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Nueva Ecija

Nueva Ecija, officially the Province of Nueva Ecija (Tagalog: Lalawigan ng Nueva Ecija [ˈnwɛba ˈɛsiha], also [ˈnwɛva- ]; Ilocano: Probinsia ti Nueva Ecija; Pangasinan: Luyag/Probinsia na Nueva Ecija), is a landlocked province in the Philippines located in the Central Luzon region. Its capital is the city of Palayan, while Cabanatuan, its former capital, is the largest local government unit (LGU). Nueva Ecija borders, from the south clockwise, Bulacan, Pampanga, Tarlac, Pangasinan, Nueva Vizcaya and Aurora. The province is nationally known as the Rice Granary of the Philippines, producing the largest rice yield in the country.

Nueva Ecija
Province of Nueva Ecija
Nickname(s): 
Rice Bowl of the Philippines
Milk Capital of the Philippines
Heart of Inland Luzon
Anthem: Awit ng Nueva Ecija (Song of Nueva Ecija)
Location in the Philippines
OpenStreetMap
Coordinates: 15°35′N 121°00′E / 15.58°N 121°E / 15.58; 121Coordinates: 15°35′N 121°00′E / 15.58°N 121°E / 15.58; 121
CountryPhilippines
RegionCentral Luzon
Founded25 April 1801[1]
Named forÉcija, Spain
CapitalPalayan
Largest cityCabanatuan
Government
 • TypeSangguniang Panlalawigan
 • GovernorAurelio Umali (Unang Sigaw)
 • Vice GovernorEmmanuel Antonio Umali (Unang Sigaw)
 • LegislatureNueva Ecija Provincial Board
Area
 • Total5,751.33 km2 (2,220.60 sq mi)
 • Rank12th out of 81
Highest elevation
(Mount Kiligantian)
1,673 m (5,489 ft)
Population
 (2020 census) [4]
 • Total2,310,134
 • Estimate 
(2020)
2,355,416[3]
 • Rank10th out of 81
 • Density400/km2 (1,000/sq mi)
  • Rank16th out of 81
Demonym
  • Novo Ecijano, Neoecijano
Divisions
 • Independent cities0
 • Component cities
 • Municipalities
 • Barangays849
 • DistrictsLegislative districts of Nueva Ecija
Demographics
 • Ethnic groups
 • Languages
Time zoneUTC+8 (PHT)
ZIP code
3100–3133
IDD:area code+63 (0)44
ISO 3166 codePH-NUE

History

Precolonial era

These first settlers included tribes of Ilongots (Egungot) or Italons, Abaca and Buquids.[6] Settlements were built along the banks following the river's undulations. The Ilongots, meaning people of the forest, were the fierce headhunters and animist tribes who occupied Carranglan and the mountainous terrain of Sierra Madre and Caraballo.[7] The head hunting communities were nestled along the riverbanks of Rio Grande's tributaries in the north. Abaca and Italon were subgroups of Ilongots meaning river settlers. Ilongots survived mainly by fishing and hunting. Food production was a secondary occupation. The agriculture-based community of Caraclans and Buquids[8] were settled in Bongabon and Pantabangan along the riverbanks of Rio Grande's tributaries in the northeast.[9]

When the waves of Tagalog migrations took place between 300 and 200 B.C., intrepid travelers and traders set up settlements along Luzon's western coast. These early settlements formed the nucleus of the Pampango Empire that was consolidated by Balagtas. The flatlands of the southern portion of Upper Pampanga was a hospitable place for these new Tagalog settlers. The indigenous tribes were forced to take to the hills in the face of the Tagalogs' superior technology.[10]

Barter trade flourished among communities that settled along the great river. The constant riverside trading resulted in both a commercial and cultural exchange between the settlements in vast plains upstream of the Rio Grande de Pampanga. Settlements in Carranglan, Pantabangan, and Bongabon and prospered and grew into more stable communities.[citation needed]

Spanish attacks

At the time, the Pampango crown has waned and had little resistance from Spanish invasion. When the Pampango Empire fell into the hands of Spanish forces under the command of Martin de Goiti in 1572, the conquistadores began their long upward trek towards Cagayan Valley and Mountain Province. Their forces passed through the settlement areas of the Upper Pampanga River. They also attacked the Caboloan of Pangasinan, effectively capturing more territories from local kingdoms.

Because of growing territorial domain and evangelical missions, a command outpost or Commandancia in the Upper Pampanga River area was established. Then Governor-General[11] Fausto Cruzat y Góngora (July 25, 1690 to December 8, 1701) had most likely spent much of his time in the northern outpost in Carranglan and Pantabangan and, baking in the fiercely hot climate, probably waxed nostalgic about his hometown in Ecija, Andalusia in Spain. Ecija, Andalusia was also known as la sarten or the frying pan because of its intensely hot summers. Thus the Governor-General hit upon the notion to name the outpost Nueva Ecija. Both the New and Old Ecija were washed by navigable rivers- the former, by Rio Grande de Pampanga and the latter, by the river Genil.

Conversion to Christianity

Consistent with the history of Hispanization in the rest of Philippine archipelago, Nueva Ecija was established by Augustinian missionaries. The first mission was established in Gapan in 1595. The Augustinians abandoned their missionary work in 1636, maintaining only the mission in Bongabon.[12]

At the turn of the 18th century, the missionaries resumed their evangelical work and redirected their efforts to the northeast, towards rough, mountainous terrain inhabited by Ilongots.

On September 1, 1759, King Carlos III of Spain issued a Royal Decree that ended the founding missions of Augustinians and transferred all Augustinian responsibilities in the settlements of Nueva Ecija to Franciscan friars. Through tribute collections and polo y servicio or rendering of force labor, the Franciscans constructed churches, convents, parochial schools and tribunals. They also constructed roads and bridges to connect other settlements. In 1781, a simple irrigation system was constructed in Pantabangan. This new farming technology contributed to the promotion of agriculture in the province.

New province

To make possible the establishments of settlements, military force became necessary to protect the friars and whatever basic settlement structures were beginning to emerge. Thus military outposts were of utmost importance, especially with the friars trying to convert fierce head-hunting tribes with spears and bladed weapons. It was around this time, during the term of Governor General Fausto Cruzat y Gongora (July 25, 1690 to December 8, 1702), that he established the military outpost he named Nueva Ecija. At this time, however, Nueva Ecija was still part of upper Pampanga.

In 2016, researchers of the National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP) and the provincial government found documents showing that in 1799, Carlos IV ordered the separation of towns and parishes of Upper Pampanga, near the Sierra Madre range, as well as coastal towns of Tayabas, along the Pacific Ocean and their organization into a corregimiento (political-military administrative unit). Royal directives were implemented on April 25, 1801, and the corregimiento was named Nueva Ecija after the Spanish hometown of that period's Governor General Rafael Maria de Aguilar, with Baler as its capital.[13]

Since then, the province had undergone numerous changes in territorial composition. The progressive towns of Gapan, San Isidro, Cabiao and Aliaga were all annexed to Nueva Ecija, resulting in an economic as well as population boom for inhabitants. While Nueva Ecija only had a population of 9,165 in 1845,[14] the annexation of new territories three years later pegged the population at 69,135.

Other changes occurred in the following years until, in 1901, Nueva Ecija's northern municipalities of Balungao, Rosales, San Quintin and Umingan were annexed to Pangasinan. Nueva Ecija's shifting political boundaries in fact necessitated transferring its provincial capital four times. Still, these changes proved ultimately beneficial to Nueva Ecija, as they resulted in a territory with rich land resources nourished by an excellent river system composed of the Rio Grande de Pampanga, Talavera and Penaranda rivers. This would help lay the foundation for Nueva Ecija's abundant agricultural economy starting with the American Occupation in the early 20th century.

Cry of Nueva Ecija

The "Cry of Nueva Ecija" is the 1896 revolutionary battle led by General Mariano Llanera, manned and assisted by General Manuel Tinio and Pantaleon Valmonte of Gapan City, Nueva Ecija and Colonel Alipio Tecson of Cabiao, Nueva Ecija who later on became Brigadaire General. The battle was fought in Cabiao, Nueva Ecija. Alipio Tecson would eventually become Gobernadorcillo of Cabiao, Nueva Ecija.[15]

Tobacco monopoly

Maintaining the Philippines as a colony became a challenge for the Spanish Empire. Expenses incurred in running the colony were usually paid for by a yearly subsidy (called real situado) sent from the Philippines' sister colony in Mexico. This financial support from the Spanish royal court was often insufficient, especially with expenditures in the Philippine colony growing each year.

This prompted the royal fiscal assigned in Manila to devise a plan to allow the colony itself to raise revenues on its own and thus be able to supplement the Spanish subsidy. This royal fiscal was Francisco Leandro de Vianna, who first proposed creating a tobacco monopoly. De Vianna reasoned, tobacco was a product widely consumed throughout the islands, with a market of roughly one million. He projected earnings of as much as P400,000 from the venture. The first time the proposal was made, however, both King Carlos III of Spain and colonial officials didn't give the idea much importance.

All that would change during the term of Governor-General Jose Basco y Vargas. Basco had plans to develop and promote Philippine agriculture, and de Vianna's proposal seemed attractive to him. After studying the proposal, Basco sent his plan to establish a large-scale tobacco production in the colony under complete ownership and management by the colonial government of Spain. What probably perked up the ears of the Spanish king about Basco's plan to make the Philippine colony financially self-sufficient, thus removing a huge financial burden from the Spanish crown. The King of Spain issued a royal decree on February 9, 1780, setting in motion Basco's plan.[16]

Almost two years to the date of that royal decree, Basco ordered local officials and military commanders to prevent unnecessary losses of tobacco revenues. By March 2, 1782, tobacco production was established in Luzon, with La Union, Ilocos, Abra, Cagayan Valley and Nueva Ecija (still part of Pampanga at the time) as the centers for planting, growing, harvesting and processing tobacco.

This made a drastic and extreme change in the lives of all Novo Ecijanos. Where farmland used to bear rice, tobacco was now the only crop allowed to grow. These included the towns of Gapan, San Isidro, Jaen, Cabiao, Cabanatuan, Talavera, Santor and Bongabon. Each farming family was given a quota of tobacco plant to grow.

By 1850 the tobacco monopoly was producing immense financial gain for the colonial government. Some reports at the time pegged the earnings by as much as $500,000. One account in 1866 reported a much higher amount, as earnings rose to $38,418,939 that year.

Novo Ecijanos suffered a lot from the system. Nueva Ecija was more often able to meet production quotas compared to the other districts. Despite this, tobacco policy imposed a lower price on tobacco from areas closer to Manila. That meant that first-class tobacco leaf grown and harvested from Nueva Ecija was priced lower by one dollar, compared to those from Ilocos, La Union and Cagayan Valley.

The tobacco monopoly did not spur Novo Ecijanos to revolt, unlike the Ilocanos who staged an uprising over injustices in the system. Some tobacco growers in Nueva Ecija resorted to smuggling their own harvests in order to get some profit. But getting caught entailed harsher fines and penalties. Even sympathetic local officials had no choice but to enforce the unjust policies under pain of arrest and hard labor, once laxity on their part resulted in low production.

The flourishing tobacco industry coupled with the rich agricultural lands in central and northeastern Nueva Ecija also attracted migrants from neighboring Pampanga, Pangasinan, Ilocos and Tagalog areas. This made Nueva Ecija a melting pot of cultures and influences, the results of which are still evident in present-day Novo Ecijano culture.

As the tobacco monopoly fuelled further unrest, Spain finally abolished the monopoly on December 3, 1882. It was only then that they could all once again grow rice for food.[17]

Rebellion against Spain

 
First prisoners of the Philippine Revolution in 1896

One distinct feature of the 1896 revolution against Spain in Nueva Ecija was that it was led by the elite, ruling class instead of the masses. Leaders of the revolt in Nueva Ecija were municipal officials and prominent citizens, who refused to collaborate with the Spanish authorities when armed struggle broke out. Despite being in the ruling class and enjoying positions in the colonial government, these prominent Novo Ecijanos proved their patriotism and love for fellow Filipinos.[18] In fact, one of the founding members of the reform movement La Liga Filipina[19] was lawyer and Novo Ecijano Mamerto Natividad. By the time the Katipunan, the revolutionary movement against Spain, was formed, Novo Ecijanos were actively yet secretly joining it. Even local officials in Nueva Ecija secretly allied with the illustrados and farmers in forming the underground revolutionary society.[20]

Once the Spanish authorities learned of the Katipunan's existence, those perceived as sympathizers of the movement, and even those who were falsely accused of being members of it, were arrested. Mamerto Natividad was among those arrested for sedition, tortured and killed by guardia civil. He was one of the first Novo Ecijano martyrs[21] for freedom. His death, however, would result in bigger problems for the Spanish authorities.

Mamerto Natividad's two sons, Mamerto Jr. and Benito Natividad, later joined the Katipunan. The Spaniards burned their house and sugar mills in Jaen. Mamerto Jr. was later jailed for shooting a Spanish judge who had slapped his younger brother. As the Revolution gained ground, Mamerto Jr. was released and he was able to join the revolutionary army of General Emilio Aguinaldo in Cavite. By August 30, 1896, a state of war was declared by the Spanish colonial government in several Luzon provinces including Nueva Ecija, Bulacan, Pampanga, Tarlac, Batangas, Laguna, Cavite and Manila.[22]

Novo Ecijanos immediately proved themselves worthy of the fight for freedom. On September 2, 1896, Novo Ecijanos led by Gen. Mariano Llanera, capital municipal of Cabiao and Gen. Pantaleon Valmonte, capitan municipal of Gapan attacked San Isidro, the provincial capital. Their 3,000-strong army attacked San Isidro in distinct Novo Ecijano fashion: accompanied by music played by the Banda de Cabiao or Cabiao band.[citation needed]

 
Wounded American on stretcher in the Philippines, 1899

Novo Ecijanos like Llanera, Valmonte, Mamerto Natividad, Jr. and Manuel Tinio conducted themselves heroically during the revolution. They were allied with Aguinaldo's Magdalo[23] group. Aguinaldo was in fact so impressed, he appointed Natividad and Llanera to the two highest-ranking posts in the revolutionary army. Natividad became General Mamerto Natividad, commanding general of the revolutionary army, while General Llanera was vice-commander with the rank of Lieutenant-General. General Natividad proved himself worthy of the position by scoring victories against the Spanish in Tayug, Pangasinan and San Rafael, Bulacan.[citation needed]

 
Pact of Biak-na-Bato Filipino negotiators

On November 11, 1897, Natividad was killed in action in Cabiao, Nueva Ecija. His death precipitated the Pact of Biak-na-Bato,[24] a peace treaty that sought to end hostilities between Spanish authorities and the Filipino rebels. The treaty provided for a payment of P800,000 to the rebels who would then be exiled to Hong Kong. Five Novo Ecijanos would accompany Aguinaldo's exile.[25] They were General Mariano Llanera, Benito Natividad, General Manuel Tinio,[26] and Joaquin Natividad.

Later on, Novo Ecijanos would continue to participate in the drama of war, revolution and the fight for freedom. They would fight when the revolt against Spain continued after the peace treaty broke down and the United States, after declaring war on Spain, promised to help Filipinos fight for freedom. Then, Novo Ecijanos again joined General Emilio Aguinaldo in the Philippine–American War (after it became evident the United States wanted to make the Philippines their own colony).[27]

When the Japanese tried to make the Philippines their own colony[28] at the outbreak of the Second World War in the Pacific, Novo Ecijanos would also make history by participating in guerilla activities. The exploits of the Novo Ecijano guerillas have in fact been made into literature, through the World War II novel Ghost Soldiers by Hampton Sides[29] and in Hollywood cinema, in the war film The Great Raid[30] based on the book.

American period

History records how the Philippine–American War began after American troops killed a Filipino soldier who was crossing the San Juan bridge on February 4, 1899.[31] One could also say, however, that hostilities and mistrust really began as early as August 13 the previous year. On that day, the Spanish colonial government in Intramuros surrendered to American forces instead of the Filipino soldiers that surrounded the Walled City. Thus began the United States own effort to have her own colonies, with the Philippines served, as it were, on a silver platter by the dying Spanish Empire thanks to the Treaty of Paris.[32][33]

When the war between Filipinos and Americans finally began, the fate of the infant Republic of the Philippines again lay in the hands of General Aguinaldo and his most trusted men who included Novo Ecijanos like General Llanera and General Tinio. And, as guerilla warfare became an effective tactic for the Filipinos, Novo Ecijanos were among the most feared guerillas. By the time the war ended on April 1, 1901, with Aguinaldo's surrender to the Americans,[34] Novo Ecijano guerillas who had fought so fiercely and bravely against two sets of foreign invaders reluctantly gave up. Still that was not the end of the association between them and the Americans. The end of the Philippine–American War also signaled a new beginning for Nueva Ecija and its people.

The railway

Commercial, interprovincial trade was carried out using the Rio Grande de Pampanga as main waterway, with trade outposts in San Isidro and Talipapa. Traders from Bulacan, Tondo and Manila regularly came to Nueva Ecija to carry back rice, palay, tobacco, sugar, corn and livestock.

Americans, however, wanted to shift from water-borne trade to a land-based trade system. Their idea for establishing this depended on something they were masters at: building railways. The American colonial government thought a railway could help boost Nueva Ecija's economic growth, in the same way that the US railway system helped unite and develop the economy of the North American continent. What made the railway project attractive was that it was less expensive than building roads. At first run by a private company, the US colonial government took over the ownership and management of the railway system by 1917.

The Americans were soon proven right: trade conducted through the railways boosted Nueva Ecija's income by 25% while transport costs went down by 25% to as much as 75%. With the train able to transport more goods and more people at a cheaper rate, the railway helped spark a rice boom in Gapan, San Isidro, Cabanatuan, Santa Rosa and Penaranda. Farmers could devote more land to growing rice and even secondary crops like onions and watermelons. More rice mills, farmers and farmer settlers came to Nueva Ecija. By 1936, there were 42 rice mills in Nueva Ecija, owned mostly by Chinese.[35]

The agriculture-based economic boom brought about by the train's huge load capacity and greater speed (compared to boats) encouraged waves of migrations to Nueva Ecija from places like Ilocos, Pampanga, Pangasinan, Tarlac and Bulacan.

The railway brought other changes to Nueva Ecija. While trade was still being done by waterways, settlements by necessity had to be established close to the rivers, where people's basic necessities came from. When the trains became the main mode of transporting goods and people, and with the influx of migrants, it became not only possible but crucial to build more communities further inland. This meant roads and irrigation systems were needed.[36]

Roads and irrigation

As communities expanded inward, first along the rivers and then along the railways, the need for roads and irrigation systems leading to communities in the plains became more urgent. These made it possible for the more remote towns—those farther away from both rivers and railroads—to grow crops and participate in trade, ending what was until then a very slow pace of economic development. By 1912 Governor Benito Natividad had appropriated funds to fast-track the building of roads and bridges linking these remote towns and municipalities to then provincial capital Cabanatuan.

The American government also constructed three major irrigation facilities: 1) The Talavera Irrigation System in 1924; 2) Penaranda River Irrigation System in 1930 and 3) Pampanga River Irrigation System in 1939.

By the time these irrigation systems went in full swing, combined with the railway system and the many rice mills, Nueva Ecija had been established as the "Rice Granary of the Philippines". From 1930 to 1939, rice production in Nueva Ecija was averaging more than 9 million cavans of rice.[37]

Homesteading and US-style tenancy

Unlike the American pioneers of the Old West, Filipinos were not so willing to occupy remote, unsettled and undeveloped areas. So when the American colonial government introduced homesteading, there were few takers among Filipinos. Homesteading could be done through a legal process of acquiring a land title, or even without a title at all. In the latter case however, the lack of a title makes the informal homesteader vulnerable to any legal action attempting to take the land away from him.[38]

When the Philippine Bill of 1902 was passed by the US Congress, the US colonial government was formally established in the Philippine islands. This meant the colonial government now had the authority to dispose of public lands on its own, without having to seek the approval of the President of the United States. Based on an earlier survey of public lands by the Philippine Commission, the new American colonial government offered public lands to settlers through homesteading, sale, purchase or lease.[39]

Under the American regime's homesteading system, an individual could get up to 16 hectares of land, while a corporation could get as much as 1,024 hectares. This did not result in a wide settlement of lands throughout the country, however. Nueva Ecija was one exception, as more settlers opted to homestead its lands. A 1928 Statistical Bulletin records nearly 70,000 hectares were given to more than five thousand homestead applicants.[40]

The homesteading efforts under the American regime ultimately failed in succeeding decades due to two major factors. First, the new farmer-settlers did not have enough capital to sustain farming costs. Without any financial assistance available from the government that granted them the land, farmer-settlers accumulated huge debts at very high interest rates from usurious moneylenders. Most of these homesteaders were later forced to sell their land and become tenant farmers instead.[citation needed]

Civil government in the American period

The civil governments established in various provinces in the Philippines under the American Occupation were supposed to teach Filipinos the basic principles of democracy, following US military rule. In general, each provincial government presided over local governments in each town or municipality. In turn, each municipality would have a president, vice-president and municipal councillors. These were elected by a select group of qualified electors for two-year terms.[41]

The second Philippine Commission went to what was then Nueva's provincial capital, San Isidro, on June 8, 1901, to begin proceedings for establishing the local and provincial governments. 16 out of Nueva Ecija's 19 towns were represented in the meeting. Elections of various representatives from the different towns were carried out successfully.

However, there was still the thorny problem of deciding whether or not to move the provincial capital. The dilemma was caused by events related to the Philippine–American War. First, Nueva Ecija had been a hotbed of resistance against the American Occupation, and was therefore in a state of siege. Four of its towns, Balungao, Rosales, San Quentin and Umingan, which were further away from the capital and already considered pacified by US forces, had been annexed to the province of Pangasinan.

The newly elected Nueva Ecija representatives were of the view that since a civil government under the Americans was already being established, it was time to return the four towns to Nueva Ecija. This would benefit the province as the four town were rich in natural resources. The fact that the towns were quite far from the capital, one of the representatives suggested, was no obstacle: the provincial capital could simply be moved to Cabanatuan. Other representatives objected to this proposal, pointing out that Cabanatuan had no infrastructures wherein to house the provincial government. The matter was not resolved until two years later, when the US governor-general signed Act No. 1748,[42] ordering the transfer of the capital to Cabanatuan by 1912.

The civil provincial government of Nueva Ecija was formally established by the Taft Commission[43] on June 11, 1901. The very first governor under this new system was Epifanio de los Santos. The main artery connecting most of Metro Manila, EDSA, is named for Governor de los Santos.

Education during the American period

Americans succeeded in making education widely available to Filipinos. While the Spanish government did, rather belatedly in their rule (in the middle of the 19th century), decide to establish public schools, it was the Americans who were able to improve it.[44]

A report of the United States' Philippine Commission in 1900 showed, only 10 out of 23 municipalities in Nueva Ecija had a public school established during the Spanish times and according to the Philippine Commission figures by 1902, 37 public primary schools were established, and 63 Novo Ecijano teachers supported by 16 American "Thomasites", part of the larger group of some 500 pioneer American teachers who arrived aboard the USAT Thomas in September 1901, to help establish an American public school system in the Philippines. The Education Act No. 74 approved by the Philippine Commission in 1901[45] proved to be the catalyst that made Novo Ecijanos rally behind the local and American teachers to make sure as many children as possible benefitted from the public school system.

People contributed in the form of cash, construction materials or labor, and even vacant lots for the building of schools. Community support for the building of schools was such that by 1906, there were already 99 schools in Nueva Ecija. The public school system was still hampered by problems. Relying only on local support, Nueva Ecija (and other places in the Philippines as well) could simply not meet the increasing needs of a growing number of schools, teachers and students. Given the high premium placed by Novo Ecijanos on education, a legislator from Nueva Ecija took the crucial step to compel the American colonial government to allot funding for public education via a legislative act.[citation needed]

Assemblyman Isauro Gabaldon of Nueva Ecija filed an education bill before the 1907 Philippine Assembly, which would later be approved and known as the Gabaldon Education Act. The bill required government to earmark P1,000,000 for public schools throughout the Philippine islands.[46]

Nueva Ecija benefitted tremendously from the new education law. By 1908 Nueva Ecija had 144 primary schools, 11 non-sectarian private schools, 18 sectarian private schools, nine intermediate schools, one vocational school and one agricultural school, the Central Luzon Agricultural School, which is currently now operating as Central Luzon State University.[citation needed]

World War II

 
Alamo Scouts in the Raid at Cabanatuan
 
Giving a sick man a drink as US POWs of Japanese, Philippine Islands, Cabanatuan prison camp

During World War II the Imperial Japanese Army entered the province and Nueva Ecija was taken in 1942. On March 29, 1942, under the leadership of Luis Taruc the Hukbalahap (Hukbo ng Bayan Laban sa Hapon-People's Army Against the Japanese) was organized in Sitio Bawit, Barrio San Julian in the town of Cabiao. It was perceived to be the military arm of the Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas (Communist Party of the Philippines), that brought about the beginning of the early organized resistance of the Filipino people.[47]

During World War II under the Japanese occupation, The Philippine Commonwealth Army has the re-establishment of the Military General Headquarters, Military Bases and Camps here in the province of Nueva Ecija on January 3, 1942, to June 30, 1946, before the engagements of the Anti-Japanese Imperial Military Operations in Central Luzon include Nueva Ecija, Pampanga, Tarlac, Zambales, Bulacan and Northern Tayabas (now Aurora) from 1942 to 1945 and aided the local recognized guerrillas and the Hukbalahap Communist guerrillas against the Japanese Imperial forces since the Japanese Counter-Insurgencies (1942-1944) and the Allied Liberation (1944-1945).[incomprehensible]

In January to August 1945, combined American and Filipino soldiers liberated Nueva Ecija with the recognized guerrillas continuing to harass the Japanese at every opportunity. When Filipino soldiers of the 2nd, 22nd, 23rd, 25th and 26th Infantry Division of the Philippine Commonwealth Army and the 2nd Constabulary Regiment of the Philippine Constabulary was re-invading launches to entering liberated the province of Nueva Ecija and helping recognized guerrilla resistance fighter units, the Hukbalahap Communist guerrillas and the American troops against the Japanese Imperial forces during the Invasion of Nueva Ecija.[incomprehensible]

On January 30, 1945, American Army Rangers, Alamo scouts and Filipino guerrillas conducted a raid to liberate Allied civilians and prisoners of war in Cabanatuan, this was successful with over 516 rescued.[48] By January 31, 1945, the liberated civilians and POWs reached Talavera.

Contemporary era

After the war, much rebuilding was made at the urban areas of the province, specifically Cabanatuan and Gapan. This became the focus of the administrations of Quezon, Roxas, Quirino, Magsaysay, Garcia, and Macapagal. The city of Palayan was formally established by law and became the new capital of the province. Much of the rebuilding and establishment of economic centers in the province spiraled down due to the declaration of martial law by Marcos, which was toppled by the EDSA People Power Revolution, where the namesake came from a Novo Ecijano. Repairing the economy was continued by the Aquino and Ramos governments. The Estrada government led to a decline in agriculture in the province. The Arroyo and Aquino governments swayed the losses and regained vitality in the province. The Duterte government accession made wary ups and downs in the provincial economy.

Geography

The province is the largest in Central Luzon, covering a total area of 5,751.33 square kilometres (2,220.60 sq mi)[49]. Its terrain begins with the southwestern marshes near the Pampanga border. It levels off and then gradually increases in elevation to rolling hills as it approaches the mountains of Sierra Madre in the east, and the Caraballo and Cordillera Central ranges in the north.

Nueva Ecija is bordered on the northeast by Nueva Vizcaya, east by Aurora, south by Bulacan, southwest by Pampanga, west by Tarlac, and northwest by Pangasinan. The province has four distinct districts. The first district (northwest) has a mixture of Ilokano, Pangasinense, and Tagalog cultures. The second district (northeast) is the most complex as it has at least 10 different ethnic groups. The third district (central) has a metropolitan culture, coming from a majority of Tagalog culture, as Cabanatuan City is within it. And the fourth district (southwest) has a mixture of Kapampangan and Tagalog cultures.

Flora and fauna

 
Rafflesia consueloae, smallest raflessia species in the world, is found only in the Pantabangan–Carranglan Watershed Forest Reserve.

The species of flora and fauna in the province is diverse on its north and east borders, which exhibit a shared ecosystem with the Caraballo mountains in the north and the Sierra Madre mountains in the east. The southeast areas are also known for its diverse fauna and flora due to the presence of the Minalungao National Park.

The ceratocentron fesselii orchid, which can only be found in the Pantabangan–Carranglan Watershed Forest Reserve in Carranglan, is considered one of the most critically endangered orchid species in the entire Southeast Asian region. It is endangered due to illegal gathering from the wild and due to the illegal black market trade. The forest reserve is also home to the endemic Rafflesia consueloae, which is the smallest rafflesia in the world and is found nowhere else. Philippine deer, Philippine warty pig, and other indigenous mouse species are also present in the province.

In a recent activity, the presence of a Philippine Eagle couple was discovered in the Sierra Madre side of Nueva Ecija. The couple are now protected by the local government units in that area. Snakes, lizards, and various amphibian species are also present, especially in wetter months.

Administrative divisions

The province is divided into four congressional districts comprising 27 municipalities and 5 cities. The province has the most cities in the Central Luzon region.

 
Political map of Nueva Ecija
  •  †  Provincial capital and component city
  •  ∗  Component city
  •   Municipality

Climate

Climate data for Nueva Ecija
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 32.1
(89.8)
32.8
(91.0)
34.4
(93.9)
36.2
(97.2)
35.3
(95.5)
34.0
(93.2)
32.8
(91.0)
32.1
(89.8)
32.4
(90.3)
32.8
(91.0)
32.7
(90.9)
32.0
(89.6)
33.3
(91.9)
Average low °C (°F) 21.1
(70.0)
21.6
(70.9)
22.7
(72.9)
23.8
(74.8)
24.6
(76.3)
24.5
(76.1)
24.2
(75.6)
24.4
(75.9)
24.1
(75.4)
23.7
(74.7)
22.9
(73.2)
21.9
(71.4)
23.3
(73.9)
Average rainy days 1 2 2 3 13 16 22 21 20 10 8 4 122
Source: Storm247 [51]

Demographics

Population census of Nueva Ecija
YearPop.±% p.a.
1903 134,147—    
1918 227,096+3.57%
1939 416,762+2.93%
1948 467,769+1.29%
1960 608,362+2.21%
1970 851,294+3.41%
1975 947,995+2.18%
1980 1,069,409+2.44%
1990 1,312,680+2.07%
1995 1,505,827+2.61%
2000 1,659,883+2.11%
2007 1,843,853+1.46%
2010 1,955,373+2.16%
2015 2,151,461+1.84%
2020 2,310,134+1.41%
Source: Philippine Statistics Authority [50][52][52]

The population of Nueva Ecija in the 2020 census was 2,310,134 people, [4] with a density of 400 inhabitants per square kilometre or 1,000 inhabitants per square mile.

The majority of the population speaks both Tagalog and English fluently. The province primarily speaks Tagalog dialect called Bulacan Tagalog that resembles poetic form of speech, with a Novoecijano flavor, that added loanwords of Ilocano and Kapampangan origin.

Ethnicity

According to the Atlas Filipinas published by the National Commission for Culture and the Arts of the Philippines, 11 local ethnic languages with living ethnic speakers are present in Nueva Ecija, namely Tagalog (in the entire province), Abellan (in a small part in the centre), Kapampangan (in the southwest-most section), Kankanaey (in the east central), Ilokano (in the northern areas and in a small section in the centre, spoken with a Tagalog accent), Alta (in the east central), Ayta Mag-antsi (in the centre and the north-central), Bugkalut (in Carranglan), Ibaloy (in Carranglan), and Kalanguya and Isinay (in Carranglan).[53]

Religion

The province is predominantly Roman Catholic (about 82.43%). Other Christian groups are Iglesia ni Cristo (5.55%), Born-again Christians, Philippine Independent Church (2.50%), Evangelical (1.70%) & Methodists (1.62%).[54] The remaining minorities (6.2%) are the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Jehovah's Witnesses and Seventh-day Adventist & Muslims. Anitists, and animists are also represented in the province practiced by indigenous ethnic groups.[55]

Economy

 
Nueva Ecija is the biggest rice producer in Central Luzon and in the Philippines, thus, often referred to as the Rice Bowl of the Philippines.
 
Rice fields in Guimba

Nueva Ecija is considered the main rice growing province of the Philippines and the leading producer of onions in the country.

Major industries

Nueva Ecija is one of the top producers of agricultural products in the country. Its principal crops is mainly rice but corn and onion are produced in quantity. The province is often referred to as the "Rice Granary of the Philippines".[63][64] Other major crops are mango, calamansi (calamondin orange), banana, garlic, and vegetables. The municipality of Bongabon at the eastern part of the province at the foot of the Sierra Madre mountains and its neighbouring Laur and Rizal are the major producers of onion and garlic. Bongabon is called the "onion capital of the country". A sunflower farm is housed inside the Central Luzon State University campus in Science City of Muñoz.

Education is very well established as a major industry in the province. The leading educational institutions are the Central Luzon State University in Science City of Munoz and Nueva Ecija University of Science and Technology, Wesleyan University-Philippines, the only internationally accredited school in Central Luzon; College of the Immaculate Conception; La Fortuna College and Araullo University in Cabanatuan City. There are 18 tertiary level institutions in Cabanatuan City alone.

Health services is a notable industry. Hospitals cater to patients from Nueva Ecija and some from neighbouring provinces. There are schools of nursing and midwifery, mostly in Cabanatuan City.

There are poultry farms in a number of towns, most notably, the Lorenzo poultry farms in San Isidro which is one of the largest in the country. Duck raising and egg production is an important livelihood. Fishponds are unevenly distributed throughout the province but the largest concentrations are in San Antonio, Santa Rosa, and Cuyapo.

Fabrication of tricycle "sidecars" is widespread in the province, notably in Santa Rosa, where prices are as low as PhP 7,000 which is practically the cheapest in the country.

Several areas have mineral deposits. Copper and manganese have been found in General Tinio, Carranglan, and Pantabangan. The upper reaches of Carranglan and Palayan City are said to contain gold.[65]

In June 2008, it received the title "Milk Capital of the Philippines" because Nueva Ecija gathers more milk from cows and carabaos (water buffaloes) than any other place in the Philippines.[66] The Philippine Carabao Center is in the CLSU compound in Science City of Munoz.

Tourism

Tourism in Nueva Ecija is focused on gatherings in churches, parks, and festivals. Some of these heritage areas are the Gapan Church, a Byzantine architecture church built from 1856 to 1872 which has been declared as a National Cultural Treasure, the first in the entire province; the Quezon Family Rest House in Bongabon which was also the place of death of former First Lady Aurora Quezon; Centuries-old brick walls of the Tabacalera in San Isidro remain as witness to the Novo Ecijanos' 100-year oppression, from 1782 to 1882, when the province became the center of the tobacco monopoly in Central Luzon and was thus restricted from raising other crops; the statue of Philippine hero General Antonio Luna astride a horse stands at the Cabanatuan plaza in front of the cathedral on the exact spot where the brave general was assassinated in 1899 in the city that adopted him subsequently; Site of the arrest of Philippine hero Apolinario Mabini, known as "the sublime paralytic", by the Americans on December 10, 1899, in Cuyapo; the Triala House of General Manual Tinio, built during the early Commonwealth period, it features ornately designed turn-of-the-century furniture and a life-size figure of esteemed Nove Ecijano Don Kapitan Berong in stained glass; The Grand Sedeco house in San Isidro, which General Emilio Aguinaldo frequented, marks this gallant town that has proven time and again to be cradle of Filipino heroes - it was here that General Frederick Funston planned the capture of Aguinaldo, first President of the Philippine republic, during the Philippine–American War; Wright Institute of San Isidro, of the first high schools established outside Metro Manila during the American period; the Dalton Pass located in Capintalan, Carranglan, the five-hectare area blessed with a cool climate houses the monument of General Dalton and a tower that borders the provinces of Nueva Ecija and Nueva Vizcaya - uphill is a World War II memorial in black marble where a historical account of the war had been etched in English and Japanese; the WWII Concentration Camp in Cabanatuan City; Nampicuan Church; Carranglan Church; Pantabangan Church; the grand Minalungao National Park,[67] known for its high limestone formations sculpted by the Penaranda river; General Luna Fall in Rizal; Mount Olivete in Bongabon, which is frequented by pilgrims due to its holy spring; the Capintalan, which is a reserve known for its WWII tunnels, forests, rivers, and artifacts and has been maintained by the only Ifugao community in Nueva Ecija, located in Carranglan; Palaspas Falls in San Jose City; Gabaldon Falls in Gabaldon which is within the Sabani Estate Agricultural College; Peñaranda Church, which is one of the oldest in the province, built initially in 1887; Diamond Park in San Jose City; Pantabangan Dam, built in 1947, is the first and only rubber dam in Asia; the campus of the Philippine Rice Research Institute in Muñoz which is the main research and experimentation arm of the government for rice and other crops; Central Luzon State University, which is the most academically excellent in the province and the only Novo Ecijano university to be declared a cultural property of the nation; CLSU Agricultural Museum; Living Fish Museum in Muñoz; the Philippine Carabao Center in Muñoz, which is the main arm of the national government on carabao research and development; Mount Mapait in Palayan City; and the Philippine Eagle Exclusive Area in the Nueva Ecija Sierra Madres.

Tourist attractions:

  • Minalungao Park
  • Pantabangan Lake
  • Lupao Pinsal Falls
  • Nabao Lake
  • Fort Magsaysay Dam (Pahingahan)
  • Tanawan

Politics

The Governor of Nueva Ecija is the highest-ranking official in the province, after the President of the Philippines. The province is divided into five congressional districts, which consists of 27 municipalities and five cities, namely: Cabanatuan, San Jose, Palayan, Gapan and Science City of Muñoz. The provincial capital is Palayan City.

Each district has a specialization, where district 1 is known for its organic agriculture, district 2 is known for its highlands and protected forests, district 3 is known for its urban and economic settings, and district 4 is known for its diverse cultural celebrations. Each district is under a congressperson, whom represents the district at the House of Representatives in Congress.

Political alliances in the province are extremely strong, with the ruling party, the Liberal Party of the Philippines, staying in power since the post-martial law era. Being an agricultural province, the main political agenda for the province is agricultural and aquacultural advancements, along with high level education, health, and job and business generation. The current governor of the province is Aurelio Umali and its vice governor is Anthony Umali.

Capitols of Nueva Ecija
 
New Provincial Capitol (seat of Government) of Nueva Ecija is at Palayan City.
 
The Governor and Provincial Officers still hold office at the Old Provincial Capitol at Cabanatuan City

Culture

Novo Ecijano culture is a mixture of Tagalog, Kapampangan, Pangasinense, Ilokano, and other indigenous cultures within the province. A melting pot of culture, the province has a varied of festivals, traditions, and beliefs that constitute Novo Ecijano heritage, along with tangible heritage structures, scenes, and objects.

Cosmopolitanism

Novoecijano architecture is based on indigenous Filipino types, Spanish colonial types, American colonial types, and modernist types. In rural areas, the bahay kubo is still present, but has decreased significantly. Spanish and American colonial architecture, like those in the National Capital Region, have slowly been demolished one after the other, signaling a destruction of colonial heritage. Despite this, there are still colonial structures preserved and conserved such as town churches and some houses surrounding them. The current architectural trend in the province is modernist architecture, signaling an end to colonial architecture in the province.

Music

The music of the Novo Ecijanos is more concentrated on the Tagalog traditional and international music. The province shares the music heritage of other Tagalog provinces such as Rizal, Batangas, Bataan, Bulacan, Quezon, and Laguna.

Visual arts

Many Novo ecijanos have been internationally known for their visual arts. The mediums are diverse, from garlic oil, blood, hair, threads, clays, pastels, leaves, mud, bronze, marble, cotton, pina, and paints which introduced as Indigenous Materials or Indigenouism movement started by Internationally known Hair and Blood Painter of the Philippines.

Values

As a general description, the distinct value system of Filipinos is rooted primarily in personal alliance systems, especially those based in kinship, obligation, friendship, religion, and commercial relationships.

Filipino values are, for the most part, centered around maintaining social harmony, motivated primarily by the desire to be accepted within a group.[496] The main sanction against diverging from these values are the concepts of "Hiya", roughly translated as 'a sense of shame', and "Amor propio" or 'self-esteem'.[496] Social approval, acceptance by a group, and belonging to a group are major concerns. Caring about what others will think, say or do, are strong influences on social behavior among Filipinos.

Other elements of the Filipino value system are optimism about the future, pessimism about present situations and events, concern and care for other people, the existence of friendship and friendliness, the habit of being hospitable, religious nature, respectfulness to self and others, respect for the female members of society, the fear of God, and abhorrence of acts of cheating and thievery.

Dance

A very Tagalog hotpot of culture, the novoecijano dance scheme is ruled by the carinosa, tinikling, and other Tagalog traditional dances.

Cuisine

Novo ecijano cuisine is varied. In its northwest, seafood and vegetable dishes with a lot of salt is prevalent due to its proximity with Pangasinan. In its northwest, highland crops are much prized. In its central and southern areas, food is very diverse due to its proximity with numerous sources of ingredients.

Literature

Novo Ecijano literature is defined by a strong nationalistic approach and a strong ethnically grounded scheme. The literature of the province is honed by the two literature departments of the Central Luzon State University, among others.

The best known Tagalog novelist of the province is Lázaro Francisco. His novels depicted life in an agrarian society that gave rise to the social unrest of his period (1950s and 1960s). One of his novels was serialized by Liwayway Magazine, the most popular Tagalog magazine at that time until the 1970s.[68] But unlike the Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas, Lazaro advocated for the peaceful resolution of the agrarian problem, relying on the benevolence of the government and the landlords.[69]

Lázaro Francisco was from Tarlac. As a child, her parents immigrated to Nueva Ecija. He practically grew up and studied in Cabanatuan. One of the elementary schools in Cabanatuan has been named after him.[69] He was named a National Artist in 2012.[citation needed] He was also a Freemason, and one of the distinguished Master of Masonic Lodge 53 in Cabanatuan City. He was named a National Artist in 2012.

Media

Nueva Ecija has many of its own television channels and radio stations. Almost all towns have their own radio stations.

Sports

The most prevalent sport in the province, like in other provinces in the country, is basketball. Volleyball, badminton, cockfighting, and sepak takraw are the other big sports in the province.

Games

Traditional Novo Ecijano games are mainly Tagalog in nature. These games include luksong baka, patintero, piko, and tumbang preso. The novo ecijano art group "Makasining" is also a main author of "Laro ng Lahi" or Philippine Indigenous Games preservation advocacy.

Festivals

One of the most historic provinces of the Philippines, festivals and fiestas are celebrated in different places in Nueva Ecija. Local history, customs and traditions can be witnessed in the province's festivals of locality.[70][71]

Festival City/Municipality Date Notes
Banatu Cabanatuan City January 29 – February 4 “Banatu Festival,” takes its name from “banatu” which means “vine”
Taong Putik Festival Aliaga June 24 At the crack of dawn, scores of mud-covered, barely dressed devotees make their appearance, asking for alms and candles form the wide awake town folks. This practice mimics a biblical myth about St. John the Baptist
Ragragsak Ti Guimba Guimba, Nueva Ecija February to March -
Holy Week Rituals of Puncan Carranglan Holy Week The unique Holy Week rites of (Puncan)Carranglan one of the oldest towns in Nueva Ecija
Kariton Festival Licab March 28 Celebrated during the annual celebration of the founding anniversary of Licab
Baybayanting Festival Lupao July 25 Honoring the town's patron – Señor Santiago. or Saint James
Araquio Festival Penaranda May The festival dramatized the spread of Christianity in the country and the war between Christians and Muslims
Tanduyong Festival San Jose City fourth Sunday of April The people of San Jose dance through the main street in a colorful, enchanting celebration of the blessing of the harvest of onion. The streets are filled with contingents of dancers outfitted in striking, multi-hued native costumes
Pagibang Damara San Jose City April or May A celebration for a bountiful harvest of the city
Pandawan Festival Pantabangan April The word “Pandaw” means assurance of an abundant fresh-water catch each time the festival is celebrated
Sibuyas Festival Bongabon April 1–10 Celebrated as a form of thanksgiving and a way to show that Bongabon is one of the largest producers of onion in Asia
Tsinelas Festival Gapan August 6–25 Commemorates Gapan's major industry with the Tsinelas Festival on the anniversary of their cityhood.
Paistima Festival Cabiao February 5–11 Commemorate the founding anniversary of the town
Kabyawan Festival Cabiao May 8–16 Thanks giving to the feast of patron's town proper Saint John Nepomocene
Kalamay Festival San Leonardo August 25 Thanksgiving for the abundance of harvest using rice as main ingredients of kalamay is the town's major cultural activity.
Papaya Festival General Tinio March Holy Mass and religious activities are celebrated to honor the town's patron saint, San Isidro de Labrador. Papaya is the town's former name after a fruit tree abundant in the town.

Patimyas Ani Festival - Quezon, Nueva Ecija

• A festival wherein elementary students from each barangay are doing street dancing and showdown in the football field in Quezon, Nueva Ecija. It celebrates every last week of January annually.

Health

The health issues facing the province are minimal because of the health establishments dotting all over the province. National health issues such as dengue, and malaria are on rise during rainy seasons, while HIV/AIDS is still low, but 2015 annual growth rate is unarguably high.

Education

The level of literacy in the province is very high. The top four universities in the province are Central Luzon State University at Science City of Muñoz, Wesleyan University Philippines, Nueva Ecija University of Science and Technology and Araullo University, all located at Cabanatuan City. The universities offer a diverse range of specializations. Every municipality also has local colleges. Central Luzon State University, a national cultural property, has also been accredited as being the twenty first to the sixth most academically excellent in the entire country. The university has also been cited as one of the 100 most significant educational institutions in Asia, overwhelming most schools in Metro Manila and other metropolitan areas in the country.

Notable people

  • General Mariano Llanera † (1855–1942) — fought in the provinces of Bulacan, Tarlac, Pampanga, and Nueva Ecija.
  • General Manuel Tinio † (1877 –1924) — the youngest General[72] of the Philippine Revolutionary Army, and was elected Governor[73] of the Province of Nueva Ecija, Republic of the Philippines in 1907.
  • General Benito Natividad † (1874–1964) — military leader, a governor, and a judge who fought in the Philippine–American War and was one of the last to surrender together with Gen. Manuel Tinio, after the capture of Aguinaldo.
  • Engr. Ponciano A. Bernardo † (December 2, 1905 — April 28, 1949) was the second Mayor of Quezon City. Ponciano Bernardo was born in Santa Rosa, Nueva Ecija, whose father immigrated from Pandi, Bulacan to PAPAYA now called General Tinio, Nueva Ecija. Ponciano Bernardo School and Ponciano Bernardo Park in Cubao, Quezon City is a memorial for him. Ponciano was killed in an ambush by Hukbalahap with the Philippine First Lady Aurora Quezon on their route to Aurora. Ponciano was appointed by the second Philippine President Manuel Quezon, prior to being Mayor he was Secretary of Department of Public Works and Highways. Ponciano was a Filipino engineer and politician who served as mayor of Quezon City, holding the position from 1947 until his death in 1949. It was during his tenure that Quezon City was designated as the capital city of the Philippines.
  • Juan Pajota (c.1914 – 1976) was involved in the Raid at Cabanatuan, an action which took place in the Philippines on 30 January 1945 by US Army Rangers and Filipino guerrillas and resulted in the liberation of more than 500 American prisoners of war (POWs) from a Japanese POW camp near Cabanatuan City
  • Epifanio de los Santos † (April 7, 1871 — April 18, 1928) — Epifanio de los Santos y Cristóbal, sometimes known as Don Pañong or Don Panyong he was born in 1871 in Malabon, province of Rizal, (now an independent city) to Escolastico de los Santos of Nueva Ecija and musician Antonina Cristóbal of Malabon. He was a noted Filipino historian, literary critic, art critic, jurist, prosecutor, antiquarian, archivist, scholar, painter, poet, musician, musicologist, philosopher, philologist, bibliographer, translator, journalist, editor, publisher, paleographer, ethnographer, biographer, researcher, civil servant, patriot and hero. He was appointed Director of the Philippine Library and Museum by Governor General Leonard Wood in 1925. He was appointed district attorney of San Isidro, Nueva Ecija. He was later elected as governor of Nueva Ecija in 1902 and 1904. His election victory made him the first democratically elected provincial governor and head of the Federal Party in Nueva Ecija.
  • Ameurfina Melencio-Herrera, Filipino lawyer and jurist who served as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines from 1979 to 1992. Herrera is a granddaughter of Emilio Aguinaldo.
  • Felipe Padilla de León a Filipino classical music composer, conductor, and scholar. He was named as National Artist of Philippines for Music.
  • Lázaro Francisco is one of the finest Tagalog novelist. One of his novels has been serialized by Liwayway magazine, the most popular Tagalog magazine in the 1950s-1970s. A Freemason and one of the distinguished Master of Masonic Lodge 53 of Cabanatuan City, he was named National Artist of Philippines for Literature in 2012.
  • Catalino "Lino" Ortiz Brocka, also known as Lino Brocka (April 3, 1939 – May 22, 1991) born in Pilar, Sorsogon but he grew up in San Jose City, Nueva Ecija. He was a Filipino film director, widely regarded as one of the most influential and significant Filipino filmmakers in the history of Philippine cinema. In 1983, he founded the organization Concerned Artists of the Philippines (CAP), dedicated to helping artists address issues confronting the country.
  • Francisco Fronda † (22 December 1896 – 17 February 1986) a Filipino scientist, Father of Poultry Science in the Philippines. He was a National Scientist of the Philippines for Animal Husbandry.
  • E. Arsenio Manuel † (1909 - 2003) a Philippine academic, historian, and anthropologist best known for his contributions to Philippine anthropology, history, literature, and linguistics known as the "Dean of Filipino Anthropology" and "Father of Philippine Folklore
  • Heber Gonzalez Bartolome (born November 4, 1948) — a Filipino folk and folk rock singer, songwriter, composer, poet, guitarist, bandurria player, bluesman, and painter. His music was influenced by the "stylistic tradition" of Philippine folk and religious melodies.
  • Rogelio R. Sikat (Also known as Rogelio Sícat) (1940–1997) — A Filipino fictionist, playwright, translator and educator. He was born to Estanislao Sikat and Crisanta Rodriguez on June 26, 1940, in Alua, San Isidro, Nueva Ecija. He is the sixth of eight children. Sicat graduated with a B.Litt. in Journalism from the University of Santo Tomas and an M.A. in Filipino from the University of the Philippines.
  • Dorothy Acueza Jones, also known as Nida Blanca † (January 6, 1936 – November 7, 2001) — Nida Blanca as popularly known by her stage name, was a Filipina actress. She starred in over 163 movies and 14 television shows and received over 16 awards for movies and six awards for television during her 50-year film career. She was named one of 15 Best Actress of all Time by YES magazine.
  • Nestor de Villa † (July 6, 1928 – February 21, 2004) — was a Filipino actor frequently cast in musical films. He was a gifted dancer often paired with frequent onscreen partner Nida Blanca in both movies and television. His dancing talent led some to call him the "Fred Astaire of the Philippines", though the same moniker had also been given to Bayani Casimiro.
  • Rafael V. Mariano (born October 24, 1956)) — former partylist representative for Anakpawis and former Secretary of Agrarian Reform
  • Jaime de los Santos (born April 1946) — is a retired military general in the Philippines. He joined the Philippine Army in 1969 after graduating from the Philippine Military Academy with a degree Bachelor of Science in Military Engineering. De los Santos later on served as a Brigade Commander, Chief of Staff and Commanding General of an Infantry Division and Superintendent of the Philippine Military Academy.
  • Frankie Evangelista † (July 24, 1934 — February 18, 2004) — A former radio and television broadcaster of ABS-CBN since 1953.
  • Josepina "Josie" Padiermos Fitial (born November 25, 1962) — The current First Lady of the Northern Mariana Islands and the wife of Governor Benigno Fitial. She became First Lady upon the inauguration of her husband as the sixth governor of the Northern Mariana Islands on January 9, 2006.[1]
  • Fred Panopio † (February 2, 1939 — April 22, 2010) — A Filipino singer and actor who rose to fame in the 1970s.
  • Oscar A. Solis (October 13, 1953) — Oscar Azarcon Solis was born in San Jose City, Philippines. He studied at Christ the King Seminary of the Society of the Divine Word in Quezon City, Philippines, and at the Pontifical Royal Seminary, University of Santo Tomas, in Manila. After migrating to the United States in 1984, Father Solis served as associate pastor of St. Rocco's parish, New Jersey, 1984–1988. With permission from his Ordinary in the Philippines, he went to the Diocese of Houma-Thibodaux in 1988 where he was appointed associate pastor of St. Joseph Co-Cathedral. He was incardinated into the Diocese of Houma-Thibodaux in 1992, and was named pastor of St. Joseph Co-Cathedral in 1999. He has been a member of the Diocesan Priests' Council, the Personnel Committee and the College of Consultors. Solis is the first Filipino-American to be consecrated a bishop.[74]
  • Joe Taruc (September 18, 1946 - September 30, 2017) - Born in Gapan City, Jose Malgapo Taruc, Jr. is his full name. He is a longtime radio broadcaster of DZRH and also a host of his radio programs Pangunahing Balita and Damdaming Bayan.
  • Anthony Taberna (January 16, 1975) — Born in San Isidro, Nueva Ecija, Anthony "Tunying" Taberna is a Filipino television news anchor and radio broadcaster. At ABS-CBN, Taberna has hosted television and radio programs covering news and public affairs. He is currently hosting Umagang Kay Ganda (where he gained popularity in the segment "Punto por Punto") and XXX: Exklusibong, Explosibong, Exposé. As a DZMM broadcaster, Taberna is one of the lead anchors for Dos Por Dos, a late afternoon show, along with Gerry Baja.
  • Kathryn Bernardo (March 26, 1996) — Born in Cabanatuan City, Kathryn Chandria Manuel Bernardo is her full name. She is a Filipina actress and her career started in 2003. She is best known for her role as Mara in the primetime Filipino drama, Mara Clara. Kathryn is currently a contract artist of Star Magic and ABS-CBN and most recently starred as Ana Bartolome in the 2011 drama film, Way Back Home. She currently plays the main protagonist, Christina Charlota Tampipi, in the primetime series Got to Believe.
  • Willie Revillame (January 27, 1961) — A Novo Ecijano with roots from Cabanatuan City but he was born in Manila, Philippines. He started his career in 1986. He is a television host, actor, comedian and a recording artist in the Philippines.
  • Jose "Kaka" Balagtas — A film director, writer, and actor. He was the Vice Mayor (2010–2016) of San Antonio, Nueva Ecija.
  • Joanna Cindy Miranda — A Filipina model and host from Rizal, Nueva Ecija, who won the Binibining Pilipinas-Tourism 2013 crown and will represent the country in Miss Tourism Queen International in Lhasa, Tibet in the first week of September, 2013.
  • Paolo Ballesteros — (born November 29, 1982, in Cabanatuan City, is a Filipino actor, TV host and model. He has appeared in films and several TV shows. He has won numerous international awards, all portraying the struggles of the LGBT community.
  • John Paul Lizardo — Also known as Japoy Lizardo, is a Filipino Taekwondo Asian Games Bronze medalist, Actor and commercial model from Cabanatuan City.
  • Yen Santos — A Filipina actress and dancer. Part of ABS-CBN Star Magic. Had appeared in Growing Up and teleserye Pure Love. From Cabanatuan City.
  • Jason Abalos (born Jan. 14, 1985) — An actor, dancer and commercial model; from Pantabangan, Nueva Ecija. In 2022, he was elected member of the provincial board representing the 2nd District.
  • Rommel Padilla (born Jan. 4, 1965) — A politician, businessman, actor and endorser; from Cuyapo, Nueva Ecija. He is the father of Daniel Padilla and the brother of elected Senator Robin Padilla. He was the former member of the provincial board (2007–2010, 2016–2019) representing the 1st District.
  • Ramon Valmonte— A writer and founder of Nueva Ecija Journal. Professor from Wesleyan University Philippines descendant of Pantaleón Valmonte y Rufino, sometimes referred to as Pantaleón Belmonte a capitan municipal (mayor) of Gapan and a general during the Philippine Revolution against Spain.
  • Anselmo Roque— An agricultural columnist. Multiawarded journalist and educator Anselmo Roque. One of the longest-serving provincial writers of the Inquirer, Roque joined the paper in 1986 as its correspondent in Nueva Ecija province.
  • Ryza Cenon — A Filipina actress born on December 21, 1987, in Gapan City, as Rhiza Ann Cenon Simbulan. She is an actress, known for Lovestruck (2005), Mr. & Mrs. Cruz (2018) and Sana ay ikaw na nga (2012).
  • Renato Bautista — He was born in 1980 in Nueva Ecija, Philippines as Renato M. Bautista Jr. He is an assistant director and director, known for 'Di natatapos ang gabi (2010), Palitan (2012) and Expressway (2016).
  • Bert Matias — He was born on July 6, 1937, in Cabanatuan City, Philippines as Lamberto I. Matias. He is an actor, known for Fred Claus (2007), Book of Swords (1996) and Renegade Force (1998).
  • Vic Sotto — Multi-awarded Filipino actor, television host, comedian.
  • Alberto Ramento — ninth Supreme Bishop of the Philippine Independent Church, known as the Bishop of Poor Peasants and Workers
  • Ruel S. Bayani — Filipino film and television director, writer, producer, who is best known for directing movies like One More Try, and No Other Woman and co-directing television shows like Budoy, Kokey, Mula Sa Puso.
  • Samboy de Leon — Filipino professional basketball player who last played for the Star Hotshots of the Philippine Basketball Association (PBA). National Athletic Association of Schools, Colleges and Universities (NAASCU), where he was awarded the league MVP in 2014 played for CEU Scorpions.
  • Coleen Perez — (born Coleen Nicole Perez Borgonia on 26 January 1995 in Gapan City, (Formerly known as Maricris Garcia and also known as Faye Lorenzo) is a Filipina commercial model and actress, known for her roles such as Molly Rivera in GMA Network's More Than Words.
  • Nikki Brianne F. Samonte — better known as Nikki "Nikz" Samonte (born March 1, 2000) in Nueva Ecija is a Filipina child actress, singer and model. She is currently handled and managed by ABS-CBN's talent agency, Star Magic.
  • Manuel Chua (born Oct. 29, 1980) — A model and actor; from Cabanatuan City. He was discovered in the Filipino version of the reality game show Pinoy Fear Factor which was aired on ABS-CBN from 2008 to 2009. In 2022, he was elected member of the city council of San Jose.
  • Fred Panopio — (February 2, 1939 – April 22, 2010) was a Filipino singer and actor who rose to fame in the 1970s. This particular kind of music is evident is many of his hits, such as "Pitong Gatang", "Markado", and "Tatlong Baraha". He was also an occasional actor, and appeared in several movies alongside Jess Lapid and Fernando Poe, Jr. He is also known sing the Poe's movie's theme songs.In 1999, Panopio and Victor Wood released an album and became part of the OPM legends.
  • Kurt Isaiah Perez — (born December 1, 1997) in Cabanatuan City is a Filipino former child actor. He became famous for being the Ultimate Male Survivor of StarStruck Kids, the reality-based talent search show of GMA in the Philippines.

See also

References

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External links

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  • Nueva Ecija Now and Beyond

nueva, ecija, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, november, 202. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Nueva Ecija news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Nueva Ecija officially the Province of Nueva Ecija Tagalog Lalawigan ng Nueva Ecija ˈnwɛba ˈɛsiha also ˈnwɛva Ilocano Probinsia ti Nueva Ecija Pangasinan Luyag Probinsia na Nueva Ecija is a landlocked province in the Philippines located in the Central Luzon region Its capital is the city of Palayan while Cabanatuan its former capital is the largest local government unit LGU Nueva Ecija borders from the south clockwise Bulacan Pampanga Tarlac Pangasinan Nueva Vizcaya and Aurora The province is nationally known as the Rice Granary of the Philippines producing the largest rice yield in the country Nueva EcijaProvinceProvince of Nueva Ecija from top left to right Minalungao National Park Dalton Pass in Carranglan Pantabangan Dam Caraballo Mountains Nueva Ecija Rice field and Upper Tabuating Dam FlagSealNickname s Rice Bowl of the Philippines Milk Capital of the PhilippinesHeart of Inland LuzonAnthem Awit ng Nueva Ecija Song of Nueva Ecija Location in the PhilippinesOpenStreetMapCoordinates 15 35 N 121 00 E 15 58 N 121 E 15 58 121 Coordinates 15 35 N 121 00 E 15 58 N 121 E 15 58 121CountryPhilippinesRegionCentral LuzonFounded25 April 1801 1 Named forEcija SpainCapitalPalayanLargest cityCabanatuanGovernment TypeSangguniang Panlalawigan GovernorAurelio Umali Unang Sigaw Vice GovernorEmmanuel Antonio Umali Unang Sigaw LegislatureNueva Ecija Provincial BoardArea 2 Total5 751 33 km2 2 220 60 sq mi Rank12th out of 81Highest elevation Mount Kiligantian 1 673 m 5 489 ft Population 2020 census 4 Total2 310 134 Estimate 2020 2 355 416 3 Rank10th out of 81 Density400 km2 1 000 sq mi Rank16th out of 81DemonymNovo Ecijano NeoecijanoDivisions Independent cities0 Component cities5 CabanatuanGapanMunozPalayanSan Jose Municipalities27 AliagaBongabonCabiaoCarranglanCuyapoGabaldonGeneral Mamerto NatividadGeneral TinioGuimbaJaenLaurLicabLlaneraLupaoNampicuanPantabanganPenarandaQuezonRizalSan AntonioSan IsidroSan LeonardoSanta RosaSanto DomingoTalaveraTalugtugZaragoza Barangays849 DistrictsLegislative districts of Nueva EcijaDemographics 5 Ethnic groupsTagalog 77 8 Ilocano 19 3 Kapampangan 0 06 Pangasinan 0 03 LanguagesTagalogIlocanoEnglishTime zoneUTC 8 PHT ZIP code3100 3133IDD area code 63 0 44ISO 3166 codePH NUE Contents 1 History 1 1 Precolonial era 1 2 Spanish attacks 1 3 Conversion to Christianity 1 4 New province 1 5 Cry of Nueva Ecija 1 6 Tobacco monopoly 1 7 Rebellion against Spain 1 8 American period 1 8 1 The railway 1 8 2 Roads and irrigation 1 8 3 Homesteading and US style tenancy 1 8 4 Civil government in the American period 1 8 5 Education during the American period 1 9 World War II 1 10 Contemporary era 2 Geography 2 1 Flora and fauna 2 2 Administrative divisions 2 3 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 Ethnicity 3 2 Religion 4 Economy 4 1 Major industries 5 Tourism 6 Politics 7 Culture 7 1 Cosmopolitanism 7 2 Music 7 3 Visual arts 7 4 Values 7 5 Dance 7 6 Cuisine 7 7 Literature 7 8 Media 7 9 Sports 7 10 Games 7 11 Festivals 8 Health 9 Education 10 Notable people 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Nueva Ecija news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Precolonial era Edit These first settlers included tribes of Ilongots Egungot or Italons Abaca and Buquids 6 Settlements were built along the banks following the river s undulations The Ilongots meaning people of the forest were the fierce headhunters and animist tribes who occupied Carranglan and the mountainous terrain of Sierra Madre and Caraballo 7 The head hunting communities were nestled along the riverbanks of Rio Grande s tributaries in the north Abaca and Italon were subgroups of Ilongots meaning river settlers Ilongots survived mainly by fishing and hunting Food production was a secondary occupation The agriculture based community of Caraclans and Buquids 8 were settled in Bongabon and Pantabangan along the riverbanks of Rio Grande s tributaries in the northeast 9 When the waves of Tagalog migrations took place between 300 and 200 B C intrepid travelers and traders set up settlements along Luzon s western coast These early settlements formed the nucleus of the Pampango Empire that was consolidated by Balagtas The flatlands of the southern portion of Upper Pampanga was a hospitable place for these new Tagalog settlers The indigenous tribes were forced to take to the hills in the face of the Tagalogs superior technology 10 Barter trade flourished among communities that settled along the great river The constant riverside trading resulted in both a commercial and cultural exchange between the settlements in vast plains upstream of the Rio Grande de Pampanga Settlements in Carranglan Pantabangan and Bongabon and prospered and grew into more stable communities citation needed Spanish attacks Edit At the time the Pampango crown has waned and had little resistance from Spanish invasion When the Pampango Empire fell into the hands of Spanish forces under the command of Martin de Goiti in 1572 the conquistadores began their long upward trek towards Cagayan Valley and Mountain Province Their forces passed through the settlement areas of the Upper Pampanga River They also attacked the Caboloan of Pangasinan effectively capturing more territories from local kingdoms Because of growing territorial domain and evangelical missions a command outpost or Commandancia in the Upper Pampanga River area was established Then Governor General 11 Fausto Cruzat y Gongora July 25 1690 to December 8 1701 had most likely spent much of his time in the northern outpost in Carranglan and Pantabangan and baking in the fiercely hot climate probably waxed nostalgic about his hometown in Ecija Andalusia in Spain Ecija Andalusia was also known as la sarten or the frying pan because of its intensely hot summers Thus the Governor General hit upon the notion to name the outpost Nueva Ecija Both the New and Old Ecija were washed by navigable rivers the former by Rio Grande de Pampanga and the latter by the river Genil Conversion to Christianity Edit See also Hinduism in the Philippines Religion in pre colonial Philippines Indosphere Indianisation and List of India related topics in the Philippines Consistent with the history of Hispanization in the rest of Philippine archipelago Nueva Ecija was established by Augustinian missionaries The first mission was established in Gapan in 1595 The Augustinians abandoned their missionary work in 1636 maintaining only the mission in Bongabon 12 At the turn of the 18th century the missionaries resumed their evangelical work and redirected their efforts to the northeast towards rough mountainous terrain inhabited by Ilongots On September 1 1759 King Carlos III of Spain issued a Royal Decree that ended the founding missions of Augustinians and transferred all Augustinian responsibilities in the settlements of Nueva Ecija to Franciscan friars Through tribute collections and polo y servicio or rendering of force labor the Franciscans constructed churches convents parochial schools and tribunals They also constructed roads and bridges to connect other settlements In 1781 a simple irrigation system was constructed in Pantabangan This new farming technology contributed to the promotion of agriculture in the province New province Edit To make possible the establishments of settlements military force became necessary to protect the friars and whatever basic settlement structures were beginning to emerge Thus military outposts were of utmost importance especially with the friars trying to convert fierce head hunting tribes with spears and bladed weapons It was around this time during the term of Governor General Fausto Cruzat y Gongora July 25 1690 to December 8 1702 that he established the military outpost he named Nueva Ecija At this time however Nueva Ecija was still part of upper Pampanga In 2016 researchers of the National Historical Commission of the Philippines NHCP and the provincial government found documents showing that in 1799 Carlos IV ordered the separation of towns and parishes of Upper Pampanga near the Sierra Madre range as well as coastal towns of Tayabas along the Pacific Ocean and their organization into a corregimiento political military administrative unit Royal directives were implemented on April 25 1801 and the corregimiento was named Nueva Ecija after the Spanish hometown of that period s Governor General Rafael Maria de Aguilar with Baler as its capital 13 Since then the province had undergone numerous changes in territorial composition The progressive towns of Gapan San Isidro Cabiao and Aliaga were all annexed to Nueva Ecija resulting in an economic as well as population boom for inhabitants While Nueva Ecija only had a population of 9 165 in 1845 14 the annexation of new territories three years later pegged the population at 69 135 Other changes occurred in the following years until in 1901 Nueva Ecija s northern municipalities of Balungao Rosales San Quintin and Umingan were annexed to Pangasinan Nueva Ecija s shifting political boundaries in fact necessitated transferring its provincial capital four times Still these changes proved ultimately beneficial to Nueva Ecija as they resulted in a territory with rich land resources nourished by an excellent river system composed of the Rio Grande de Pampanga Talavera and Penaranda rivers This would help lay the foundation for Nueva Ecija s abundant agricultural economy starting with the American Occupation in the early 20th century Cry of Nueva Ecija Edit Main article Cry of Nueva Ecija General Manuel Tinio former governor of Nueva Ecija The Cry of Nueva Ecija is the 1896 revolutionary battle led by General Mariano Llanera manned and assisted by General Manuel Tinio and Pantaleon Valmonte of Gapan City Nueva Ecija and Colonel Alipio Tecson of Cabiao Nueva Ecija who later on became Brigadaire General The battle was fought in Cabiao Nueva Ecija Alipio Tecson would eventually become Gobernadorcillo of Cabiao Nueva Ecija 15 Tobacco monopoly Edit Maintaining the Philippines as a colony became a challenge for the Spanish Empire Expenses incurred in running the colony were usually paid for by a yearly subsidy called real situado sent from the Philippines sister colony in Mexico This financial support from the Spanish royal court was often insufficient especially with expenditures in the Philippine colony growing each year This prompted the royal fiscal assigned in Manila to devise a plan to allow the colony itself to raise revenues on its own and thus be able to supplement the Spanish subsidy This royal fiscal was Francisco Leandro de Vianna who first proposed creating a tobacco monopoly De Vianna reasoned tobacco was a product widely consumed throughout the islands with a market of roughly one million He projected earnings of as much as P400 000 from the venture The first time the proposal was made however both King Carlos III of Spain and colonial officials didn t give the idea much importance All that would change during the term of Governor General Jose Basco y Vargas Basco had plans to develop and promote Philippine agriculture and de Vianna s proposal seemed attractive to him After studying the proposal Basco sent his plan to establish a large scale tobacco production in the colony under complete ownership and management by the colonial government of Spain What probably perked up the ears of the Spanish king about Basco s plan to make the Philippine colony financially self sufficient thus removing a huge financial burden from the Spanish crown The King of Spain issued a royal decree on February 9 1780 setting in motion Basco s plan 16 Almost two years to the date of that royal decree Basco ordered local officials and military commanders to prevent unnecessary losses of tobacco revenues By March 2 1782 tobacco production was established in Luzon with La Union Ilocos Abra Cagayan Valley and Nueva Ecija still part of Pampanga at the time as the centers for planting growing harvesting and processing tobacco This made a drastic and extreme change in the lives of all Novo Ecijanos Where farmland used to bear rice tobacco was now the only crop allowed to grow These included the towns of Gapan San Isidro Jaen Cabiao Cabanatuan Talavera Santor and Bongabon Each farming family was given a quota of tobacco plant to grow By 1850 the tobacco monopoly was producing immense financial gain for the colonial government Some reports at the time pegged the earnings by as much as 500 000 One account in 1866 reported a much higher amount as earnings rose to 38 418 939 that year Novo Ecijanos suffered a lot from the system Nueva Ecija was more often able to meet production quotas compared to the other districts Despite this tobacco policy imposed a lower price on tobacco from areas closer to Manila That meant that first class tobacco leaf grown and harvested from Nueva Ecija was priced lower by one dollar compared to those from Ilocos La Union and Cagayan Valley The tobacco monopoly did not spur Novo Ecijanos to revolt unlike the Ilocanos who staged an uprising over injustices in the system Some tobacco growers in Nueva Ecija resorted to smuggling their own harvests in order to get some profit But getting caught entailed harsher fines and penalties Even sympathetic local officials had no choice but to enforce the unjust policies under pain of arrest and hard labor once laxity on their part resulted in low production The flourishing tobacco industry coupled with the rich agricultural lands in central and northeastern Nueva Ecija also attracted migrants from neighboring Pampanga Pangasinan Ilocos and Tagalog areas This made Nueva Ecija a melting pot of cultures and influences the results of which are still evident in present day Novo Ecijano culture As the tobacco monopoly fuelled further unrest Spain finally abolished the monopoly on December 3 1882 It was only then that they could all once again grow rice for food 17 Rebellion against Spain Edit First prisoners of the Philippine Revolution in 1896 One distinct feature of the 1896 revolution against Spain in Nueva Ecija was that it was led by the elite ruling class instead of the masses Leaders of the revolt in Nueva Ecija were municipal officials and prominent citizens who refused to collaborate with the Spanish authorities when armed struggle broke out Despite being in the ruling class and enjoying positions in the colonial government these prominent Novo Ecijanos proved their patriotism and love for fellow Filipinos 18 In fact one of the founding members of the reform movement La Liga Filipina 19 was lawyer and Novo Ecijano Mamerto Natividad By the time the Katipunan the revolutionary movement against Spain was formed Novo Ecijanos were actively yet secretly joining it Even local officials in Nueva Ecija secretly allied with the illustrados and farmers in forming the underground revolutionary society 20 Once the Spanish authorities learned of the Katipunan s existence those perceived as sympathizers of the movement and even those who were falsely accused of being members of it were arrested Mamerto Natividad was among those arrested for sedition tortured and killed by guardia civil He was one of the first Novo Ecijano martyrs 21 for freedom His death however would result in bigger problems for the Spanish authorities Mamerto Natividad s two sons Mamerto Jr and Benito Natividad later joined the Katipunan The Spaniards burned their house and sugar mills in Jaen Mamerto Jr was later jailed for shooting a Spanish judge who had slapped his younger brother As the Revolution gained ground Mamerto Jr was released and he was able to join the revolutionary army of General Emilio Aguinaldo in Cavite By August 30 1896 a state of war was declared by the Spanish colonial government in several Luzon provinces including Nueva Ecija Bulacan Pampanga Tarlac Batangas Laguna Cavite and Manila 22 Novo Ecijanos immediately proved themselves worthy of the fight for freedom On September 2 1896 Novo Ecijanos led by Gen Mariano Llanera capital municipal of Cabiao and Gen Pantaleon Valmonte capitan municipal of Gapan attacked San Isidro the provincial capital Their 3 000 strong army attacked San Isidro in distinct Novo Ecijano fashion accompanied by music played by the Banda de Cabiao or Cabiao band citation needed Wounded American on stretcher in the Philippines 1899 Novo Ecijanos like Llanera Valmonte Mamerto Natividad Jr and Manuel Tinio conducted themselves heroically during the revolution They were allied with Aguinaldo s Magdalo 23 group Aguinaldo was in fact so impressed he appointed Natividad and Llanera to the two highest ranking posts in the revolutionary army Natividad became General Mamerto Natividad commanding general of the revolutionary army while General Llanera was vice commander with the rank of Lieutenant General General Natividad proved himself worthy of the position by scoring victories against the Spanish in Tayug Pangasinan and San Rafael Bulacan citation needed Pact of Biak na Bato Filipino negotiators On November 11 1897 Natividad was killed in action in Cabiao Nueva Ecija His death precipitated the Pact of Biak na Bato 24 a peace treaty that sought to end hostilities between Spanish authorities and the Filipino rebels The treaty provided for a payment of P800 000 to the rebels who would then be exiled to Hong Kong Five Novo Ecijanos would accompany Aguinaldo s exile 25 They were General Mariano Llanera Benito Natividad General Manuel Tinio 26 and Joaquin Natividad Later on Novo Ecijanos would continue to participate in the drama of war revolution and the fight for freedom They would fight when the revolt against Spain continued after the peace treaty broke down and the United States after declaring war on Spain promised to help Filipinos fight for freedom Then Novo Ecijanos again joined General Emilio Aguinaldo in the Philippine American War after it became evident the United States wanted to make the Philippines their own colony 27 When the Japanese tried to make the Philippines their own colony 28 at the outbreak of the Second World War in the Pacific Novo Ecijanos would also make history by participating in guerilla activities The exploits of the Novo Ecijano guerillas have in fact been made into literature through the World War II novel Ghost Soldiers by Hampton Sides 29 and in Hollywood cinema in the war film The Great Raid 30 based on the book American period Edit History records how the Philippine American War began after American troops killed a Filipino soldier who was crossing the San Juan bridge on February 4 1899 31 One could also say however that hostilities and mistrust really began as early as August 13 the previous year On that day the Spanish colonial government in Intramuros surrendered to American forces instead of the Filipino soldiers that surrounded the Walled City Thus began the United States own effort to have her own colonies with the Philippines served as it were on a silver platter by the dying Spanish Empire thanks to the Treaty of Paris 32 33 When the war between Filipinos and Americans finally began the fate of the infant Republic of the Philippines again lay in the hands of General Aguinaldo and his most trusted men who included Novo Ecijanos like General Llanera and General Tinio And as guerilla warfare became an effective tactic for the Filipinos Novo Ecijanos were among the most feared guerillas By the time the war ended on April 1 1901 with Aguinaldo s surrender to the Americans 34 Novo Ecijano guerillas who had fought so fiercely and bravely against two sets of foreign invaders reluctantly gave up Still that was not the end of the association between them and the Americans The end of the Philippine American War also signaled a new beginning for Nueva Ecija and its people The railway Edit Commercial interprovincial trade was carried out using the Rio Grande de Pampanga as main waterway with trade outposts in San Isidro and Talipapa Traders from Bulacan Tondo and Manila regularly came to Nueva Ecija to carry back rice palay tobacco sugar corn and livestock Americans however wanted to shift from water borne trade to a land based trade system Their idea for establishing this depended on something they were masters at building railways The American colonial government thought a railway could help boost Nueva Ecija s economic growth in the same way that the US railway system helped unite and develop the economy of the North American continent What made the railway project attractive was that it was less expensive than building roads At first run by a private company the US colonial government took over the ownership and management of the railway system by 1917 The Americans were soon proven right trade conducted through the railways boosted Nueva Ecija s income by 25 while transport costs went down by 25 to as much as 75 With the train able to transport more goods and more people at a cheaper rate the railway helped spark a rice boom in Gapan San Isidro Cabanatuan Santa Rosa and Penaranda Farmers could devote more land to growing rice and even secondary crops like onions and watermelons More rice mills farmers and farmer settlers came to Nueva Ecija By 1936 there were 42 rice mills in Nueva Ecija owned mostly by Chinese 35 The agriculture based economic boom brought about by the train s huge load capacity and greater speed compared to boats encouraged waves of migrations to Nueva Ecija from places like Ilocos Pampanga Pangasinan Tarlac and Bulacan The railway brought other changes to Nueva Ecija While trade was still being done by waterways settlements by necessity had to be established close to the rivers where people s basic necessities came from When the trains became the main mode of transporting goods and people and with the influx of migrants it became not only possible but crucial to build more communities further inland This meant roads and irrigation systems were needed 36 Roads and irrigation Edit As communities expanded inward first along the rivers and then along the railways the need for roads and irrigation systems leading to communities in the plains became more urgent These made it possible for the more remote towns those farther away from both rivers and railroads to grow crops and participate in trade ending what was until then a very slow pace of economic development By 1912 Governor Benito Natividad had appropriated funds to fast track the building of roads and bridges linking these remote towns and municipalities to then provincial capital Cabanatuan The American government also constructed three major irrigation facilities 1 The Talavera Irrigation System in 1924 2 Penaranda River Irrigation System in 1930 and 3 Pampanga River Irrigation System in 1939 By the time these irrigation systems went in full swing combined with the railway system and the many rice mills Nueva Ecija had been established as the Rice Granary of the Philippines From 1930 to 1939 rice production in Nueva Ecija was averaging more than 9 million cavans of rice 37 Homesteading and US style tenancy Edit Unlike the American pioneers of the Old West Filipinos were not so willing to occupy remote unsettled and undeveloped areas So when the American colonial government introduced homesteading there were few takers among Filipinos Homesteading could be done through a legal process of acquiring a land title or even without a title at all In the latter case however the lack of a title makes the informal homesteader vulnerable to any legal action attempting to take the land away from him 38 When the Philippine Bill of 1902 was passed by the US Congress the US colonial government was formally established in the Philippine islands This meant the colonial government now had the authority to dispose of public lands on its own without having to seek the approval of the President of the United States Based on an earlier survey of public lands by the Philippine Commission the new American colonial government offered public lands to settlers through homesteading sale purchase or lease 39 Under the American regime s homesteading system an individual could get up to 16 hectares of land while a corporation could get as much as 1 024 hectares This did not result in a wide settlement of lands throughout the country however Nueva Ecija was one exception as more settlers opted to homestead its lands A 1928 Statistical Bulletin records nearly 70 000 hectares were given to more than five thousand homestead applicants 40 The homesteading efforts under the American regime ultimately failed in succeeding decades due to two major factors First the new farmer settlers did not have enough capital to sustain farming costs Without any financial assistance available from the government that granted them the land farmer settlers accumulated huge debts at very high interest rates from usurious moneylenders Most of these homesteaders were later forced to sell their land and become tenant farmers instead citation needed Civil government in the American period Edit The civil governments established in various provinces in the Philippines under the American Occupation were supposed to teach Filipinos the basic principles of democracy following US military rule In general each provincial government presided over local governments in each town or municipality In turn each municipality would have a president vice president and municipal councillors These were elected by a select group of qualified electors for two year terms 41 The second Philippine Commission went to what was then Nueva s provincial capital San Isidro on June 8 1901 to begin proceedings for establishing the local and provincial governments 16 out of Nueva Ecija s 19 towns were represented in the meeting Elections of various representatives from the different towns were carried out successfully However there was still the thorny problem of deciding whether or not to move the provincial capital The dilemma was caused by events related to the Philippine American War First Nueva Ecija had been a hotbed of resistance against the American Occupation and was therefore in a state of siege Four of its towns Balungao Rosales San Quentin and Umingan which were further away from the capital and already considered pacified by US forces had been annexed to the province of Pangasinan The newly elected Nueva Ecija representatives were of the view that since a civil government under the Americans was already being established it was time to return the four towns to Nueva Ecija This would benefit the province as the four town were rich in natural resources The fact that the towns were quite far from the capital one of the representatives suggested was no obstacle the provincial capital could simply be moved to Cabanatuan Other representatives objected to this proposal pointing out that Cabanatuan had no infrastructures wherein to house the provincial government The matter was not resolved until two years later when the US governor general signed Act No 1748 42 ordering the transfer of the capital to Cabanatuan by 1912 The civil provincial government of Nueva Ecija was formally established by the Taft Commission 43 on June 11 1901 The very first governor under this new system was Epifanio de los Santos The main artery connecting most of Metro Manila EDSA is named for Governor de los Santos Education during the American period Edit Americans succeeded in making education widely available to Filipinos While the Spanish government did rather belatedly in their rule in the middle of the 19th century decide to establish public schools it was the Americans who were able to improve it 44 A report of the United States Philippine Commission in 1900 showed only 10 out of 23 municipalities in Nueva Ecija had a public school established during the Spanish times and according to the Philippine Commission figures by 1902 37 public primary schools were established and 63 Novo Ecijano teachers supported by 16 American Thomasites part of the larger group of some 500 pioneer American teachers who arrived aboard the USAT Thomas in September 1901 to help establish an American public school system in the Philippines The Education Act No 74 approved by the Philippine Commission in 1901 45 proved to be the catalyst that made Novo Ecijanos rally behind the local and American teachers to make sure as many children as possible benefitted from the public school system People contributed in the form of cash construction materials or labor and even vacant lots for the building of schools Community support for the building of schools was such that by 1906 there were already 99 schools in Nueva Ecija The public school system was still hampered by problems Relying only on local support Nueva Ecija and other places in the Philippines as well could simply not meet the increasing needs of a growing number of schools teachers and students Given the high premium placed by Novo Ecijanos on education a legislator from Nueva Ecija took the crucial step to compel the American colonial government to allot funding for public education via a legislative act citation needed Assemblyman Isauro Gabaldon of Nueva Ecija filed an education bill before the 1907 Philippine Assembly which would later be approved and known as the Gabaldon Education Act The bill required government to earmark P1 000 000 for public schools throughout the Philippine islands 46 Nueva Ecija benefitted tremendously from the new education law By 1908 Nueva Ecija had 144 primary schools 11 non sectarian private schools 18 sectarian private schools nine intermediate schools one vocational school and one agricultural school the Central Luzon Agricultural School which is currently now operating as Central Luzon State University citation needed World War II Edit Further information Raid at Cabanatuan Alamo Scouts in the Raid at Cabanatuan Giving a sick man a drink as US POWs of Japanese Philippine Islands Cabanatuan prison camp During World War II the Imperial Japanese Army entered the province and Nueva Ecija was taken in 1942 On March 29 1942 under the leadership of Luis Taruc the Hukbalahap Hukbo ng Bayan Laban sa Hapon People s Army Against the Japanese was organized in Sitio Bawit Barrio San Julian in the town of Cabiao It was perceived to be the military arm of the Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas Communist Party of the Philippines that brought about the beginning of the early organized resistance of the Filipino people 47 During World War II under the Japanese occupation The Philippine Commonwealth Army has the re establishment of the Military General Headquarters Military Bases and Camps here in the province of Nueva Ecija on January 3 1942 to June 30 1946 before the engagements of the Anti Japanese Imperial Military Operations in Central Luzon include Nueva Ecija Pampanga Tarlac Zambales Bulacan and Northern Tayabas now Aurora from 1942 to 1945 and aided the local recognized guerrillas and the Hukbalahap Communist guerrillas against the Japanese Imperial forces since the Japanese Counter Insurgencies 1942 1944 and the Allied Liberation 1944 1945 incomprehensible In January to August 1945 combined American and Filipino soldiers liberated Nueva Ecija with the recognized guerrillas continuing to harass the Japanese at every opportunity When Filipino soldiers of the 2nd 22nd 23rd 25th and 26th Infantry Division of the Philippine Commonwealth Army and the 2nd Constabulary Regiment of the Philippine Constabulary was re invading launches to entering liberated the province of Nueva Ecija and helping recognized guerrilla resistance fighter units the Hukbalahap Communist guerrillas and the American troops against the Japanese Imperial forces during the Invasion of Nueva Ecija incomprehensible On January 30 1945 American Army Rangers Alamo scouts and Filipino guerrillas conducted a raid to liberate Allied civilians and prisoners of war in Cabanatuan this was successful with over 516 rescued 48 By January 31 1945 the liberated civilians and POWs reached Talavera Contemporary era Edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed December 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message After the war much rebuilding was made at the urban areas of the province specifically Cabanatuan and Gapan This became the focus of the administrations of Quezon Roxas Quirino Magsaysay Garcia and Macapagal The city of Palayan was formally established by law and became the new capital of the province Much of the rebuilding and establishment of economic centers in the province spiraled down due to the declaration of martial law by Marcos which was toppled by the EDSA People Power Revolution where the namesake came from a Novo Ecijano Repairing the economy was continued by the Aquino and Ramos governments The Estrada government led to a decline in agriculture in the province The Arroyo and Aquino governments swayed the losses and regained vitality in the province The Duterte government accession made wary ups and downs in the provincial economy Geography EditThe province is the largest in Central Luzon covering a total area of 5 751 33 square kilometres 2 220 60 sq mi 49 Its terrain begins with the southwestern marshes near the Pampanga border It levels off and then gradually increases in elevation to rolling hills as it approaches the mountains of Sierra Madre in the east and the Caraballo and Cordillera Central ranges in the north Nueva Ecija is bordered on the northeast by Nueva Vizcaya east by Aurora south by Bulacan southwest by Pampanga west by Tarlac and northwest by Pangasinan The province has four distinct districts The first district northwest has a mixture of Ilokano Pangasinense and Tagalog cultures The second district northeast is the most complex as it has at least 10 different ethnic groups The third district central has a metropolitan culture coming from a majority of Tagalog culture as Cabanatuan City is within it And the fourth district southwest has a mixture of Kapampangan and Tagalog cultures Flora and fauna Edit Rafflesia consueloae smallest raflessia species in the world is found only in the Pantabangan Carranglan Watershed Forest Reserve The species of flora and fauna in the province is diverse on its north and east borders which exhibit a shared ecosystem with the Caraballo mountains in the north and the Sierra Madre mountains in the east The southeast areas are also known for its diverse fauna and flora due to the presence of the Minalungao National Park The ceratocentron fesselii orchid which can only be found in the Pantabangan Carranglan Watershed Forest Reserve in Carranglan is considered one of the most critically endangered orchid species in the entire Southeast Asian region It is endangered due to illegal gathering from the wild and due to the illegal black market trade The forest reserve is also home to the endemic Rafflesia consueloae which is the smallest rafflesia in the world and is found nowhere else Philippine deer Philippine warty pig and other indigenous mouse species are also present in the province In a recent activity the presence of a Philippine Eagle couple was discovered in the Sierra Madre side of Nueva Ecija The couple are now protected by the local government units in that area Snakes lizards and various amphibian species are also present especially in wetter months Administrative divisions Edit The province is divided into four congressional districts comprising 27 municipalities and 5 cities The province has the most cities in the Central Luzon region Political map of Nueva Ecija Provincial capital and component city Component city MunicipalityCity or municipality A District 49 Population p a Area 49 Density Barangay Coordinates B 2020 4 2015 50 km2 sq mi km2 sq miAliaga 6th 3 0 70 363 63 543 1 96 90 04 34 76 780 2 000 26 15 30 12 N 120 50 44 E 15 5032 N 120 8455 E 15 5032 120 8455 Aliaga Bongabon 3rd 2 9 66 839 64 173 0 78 242 91 93 79 280 730 28 15 37 56 N 121 08 45 E 15 6321 N 121 1459 E 15 6321 121 1459 Bongabon Cabanatuan Lone 14 2 327 325 302 231 1 53 282 75 109 17 1 200 3 100 89 15 29 25 N 120 57 59 E 15 4902 N 120 9665 E 15 4902 120 9665 Cabanatuan Cabiao 4th 3 7 85 862 79 007 1 60 111 83 43 18 770 2 000 23 15 15 03 N 120 51 27 E 15 2508 N 120 8575 E 15 2508 120 8575 Cabiao Carranglan 2nd 1 8 42 420 41 131 0 59 705 31 272 32 60 160 17 15 57 37 N 121 03 50 E 15 9603 N 121 0638 E 15 9603 121 0638 Carranglan Cuyapo 1st 2 9 68 066 65 039 0 87 215 73 83 29 320 830 51 15 46 39 N 120 39 44 E 15 7774 N 120 6622 E 15 7774 120 6622 Cuyapo Gabaldon Bitulok amp Sabani 3rd 1 7 39 958 35 383 2 34 225 28 86 98 170 440 16 15 27 14 N 121 20 14 E 15 4540 N 121 3371 E 15 4540 121 3371 Gabaldon Gapan 4th 5 3 122 968 110 303 2 09 164 44 63 49 750 1 900 23 15 18 45 N 120 56 58 E 15 3126 N 120 9495 E 15 3126 120 9495 Gapan General Mamerto Natividad 3rd 1 9 44 311 41 656 1 18 118 00 45 56 380 980 20 15 36 09 N 121 03 02 E 15 6025 N 121 0506 E 15 6025 121 0506 General Mamerto Natividad General Tinio Papaya 4th 2 4 55 925 47 865 3 01 533 08 205 82 100 260 13 15 21 00 N 121 02 59 E 15 3501 N 121 0498 E 15 3501 121 0498 General Tinio Guimba 1st 5 5 127 653 118 655 1 40 245 29 94 71 520 1 300 64 15 40 00 N 120 46 00 E 15 6666 N 120 7666 E 15 6666 120 7666 Guimba Jaen 5th 3 4 79 189 73 184 1 51 85 46 33 00 930 2 400 27 15 20 14 N 120 54 21 E 15 3371 N 120 9059 E 15 3371 120 9059 Jaen Laur 3rd 1 7 38 263 35 656 1 35 295 88 114 24 130 340 17 15 35 07 N 121 11 00 E 15 5854 N 121 1832 E 15 5854 121 1832 Laur Licab 1st 1 3 29 269 28 254 0 67 67 37 26 01 430 1 100 11 15 32 27 N 120 45 46 E 15 5408 N 120 7629 E 15 5408 120 7629 Licab Llanera 2nd 1 8 42 281 39 701 1 21 114 44 44 19 370 960 22 15 39 45 N 121 01 19 E 15 6624 N 121 0220 E 15 6624 121 0220 Llanera Lupao 2nd 2 0 45 917 43 788 0 91 121 33 46 85 380 980 24 15 52 26 N 120 53 59 E 15 8740 N 120 8996 E 15 8740 120 8996 Lupao Science City of Munoz 6th 3 6 84 308 81 483 0 65 163 05 62 95 520 1 300 37 15 42 52 N 120 54 15 E 15 7144 N 120 9041 E 15 7144 120 9041 Munoz Nampicuan 1st 0 6 14 471 14 954 0 62 52 60 20 31 280 730 21 15 43 56 N 120 38 19 E 15 7321 N 120 6386 E 15 7321 120 6386 Nampicuan Palayan 3rd 2 0 45 383 41 041 1 93 101 40 39 15 450 1 200 19 15 32 26 N 121 04 57 E 15 540679 N 121 082430 E 15 540679 121 082430 Palayan Pantabangan 2nd 1 4 31 763 29 925 1 14 392 56 151 57 81 210 14 15 48 26 N 121 08 39 E 15 8073 N 121 1442 E 15 8073 121 1442 Pantabangan Penaranda 4th 1 4 32 269 29 882 1 47 95 00 36 68 340 880 10 15 21 11 N 121 00 09 E 15 3530 N 121 0025 E 15 3530 121 0025 Penaranda Quezon 1st 1 8 41 845 40 592 0 58 68 53 26 46 610 1 600 16 15 33 13 N 120 48 36 E 15 5536 N 120 8101 E 15 5536 120 8101 Quezon Rizal 3rd 3 0 70 196 64 087 1 75 120 55 46 54 580 1 500 26 15 42 31 N 121 06 18 E 15 7087 N 121 1050 E 15 7087 121 1050 Rizal San Antonio 5th 3 6 83 060 77 836 1 24 153 56 59 29 540 1 400 16 15 18 24 N 120 51 00 E 15 3067 N 120 8500 E 15 3067 120 8500 San Antonio San Isidro 4th 2 4 54 372 51 612 1 00 56 49 21 81 960 2 500 9 15 18 35 N 120 54 23 E 15 3096 N 120 9063 E 15 3096 120 9063 San Isidro San Jose Cabaritan 2nd 6 5 150 917 139 738 1 48 185 99 71 81 810 2 100 38 15 47 24 N 120 59 24 E 15 7899 N 120 9900 E 15 7899 120 9900 San Jose San Leonardo 5th 3 0 68 536 65 299 0 93 151 90 58 65 450 1 200 15 15 21 39 N 120 57 33 E 15 3607 N 120 9593 E 15 3607 120 9593 San Leonardo Santa Rosa 5th 3 3 75 649 69 467 1 64 147 15 56 81 510 1 300 33 15 25 29 N 120 56 17 E 15 4247 N 120 9380 E 15 4247 120 9380 Santa Rosa Santo Domingo 6th 2 6 61 092 57 943 1 01 74 88 28 91 820 2 100 24 15 35 11 N 120 52 40 E 15 5863 N 120 8778 E 15 5863 120 8778 Santo Domingo Talavera 6th 5 7 132 338 124 829 1 12 140 92 54 41 940 2 400 53 15 34 48 N 120 55 12 E 15 5800 N 120 9199 E 15 5800 120 9199 Talavera Talugtug 1st 1 1 25 236 23 817 1 11 93 95 36 27 270 700 28 15 46 42 N 120 48 28 E 15 7782 N 120 8078 E 15 7782 120 8078 Talugtug Zaragoza 5th 2 3 53 090 49 387 0 71 72 02 27 81 740 1 900 19 15 26 54 N 120 47 41 E 15 4482 N 120 7948 E 15 4482 120 7948 Zaragoza Total 2 310 134 2 151 461 1 36 5 689 69 2 196 80 410 1 100 849 see GeoGroup box Former names are italicized Coordinates mark the town center and are sortable by latitude Climate Edit Climate data for Nueva EcijaMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 32 1 89 8 32 8 91 0 34 4 93 9 36 2 97 2 35 3 95 5 34 0 93 2 32 8 91 0 32 1 89 8 32 4 90 3 32 8 91 0 32 7 90 9 32 0 89 6 33 3 91 9 Average low C F 21 1 70 0 21 6 70 9 22 7 72 9 23 8 74 8 24 6 76 3 24 5 76 1 24 2 75 6 24 4 75 9 24 1 75 4 23 7 74 7 22 9 73 2 21 9 71 4 23 3 73 9 Average rainy days 1 2 2 3 13 16 22 21 20 10 8 4 122Source Storm247 51 Demographics EditPopulation census of Nueva EcijaYearPop p a 1903134 147 1918227 096 3 57 1939416 762 2 93 1948467 769 1 29 1960608 362 2 21 1970851 294 3 41 1975947 995 2 18 19801 069 409 2 44 19901 312 680 2 07 19951 505 827 2 61 20001 659 883 2 11 20071 843 853 1 46 20101 955 373 2 16 20152 151 461 1 84 20202 310 134 1 41 Source Philippine Statistics Authority 50 52 52 The population of Nueva Ecija in the 2020 census was 2 310 134 people 4 with a density of 400 inhabitants per square kilometre or 1 000 inhabitants per square mile The majority of the population speaks both Tagalog and English fluently The province primarily speaks Tagalog dialect called Bulacan Tagalog that resembles poetic form of speech with a Novoecijano flavor that added loanwords of Ilocano and Kapampangan origin Population percentage 2015 Census 50 Aliaga 63 543 3 0 Bongabon 64 173 3 0 Cabanatuan 302 231 14 0 Cabiao 79 007 3 7 Carranglan 41 131 1 9 Cuyapo 65 039 3 0 Gabaldon 35 383 1 6 Gapan 110 303 5 1 Gen M Natividad 41 656 1 9 Gen Tinio 47 865 2 2 Guimba 118 655 5 5 Jaen 73 184 3 4 Laur 35 656 1 7 Licab 28 254 1 3 Llanera 39 701 1 8 Lupao 43 788 2 0 Munoz 81 483 3 8 Nampicuan 14 954 0 7 Palayan 41 041 1 9 Pantabangan 29 925 1 4 Penaranda 29 882 1 4 Quezon 40 592 1 9 Rizal 64 087 3 0 San Antonio 77 836 3 6 San Isidro 51 612 2 4 San Jose 139 738 6 5 San Leonardo 65 299 3 0 Santa Rosa 69 467 3 2 Santo Domingo 57 943 2 7 Talavera 124 829 5 8 Talugtug 23 817 1 1 Zaragoza 49 387 2 3 Total population 2 151 461Ethnicity Edit According to the Atlas Filipinas published by the National Commission for Culture and the Arts of the Philippines 11 local ethnic languages with living ethnic speakers are present in Nueva Ecija namely Tagalog in the entire province Abellan in a small part in the centre Kapampangan in the southwest most section Kankanaey in the east central Ilokano in the northern areas and in a small section in the centre spoken with a Tagalog accent Alta in the east central Ayta Mag antsi in the centre and the north central Bugkalut in Carranglan Ibaloy in Carranglan and Kalanguya and Isinay in Carranglan 53 Religion Edit The province is predominantly Roman Catholic about 82 43 Other Christian groups are Iglesia ni Cristo 5 55 Born again Christians Philippine Independent Church 2 50 Evangelical 1 70 amp Methodists 1 62 54 The remaining minorities 6 2 are the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Jehovah s Witnesses and Seventh day Adventist amp Muslims Anitists and animists are also represented in the province practiced by indigenous ethnic groups 55 Economy EditPoverty Incidence of Nueva Ecija Source Philippine Statistics Authority 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 Nueva Ecija is the biggest rice producer in Central Luzon and in the Philippines thus often referred to as the Rice Bowl of the Philippines Rice fields in Guimba Nueva Ecija is considered the main rice growing province of the Philippines and the leading producer of onions in the country Major industries Edit Nueva Ecija is one of the top producers of agricultural products in the country Its principal crops is mainly rice but corn and onion are produced in quantity The province is often referred to as the Rice Granary of the Philippines 63 64 Other major crops are mango calamansi calamondin orange banana garlic and vegetables The municipality of Bongabon at the eastern part of the province at the foot of the Sierra Madre mountains and its neighbouring Laur and Rizal are the major producers of onion and garlic Bongabon is called the onion capital of the country A sunflower farm is housed inside the Central Luzon State University campus in Science City of Munoz Education is very well established as a major industry in the province The leading educational institutions are the Central Luzon State University in Science City of Munoz and Nueva Ecija University of Science and Technology Wesleyan University Philippines the only internationally accredited school in Central Luzon College of the Immaculate Conception La Fortuna College and Araullo University in Cabanatuan City There are 18 tertiary level institutions in Cabanatuan City alone Health services is a notable industry Hospitals cater to patients from Nueva Ecija and some from neighbouring provinces There are schools of nursing and midwifery mostly in Cabanatuan City There are poultry farms in a number of towns most notably the Lorenzo poultry farms in San Isidro which is one of the largest in the country Duck raising and egg production is an important livelihood Fishponds are unevenly distributed throughout the province but the largest concentrations are in San Antonio Santa Rosa and Cuyapo Fabrication of tricycle sidecars is widespread in the province notably in Santa Rosa where prices are as low as PhP 7 000 which is practically the cheapest in the country Several areas have mineral deposits Copper and manganese have been found in General Tinio Carranglan and Pantabangan The upper reaches of Carranglan and Palayan City are said to contain gold 65 In June 2008 it received the title Milk Capital of the Philippines because Nueva Ecija gathers more milk from cows and carabaos water buffaloes than any other place in the Philippines 66 The Philippine Carabao Center is in the CLSU compound in Science City of Munoz Tourism EditTourism in Nueva Ecija is focused on gatherings in churches parks and festivals Some of these heritage areas are the Gapan Church a Byzantine architecture church built from 1856 to 1872 which has been declared as a National Cultural Treasure the first in the entire province the Quezon Family Rest House in Bongabon which was also the place of death of former First Lady Aurora Quezon Centuries old brick walls of the Tabacalera in San Isidro remain as witness to the Novo Ecijanos 100 year oppression from 1782 to 1882 when the province became the center of the tobacco monopoly in Central Luzon and was thus restricted from raising other crops the statue of Philippine hero General Antonio Luna astride a horse stands at the Cabanatuan plaza in front of the cathedral on the exact spot where the brave general was assassinated in 1899 in the city that adopted him subsequently Site of the arrest of Philippine hero Apolinario Mabini known as the sublime paralytic by the Americans on December 10 1899 in Cuyapo the Triala House of General Manual Tinio built during the early Commonwealth period it features ornately designed turn of the century furniture and a life size figure of esteemed Nove Ecijano Don Kapitan Berong in stained glass The Grand Sedeco house in San Isidro which General Emilio Aguinaldo frequented marks this gallant town that has proven time and again to be cradle of Filipino heroes it was here that General Frederick Funston planned the capture of Aguinaldo first President of the Philippine republic during the Philippine American War Wright Institute of San Isidro of the first high schools established outside Metro Manila during the American period the Dalton Pass located in Capintalan Carranglan the five hectare area blessed with a cool climate houses the monument of General Dalton and a tower that borders the provinces of Nueva Ecija and Nueva Vizcaya uphill is a World War II memorial in black marble where a historical account of the war had been etched in English and Japanese the WWII Concentration Camp in Cabanatuan City Nampicuan Church Carranglan Church Pantabangan Church the grand Minalungao National Park 67 known for its high limestone formations sculpted by the Penaranda river General Luna Fall in Rizal Mount Olivete in Bongabon which is frequented by pilgrims due to its holy spring the Capintalan which is a reserve known for its WWII tunnels forests rivers and artifacts and has been maintained by the only Ifugao community in Nueva Ecija located in Carranglan Palaspas Falls in San Jose City Gabaldon Falls in Gabaldon which is within the Sabani Estate Agricultural College Penaranda Church which is one of the oldest in the province built initially in 1887 Diamond Park in San Jose City Pantabangan Dam built in 1947 is the first and only rubber dam in Asia the campus of the Philippine Rice Research Institute in Munoz which is the main research and experimentation arm of the government for rice and other crops Central Luzon State University which is the most academically excellent in the province and the only Novo Ecijano university to be declared a cultural property of the nation CLSU Agricultural Museum Living Fish Museum in Munoz the Philippine Carabao Center in Munoz which is the main arm of the national government on carabao research and development Mount Mapait in Palayan City and the Philippine Eagle Exclusive Area in the Nueva Ecija Sierra Madres Tourist attractions Minalungao Park Pantabangan Lake Lupao Pinsal Falls Nabao Lake Fort Magsaysay Dam Pahingahan Tanawan Dalton Pass Landscape at Carranglan Pantabangan Dam Central Luzon State University main gatePolitics EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Nueva Ecija news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Governor of Nueva Ecija is the highest ranking official in the province after the President of the Philippines The province is divided into five congressional districts which consists of 27 municipalities and five cities namely Cabanatuan San Jose Palayan Gapan and Science City of Munoz The provincial capital is Palayan City Each district has a specialization where district 1 is known for its organic agriculture district 2 is known for its highlands and protected forests district 3 is known for its urban and economic settings and district 4 is known for its diverse cultural celebrations Each district is under a congressperson whom represents the district at the House of Representatives in Congress Political alliances in the province are extremely strong with the ruling party the Liberal Party of the Philippines staying in power since the post martial law era Being an agricultural province the main political agenda for the province is agricultural and aquacultural advancements along with high level education health and job and business generation The current governor of the province is Aurelio Umali and its vice governor is Anthony Umali Capitols of Nueva Ecija New Provincial Capitol seat of Government of Nueva Ecija is at Palayan City The Governor and Provincial Officers still hold office at the Old Provincial Capitol at Cabanatuan CityCulture EditNovo Ecijano culture is a mixture of Tagalog Kapampangan Pangasinense Ilokano and other indigenous cultures within the province A melting pot of culture the province has a varied of festivals traditions and beliefs that constitute Novo Ecijano heritage along with tangible heritage structures scenes and objects Cosmopolitanism Edit Novoecijano architecture is based on indigenous Filipino types Spanish colonial types American colonial types and modernist types In rural areas the bahay kubo is still present but has decreased significantly Spanish and American colonial architecture like those in the National Capital Region have slowly been demolished one after the other signaling a destruction of colonial heritage Despite this there are still colonial structures preserved and conserved such as town churches and some houses surrounding them The current architectural trend in the province is modernist architecture signaling an end to colonial architecture in the province Music Edit The music of the Novo Ecijanos is more concentrated on the Tagalog traditional and international music The province shares the music heritage of other Tagalog provinces such as Rizal Batangas Bataan Bulacan Quezon and Laguna Visual arts Edit Many Novo ecijanos have been internationally known for their visual arts The mediums are diverse from garlic oil blood hair threads clays pastels leaves mud bronze marble cotton pina and paints which introduced as Indigenous Materials or Indigenouism movement started by Internationally known Hair and Blood Painter of the Philippines Values Edit As a general description the distinct value system of Filipinos is rooted primarily in personal alliance systems especially those based in kinship obligation friendship religion and commercial relationships Filipino values are for the most part centered around maintaining social harmony motivated primarily by the desire to be accepted within a group 496 The main sanction against diverging from these values are the concepts of Hiya roughly translated as a sense of shame and Amor propio or self esteem 496 Social approval acceptance by a group and belonging to a group are major concerns Caring about what others will think say or do are strong influences on social behavior among Filipinos Other elements of the Filipino value system are optimism about the future pessimism about present situations and events concern and care for other people the existence of friendship and friendliness the habit of being hospitable religious nature respectfulness to self and others respect for the female members of society the fear of God and abhorrence of acts of cheating and thievery Dance Edit A very Tagalog hotpot of culture the novoecijano dance scheme is ruled by the carinosa tinikling and other Tagalog traditional dances Cuisine Edit Novo ecijano cuisine is varied In its northwest seafood and vegetable dishes with a lot of salt is prevalent due to its proximity with Pangasinan In its northwest highland crops are much prized In its central and southern areas food is very diverse due to its proximity with numerous sources of ingredients Literature Edit Novo Ecijano literature is defined by a strong nationalistic approach and a strong ethnically grounded scheme The literature of the province is honed by the two literature departments of the Central Luzon State University among others The best known Tagalog novelist of the province is Lazaro Francisco His novels depicted life in an agrarian society that gave rise to the social unrest of his period 1950s and 1960s One of his novels was serialized by Liwayway Magazine the most popular Tagalog magazine at that time until the 1970s 68 But unlike the Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas Lazaro advocated for the peaceful resolution of the agrarian problem relying on the benevolence of the government and the landlords 69 Lazaro Francisco was from Tarlac As a child her parents immigrated to Nueva Ecija He practically grew up and studied in Cabanatuan One of the elementary schools in Cabanatuan has been named after him 69 He was named a National Artist in 2012 citation needed He was also a Freemason and one of the distinguished Master of Masonic Lodge 53 in Cabanatuan City He was named a National Artist in 2012 Media Edit Nueva Ecija has many of its own television channels and radio stations Almost all towns have their own radio stations Sports Edit The most prevalent sport in the province like in other provinces in the country is basketball Volleyball badminton cockfighting and sepak takraw are the other big sports in the province Games Edit Traditional Novo Ecijano games are mainly Tagalog in nature These games include luksong baka patintero piko and tumbang preso The novo ecijano art group Makasining is also a main author of Laro ng Lahi or Philippine Indigenous Games preservation advocacy Festivals Edit This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section is written like a travel guide rather than an encyclopedic description of the subject Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style If a travel guide is intended use of Wikivoyage is strongly suggested May 2016 This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is article is written like a travel guide Please help improve this article if you can August 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message It has been suggested that parts of this page be moved into Culture of the Philippines Festivals Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page September 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message One of the most historic provinces of the Philippines festivals and fiestas are celebrated in different places in Nueva Ecija Local history customs and traditions can be witnessed in the province s festivals of locality 70 71 Festival City Municipality Date NotesBanatu Cabanatuan City January 29 February 4 Banatu Festival takes its name from banatu which means vine Taong Putik Festival Aliaga June 24 At the crack of dawn scores of mud covered barely dressed devotees make their appearance asking for alms and candles form the wide awake town folks This practice mimics a biblical myth about St John the BaptistRagragsak Ti Guimba Guimba Nueva Ecija February to March Holy Week Rituals of Puncan Carranglan Holy Week The unique Holy Week rites of Puncan Carranglan one of the oldest towns in Nueva EcijaKariton Festival Licab March 28 Celebrated during the annual celebration of the founding anniversary of LicabBaybayanting Festival Lupao July 25 Honoring the town s patron Senor Santiago or Saint JamesAraquio Festival Penaranda May The festival dramatized the spread of Christianity in the country and the war between Christians and MuslimsTanduyong Festival San Jose City fourth Sunday of April The people of San Jose dance through the main street in a colorful enchanting celebration of the blessing of the harvest of onion The streets are filled with contingents of dancers outfitted in striking multi hued native costumesPagibang Damara San Jose City April or May A celebration for a bountiful harvest of the cityPandawan Festival Pantabangan April The word Pandaw means assurance of an abundant fresh water catch each time the festival is celebratedSibuyas Festival Bongabon April 1 10 Celebrated as a form of thanksgiving and a way to show that Bongabon is one of the largest producers of onion in AsiaTsinelas Festival Gapan August 6 25 Commemorates Gapan s major industry with the Tsinelas Festival on the anniversary of their cityhood Paistima Festival Cabiao February 5 11 Commemorate the founding anniversary of the townKabyawan Festival Cabiao May 8 16 Thanks giving to the feast of patron s town proper Saint John NepomoceneKalamay Festival San Leonardo August 25 Thanksgiving for the abundance of harvest using rice as main ingredients of kalamay is the town s major cultural activity Papaya Festival General Tinio March Holy Mass and religious activities are celebrated to honor the town s patron saint San Isidro de Labrador Papaya is the town s former name after a fruit tree abundant in the town Patimyas Ani Festival Quezon Nueva Ecija A festival wherein elementary students from each barangay are doing street dancing and showdown in the football field in Quezon Nueva Ecija It celebrates every last week of January annually Health EditThe health issues facing the province are minimal because of the health establishments dotting all over the province National health issues such as dengue and malaria are on rise during rainy seasons while HIV AIDS is still low but 2015 annual growth rate is unarguably high Education EditThe level of literacy in the province is very high The top four universities in the province are Central Luzon State University at Science City of Munoz Wesleyan University Philippines Nueva Ecija University of Science and Technology and Araullo University all located at Cabanatuan City The universities offer a diverse range of specializations Every municipality also has local colleges Central Luzon State University a national cultural property has also been accredited as being the twenty first to the sixth most academically excellent in the entire country The university has also been cited as one of the 100 most significant educational institutions in Asia overwhelming most schools in Metro Manila and other metropolitan areas in the country Notable people EditGeneral Mariano Llanera 1855 1942 fought in the provinces of Bulacan Tarlac Pampanga and Nueva Ecija General Manuel Tinio 1877 1924 the youngest General 72 of the Philippine Revolutionary Army and was elected Governor 73 of the Province of Nueva Ecija Republic of the Philippines in 1907 General Benito Natividad 1874 1964 military leader a governor and a judge who fought in the Philippine American War and was one of the last to surrender together with Gen Manuel Tinio after the capture of Aguinaldo Engr Ponciano A Bernardo December 2 1905 April 28 1949 was the second Mayor of Quezon City Ponciano Bernardo was born in Santa Rosa Nueva Ecija whose father immigrated from Pandi Bulacan to PAPAYA now called General Tinio Nueva Ecija Ponciano Bernardo School and Ponciano Bernardo Park in Cubao Quezon City is a memorial for him Ponciano was killed in an ambush by Hukbalahap with the Philippine First Lady Aurora Quezon on their route to Aurora Ponciano was appointed by the second Philippine President Manuel Quezon prior to being Mayor he was Secretary of Department of Public Works and Highways Ponciano was a Filipino engineer and politician who served as mayor of Quezon City holding the position from 1947 until his death in 1949 It was during his tenure that Quezon City was designated as the capital city of the Philippines Juan Pajota c 1914 1976 was involved in the Raid at Cabanatuan an action which took place in the Philippines on 30 January 1945 by US Army Rangers and Filipino guerrillas and resulted in the liberation of more than 500 American prisoners of war POWs from a Japanese POW camp near Cabanatuan City Epifanio de los Santos April 7 1871 April 18 1928 Epifanio de los Santos y Cristobal sometimes known as Don Panong or Don Panyong he was born in 1871 in Malabon province of Rizal now an independent city to Escolastico de los Santos of Nueva Ecija and musician Antonina Cristobal of Malabon He was a noted Filipino historian literary critic art critic jurist prosecutor antiquarian archivist scholar painter poet musician musicologist philosopher philologist bibliographer translator journalist editor publisher paleographer ethnographer biographer researcher civil servant patriot and hero He was appointed Director of the Philippine Library and Museum by Governor General Leonard Wood in 1925 He was appointed district attorney of San Isidro Nueva Ecija He was later elected as governor of Nueva Ecija in 1902 and 1904 His election victory made him the first democratically elected provincial governor and head of the Federal Party in Nueva Ecija Ameurfina Melencio Herrera Filipino lawyer and jurist who served as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines from 1979 to 1992 Herrera is a granddaughter of Emilio Aguinaldo Felipe Padilla de Leon a Filipino classical music composer conductor and scholar He was named as National Artist of Philippines for Music Lazaro Francisco is one of the finest Tagalog novelist One of his novels has been serialized by Liwayway magazine the most popular Tagalog magazine in the 1950s 1970s A Freemason and one of the distinguished Master of Masonic Lodge 53 of Cabanatuan City he was named National Artist of Philippines for Literature in 2012 Catalino Lino Ortiz Brocka also known as Lino Brocka April 3 1939 May 22 1991 born in Pilar Sorsogon but he grew up in San Jose City Nueva Ecija He was a Filipino film director widely regarded as one of the most influential and significant Filipino filmmakers in the history of Philippine cinema In 1983 he founded the organization Concerned Artists of the Philippines CAP dedicated to helping artists address issues confronting the country Francisco Fronda 22 December 1896 17 February 1986 a Filipino scientist Father of Poultry Science in the Philippines He was a National Scientist of the Philippines for Animal Husbandry E Arsenio Manuel 1909 2003 a Philippine academic historian and anthropologist best known for his contributions to Philippine anthropology history literature and linguistics known as the Dean of Filipino Anthropology and Father of Philippine Folklore Heber Gonzalez Bartolome born November 4 1948 a Filipino folk and folk rock singer songwriter composer poet guitarist bandurria player bluesman and painter His music was influenced by the stylistic tradition of Philippine folk and religious melodies Rogelio R Sikat Also known as Rogelio Sicat 1940 1997 A Filipino fictionist playwright translator and educator He was born to Estanislao Sikat and Crisanta Rodriguez on June 26 1940 in Alua San Isidro Nueva Ecija He is the sixth of eight children Sicat graduated with a B Litt in Journalism from the University of Santo Tomas and an M A in Filipino from the University of the Philippines Dorothy Acueza Jones also known as Nida Blanca January 6 1936 November 7 2001 Nida Blanca as popularly known by her stage name was a Filipina actress She starred in over 163 movies and 14 television shows and received over 16 awards for movies and six awards for television during her 50 year film career She was named one of 15 Best Actress of all Time by YES magazine Nestor de Villa July 6 1928 February 21 2004 was a Filipino actor frequently cast in musical films He was a gifted dancer often paired with frequent onscreen partner Nida Blanca in both movies and television His dancing talent led some to call him the Fred Astaire of the Philippines though the same moniker had also been given to Bayani Casimiro Rafael V Mariano born October 24 1956 former partylist representative for Anakpawis and former Secretary of Agrarian Reform Jaime de los Santos born April 1946 is a retired military general in the Philippines He joined the Philippine Army in 1969 after graduating from the Philippine Military Academy with a degree Bachelor of Science in Military Engineering De los Santos later on served as a Brigade Commander Chief of Staff and Commanding General of an Infantry Division and Superintendent of the Philippine Military Academy Frankie Evangelista July 24 1934 February 18 2004 A former radio and television broadcaster of ABS CBN since 1953 Josepina Josie Padiermos Fitial born November 25 1962 The current First Lady of the Northern Mariana Islands and the wife of Governor Benigno Fitial She became First Lady upon the inauguration of her husband as the sixth governor of the Northern Mariana Islands on January 9 2006 1 Fred Panopio February 2 1939 April 22 2010 A Filipino singer and actor who rose to fame in the 1970s Oscar A Solis October 13 1953 Oscar Azarcon Solis was born in San Jose City Philippines He studied at Christ the King Seminary of the Society of the Divine Word in Quezon City Philippines and at the Pontifical Royal Seminary University of Santo Tomas in Manila After migrating to the United States in 1984 Father Solis served as associate pastor of St Rocco s parish New Jersey 1984 1988 With permission from his Ordinary in the Philippines he went to the Diocese of Houma Thibodaux in 1988 where he was appointed associate pastor of St Joseph Co Cathedral He was incardinated into the Diocese of Houma Thibodaux in 1992 and was named pastor of St Joseph Co Cathedral in 1999 He has been a member of the Diocesan Priests Council the Personnel Committee and the College of Consultors Solis is the first Filipino American to be consecrated a bishop 74 Joe Taruc September 18 1946 September 30 2017 Born in Gapan City Jose Malgapo Taruc Jr is his full name He is a longtime radio broadcaster of DZRH and also a host of his radio programs Pangunahing Balita and Damdaming Bayan Anthony Taberna January 16 1975 Born in San Isidro Nueva Ecija Anthony Tunying Taberna is a Filipino television news anchor and radio broadcaster At ABS CBN Taberna has hosted television and radio programs covering news and public affairs He is currently hosting Umagang Kay Ganda where he gained popularity in the segment Punto por Punto and XXX Exklusibong Explosibong Expose As a DZMM broadcaster Taberna is one of the lead anchors for Dos Por Dos a late afternoon show along with Gerry Baja Kathryn Bernardo March 26 1996 Born in Cabanatuan City Kathryn Chandria Manuel Bernardo is her full name She is a Filipina actress and her career started in 2003 She is best known for her role as Mara in the primetime Filipino drama Mara Clara Kathryn is currently a contract artist of Star Magic and ABS CBN and most recently starred as Ana Bartolome in the 2011 drama film Way Back Home She currently plays the main protagonist Christina Charlota Tampipi in the primetime series Got to Believe Willie Revillame January 27 1961 A Novo Ecijano with roots from Cabanatuan City but he was born in Manila Philippines He started his career in 1986 He is a television host actor comedian and a recording artist in the Philippines Jose Kaka Balagtas A film director writer and actor He was the Vice Mayor 2010 2016 of San Antonio Nueva Ecija Joanna Cindy Miranda A Filipina model and host from Rizal Nueva Ecija who won the Binibining Pilipinas Tourism 2013 crown and will represent the country in Miss Tourism Queen International in Lhasa Tibet in the first week of September 2013 Paolo Ballesteros born November 29 1982 in Cabanatuan City is a Filipino actor TV host and model He has appeared in films and several TV shows He has won numerous international awards all portraying the struggles of the LGBT community John Paul Lizardo Also known as Japoy Lizardo is a Filipino Taekwondo Asian Games Bronze medalist Actor and commercial model from Cabanatuan City Yen Santos A Filipina actress and dancer Part of ABS CBN Star Magic Had appeared in Growing Up and teleserye Pure Love From Cabanatuan City Jason Abalos born Jan 14 1985 An actor dancer and commercial model from Pantabangan Nueva Ecija In 2022 he was elected member of the provincial board representing the 2nd District Rommel Padilla born Jan 4 1965 A politician businessman actor and endorser from Cuyapo Nueva Ecija He is the father of Daniel Padilla and the brother of elected Senator Robin Padilla He was the former member of the provincial board 2007 2010 2016 2019 representing the 1st District Ramon Valmonte A writer and founder of Nueva Ecija Journal Professor from Wesleyan University Philippines descendant of Pantaleon Valmonte y Rufino sometimes referred to as Pantaleon Belmonte a capitan municipal mayor of Gapan and a general during the Philippine Revolution against Spain Anselmo Roque An agricultural columnist Multiawarded journalist and educator Anselmo Roque One of the longest serving provincial writers of the Inquirer Roque joined the paper in 1986 as its correspondent in Nueva Ecija province Ryza Cenon A Filipina actress born on December 21 1987 in Gapan City as Rhiza Ann Cenon Simbulan She is an actress known for Lovestruck 2005 Mr amp Mrs Cruz 2018 and Sana ay ikaw na nga 2012 Renato Bautista He was born in 1980 in Nueva Ecija Philippines as Renato M Bautista Jr He is an assistant director and director known for Di natatapos ang gabi 2010 Palitan 2012 and Expressway 2016 Bert Matias He was born on July 6 1937 in Cabanatuan City Philippines as Lamberto I Matias He is an actor known for Fred Claus 2007 Book of Swords 1996 and Renegade Force 1998 Vic Sotto Multi awarded Filipino actor television host comedian Alberto Ramento ninth Supreme Bishop of the Philippine Independent Church known as the Bishop of Poor Peasants and Workers Ruel S Bayani Filipino film and television director writer producer who is best known for directing movies like One More Try and No Other Woman and co directing television shows like Budoy Kokey Mula Sa Puso Samboy de Leon Filipino professional basketball player who last played for the Star Hotshots of the Philippine Basketball Association PBA National Athletic Association of Schools Colleges and Universities NAASCU where he was awarded the league MVP in 2014 played for CEU Scorpions Coleen Perez born Coleen Nicole Perez Borgonia on 26 January 1995 in Gapan City Formerly known as Maricris Garcia and also known as Faye Lorenzo is a Filipina commercial model and actress known for her roles such as Molly Rivera in GMA Network s More Than Words Nikki Brianne F Samonte better known as Nikki Nikz Samonte born March 1 2000 in Nueva Ecija is a Filipina child actress singer and model She is currently handled and managed by ABS CBN s talent agency Star Magic Manuel Chua born Oct 29 1980 A model and actor from Cabanatuan City He was discovered in the Filipino version of the reality game show Pinoy Fear Factor which was aired on ABS CBN from 2008 to 2009 In 2022 he was elected member of the city council of San Jose Fred Panopio February 2 1939 April 22 2010 was a Filipino singer and actor who rose to fame in the 1970s This particular kind of music is evident is many of his hits such as Pitong Gatang Markado and Tatlong Baraha He was also an occasional actor and appeared in several movies alongside Jess Lapid and Fernando Poe Jr He is also known sing the Poe s movie s theme songs In 1999 Panopio and Victor Wood released an album and became part of the OPM legends Kurt Isaiah Perez born December 1 1997 in Cabanatuan City is a Filipino former child actor He became famous for being the Ultimate Male Survivor of StarStruck Kids the reality based talent search show of GMA in the Philippines See also EditList of radio stations in Nueva Ecija Super regions of the Philippines Intangible Cultural Heritage of the PhilippinesReferences Edit N Ecija founding date April 25 not Sept 2 Philippine Daily Inquirer Archived from the original on 30 May 2016 Retrieved 17 June 2016 List of Provinces PSGC Interactive Makati City Philippines National Statistical Coordination Board Archived from the original on 17 January 2013 Retrieved 17 October 2013 POPULATION PROJECTIONS BY REGION PROVINCE CITIES AND MUNICIPALITIES 2020 2025 www doh gov ph Department of Health August 27 2020 Retrieved October 16 2020 a b c Census of Population 2020 Region III Central Luzon Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay PSA Retrieved 8 July 2021 Dependency Ratio Down by Three Persons in Nueva Ecija Philippine Statistics Authority September 2 2002 Retrieved 15 December 2015 Census United States Bureau of the Commission 1900 1916 United States Philippine 1905 Census of the Philippine Islands Taken Under the Direction of the Philippine Commission in the Year 1903 in Four Volumes U S Government Printing Office Retrieved 17 August 2019 Barrows Dr David P 1910 The Ilongot or Ibilao of Luzon Popular Science Monthly Mozo Antonio 1763 En Que Se Da Cuenta googlebooks com p 247 The Ilongot Daniel Strouthes Pre Colonial Period oocities org Retrieved 21 November 2022 Barrows David P 1916 The Governor General of the Philippines Under Spain and the United States The American Historical Review 21 2 288 311 doi 10 2307 1835051 JSTOR 1835051 The Augustinian Friars Order of Saint Augustine sanagustinchurch org N Ecija founding date April 25 not Sept 2 inquirer net About Cabanatuan City fnetravel com HISTORY OF UNANG SIGAW NG NUEVA ECIJA Ginto ang Inaani Edilberto C de Jesus Tobacco Monopoly in Philippines The Reading Life History of the Province visitmyphilippines com True Version of the Philippine Revolution authorama com Agoncillo amp Guerrero 1977 The Constitution of the Old La Liga Filipina 1892 History of the Filipino People 5th ed pp 164 168 Archived from the original on 2012 08 03 La Solidaridad and La Liga Filipina philippine history org About Gapan cityofgapan gov Retrieved November 21 2022 Philippine Revolution of 1896 About Philippines Archived from the original on 2013 10 21 Retrieved 2012 05 29 Magdiwang and Magdalo tripod com Pact of Biak na Bato philippine history org Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy Library of Congress Arnaldo Dumindin Philippine American War 1899 1902 philippineamericanwar webs com The World of 1898 The Spanish American War Hispanic Division Library of Congress Archived from the original on 2011 06 29 Retrieved 2017 12 29 Japanese Occupation philippine history org Ghost Soldiers Hampton Sides Great Raid Carole D Bos Arnaldo Dumindin Fil Am War Breaks Out philippineamericanwar webs com The Philippines under Spanish and American Rules Forbes Lindsay C H The Treaty of Paris PDF law upd edu ph Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 26 The Last Holdouts Arnaldo Dumindin Edgar Wickberg Early Chinese Economic Influence in the Philippines 1850 1898 PDF upf edu Archived from the original PDF on 2012 02 20 Railways in The Philippines Trade Chakra The Rice Granary of the Philippines kylian74 Agrarian Reform History Department of Agrarian Reform Archived from the original on 2013 05 14 Retrieved 2012 06 24 PHILIPPINE BILL OF JULY 1 1902 chanrobles com The United States and Its Territories 1870 1925 The Age of Imperialism quod lib umich edu Retrieved 21 November 2022 Henry F Funtecha August 18 2006 The Government During the American Regime The News Today Act No 1748 philippinelaw info Archived from the original on 2012 06 01 Retrieved 2012 06 24 The Taft Commission philippine history org American Government Gave Importance to Education etravelpilipinas com Archived from the original on 2011 10 15 Retrieved 2012 05 29 Education Act of 1901 philippinelaw Archived from the original on 2014 03 04 Retrieved 2012 05 29 1st Philippine Legislature Kerkvliet Benedict J 1977 The Huk Rebellion A Study of Peasant Revolt in the Philippines ISBN 9780742518681 1945 Great Raid on Cabanatuan Prison Olive Drab a b c Province Nueva Ecija PSGC Interactive Quezon City Philippines Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved 8 January 2016 a b c Census of Population 2015 Region III Central Luzon Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay PSA Retrieved 20 June 2016 Weather forecast for Nueva Ecija Philippines Storm247 com Bergen NO StormGeo AS Retrieved 23 April 2016 a b Census of Population and Housing 2010 Region III Central Luzon Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay NSO Retrieved 29 June 2016 kwf gov ph 2000 Census on Population and Housing PDF PSA gov National Statistics Office Retrieved 1 September 2019 Tan Michael L Tan Michael T 2008 Revisiting Usog Pasma Kulam UP Press p 154 ISBN 9789715425704 Retrieved 1 September 2019 Poverty incidence PI Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved 28 December 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 2009 20Poverty 20Statistics pdf publication date 8 February 2011 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files Table 202 20 20Annual 20Per 20Capita 20Poverty 20Threshold 2C 20Poverty 20Incidence 20and 20Magnitude 20of 20Poor 20Population 2C 20by 20Region 20and 20Province 20 20 202006 2C 202009 2C 202012 20and 202015 xlsx publication date 27 August 2016 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files Table 202 20 20Annual 20Per 20Capita 20Poverty 20Threshold 2C 20Poverty 20Incidence 20and 20Magnitude 20of 20Poor 20Population 2C 20by 20Region 20and 20Province 20 20 202006 2C 202009 2C 202012 20and 202015 xlsx publication date 27 August 2016 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files Table 202 20 20Annual 20Per 20Capita 20Poverty 20Threshold 2C 20Poverty 20Incidence 20and 20Magnitude 20of 20Poor 20Population 2C 20by 20Region 20and 20Province 20 20 202006 2C 202009 2C 202012 20and 202015 xlsx publication date 27 August 2016 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files Table 202 20 20Updated 20Annual 20Per 20Capita 20Poverty 20Threshold 2C 20Poverty 20Incidence 20and 20Magnitude 20of 20Poor 20Population 20with 20Measures 20of 20Precision 2C 20by 20Region 20and 20Province 2015 20and 202018 xlsx publication date 4 June 2020 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority RICE GRANARY OF THE PHILIPPINES Ginto ang Inaani Archived from the original on December 4 2013 Nueva Ecija Still the Country s Top Palay Producing Province National Statistical Coordination Board June 2008 Archived from the original on 2008 07 27 Estimation of the Geologic Mineral Reserve of the small scale Gold Mines in the Philippines National Statistical Coordination Board permanent dead link TV Patrol North Central Luzon Best Places to Visit in Minalungao National Park Indi Newz 2019 09 05 Retrieved 2019 09 27 Cruz Neni Sta Romana Remembering Lazaro Francisco opinion inquirer net Retrieved 17 August 2019 a b Francisco Lazaro CulturEd Philippine Cultural Education Online Retrieved 17 August 2019 Romulo Liana 2012 Filipino Celebrations A treasury of Feasts and Festivals Tuttle Publishing ISBN 9781462908622 Retrieved 1 September 2019 Famous and Notable Traditionally Celebrated Socio cultural and Religious Festivals of Nueva Ecija Knoji Retrieved 1 September 2019 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2009 07 18 Retrieved 2009 06 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Kerkvliet B J 2002 The Huk Rebellion A Study of Peasant Revolt in the Philippines Rowman amp Littlefield p 7 ISBN 978 0 7425 1868 1 Retrieved 2014 11 19 Louisiana Pastor Named Auxiliary Bishop Of Los Angeles United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Archived from the original on 2013 04 16 External links EditMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML Media related to Nueva Ecija at Wikimedia Commons Geographic data related to Nueva Ecija at OpenStreetMap Philippine Standard Geographic Code Local Governance Performance Management System Nueva Ecija Now and Beyond Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nueva Ecija amp oldid 1130083702, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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