1521, he and his men defeated the Spanish forces, led by Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan and his native allies Rajah Humabon and Datu Zula.[6][7] Magellan's death ended his voyage of circumnavigation and delayed the Spanish occupation of the islands by over forty years[8] until the expedition of Miguel López de Legazpi in 1564. Legazpi continued the expeditions of Magellan, leading to the colonization of the Philippines for 333 years.

Modern Philippine society regards him as the first Filipino hero because of his resistance to Spanish colonization. Monuments of Lapulapu have been built all over the Philippines to honor Lapulapu's bravery against the Spaniards. The Philippine National Police and the Bureau of Fire Protection use his image as part of their official seals.

Besides being a rival of Rajah Humabon of neighboring Cebu, very little is reliably known about the life of Lapulapu. The only existing primary source mentioning him by name is the account of Antonio Pigafetta, and according to historian Resil B. Mojares, no European who left a primary record of Magellan's voyage/vessel "knew what he looked like, heard him speak (his recorded words of defiance and pride are all indirect), or mentioned that he was present in the battle of Mactan that made him famous."[9] His name, origins, religion, and fate are still a matter of controversy.

Name edit

The earliest record of his name comes from Italian diarist Antonio Pigafetta who accompanied Magellan's expedition. Pigafetta noted the names of two chiefs of the island of Matan (Miramonte), the chiefs Zula and Çilapulapu.[5][2] Pigafetta's account of Magellan's voyage, which contains the only mention of Lapulapu by name in an undisputed primary source, exists in several variant manuscripts and print editions, the earliest dating to around 1524.

In an annotation for his 1890 edition of Antonio de Morga's 1609 Sucesos de las islas Filipinas, José Rizal spells the name as Si Lapulapu. This supplements a passage where Morga mentions Magellan's death in Mactan, but does not mention the Mactan leader by name.[10] In Philippine languages, si (plural siná) is an article used to indicate personal names. Thus Si Lapulapu, as rendered by Rizal, was subsequently interpreted by others to mean this way (though Rizal never explicitly asserts this himself) and the Si was dropped, eventually cementing the Mactan leader's name in Filipino culture as Lapulapu or Lapu-Lapu (e.g. Siya si Lapulapu "He is Lapulapu" vs. Siya si Si Lapulapu "He is Si Lapulapu"). However, this meaning for Si or Çi in Lapulapu's recorded name is doubtful because not all names recorded by Pigafetta contain it, as would be the case if it were. In an annotation of his 1800 edition of Pigafetta's account, Carlo Amoretti surmised that the Si or Çi found in several native names recorded by Pigafetta was an honorific title.[5] E. P. Patanñe (1999) thus proposes that this usage of Si was derived from a corruption of the Sanskrit title Sri.[11]

In 1604, Fr. Prudencio de Sandoval in his Historia de la Vida y Hechos del Emperador Carlos V spelled the name as Calipulapo, perhaps through transposing the first A and I and misreading the Ç.[12] This further became Cali Pulaco in the 1614 poem Que Dios le perdone (May God Forgive Him) by mestizo de sangley poet Carlos Calao.[13] This rendition, spelled as Kalipulako, was later adopted as one of the pseudonyms of the Philippine hero Mariano Ponce during the Propaganda Movement.[14] The 1898 Philippine Declaration of Independence of Cavite II el Viejo, also mentions Lapulapu under the name Rey Kalipulako de Manktan [sic] (King Kalipulako of Mactan).[15][16] This name variation has further led to claims that Lapulapu was a Caliph and thus Muslim, whereas Pigafetta notes that the region was not Islamized.

In 2019, the National Historical Commission of the Philippines' National Quincentennial Committee, tasked with handling preparations for the 500th anniversary commemoration of Magellan's arrival, stated that Lapulapu without the hyphen is the correct spelling of the Mactan ruler's name, being based on Pigafetta's original spelling, which they took to be Çilapulapu (approximately rendered as "Silapulapu", not "Kilapulapu", in equivalent Philippine orthography). The committee agreed with previous scholarship that the Si in his name reported by Pigafetta probably was an indigenous form of the Hindu honorific Sri, so Lapulapu would probably have been called Si Lapulapu.[2]

The Aginid chronicle, whose historicity is doubtful,[17] calls him Lapulapu Dimantag.[17][18]

In 2021, President Rodrigo Duterte signed Executive Order No. 152, officially calling to change the rendering of the Filipino hero's name from "Lapu-Lapu" to "Lapulapu", to conform with earlier references.[19] This executive order now requires government and non-government entities to adopt the name "Lapulapu" in all references pertaining to him.[19]

Early life edit

 
Location of Mactan in Cebu

There had been many folk accounts surrounding Lapulapu's origin. One oral tradition is that the Sugbuanons of Opong was once ruled by a datu named Mangal and later succeeded by his son named Lapulapu.[20]

Another is from the book Aginid, Bayok sa Atong Tawarik ("Glide on, Odes to Our History") published in 1952 by Jovito Abellana, which supposedly records the oral chronicles from the reign of the last king of Cebu, Rajah Tupas (d. 1565). However, its historicity is doubtful. The chronicle records the founding of the Rajahnate of Cebu by a certain Sri Lumay (also known as Rajamuda Lumaya), who was a Hindu prince from the Chola dynasty of Sumatra. His sons, Sri Alho and Sri Ukob, ruled the neighboring communities of Sialo and Nahalin, respectively. The islands they were in were collectively known as Pulua Kang Dayang or Kangdaya (literally "[the islands] of the lady"). Sri Lumay was known for his strict policies in defending against Moro raiders and slavers from Mindanao. His use of scorched earth tactics to repel invaders gave rise to the name Kang Sri Lumayng Sugbo (literally "that of Sri Lumay's great fire") to the town, which was later shortened to Sugbo ("conflagration").[18] Upon his death in a battle against the raiders, Sri Lumay was succeeded by his youngest son, Sri Bantug, who ruled from the region of Singhapala (literally "lion city"), now Mabolo in modern Cebu City. Sri Bantug died of a disease during an epidemic and was succeeded by his son Rajah Humabon (also known as Sri Humabon or Rajah Humabara).[18] During Humabon's reign, the region had become an important trading center. The harbors of Sugbo became known colloquially as sinibuayng hingpit ("the place for trading"), shortened to sibu or sibo ("to trade"), from which the modern name "Cebu" originates.[18]

According to the Aginid, this was the period in which Lapulapu (as Lapulapu Dimantag) was first recorded as arriving from "Borneo" (Sabah). He asked Humabon for a place to settle, and the king offered him the region of Mandawili (now Mandaue), including the island known as Opong (or Opon), hoping that Lapulapu's people would cultivate the land. They were successful in this, and the influx of farm produce from Mandawili enriched the trade port of Sugbo further.[18] The relationship between Lapulapu and Humabon later deteriorated when Lapulapu turned to piracy. He began raiding merchant ships passing the island of Opong, affecting trade in Sugbo. The island thus earned the name Mangatang ("those who lie in wait"), later evolving to "Mactan".[18]

 
3d render of LapuLapu monument

Battle of Mactan edit

Lapulapu was one of the two datus of Mactan before the Spanish arrived in the archipelago, the other being Zula, both of whom belong to the Maginoo class. When Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan arrived in the Philippines in the service of Spain, Zula was one of those who gave tribute to the Spanish king while Lapulapu refused.[21]

 
A depiction of the Battle of Mactan in the Magellan shrine

In the midnight of April 27, 1521, Magellan led a force of around 60 Spaniards and 20 to 30 war boats (karakoa) of Humabon's warriors from Cebu. They arrived in Mactan three hours before dawn. However, because of the presence of rock outcroppings and coral reefs, Magellan's ships could not land on the shores of Mactan. Their ships were forced to anchor "two crossbow flights" away from the beach. According to Antonio Pigafetta, they faced around 1,500 warriors of Lapulapu armed with iron swords,[note 1] bows, and "bamboo" spears.[note 2]

Magellan repeated his offer not to attack them if Lapulapu swore fealty to Rajah Humabon, obeyed the Spanish king, and paid tribute, which Lapulapu again rejected. At the taunting request of Lapulapu, the battle did not begin until morning. Magellan, perhaps hoping to impress Humabon's warriors with the superiority of European armor and weapons, told Humabon's warriors to remain in their ships. Magellan and 49 of the heavily armored Spaniards (armed with lances, swords, crossbows, and muskets) waded ashore to meet Lapulapu's forces. They set fire to a few houses on the shore in an attempt to scare them. Instead, Lapulapu's warriors became infuriated and charged. Two Spaniards were killed immediately in the fighting, and Magellan was wounded in the leg with a poisoned arrow. He ordered a retreat, which most of his men followed except for a few who remained to protect him. However, he was recognized as the captain by the natives, whereupon he became the focus of the attack. Outnumbered and encumbered by their armor, Magellan's forces were quickly overwhelmed. Magellan and several of his men were killed, and the rest escaped to the waiting ships.[21][22]

 
Illustration from Antonio Pigafetta's journal showing Cebu, Mactan, and Bohol; with a label indicating that the "Capitaine general" died on Mactan (c. 1525)

The historian William Henry Scott believes that Lapulapu's hostility may have been the result of a mistaken assumption by Magellan. Magellan assumed that ancient Filipino society was structured in the same way as European society (i.e. with royalty ruling over a region). While this may have been true in the Islamic sultanates in Mindanao, the Visayan societies were structured along a loose federation of city-states (more accurately, a chiefdom). The most powerful datu in such a federation has limited power over another member datu, but no direct control over the subjects or lands of the other datu.[23]

Thus Magellan believed that since Rajah Humabon was the king of Cebu, he was the king of Mactan as well. But the island of Mactan, the dominion of Lapulapu and Zula, was in a location that enabled them to intercept trade ships entering the harbor of Cebu, Humabon's domain. Thus, it was more likely that Lapulapu was actually more powerful than Humabon, or at least was the undisputed ruler of Mactan. Humabon was married to Lapulapu's niece. When Magellan demanded that Lapulapu submit as his King Humabon had done, Lapulapu purportedly replied that: "he was unwilling to come and do reverence to one whom he had been commanding for so long a time".[23]

The Aginid chronicle also records that Humabon had actually purposefully goaded the Spaniards into fighting Lapulapu, who was his enemy at that time. However, the men of Humabon who accompanied Magellan did not engage in battle with Lapulapu, though they helped with recovering the wounded Spaniards. Humabon later poisoned and killed 27 Spanish sailors during a feast. According to the Aginid, this was because they had started raping the local women. It was also possibly to aid Magellan's Malay slave interpreter, Enrique of Malacca, in gaining his freedom. The Spanish were refusing to release him, even though Magellan explicitly willed that he be set free upon his death.[18][21] A discourse by Giovanni Battista Ramusio also claims that Enrique warned the Chief of "Subuth" that the Spaniards were plotting to capture the king and that this led to the murder of the Spaniards at the banquet.[24] Enrique stayed in Cebu with Humabon while the Spanish escaped to Bohol.[18][21]

The battle left the expedition with too few men to crew three ships, so they abandoned the Concepción. The remaining ships – the Trinidad and the Victoria – sailed to the Spice Islands in present-day Indonesia. From there, the expedition split into two groups. The Trinidad, commanded by Gonzalo Gómez de Espinoza tried to sail eastward across the Pacific Ocean to the Isthmus of Panama. Disease and shipwreck disrupted Espinoza's voyage and most of the crew died. Survivors of the Trinidad returned to the Spice Islands, where the Portuguese imprisoned them. The Victoria continued sailing westward, commanded by Juan Sebastián Elcano, and managed to return to Sanlúcar de Barrameda, Spain in 1522. In 1529, King Charles I of Spain relinquished all claim over the Spice Islands to Portugal in the treaty of Zaragoza. However, the treaty did not stop the colonization of the Philippine archipelago from New Spain.[25]

According to Aginid, Lapulapu and Humabon restored friendly relations after the Battle of Mactan. Lapulapu later decided to return to Borneo with his family and 17 of his men. Nothing more is known of him after this.[18]

After Magellan's voyage, subsequent expeditions were dispatched to the islands. Five expeditions were sent: Loaisa (1525), Cabot (1526), Saavedra (1527), Villalobos (1542), and Legazpi (1564).[26] The Legazpi expedition was the most successful, resulting in the colonization of the islands.[27][28][29]

Religion edit

 
Depiction of the Visayan Pintados in the Boxer Codex (c. 1595)

Lapulapu's religious beliefs are another subject of debate but it is strongly suggested that he was an adherent of the indigenous animistic anito beliefs. The inhabitants of the Sulu Archipelago believe that Qadi Lapulapu was a Muslim belonging to the Tausūg or the Sama-Bajau people of Mindanao,[30][31] a claim made by the now dissolved Sultanate of Sulu that many historians negate.[32][33] Moreover, prominent Cebuano anthropologist José Eleazar Bersales says that Cebu was never islamized,[34] referenced from an excavation in Boljoon in southern Cebu. Direct evidences such as accounts of Pigafetta and the native oral tradition did not indicate Lapulapu as a Muslim but a Visayan animist and a Sugbuanon native.[35]

Cebuanos were predominantly animist at the time of the arrival of the Spanish.[36][37][38] Visayans were noted for their widespread practice of tattooing; hence, Spaniards referred to them as the Pintados.[39] Pigafetta, who recorded Magellan's encounter with the Cebuanos, explicitly described Rajah Humabon as tattooed. He also records the consumption of pork, dog meat, and palm wine (arak) by the Cebuanos,[21][40] as well as the common custom of penile piercings (tugbuk or sakra).[21][41] Tattooing, body modification, pork, dog meat, and alcohol are all ḥarām (forbidden) in Islam.[42]

The supreme deity of the Visayans, as explicitly recorded by contemporary historians, was identified as Abba by Pigafetta and Kan-Laon (also spelled Laon) by the Jesuit historian Pedro Chirino in 1604, comparable to the Tagalog "Bathala". There is no mention of Islam.[43] This is in contrast to the other locations visited by the Magellan expedition where Pigafetta readily identifies the Muslims whom they encountered; he would call them Moros after the Muslim Moors of medieval Spain and northern Africa, to distinguish them from the polytheistic "heathens".[21][36][44] In fact, during the mass baptism of the Cebuanos to Christianity, he clearly identifies them as "heathens," not Moros:[21][37]

We set up the cross there for those people were heathen. Had they been Moros, we would have erected a column there as a token of greater hardness, for the Moros are much harder to convert than the heathen.

— Antonio Pigafetta, Primo viaggio intorno al mondo (c. 1525)

A more dubious claim from the Aginid is that Lapulapu may have been from Borneo. The Aginid calls him an orang laut ("man of the sea") and an outsider who settled in Cebu from Borneo.[18][31] The Oponganon-Cebuano oral tradition effectively disputes this claim, saying his father was Datu Mangal of Mactan, indicating that Lapulapu a native of Opong.[35][18]

Legacy edit

Recognition as a Filipino hero edit

Lapulapu is regarded, retroactively, as the first Filipino hero.[45][46]

On April 27, 2017, President Rodrigo Duterte declared April 27 (the date when Battle of Mactan happened) as Lapu-Lapu Day for honoring as the first hero in the country who defeated foreign rule.[47][48] Duterte also signed Executive Order No. 17 creating the Order of Lapu-Lapu which recognizes the services of government workers and private citizens in relation to the campaigns and advocacies of the President.[49]

During the First Regular Season of the 14th Congress of the Philippines, Senator Richard Gordon introduced a bill proposing to declare April 27 as an official Philippine national holiday to be known as Adlaw ni Lapu-Lapu, (Cebuano, "Day of Lapu-Lapu").[50]

Commemorations edit

 
 
 
Left: Lapulapu's profile on the obverse of a Philippine 1-centavo coin from the Pilipino Series. Middle and Right: Lapulapu is a central figure in the seal of the Philippine National Police and the Bureau of Fire Protection.

The government erected a statue in his honor on Mactan Island and renamed the town of Opon in Cebu to Lapu-Lapu City. A large statue of him, donated by South Korea, stands in the middle of Agrifina Circle in Rizal Park in Manila, replacing a fountain and rollerskating rink. Lapulapu appears on the official seal of the Philippine National Police.[51] His face was used as the main design on the 1-centavo coin that was circulated in the Philippines from 1967 to 1994.[52][failed verification]

In the United States, a street in South of Market, San Francisco is named after Lapulapu.[53] That street and others in the immediate neighborhood were renamed by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors with names derived from historical Filipino heroes on August 31, 1979.[54]

On January 18, 2021, the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, in cooperation with the Quincentennial Commemorations in the Philippines, launches the 5,000-Piso commemorative non-circulating banknote, in honor of his heroism.[55]

In urban legend and folklore edit

According to local legend, Lapulapu never died but was turned into stone, and has since then been guarding the seas of Mactan. Fisherfolk in Mactan would throw coins at a stone shaped like a man as a means to "ask permission" from Lapulapu to fish "in his territory". Another urban legend concerns the statue of Lapulapu erected in 1933 at the center of the town plaza of Lapu-Lapu when the city was still a municipality with the name Opon. The statue faced the old town hall, where mayors used to hold office; Lapulapu was shown with a crossbow in the stance of shooting an enemy. Superstitious citizens proposed to replace this crossbow with a sword, after three consecutive mayors of Opon (Rito dela Serna, Gregorio dela Serna and Simeon Amodia) each died of heart attack. The statue was modified during the administration of Mayor Mariano Dimataga who took office in 1938.[56]

In popular culture edit

  • Portrayed by Mario Montenegro in the 1955 film Lapu-Lapu.[57]
  • Portrayed by Calvin Millado in the 1995 children's educational series Bayani.
  • Portrayed by Lito Lapid in the 2002 film Lapu-Lapu.[58]
  • Portrayed by Aljur Abrenica in the GMA 2010 Lupang Hinirang Music Video[citation needed]
  • Lapu-Lapu was the inspiration of a playable character of the same name in the mobile game Mobile Legends: Bang Bang. The character is a dual swordsman who has two instances and can swap between two weapons. In the game lore, he serves as the chief of Makadan (now Parlas, a sublocation in Vonetis Island), a reference to Mactan Island.[59][60]
  • In the 2004 Bayani Agbayani song, Otso Otso, he was mentioned the last time the song mentions, Two plus two. Ironically, the child rhyme mentions him at the second line: "One plus one, Magellan, Two plus two, Lapu-Lapu..." This presumably references the Battle of Mactan that Magellan was killed in.[citation needed]
  • The song "Panalo" by Ez Mil, had a line that mentions Lapu-Lapu being beheaded in the Battle of Mactan. The song was met with criticism for the line's lack of historical accuracy. Among the song's critics were the Lapu-Lapu City government [61] and the National Historical Commission of the Philippines.[62]
  • Portrayed by Zeus Collins in the 2019 film The Mall, The Merrier, as one of the statues in Tamol Mall.
  • Portrayed by Armando Alera in the 2022 series Boundless.
  • Portrayed by Michael Copon in the 2023 film 1521
  • The Kuwaiti novelist Saod Alsanousi refers to Lapulapu in his novel, The Bamboo Stalk, which won the International Prize for Arabic literature. The protagonist of this novel Jose/Issa explains that Lapulapu represented Islam to him. [63]

Shrine edit

The Lapu-Lapu shrine is a 20 meters (66 ft) bronze statue in Punta Engaño, Lapu-Lapu, Cebu, Philippines.[64]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Including what Pigafetta described as a "large cutlass", traditionally illustrated as the two-handed kampilan. But this could have been another sword type because Pigafetta further says it resembled "a scimitar, only being larger", and the kampilan is straight while the scimitar is curved.
  2. ^ Bangkaw, a light spear weapon that can be thrown. It is actually made of fire-hardened rattan, which superficially resembles bamboo, and is usually tipped with metal heads.

References edit

  1. ^ "Mangubat". Philippine Armorial. August 26, 2017. Retrieved January 13, 2020.
  2. ^ a b c ABS-CBN News (May 1, 2019). "It's Lapulapu: Gov't committee weighs in on correct spelling of Filipino hero's name". ABS-CBN News. Manila: ABS-CBN Corporation. Retrieved March 24, 2020.
  3. ^ Mendoza, Norman (November 14, 2019). "NQC: Lapulapu (without the hyphen) is Mactan ruler's name". Cebu Daily News. Lapu-Lapu City, Philippines. Retrieved March 24, 2020.
  4. ^ Escalante, Rene R. (2019). National Quincentennial Committee Comprehensive Plan. Manila: National Historical Commission of the Philippines.
  5. ^ a b c John Pinkerton (1812). "Pigafetta's Voyage Round the World [...] with notes by Charles Amoretti". A general collection of the best and most interesting voyages and travels in all parts of the world: many of which are now first translated into English; digested on a new plan. Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme. pp. 341–344.
  6. ^ Ocampo, Ambeth R. (July 3, 2019). "The Battle of Mactan, according to Pigafetta". Inquirer.net.
  7. ^ Pigafetta, Antonio (c. 1525). Journal of Magellan's Voyage (in French).
  8. ^ Pedrosa, Carmen N. "The untold stories of Lapu-Lapu and Zheng He". Philstar.com. Retrieved June 10, 2021.
  9. ^ Ocampo, Ambeth (April 25, 2018). "Lapu-Lapu, national hero". Inquirer.net. Retrieved June 27, 2019.
  10. ^ Antonio de Morga (1559–1636) annotations by José Rizal (1890). Sucesos de las islas Filipinas por el doctor Antonio de Morga, obra publicada en Méjico el an̄o de 1609. Nuevamente sacada à luz y anotada por José Rizal y precedida de un prólogo del prof. Fernando Blumentritt. Garnier hnos. p. 4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ E. P. Patanñe (1996). The Philippines in the 6th to 16th Centuries. LSA Press, Inc. p. 175. ISBN 978-971-91666-0-3.
  12. ^ Prudencio de Sandoval (1604). Historia de la Vida y Hechos del Emperador Carlos V. Maximo, Fortissimo Rey Catholico de Espana, y de las Indias, Islas, y Tierra Firme del Mar Oceano. Vol. 1. Barcelona (published 1625). p. 601.
  13. ^ M.C. Halili (2004). Philippine History. Rex Bookstore, Inc. p. 74. ISBN 978-971-23-3934-9.
  14. ^ . Provincial Government of Bulacan, Philippines. 2007. Archived from the original on October 20, 2018. Retrieved July 9, 2012.
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  16. ^ Albert P. Blaustein; Jay A. Sigler; Benjamin R. Beede (1977). "Republic of the Philippines: Cavite Declaration of June 12, 1898". Independence Documents of the World, Vol. 2. Oceana Publications. p. 567. ISBN 0-379-00795-9.
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  19. ^ a b "Executive Order No. 152, s. 2021 | GOVPH". Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. December 6, 2021. Retrieved December 8, 2021.
  20. ^ "In the nearby satellite island of Opong, Datu Mangal ruled the Sibuanons there and later his son succeeded him, rising in power and popularity. This legendary successor to Mangal was Lapu-Lapu. There had been many versions, even myths surrounding Lapu-Lapu’s origin." John Kingsley Pangan, Church of the Far East (Makati: St. Pauls, 2016), 68
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h Donald F. Lach (1994). Asia in the Making of Europe, Volume I: The Century of Discovery. University of Chicago Press. pp. 175, 635–638. ISBN 978-0-226-46732-0.
  22. ^ Nowell, Charles E. (1962). Magellan's Voyage Around the World: Three Contemporary Accounts. Northwestern University Press.
  23. ^ a b William Henry Scott (1994). Barangay: sixteenth-century Philippine culture and society. Ateneo de Manila University Press. ISBN 978-971-550-135-4.
  24. ^ Pigafetta, Antonio (1874), Lord Stanley of Alderley (ed.), The First Voyage Round the World by Magellan and other documents, Printed for the Hakluyt Society, p. 201
  25. ^ Agoncillo, Teodoro A. (1990), History of the Filipino People (Eighth ed.), University of the Philippines, ISBN 971-8711-06-6
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  27. ^ Zaide, Gregorio F. (1939), Philippine History and Civilization, Philippine Education Co.
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  29. ^ Williams, Patrick (2009), "Philip II, the Philippines, and the Hispanic World", in Ramírez, Dámaso de Lario (ed.), Re-shaping the World: Philip II of Spain and His Time (illustrated ed.), Ateneo de Manila University Press, ISBN 978-971-550-556-7
  30. ^ Frank "Sulaiman" Tucci (2009). The Old Muslim's Opinions: A Year of Filipino Newspaper Columns. iUniverse. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-4401-8343-0.
  31. ^ a b Yusuf Morales. "Looking at the other Lost Moro Kingdoms". Scribd. Retrieved December 21, 2013.
  32. ^ Macasero, Ryan (April 29, 2021). "Bong Go apologizes for wrongly claiming Lapulapu was from Mindanao". Rappler. Retrieved April 30, 2021.
  33. ^ Israel, Dale G. (April 27, 2021). "Historians say 'huh?' as Bong Go says Lapulapu is from Sulu". INQUIRER.net. Retrieved April 30, 2021.
  34. ^ . June 8, 2008. Archived from the original on June 8, 2008.
  35. ^ a b "In the nearby satellite island of Opong, Datu Mangal ruled the Sibuanons there and later his son succeeded him, rising in power and popularity. This legendary successor to Mangal was Lapu-lapu. There had been many versions, even myths surrounding Lapu-lapu’s origin. One account tells that many years before Magellan’s arrival, a man called Dimantag traveling from Borneo reached to shores of Sibu. He asked Rajah Humabon for a place to settle. The wanderer was given the nearby Opong island, though Dimantag primarily preferred to settle in Mandawili (modern-day Mandaue). Ages passed, Dimantag rose to power in Opong and became known by Sibuanons as Sri Lapu-lapu (Çilapulapu by the Spaniards). Farther south in Mindanao, the annals of Moro history made Lapu-lapu a Muslim. He was said to have an allegiance with the Sultan of Sulu. However, direct evidence such as accounts of Pigafetta and the ancient Sugbuanon oral tradition did not indicate Lapu-lapu as a Muslim but a Visayan animist."John Kingsley Pangan, Church of the Far East (Makati: St. Pauls, 2016), 68.
  36. ^ a b J.P. Sanger (1905). "History of the Population". Census of the Philippine Islands, Volume I: Geography, History, and Population. Washington, D.C.: United States Bureau of the Census. p. 414. ISBN 978-971-23-2142-9.
  37. ^ a b Antonio Pigafetta. MS. ca. 1525, of events of 1519–1522 (1906). "Primo viaggio intorno al mondo". In Emma Helen Blair & James Alexander Robertson (ed.). The Philippine Islands, 1493–1803; explorations by early navigators, descriptions of the islands and their peoples, their history and records of the Catholic missions, as related in contemporaneous books and manuscripts, showing the political, economic, commercial and religious conditions of those islands from their earliest relations with European nations to the beginning of the nineteenth century. The Arthur H. Clark Co. p. 161.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  38. ^ Carolyn Brewer (2004). Shamanism, Catholicism, and Gender Relations in Colonial Philippines, 1521-1685. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-7546-3437-9.
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  57. ^ "Lapu-Lapu (1955)". Retrieved June 10, 2008.
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  59. ^ "Mobile Legends: Menilik Sejarah Terciptanya Karakter GatotKaca di Game yang Sedang Hits!". Okezone Techno (in Indonesian). July 26, 2017.
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  62. ^ "Historical commission on 'Panalo' lyrics: 'Let us not compromise history'". February 10, 2021.
  63. ^ Sanʻūsī, Saʻūd; سنعوسي، سعود. (2015). The bamboo stalk. Jonathan Wright. Doha, Qatar. ISBN 978-9927-101-77-9. OCLC 890435699.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  64. ^ "Lapu-Lapu Monument also called Mactan Shrine". Cebu City. March 2, 2012. Retrieved April 1, 2015.

Further reading edit

  • Agoncillo, Teodoro A. "Magellan and Lapu-Lapu". Fookien Times Yearbook, 1965, p. 634
  • Alcina, Francisco, Historia de las Islas e Indios de Bisaya, MS 1668
  • Correa, Gaspar, Lendas de India, Vol. 2, p. 630
  • Cruz, Gemma, "Making Little Hero of Maktan"
  • Estabaya, D. M., "445 Years of Lapu-lapu", Weekly nation 1: 26–27, April 25, 1966
  • Pigafetta, Antonio, Primo Viaje en Torno al Globo Terraqueo, Corredato di Notte de Carlo Amoteti, Milano, 1800

External links edit

  •   Media related to Lapulapu at Wikimedia Commons

lapulapu, lapu, lapu, redirects, here, city, named, after, lapu, lapu, city, 2001, film, lapu, lapu, film, fish, also, known, lapu, lapu, epinephelus, undulosus, this, philippine, name, indigenous, people, this, person, addressed, sole, name, 1521, lapu, lapu,. Lapu Lapu redirects here For the city named after him see Lapu Lapu City For the 2001 film see Lapu Lapu film For the fish also known as lapu lapu see Epinephelus undulosus In this Philippine name for indigenous people this person is addressed by the sole name Lapulapu Lapulapu 2 3 4 fl 1521 or Lapu Lapu whose name was first recorded as Cilapulapu 5 was a datu chief of Mactan today part of the Philippines LapulapuImaginary posthumous portrait of Lapulapu by Carlo Caacbay for the National Historical Commission of the Philippines 2019Datu of MactanReignfl 1521PredecessorRajah MangalSuccessorRajah Mangubat 1 Lapulapu is known for the Battle of Mactan on April 26 1521 he and his men defeated the Spanish forces led by Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan and his native allies Rajah Humabon and Datu Zula 6 7 Magellan s death ended his voyage of circumnavigation and delayed the Spanish occupation of the islands by over forty years 8 until the expedition of Miguel Lopez de Legazpi in 1564 Legazpi continued the expeditions of Magellan leading to the colonization of the Philippines for 333 years Modern Philippine society regards him as the first Filipino hero because of his resistance to Spanish colonization Monuments of Lapulapu have been built all over the Philippines to honor Lapulapu s bravery against the Spaniards The Philippine National Police and the Bureau of Fire Protection use his image as part of their official seals Besides being a rival of Rajah Humabon of neighboring Cebu very little is reliably known about the life of Lapulapu The only existing primary source mentioning him by name is the account of Antonio Pigafetta and according to historian Resil B Mojares no European who left a primary record of Magellan s voyage vessel knew what he looked like heard him speak his recorded words of defiance and pride are all indirect or mentioned that he was present in the battle of Mactan that made him famous 9 His name origins religion and fate are still a matter of controversy Contents 1 Name 2 Early life 3 Battle of Mactan 4 Religion 5 Legacy 5 1 Recognition as a Filipino hero 5 2 Commemorations 5 3 In urban legend and folklore 6 In popular culture 7 Shrine 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksName editThe earliest record of his name comes from Italian diarist Antonio Pigafetta who accompanied Magellan s expedition Pigafetta noted the names of two chiefs of the island of Matan Miramonte the chiefs Zula and Cilapulapu 5 2 Pigafetta s account of Magellan s voyage which contains the only mention of Lapulapu by name in an undisputed primary source exists in several variant manuscripts and print editions the earliest dating to around 1524 In an annotation for his 1890 edition of Antonio de Morga s 1609 Sucesos de las islas Filipinas Jose Rizal spells the name as Si Lapulapu This supplements a passage where Morga mentions Magellan s death in Mactan but does not mention the Mactan leader by name 10 In Philippine languages si plural sina is an article used to indicate personal names Thus Si Lapulapu as rendered by Rizal was subsequently interpreted by others to mean this way though Rizal never explicitly asserts this himself and the Si was dropped eventually cementing the Mactan leader s name in Filipino culture as Lapulapu or Lapu Lapu e g Siya si Lapulapu He is Lapulapu vs Siya si Si Lapulapu He is Si Lapulapu However this meaning for Si or Ci in Lapulapu s recorded name is doubtful because not all names recorded by Pigafetta contain it as would be the case if it were In an annotation of his 1800 edition of Pigafetta s account Carlo Amoretti surmised that the Si or Ci found in several native names recorded by Pigafetta was an honorific title 5 E P Patanne 1999 thus proposes that this usage of Si was derived from a corruption of the Sanskrit title Sri 11 In 1604 Fr Prudencio de Sandoval in his Historia de la Vida y Hechos del Emperador Carlos V spelled the name as Calipulapo perhaps through transposing the first A and I and misreading the C 12 This further became Cali Pulaco in the 1614 poem Que Dios le perdone May God Forgive Him by mestizo de sangley poet Carlos Calao 13 This rendition spelled as Kalipulako was later adopted as one of the pseudonyms of the Philippine hero Mariano Ponce during the Propaganda Movement 14 The 1898 Philippine Declaration of Independence of Cavite II el Viejo also mentions Lapulapu under the name Rey Kalipulako de Manktan sic King Kalipulako of Mactan 15 16 This name variation has further led to claims that Lapulapu was a Caliph and thus Muslim whereas Pigafetta notes that the region was not Islamized In 2019 the National Historical Commission of the Philippines National Quincentennial Committee tasked with handling preparations for the 500th anniversary commemoration of Magellan s arrival stated that Lapulapu without the hyphen is the correct spelling of the Mactan ruler s name being based on Pigafetta s original spelling which they took to be Cilapulapu approximately rendered as Silapulapu not Kilapulapu in equivalent Philippine orthography The committee agreed with previous scholarship that the Si in his name reported by Pigafetta probably was an indigenous form of the Hindu honorific Sri so Lapulapu would probably have been called Si Lapulapu 2 The Aginid chronicle whose historicity is doubtful 17 calls him Lapulapu Dimantag 17 18 In 2021 President Rodrigo Duterte signed Executive Order No 152 officially calling to change the rendering of the Filipino hero s name from Lapu Lapu to Lapulapu to conform with earlier references 19 This executive order now requires government and non government entities to adopt the name Lapulapu in all references pertaining to him 19 Early life edit nbsp Location of Mactan in CebuThere had been many folk accounts surrounding Lapulapu s origin One oral tradition is that the Sugbuanons of Opong was once ruled by a datu named Mangal and later succeeded by his son named Lapulapu 20 Another is from the book Aginid Bayok sa Atong Tawarik Glide on Odes to Our History published in 1952 by Jovito Abellana which supposedly records the oral chronicles from the reign of the last king of Cebu Rajah Tupas d 1565 However its historicity is doubtful The chronicle records the founding of the Rajahnate of Cebu by a certain Sri Lumay also known as Rajamuda Lumaya who was a Hindu prince from the Chola dynasty of Sumatra His sons Sri Alho and Sri Ukob ruled the neighboring communities of Sialo and Nahalin respectively The islands they were in were collectively known as Pulua Kang Dayang or Kangdaya literally the islands of the lady Sri Lumay was known for his strict policies in defending against Moro raiders and slavers from Mindanao His use of scorched earth tactics to repel invaders gave rise to the name Kang Sri Lumayng Sugbo literally that of Sri Lumay s great fire to the town which was later shortened to Sugbo conflagration 18 Upon his death in a battle against the raiders Sri Lumay was succeeded by his youngest son Sri Bantug who ruled from the region of Singhapala literally lion city now Mabolo in modern Cebu City Sri Bantug died of a disease during an epidemic and was succeeded by his son Rajah Humabon also known as Sri Humabon or Rajah Humabara 18 During Humabon s reign the region had become an important trading center The harbors of Sugbo became known colloquially as sinibuayng hingpit the place for trading shortened to sibu or sibo to trade from which the modern name Cebu originates 18 According to the Aginid this was the period in which Lapulapu as Lapulapu Dimantag was first recorded as arriving from Borneo Sabah He asked Humabon for a place to settle and the king offered him the region of Mandawili now Mandaue including the island known as Opong or Opon hoping that Lapulapu s people would cultivate the land They were successful in this and the influx of farm produce from Mandawili enriched the trade port of Sugbo further 18 The relationship between Lapulapu and Humabon later deteriorated when Lapulapu turned to piracy He began raiding merchant ships passing the island of Opong affecting trade in Sugbo The island thus earned the name Mangatang those who lie in wait later evolving to Mactan 18 nbsp 3d render of LapuLapu monumentBattle of Mactan editMain article Battle of Mactan Lapulapu was one of the two datus of Mactan before the Spanish arrived in the archipelago the other being Zula both of whom belong to the Maginoo class When Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan arrived in the Philippines in the service of Spain Zula was one of those who gave tribute to the Spanish king while Lapulapu refused 21 nbsp A depiction of the Battle of Mactan in the Magellan shrineIn the midnight of April 27 1521 Magellan led a force of around 60 Spaniards and 20 to 30 war boats karakoa of Humabon s warriors from Cebu They arrived in Mactan three hours before dawn However because of the presence of rock outcroppings and coral reefs Magellan s ships could not land on the shores of Mactan Their ships were forced to anchor two crossbow flights away from the beach According to Antonio Pigafetta they faced around 1 500 warriors of Lapulapu armed with iron swords note 1 bows and bamboo spears note 2 Magellan repeated his offer not to attack them if Lapulapu swore fealty to Rajah Humabon obeyed the Spanish king and paid tribute which Lapulapu again rejected At the taunting request of Lapulapu the battle did not begin until morning Magellan perhaps hoping to impress Humabon s warriors with the superiority of European armor and weapons told Humabon s warriors to remain in their ships Magellan and 49 of the heavily armored Spaniards armed with lances swords crossbows and muskets waded ashore to meet Lapulapu s forces They set fire to a few houses on the shore in an attempt to scare them Instead Lapulapu s warriors became infuriated and charged Two Spaniards were killed immediately in the fighting and Magellan was wounded in the leg with a poisoned arrow He ordered a retreat which most of his men followed except for a few who remained to protect him However he was recognized as the captain by the natives whereupon he became the focus of the attack Outnumbered and encumbered by their armor Magellan s forces were quickly overwhelmed Magellan and several of his men were killed and the rest escaped to the waiting ships 21 22 nbsp Illustration from Antonio Pigafetta s journal showing Cebu Mactan and Bohol with a label indicating that the Capitaine general died on Mactan c 1525 The historian William Henry Scott believes that Lapulapu s hostility may have been the result of a mistaken assumption by Magellan Magellan assumed that ancient Filipino society was structured in the same way as European society i e with royalty ruling over a region While this may have been true in the Islamic sultanates in Mindanao the Visayan societies were structured along a loose federation of city states more accurately a chiefdom The most powerful datu in such a federation has limited power over another member datu but no direct control over the subjects or lands of the other datu 23 Thus Magellan believed that since Rajah Humabon was the king of Cebu he was the king of Mactan as well But the island of Mactan the dominion of Lapulapu and Zula was in a location that enabled them to intercept trade ships entering the harbor of Cebu Humabon s domain Thus it was more likely that Lapulapu was actually more powerful than Humabon or at least was the undisputed ruler of Mactan Humabon was married to Lapulapu s niece When Magellan demanded that Lapulapu submit as his King Humabon had done Lapulapu purportedly replied that he was unwilling to come and do reverence to one whom he had been commanding for so long a time 23 The Aginid chronicle also records that Humabon had actually purposefully goaded the Spaniards into fighting Lapulapu who was his enemy at that time However the men of Humabon who accompanied Magellan did not engage in battle with Lapulapu though they helped with recovering the wounded Spaniards Humabon later poisoned and killed 27 Spanish sailors during a feast According to the Aginid this was because they had started raping the local women It was also possibly to aid Magellan s Malay slave interpreter Enrique of Malacca in gaining his freedom The Spanish were refusing to release him even though Magellan explicitly willed that he be set free upon his death 18 21 A discourse by Giovanni Battista Ramusio also claims that Enrique warned the Chief of Subuth that the Spaniards were plotting to capture the king and that this led to the murder of the Spaniards at the banquet 24 Enrique stayed in Cebu with Humabon while the Spanish escaped to Bohol 18 21 The battle left the expedition with too few men to crew three ships so they abandoned the Concepcion The remaining ships the Trinidad and the Victoria sailed to the Spice Islands in present day Indonesia From there the expedition split into two groups The Trinidad commanded by Gonzalo Gomez de Espinoza tried to sail eastward across the Pacific Ocean to the Isthmus of Panama Disease and shipwreck disrupted Espinoza s voyage and most of the crew died Survivors of the Trinidad returned to the Spice Islands where the Portuguese imprisoned them The Victoria continued sailing westward commanded by Juan Sebastian Elcano and managed to return to Sanlucar de Barrameda Spain in 1522 In 1529 King Charles I of Spain relinquished all claim over the Spice Islands to Portugal in the treaty of Zaragoza However the treaty did not stop the colonization of the Philippine archipelago from New Spain 25 According to Aginid Lapulapu and Humabon restored friendly relations after the Battle of Mactan Lapulapu later decided to return to Borneo with his family and 17 of his men Nothing more is known of him after this 18 After Magellan s voyage subsequent expeditions were dispatched to the islands Five expeditions were sent Loaisa 1525 Cabot 1526 Saavedra 1527 Villalobos 1542 and Legazpi 1564 26 The Legazpi expedition was the most successful resulting in the colonization of the islands 27 28 29 Religion edit nbsp Depiction of the Visayan Pintados in the Boxer Codex c 1595 Lapulapu s religious beliefs are another subject of debate but it is strongly suggested that he was an adherent of the indigenous animistic anito beliefs The inhabitants of the Sulu Archipelago believe that Qadi Lapulapu was a Muslim belonging to the Tausug or the Sama Bajau people of Mindanao 30 31 a claim made by the now dissolved Sultanate of Sulu that many historians negate 32 33 Moreover prominent Cebuano anthropologist Jose Eleazar Bersales says that Cebu was never islamized 34 referenced from an excavation in Boljoon in southern Cebu Direct evidences such as accounts of Pigafetta and the native oral tradition did not indicate Lapulapu as a Muslim but a Visayan animist and a Sugbuanon native 35 Cebuanos were predominantly animist at the time of the arrival of the Spanish 36 37 38 Visayans were noted for their widespread practice of tattooing hence Spaniards referred to them as the Pintados 39 Pigafetta who recorded Magellan s encounter with the Cebuanos explicitly described Rajah Humabon as tattooed He also records the consumption of pork dog meat and palm wine arak by the Cebuanos 21 40 as well as the common custom of penile piercings tugbuk or sakra 21 41 Tattooing body modification pork dog meat and alcohol are all ḥaram forbidden in Islam 42 The supreme deity of the Visayans as explicitly recorded by contemporary historians was identified as Abba by Pigafetta and Kan Laon also spelled Laon by the Jesuit historian Pedro Chirino in 1604 comparable to the Tagalog Bathala There is no mention of Islam 43 This is in contrast to the other locations visited by the Magellan expedition where Pigafetta readily identifies the Muslims whom they encountered he would call them Moros after the Muslim Moors of medieval Spain and northern Africa to distinguish them from the polytheistic heathens 21 36 44 In fact during the mass baptism of the Cebuanos to Christianity he clearly identifies them as heathens not Moros 21 37 We set up the cross there for those people were heathen Had they been Moros we would have erected a column there as a token of greater hardness for the Moros are much harder to convert than the heathen Antonio Pigafetta Primo viaggio intorno al mondo c 1525 A more dubious claim from the Aginid is that Lapulapu may have been from Borneo The Aginid calls him an orang laut man of the sea and an outsider who settled in Cebu from Borneo 18 31 The Oponganon Cebuano oral tradition effectively disputes this claim saying his father was Datu Mangal of Mactan indicating that Lapulapu a native of Opong 35 18 Legacy editRecognition as a Filipino hero edit Lapulapu is regarded retroactively as the first Filipino hero 45 46 On April 27 2017 President Rodrigo Duterte declared April 27 the date when Battle of Mactan happened as Lapu Lapu Day for honoring as the first hero in the country who defeated foreign rule 47 48 Duterte also signed Executive Order No 17 creating the Order of Lapu Lapu which recognizes the services of government workers and private citizens in relation to the campaigns and advocacies of the President 49 During the First Regular Season of the 14th Congress of the Philippines Senator Richard Gordon introduced a bill proposing to declare April 27 as an official Philippine national holiday to be known as Adlaw ni Lapu Lapu Cebuano Day of Lapu Lapu 50 Commemorations edit nbsp nbsp nbsp Left Lapulapu s profile on the obverse of a Philippine 1 centavo coin from the Pilipino Series Middle and Right Lapulapu is a central figure in the seal of the Philippine National Police and the Bureau of Fire Protection The government erected a statue in his honor on Mactan Island and renamed the town of Opon in Cebu to Lapu Lapu City A large statue of him donated by South Korea stands in the middle of Agrifina Circle in Rizal Park in Manila replacing a fountain and rollerskating rink Lapulapu appears on the official seal of the Philippine National Police 51 His face was used as the main design on the 1 centavo coin that was circulated in the Philippines from 1967 to 1994 52 failed verification In the United States a street in South of Market San Francisco is named after Lapulapu 53 That street and others in the immediate neighborhood were renamed by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors with names derived from historical Filipino heroes on August 31 1979 54 On January 18 2021 the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas in cooperation with the Quincentennial Commemorations in the Philippines launches the 5 000 Piso commemorative non circulating banknote in honor of his heroism 55 In urban legend and folklore edit According to local legend Lapulapu never died but was turned into stone and has since then been guarding the seas of Mactan Fisherfolk in Mactan would throw coins at a stone shaped like a man as a means to ask permission from Lapulapu to fish in his territory Another urban legend concerns the statue of Lapulapu erected in 1933 at the center of the town plaza of Lapu Lapu when the city was still a municipality with the name Opon The statue faced the old town hall where mayors used to hold office Lapulapu was shown with a crossbow in the stance of shooting an enemy Superstitious citizens proposed to replace this crossbow with a sword after three consecutive mayors of Opon Rito dela Serna Gregorio dela Serna and Simeon Amodia each died of heart attack The statue was modified during the administration of Mayor Mariano Dimataga who took office in 1938 56 In popular culture editPortrayed by Mario Montenegro in the 1955 film Lapu Lapu 57 Portrayed by Calvin Millado in the 1995 children s educational series Bayani Portrayed by Lito Lapid in the 2002 film Lapu Lapu 58 Portrayed by Aljur Abrenica in the GMA 2010 Lupang Hinirang Music Video citation needed Lapu Lapu was the inspiration of a playable character of the same name in the mobile game Mobile Legends Bang Bang The character is a dual swordsman who has two instances and can swap between two weapons In the game lore he serves as the chief of Makadan now Parlas a sublocation in Vonetis Island a reference to Mactan Island 59 60 In the 2004 Bayani Agbayani song Otso Otso he was mentioned the last time the song mentions Two plus two Ironically the child rhyme mentions him at the second line One plus one Magellan Two plus two Lapu Lapu This presumably references the Battle of Mactan that Magellan was killed in citation needed The song Panalo by Ez Mil had a line that mentions Lapu Lapu being beheaded in the Battle of Mactan The song was met with criticism for the line s lack of historical accuracy Among the song s critics were the Lapu Lapu City government 61 and the National Historical Commission of the Philippines 62 Portrayed by Zeus Collins in the 2019 film The Mall The Merrier as one of the statues in Tamol Mall Portrayed by Armando Alera in the 2022 series Boundless Portrayed by Michael Copon in the 2023 film 1521 The Kuwaiti novelist Saod Alsanousi refers to Lapulapu in his novel The Bamboo Stalk which won the International Prize for Arabic literature The protagonist of this novel Jose Issa explains that Lapulapu represented Islam to him 63 Shrine editMain article Mactan Shrine The Lapu Lapu shrine is a 20 meters 66 ft bronze statue in Punta Engano Lapu Lapu Cebu Philippines 64 Notes edit Including what Pigafetta described as a large cutlass traditionally illustrated as the two handed kampilan But this could have been another sword type because Pigafetta further says it resembled a scimitar only being larger and the kampilan is straight while the scimitar is curved Bangkaw a light spear weapon that can be thrown It is actually made of fire hardened rattan which superficially resembles bamboo and is usually tipped with metal heads References edit Mangubat Philippine Armorial August 26 2017 Retrieved January 13 2020 a b c ABS CBN News May 1 2019 It s Lapulapu Gov t committee weighs in on correct spelling of Filipino hero s name ABS CBN News Manila ABS CBN Corporation Retrieved March 24 2020 Mendoza Norman November 14 2019 NQC Lapulapu without the hyphen is Mactan ruler s name Cebu Daily News Lapu Lapu City Philippines Retrieved March 24 2020 Escalante Rene R 2019 National Quincentennial Committee Comprehensive Plan Manila National Historical Commission of the Philippines a b c John Pinkerton 1812 Pigafetta s Voyage Round the World with notes by Charles Amoretti A general collection of the best and most interesting voyages and travels in all parts of the world many of which are now first translated into English digested on a new plan Longman Hurst Rees and Orme pp 341 344 Ocampo Ambeth R July 3 2019 The Battle of Mactan according to Pigafetta Inquirer net Pigafetta Antonio c 1525 Journal of Magellan s Voyage in French Pedrosa Carmen N The untold stories of Lapu Lapu and Zheng He Philstar com Retrieved June 10 2021 Ocampo Ambeth April 25 2018 Lapu Lapu national hero Inquirer net Retrieved June 27 2019 Antonio de Morga 1559 1636 annotations by Jose Rizal 1890 Sucesos de las islas Filipinas por el doctor Antonio de Morga obra publicada en Mejico el an o de 1609 Nuevamente sacada a luz y anotada por Jose Rizal y precedida de un prologo del prof Fernando Blumentritt Garnier hnos p 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link E P Patanne 1996 The Philippines in the 6th to 16th Centuries LSA Press Inc p 175 ISBN 978 971 91666 0 3 Prudencio de Sandoval 1604 Historia de la Vida y Hechos del Emperador Carlos V Maximo Fortissimo Rey Catholico de Espana y de las Indias Islas y Tierra Firme del Mar Oceano Vol 1 Barcelona published 1625 p 601 M C Halili 2004 Philippine History Rex Bookstore Inc p 74 ISBN 978 971 23 3934 9 Mariano Ponce Provincial Government of Bulacan Philippines 2007 Archived from the original on October 20 2018 Retrieved July 9 2012 Acta de la proclamacion de la independencia del pueblo Filipino in English and Spanish from Wikisource Albert P Blaustein Jay A Sigler Benjamin R Beede 1977 Republic of the Philippines Cavite Declaration of June 12 1898 Independence Documents of the World Vol 2 Oceana Publications p 567 ISBN 0 379 00795 9 a b Ouano Savellon Romola 2014 Aginid Bayok Sa Atong Tawarik Archaic Cebuano and Historicity in a Folk Narrative Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 42 3 4 189 220 JSTOR 44512020 a b c d e f g h i j k Celestino C Macachor 2011 Searching for Kali in the Indigenous Chronicles of Jovito Abellana Rapid Journal 10 2 Archived from the original on July 3 2012 a b Executive Order No 152 s 2021 GOVPH Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines December 6 2021 Retrieved December 8 2021 In the nearby satellite island of Opong Datu Mangal ruled the Sibuanons there and later his son succeeded him rising in power and popularity This legendary successor to Mangal was Lapu Lapu There had been many versions even myths surrounding Lapu Lapu s origin John Kingsley Pangan Church of the Far East Makati St Pauls 2016 68 a b c d e f g h Donald F Lach 1994 Asia in the Making of Europe Volume I The Century of Discovery University of Chicago Press pp 175 635 638 ISBN 978 0 226 46732 0 Nowell Charles E 1962 Magellan s Voyage Around the World Three Contemporary Accounts Northwestern University Press a b William Henry Scott 1994 Barangay sixteenth century Philippine culture and society Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 135 4 Pigafetta Antonio 1874 Lord Stanley of Alderley ed The First Voyage Round the World by Magellan and other documents Printed for the Hakluyt Society p 201 Agoncillo Teodoro A 1990 History of the Filipino People Eighth ed University of the Philippines ISBN 971 8711 06 6 Zaide Sonia M 2006 The Philippines A Unique Nation All Nations Publishing Co Inc Quezon City ISBN 971 642 071 4 Zaide Gregorio F 1939 Philippine History and Civilization Philippine Education Co Scott William Henry 1985 Cracks in the parchment curtain and other essays in Philippine history New Day Publishers ISBN 978 971 10 0074 5 Williams Patrick 2009 Philip II the Philippines and the Hispanic World in Ramirez Damaso de Lario ed Re shaping the World Philip II of Spain and His Time illustrated ed Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 556 7 Frank Sulaiman Tucci 2009 The Old Muslim s Opinions A Year of Filipino Newspaper Columns iUniverse p 41 ISBN 978 1 4401 8343 0 a b Yusuf Morales Looking at the other Lost Moro Kingdoms Scribd Retrieved December 21 2013 Macasero Ryan April 29 2021 Bong Go apologizes for wrongly claiming Lapulapu was from Mindanao Rappler Retrieved April 30 2021 Israel Dale G April 27 2021 Historians say huh as Bong Go says Lapulapu is from Sulu INQUIRER net Retrieved April 30 2021 Boljoon excavation shows gold jewelry China trade INQUIRER net Philippine News for Filipinos June 8 2008 Archived from the original on June 8 2008 a b In the nearby satellite island of Opong Datu Mangal ruled the Sibuanons there and later his son succeeded him rising in power and popularity This legendary successor to Mangal was Lapu lapu There had been many versions even myths surrounding Lapu lapu s origin One account tells that many years before Magellan s arrival a man called Dimantag traveling from Borneo reached to shores of Sibu He asked Rajah Humabon for a place to settle The wanderer was given the nearby Opong island though Dimantag primarily preferred to settle in Mandawili modern day Mandaue Ages passed Dimantag rose to power in Opong and became known by Sibuanons as Sri Lapu lapu Cilapulapu by the Spaniards Farther south in Mindanao the annals of Moro history made Lapu lapu a Muslim He was said to have an allegiance with the Sultan of Sulu However direct evidence such as accounts of Pigafetta and the ancient Sugbuanon oral tradition did not indicate Lapu lapu as a Muslim but a Visayan animist John Kingsley Pangan Church of the Far East Makati St Pauls 2016 68 a b J P Sanger 1905 History of the Population Census of the Philippine Islands Volume I Geography History and Population Washington D C United States Bureau of the Census p 414 ISBN 978 971 23 2142 9 a b Antonio Pigafetta MS ca 1525 of events of 1519 1522 1906 Primo viaggio intorno al mondo In Emma Helen Blair amp James Alexander Robertson ed The Philippine Islands 1493 1803 explorations by early navigators descriptions of the islands and their peoples their history and records of the Catholic missions as related in contemporaneous books and manuscripts showing the political economic commercial and religious conditions of those islands from their earliest relations with European nations to the beginning of the nineteenth century The Arthur H Clark Co p 161 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Carolyn Brewer 2004 Shamanism Catholicism and Gender Relations in Colonial Philippines 1521 1685 Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 102 ISBN 978 0 7546 3437 9 Paul A Rodell 2002 Culture and Customs of the Philippines Greenwood Publishing Group p 50 ISBN 978 0 313 30415 6 Sebastian Sta Cruz Serag 1997 The Remnants of the Great Ilonggo Nation Rex Bookstore Inc p 95 ISBN 978 971 23 2142 9 Raquel A G Reyes William G Clarence Smith 2012 Sexual Diversity in Asia c 600 1950 Routledge p 130 ISBN 978 1 136 29721 2 Jeanne Nagle 2011 Why People Get Tattoos and Other Body Art The Rosen Publishing Group p 37 ISBN 978 1 4488 4617 7 Gregorio F Zaide 2006 Filipinos before the Spanish Conquest Possessed a Well Ordered and Well Thought Out Religion In Tanya Storch ed Religions and Missionaries Around the Pacific 1500 1900 Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 34 35 ISBN 978 0 7546 0667 3 James A Boon 1990 Affinities and Extremes Crisscrossing the Bittersweet Ethnology of East Indies History Hindu Balinese Culture and Indo European Allure University of Chicago Press p 12 ISBN 978 0 226 06463 5 Zaide Sonia M 1994 The Philippines A Unique Nation All Nations Publishing Co Inc pp 83 84 ISBN 971 642 005 6 de Guzman Maria O 1967 The Filipino Heroes National Bookstore Inc p 58 ISBN 971 08 2987 4 Kabiling Genalyn April 27 2017 April 27 declared as Lapu Lapu Day Manila Bulletin Retrieved May 22 2017 Romero Alexis April 27 2017 Hero Lapu Lapu gets special day The Philippine Star Retrieved May 22 2017 Executive Order No 17 s 2017 GOVPH Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines April 7 2017 Retrieved June 10 2020 Gordon Richard J An Act to declare April 27 of every year as a special non working holiday throughout the country to commemorate the victory of Lapu Lapu and his men over the Spaniards led by Fernando Magallanes PDF Retrieved July 11 2008 PNP Seal Symbolism Archived from the original on March 16 2008 Retrieved June 9 2008 American Numismatic Society Retrieved June 10 2008 Lapu Lapu Street in San Francisco Retrieved August 13 2008 The Philippines in San Francisco The Philippine Consulate General in San Francisco July 9 2012 Filipino Heroes and Names The Streets of San Francisco BSP Issues Lapulapu Commemorative Banknote and Medal bsp gov ph Retrieved January 18 2021 Mayol Ador Vincent April 25 2021 Lapulapu Hero behind the myth Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved April 26 2021 Lapu Lapu 1955 Retrieved June 10 2008 Lapu Lapu 2002 IMDb Retrieved June 10 2008 Mobile Legends Menilik Sejarah Terciptanya Karakter GatotKaca di Game yang Sedang Hits Okezone Techno in Indonesian July 26 2017 Mobile Legends Honors Lapu lapu In Recent Update go Globe Globe May 27 2017 Retrieved February 10 2021 Lapu Lapu City mayor wants rapper declared persona non grata Philippine News Agency February 8 2021 Historical commission on Panalo lyrics Let us not compromise history February 10 2021 Sanʻusi Saʻud سنعوسي سعود 2015 The bamboo stalk Jonathan Wright Doha Qatar ISBN 978 9927 101 77 9 OCLC 890435699 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Lapu Lapu Monument also called Mactan Shrine Cebu City March 2 2012 Retrieved April 1 2015 Further reading editAgoncillo Teodoro A Magellan and Lapu Lapu Fookien Times Yearbook 1965 p 634 Alcina Francisco Historia de las Islas e Indios de Bisaya MS 1668 Correa Gaspar Lendas de India Vol 2 p 630 Cruz Gemma Making Little Hero of Maktan Estabaya D M 445 Years of Lapu lapu Weekly nation 1 26 27 April 25 1966 Pigafetta Antonio Primo Viaje en Torno al Globo Terraqueo Corredato di Notte de Carlo Amoteti Milano 1800External links edit nbsp Media related to Lapulapu at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lapulapu amp oldid 1195999119, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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