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Wikipedia

Quezon

Quezon,[a] officially the Province of Quezon (Tagalog: Lalawigan ng Quezon), is a province in the Philippines located in the Calabarzon region on Luzon. Kalilayan was the first known name of the province. It was later renamed Tayabas. In honor of the former governor of the province who later became the second president of the Philippines and the first to be freely elected, Manuel L. Quezon, the province’s name was then changed to Quezon. Lucena, the provincial capital, seat of the provincial government, and the most populous city of the province, is governed independently from the province as a highly urbanized city. To distinguish the province from Quezon City, it is sometimes called Quezon Province.

Quezon
Tayabas
(from top: left to right) Mt. Banahaw de Lucban, Quezon Provincial Capitol, Quezon boundary arch in Tiaong, Alijiban Island, Cagbalete Island and Malagonlong Bridge
Nicknames: 
Land of Thousand Colors (Kalupaan ng Libong Kulay)
Cocolandia of the Philippines (Kabisera ng Kaniyugan)[1][2]
Food Basket of Calabarzon [3]
Motto(s): 
Walang Tamad sa Quezon![4]
Pilipinas, Quezon Naman!
Healing Quezon
Anthem: Lalawigan ng Quezon (Quezon Hymn)
Location in the Philippines
OpenStreetMap
Coordinates: 13°56′N 121°37′E / 13.93°N 121.62°E / 13.93; 121.62Coordinates: 13°56′N 121°37′E / 13.93°N 121.62°E / 13.93; 121.62
CountryPhilippines
RegionCalabarzon
Founded1591 (as Kalilayan)
Secession from Laguna1754 (as Tayabas)
Re-establishedMarch 12, 1901 (as Tayabas)
Named forManuel L. Quezon
Capital
and largest city
Lucena
Government
 • GovernorAngelina D.L. Tan (NPC)
 • Vice GovernorAnacleto A. Alcala III (NPC)
 • LegislatureQuezon Provincial Board
Area
 • Total8,989.39 km2 (3,470.82 sq mi)
 • Rank8th out of 81
Highest elevation2,170 m (7,120 ft)
Population
 (2020 census) [6]
 • Total1,950,459
 • Rank13th out of 81
 • Density220/km2 (560/sq mi)
  • Rank45th out of 81
 (excludes Lucena)
Demonym(s)Quezonian (English)
Quezonin (Tagalog)
Tayabeño(-a) (Spanish-archaic)
Tayabasin (Tagalog-archaic)
Divisions
 • Independent cities
1
  • Lucena
  • (Highly urbanized city)
 • Component cities
 • Municipalities
 • Barangays
 • DistrictsLegislative districts of Quezon (shared with Lucena)
Demographics
 • Ethnic groups
Time zoneUTC+8 (PHT)
ZIP code
4300–4342
IDD:area code+63 (0)42
ISO 3166 codePH-QUE
Spoken languages
Websitewww.quezon.gov.ph

Quezon is southeast of Metro Manila and is bordered by the provinces of Aurora to the north, Bulacan, Rizal, Laguna and Batangas to the west and the provinces of Camarines Norte and Camarines Sur to the east. Part of Quezon lies on an isthmus connecting the Bicol Peninsula to the main part of Luzon. The province also includes the Polillo Islands in the Philippine Sea. Some marine parts of the Verde Island Passage, the center of the center of world's marine biodiversity, are also in the province.

A major tourism draw to the province is Mount Banahaw. The mountain is surrounded by spiritual mysticism with many Anitist adherents, Christian cults, and Christian organizations staying on the mountain. The mountain was also one of the most sacred sites for pre-colonial Tagalog people before the arrival of the Spanish. Numerous pilgrims visit the mountain especially during Holy Week.

History

Precolonial period

Archaeological excavations in the province attest to its rich precolonial past. Archaeological materials including burial jars, human bones, shell midden and pot shreds have been discovered at different sites in Bondoc Peninsula including the towns of San Narciso, San Andres, Mulanay and Catanauan. The most recent excavations were conducted in Catanauan by the Catanauan Archeological and Heritage Project.[citation needed]

According to the preliminary report released by the Catanauan Archaeological and Heritage Project, several excavations were conducted in the 1930s. One of the excavations was conducted in San Narciso where archaeologists found burial jars. The site, inspected by Ricardo Galang, resulted in the discovery of burial jars near the coast. Galang also went to San Andres where excavations yielded 14th and 15th century ceramics as well as shell bracelets and beads. According to the journal as well, at a site named Tala, archaeologists discovered a glazed Chinese jar containing bone fragments from the early Ming dynasty. Looking at other archaeological sites located in adjacent areas like Marinduque and Masbate, it can be inferred that these excavations date back to the metal period of the archipelago.[11]

In 2012, at Mt. Kamhantik in the town of Mulanay, 15 limestone coffins were discovered. Carbon dating on a human tooth found it to be at least 1,000 years old. According to the archaeologists, the village is proof that the ancient inhabitants of the area practiced a more sophisticated way of life. Metal tools are believed to have been used to carve the coffins, and this is the first of its kind discovered in the archipelago. The remains are said to date back to the 10th to 14th century.[12]

Spanish colonial period

 
Territorial evolution of Quezon.

Originally, what now forms Quezon was divided among the provinces of Batangas, Laguna, and Nueva Ecija. However, at different points in time, the boundaries of Quezon changed and included parts of Aurora, Marinduque, and Camarines Norte. At the early period of Spanish colonization, the province of Aurora was called El Principe, Infanta was called Binangonan de Lampon and southern Quezon was called Kalilayan. The first European to explore the area was Juan de Salcedo in 1571–1572, during his expedition from Laguna to Camarines provinces.[13][14]

In 1574, Father Diego de Oropesa founded the town of Bumaka, now known as the municipality of Gumaca.[13]

In 1591, the province was created and was called Kaliraya or Kalilayan, after the capital town which later became Unisan.[15]

In 1595, the Diocese of Cáceres was established by Pope Clement VIII as a suffragan of Manila. The diocese covered the entire Bicolandia region plus the towns in Kalilayan, and the Contracosta towns. At that time, the towns on the eastern seaboard were pertained to as the Contracosta and included towns from Mauban, Binangonan de Lampon, to El Principe.[16]

The destruction of Kalilayan in 1604 by a big fleet of Moro pirates caused the inhabitants to transfer to Palsabangon (Pagbilao). Depredation and plunder by the Moros from Jolo and Brunei were rampant during the 1600s. Slavery is one reason for the proliferation of these raids. A padron for Calilaya was ordered after Tayabas suffered severely from Moro raids. It is said that 187 people were either captured or killed while 400 people fled. Fear from these raids are the primary reason as to the permanent movement of settlements along the coast further inland as well as a general decline in population. Frequent invasions by the moros disrupted the food production in the province, affecting the nutrition of its inhabitants. Maternal malnutrition was even cited as one of the primary causes of infant mortality at that time. By 1701, the previously densely settled coastal areas of the province, was described as consisting of rancherias whose inhabitants depended on wild products.[17]

In 1705, the Military Comandancia of Nueva Ecija was created and was governed by Governor General Fausto Cruzat y Góngora. It included huge swathes of Central Luzon, the Contracosta towns as well as the Kalilayan area.[18]

In 1749, the capital was transferred to the town of Tayabas, from which the province got its new name.[13]

In a report by a Spanish priest named Fr. Bartolome Galan in 1823, he describes the economy of the province. According to his report, Tayabas had poor soil and the terrain is hilly which meant that conditions were not that suitable for agriculture compared to other places. The people grew upland rice, wheat, beans and vegetables. Surplus rice was sold in San Pablo and Majayjay on Mondays, the market day of those towns. Cattle breeding was rampant in towns like Tayabas, Pagbilao, Tiaong, and Sariaya. Also, unlike other provinces, haciendas were not so many in Tayabas. Instead, residents owned most of their own land.[19]

The people of Tayabas, as in other areas, are actively trading with Manila. Santa Cruz, Laguna, was the entrepot for all goods going to the capital. The people from Lucban made products of buri and pandan leaves like hats, sleeping mata and the like which they traded. They, along with the people of Mauban also went to Polillo, at that time part of Nueva Ecija, to buy sea slugs, shells and beeswax. Being a rich agricultural area, the town of Tayabas traded rice, coconuts, and panocha with nearby towns of Majayjay, Lucban, Sariaya, Pagbilao, Mauban, Gumaca, and Atimonan. In turn, they traded fish from Pagbilao, rice from Sariaya, and high quality abaca products from Mauban and Atimonan. Lucban, as well as Tayabas, benefitted greatly from the high commercial activity of Chinese and Chinese mestizos in the pueblos.[19]

Gumaca, being a town with little arable land depended heavily on the sea. They collected sea slugs, and tortoise shell from Alabat and traded with the mountain people there for beeswax in exchange for clothing. They even sometimes ventured to Burias Island in the Ragay Gulf in search for these goods. These products were then sent to Tayabas for shipment to Manila. Gumaca also traded items from nearby pueblos like vinegar and clothing for gold and abaca from Naga in the Bicol region.[19]

It was also around this time that the Confradia de San Jose was active in the province, caused by the growing inequality between the poor and the upper classes. This organization was directed mostly on the poor and neither admitted Spaniards nor mestizos.[19]

In 1853, the new military district of Tayabas was carved from Nueva Ecija and included present-day Southern Quezon as well as present-day Aurora. In 1858, Binangonan de Lampon and the Polilio Islands were separated from Nueva Ecija to form part of Infanta.[18] According to the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines, the two Franciscan friars named Fray Juan de Plasencia and Fray Diego de Oropesa were the ones responsible for bringing Christianity to the area. The Franciscans are also credited for spreading Christianity to towns and parishes across the province including Mauban, Sariaya and Gumaca.[20]

Between 1855 and 1885, El Principe was established as its own Military Comandancia with its capital in Baler.[citation needed]

After years under the Spanish regime, the colonized people grew discontented with the Spaniards over the centuries. The most important event in the history of the province was the Confradia Revolt in 1841, which was led by the famous Lucbanin, Apolinario de la Cruz, popularly known as Hermano Pule. The province, under General Miguel Malvar, was also among the earliest to join the Philippine Revolution. The Revolutionary Government took control over the province on August 15, 1898.[citation needed]

American colonial period and World War II

Tayabas province in 1918
 
Northern portion
 
Southern portion

The Americans then came and annexed the Philippines. A civil government was established in the province on March 12, 1901, and Lucena was made the provincial capital.[citation needed]

During the pacification of the archipelago by the Americans, insurrections were a commonplace in what was then Tayabas. Insurgents from neighboring provinces of Laguna and Batangas often use Tayabas as their base of operations as well as their source of supplies. An insurgent government, with connections to Gen. Malvar and Pedro Caballes was even said to be based in Infanta. This has led the American in charge, Brigadier-General J.F. Bell to decide to return to Tayabas with a larger contingent. Bell acknowledged the importance of the ports of Tayabas as sources of supplies to the insurrection such that he believed that closing all the ports in the province might convince the leaders of the resistance to surrender.[21]

In 1902, the district of El Principe was transferred from the jurisdiction of Nueva Ecija to Tayabas.[15] In the same year, Marinduque became part of Tayabas province by virtue of Act 499 enacted by the Philippine Commission.[22] However, by 1920, Act 2280 was passed by the Philippine Congress, reestablishing Marinduque as a separate province.[citation needed]

Because of the distance between Tayabas and Bicol and the growing population, Tayabas came under the jurisdiction of the Diocese of Lipa in 1910.[20]

Japanese occupation of the province during World War II began on December 23, 1941, when the Japanese Imperial Army landed in Atimonan. The General Headquarters of the Philippine Commonwealth Army and Philippine Constabulary was stationed in Tayabas from January 3, 1942, to June 30, 1946, are military operates against the Japanese Occupation.[incomprehensible] The occupation witnessed the brutal murders of prominent sons of Tayabas. April 4, 1945 was the day the province was liberated as the combined Filipino and American army forces reached Lucena.[further explanation needed]

Post-war period

Name change from Tayabas to Quezon

After the war, on September 7, 1946, Republic Act No. 14 changed the name Tayabas to Quezon, in honor of Manuel L. Quezon, the Commonwealth president who hailed from Baler, which was one of the province's towns.[23]

Rise of the coconut industry

Even before the Philippines gained its independence, the province has already depended heavily on coconuts. This history can clearly be seen through the opulent houses built in the town of Sariaya during this period. Coconuts served as the main source of income for the landed class of Sariaya and this allowed them to build the ancestral houses that we see today.[24] This has led some companies like Peter Paul to establish its presence in Candelaria to manufacture products like desiccated coconut. as early as this period.[25]

Establishment of the Province of Aurora

In June 1951, the northern part of Quezon (specifically, the towns of Baler, Casiguran, Dilasag, Dingalan, Dinalongan, Dipaculao, Maria Aurora and San Luis) was made into the sub-province of Aurora.[26] Aurora was the name of the president's wife, Aurora Quezon. Aurora was finally separated from Quezon as an independent province in 1979.[27]

During the Marcos dictatorship

Quezon Province was not spared the social and economic turmoil during the Dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos, including his 1971 suspension of the writ of habeas corpus, his 1972 declaration of martial law, and his continued hold on power from the lifting of martial law in 1981 until his ouster under the People Power Revolution of 1986. One major event that took place during this period was the Guinayangan massacre of February 1, 1981, in which Military elements opened fire on a group of about coconut farmers who were marching towards the Guinayangan plaza air to protest the coco levy fund scam. Two people were killed and 27 were wounded.[28][29]

Among the Quezon citizens who were victims of forced disappearances during the Marcos dictatorship were human rights worker Albert Enriquez of Lucena, who documented military abuses as a volunteer for Task Force Detainees of the Philippines; and activist Ramon Jasul who founded the Bagong Kabataan ng Lukban (New Youth of Lucban) in his hometown. Enriquez was abducted by armed men on Aug. 29, 1985,[30] while Jasul was abducted in Makati as part of the Southern Tagalog 10 incident of late July 1977.[31] Neither were ever seen again, and both were eventually honored by having their names engraved on the wall of remembrance at the Philippines' Bantayog ng mga Bayani.[32]

Contemporary period

Quezon–Camarines Norte boundary dispute

In 1989, the province of Quezon, represented by Governor Hjalmar Quintana, was involved in a boundary dispute with the province of Camarines Norte, represented by Roy Padilla, over 9 barangays of over 8,000 hectares at their border. These barangays are Kagtalaba, Plaridel, Kabuluan, Don Tomas, Guitol, Tabugon, Maualawin, Patag Ibaba and Patag Iraya. The boundary dispute originated from Act 2711 or the Revised Administrative Code which was enacted in 1917.[33] Section 42 of Act 2711 defines the Tayabas-Camarines Norte boundary as:

Camarines Norte and Tayabas boundary. – The boundary separating the Province of Camarines Norte from the Province of Tayabas begins at a point on the eastern shore of Basiad Bay and extends to a peak known as Mount Cadig in such manner as to bring the territory of the barrio of Basiad entirely within the municipality of Capalonga, in Camarines Norte, and to exclude the same from the territory of Calauag, in Tayabas. From Mount Cadig it extends along the crest of a mountain range, a distance of 50 kilometers, more or less, to a peak known as Mount Labo; thence in a southwesterly direction, a distance of 25 kilometers, more or less, to a prominent stone monument at the source or headwaters of the Pasay River, thence along the meandering course of said river in a southerly direction, a distance of 1½ kilometers, more or less, to the Gulf of Ragay.[34]

In 1922, the then Chief of the Executive Bureau, acted upon the authority of the Secretary of the Interior.[33] This ruling by the then chief was never implemented even with repeated efforts of the provincial government of Camarines Norte and the Secretary of Interior. The Chief delineated the border as follows:

Starting from the peak of Mt. Labo as a common corner between the provinces of Tayabas, Camarines Sur and Camarines Norte thence a straight line is drawn to the peak of Mt. Cadig; thence a straight line is drawn to the point of intersection of the inter-provincial road between Camarines Norte and Tayabas with the Tabugon River; thence, following the course of the river to its mouth at Basiad Bay.[33]

In the legal dispute, Quezon raised two points of contention. First is that Act 2711 already delineated the boundaries of the province. Second is that the Chief of the Executive Bureau had no power nor authority to change the boundaries of the province. Regarding the first issue, the court stated that it is true that Act 2711 delineated the boundary but it did not delineate the entirety of the boundary. The point on the eastern shore of Basiad Bay was never specifically located, thus, needing further delineation. On the second issue, the court stated that the Chief did not alter the borders in any way. The Chief worked with the requirement that the point be on the eastern shore of Basiad Bay. He was also acting on the consideration of Act 2809, the Act establishing Camarines Norte, which states that Camarines Norte be established with the borders it had before merging with Camarines Sur. The court then ruled in favor of Camarines Norte and ordered the provincial government of Quezon to transfer all its authority and jurisdiction to the former.[33]

By 2001, the Provincial Government of Quezon, this time represented by Governor Eduardo Rodriguez, the Provincial Government of Camarines Norte, as represented by Governor Roy Padilla, went back to court. Even with the judgment on the 1989 case was executory by 1990, the provincial government of Quezon did not abide by the court's ruling. In 1991, a DENR technical team conducted a survey of the area and erected a monument marker to delineate the boundary of the area. However, by October 1991, Quezon Governor Eduardo Rodriguez and Calauag Mayor Julio Lim caused the removal of the marker. Throughout the proceedings, several government agencies including the Department of Budget and Management, Comelec, as well as the Philippine Statistics Authority recognized the jurisdiction of the town of Santa Elena, Camarines Norte over the 9 barangays. In 2000, Judge Regino held Governor Rodriguez and Mayor Lim guilty of contempt, with a maximum imprisonment of 6 months as well as a fine of 1,000 pesos for the erection of a new boundary marker.[35]

Failed proposal to divide Quezon

In 2007, Republic Act No. 9495 proposed to further divide Quezon into Quezon del Norte and Quezon del Sur. Quezon del Norte was to be composed of the first and second congressional districts of the province (Burdeos, General Nakar, Infanta, Jomalig, Lucban, Mauban, Pagbilao, Panukulan, Patnanungan, Polilio, Real, Sampaloc, Tayabas, Candelaria, Dolores, San Antonio, Sariaya, Tiaong and Lucena), with Lucena as its capital. Quezon del Sur, with its capital at Gumaca, would have been composed of the third and fourth congressional districts (Agdangan, Buenavista, Catanauan, General Luna, Macalelon, Mulanay, Padre Burgos, Pitogo, San Andres, San Francisco, San Narciso, Unisan, Alabat, Atimonan, Calauag, Guinayangan, Gumaca, Lopez, Perez, Plaridel, Quezon and Tagkawayan). The act lapsed into law without the signature of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo on September 7, 2007.[36]

As required by law, the COMELEC held a plebiscite on December 13, 2008, 60 days after law took effect. The majority of the votes cast overwhelmingly rejected the division, therefore the split did not push through.

Geography

 
Mount Banahaw seen from the Atimonan-Pagbilao border

Physical characteristics

Quezon, east of Metro Manila, is the 8th largest province in the Philippines having an area of 8,989.39 square kilometers (3,470.82 sq mi).[37] It is the largest province of Calabarzon, comprising 879,660 hectares or 53.21% of the total land area of the region.[38] Of this area, 513,618 hectares is categorized as agricultural land.[38] The northern part of the province is sandwiched between the Sierra Madre mountain range and the Philippine Sea. The southern part consists of the Tayabas Isthmus, which separates the Bicol Peninsula from the main part of Luzon Island, and the Bondoc Peninsula which lies between Tayabas Bay and Ragay Gulf. Because of this, majority of towns in the province have access to the sea. The province is bounded by the provinces of Aurora, Bulacan, Rizal, Laguna, Batangas, Camarines Sur and Camarines Norte. It is bounded to the east by the Pacific Ocean and to the south by Tayabas Bay. The province is said to be characterized by a rugged terrain with patches of plains, valleys and swamps.

The major islands of Quezon are Alabat Island and Polillo Islands. Mount Banahaw, an active volcano, is the highest peak at 2,169 meters (7,116 ft).[39] It supplies geothermal power to the Mak-Ban Geothermal Power Plant.[40]

The province has a total of 1,066.36 km of coastline[38] and has several bays including Burdeos Bay, Lamon Bay, Calauag Bay, Lopez Bay, Ragay Gulf, Pagbilao Bay and Tayabas Bay. The Infanta Watershed has extensive and highly productive aquifers while Mauban and Atimonan have no significant groundwater.[41] According to the DENR, in 2003, Quezon had 231,190 hectares of forest cover.[42] However, due to rampant illegal logging as well as kaingin, these forests are constantly threatened.

Climate

Because of the sheer size of Quezon, different areas have different climate patterns. Most of the province falls under Type IV Climate which means that rains are evenly distributed throughout the year. Polillo, Infanta, and parts of Calauag fall under Type II climate which means that there are no dry seasons but there is a pronounced wet season from November to April. Parts of the western towns of Tiaong, San Antonio, Dolores, and Candelaria as well as the tip of Bondoc Peninsula including parts of Mulanay, San Francisco, San Narciso and San Andres fall under Type III climate. This means that there is a relatively dry season from November to April.[citation needed] Although these are the patterns observed, it is important to note that with climate change, these patterns have become more erratic. Typhoons have become stronger through the years, causing problems such as power outages, road blockages, landslides, flashfloods and crop damages.

Administrative divisions

Quezon comprises 39 municipalities and one component city (Tayabas), which are organized into four legislative districts and further subdivided into 1,209 barangays.

The capital, Lucena, is independent of the administrative and fiscal supervision of the province but is eligible to vote for provincial officials.

 
Political Map of Quezon

In the 1800s when Jean Mallat de Bassilan conducted a survey of the province, it only had 17 towns.[44]

Administrative divisions and population of Tayabas in 1800s
Town Tributes Inhabitants
Tayabas 4,283.5 21,418
Lucban 2,829.5 14,147
Saryaya 1,722.5 8,614
Tiaon 692 3,460
Dolores 450 2,250
Mauban 1,323 6,615
Atimonan 1,176 5,880
Gumaca 1,848 9,240
Pagbilao 496 2,480
Pitogo 276 1,380
Macalelon 155 775
Catanauan 450 2,250
Mulanay 305 1,525
Obuyon 265 1,325
Calauag 63 315
Apad 63 315
Guinyangan 212 1,060
Total 83,049

In 1902, during the American period, Tayabas was divided as follows:[45]

Administrative divisions and population of Tayabas in 1902
Town Population
Alabat 4,516
Atimonan 11,203
Baler 2,417
Bondoc 1,330
Calauag 3,185
Casiguran 2,067
Catanauan 4,108
Guinayangan 3,870
Gumaca 5,234
Infanta 10,283
Lopez 8,549
Lucban 10,227
Lucena 9,375
Macalelon 4,759
Mauban 12,021
Mulanay 2,149
Pagbilao 6,085
Pitogo 3,454
Polillo 2,164
Sampaloc 1,263
San Narciso 2,501
Sariaya 12,453
Tayabas 14,740
Tiaong 9,527
Unisan 2,692
Total 150,262

Demographics

Population census of Quezon
YearPop.±% p.a.
1903 148,581—    
1918 206,037+2.20%
1939 340,273+2.42%
1948 393,894+1.64%
1960 610,599+3.72%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1970 825,859+3.06%
1975 933,566+2.49%
1980 1,021,397+1.81%
1990 1,221,831+1.81%
1995 1,359,992+2.03%
YearPop.±% p.a.
2000 1,482,955+1.87%
2007 1,646,510+1.45%
2010 1,740,638+2.04%
2015 1,856,582+1.24%
2020 1,950,459+0.97%
(excluding Lucena)
Source: Philippine Statistics Authority [43][46][47]

When the Census of the Philippine Islands was conducted in 1902 during the American era, Tayabas, excluding the subprovince of Marinduque, had a total population of 153,065. 2,803 were considered as wild, or part of the non-Christian tribes like the Aetas while 150,262 people were considered as civilized.[48] Of the civilized population, 75,774 were males while 74,488 were female. 287 were of mixed descent while the rest are categorized as "Brown".[49]

The population of Quezon in the 2020 census was 1,950,459 people, [6] with a density of 220 inhabitants per square kilometre or 570 inhabitants per square mile. When Lucena City is included for geographical purposes, the province's population is 2,122,830 people, with a density of 234/km2 (606/sq mi).

The inhabitants are mostly Tagalogs. The population is concentrated in the flat south-central portion which includes Lucena City, Sariaya, and Candelaria. After World War II, Infanta and surrounding towns received migrants from Manila, Laguna, Rizal and Batangas. People from Marinduque moved to the southern part of the Tayabas Isthmus and the Bondoc Peninsula. Ilocanos from Ilocos Region, Cagayan Valley, Central Luzon and Cordillera Administrative Region migrated to the northernmost towns of General Nakar, Infanta and Real; many Ilocanos also arrived from some places of Aurora after Aurora was separated from Quezon in 1979. Bicolanos from Bicol Region migrated to the easternmost towns of Calauag and Tagkawayan.[50]

Filipino Chinese also have a long history in Quezon. In 1939, the province ranked 5th among all provinces including Manila in terms of the concentration of Filipino Chinese. This ethnic group has a long history of being active in business and commerce as shown by the business chambers existent before. However, as the Chinese intermarried with locals, these groups have dwindled in number.

Population of Filipino Chinese[51]
Province 1903 1918 1939
Tayabas 479 1,274 4,069

The province used to be home to various Aeta tribes. Other terms used to call them include "Umag", "Ata", "Atid", and "Itim". The Aeta used to clear coconut plantations and other odd jobs in exchange for food or clothing. These people, though seem as uncivilized by some, have a very rich culture. Some forms of their art include body scarification. The Aeta cause wound on their skin in various parts of their body including back, arms, legs, hands, calves and abdomen. They then irritate them during healing using fire, lime and other materials to form scars. They also bore holes on their septum and then proceed to decorate it with a sliver of bamboo. The Aeta also have various musical instruments like the nose flute and the gurimbaw, a stringed instrument made of coconuts, fibers from lukmong vines and bamboo.[52]

Languages

There are five indigenous languages in Quezon province. There are the dominant Tagalog language, the Manide language in the east and a small portion in the north, the Agta Dumagat Umiray language in the north and a small area in the center, the already-extinct Katabaga language which used to be in the south, and the endangered Alabat Agta in Alabat island. The province primarily speaks Tagalog dialect called Tayabas Tagalog that resembles a dominant part of Batangas Tagalog, with presence of Ilocano loanwords in northern municipalities of Quezon, while presence of Bicolano and Cebuano loanwords in southern municipalities of Quezon. The Tayabasin dialect of the local Quezonians is also known for distinctive expressions like hane, kawasa, and yano.

In 2010, UNESCO released its 3rd world volume of Endangered Languages in the World, where 3 critically endangered languages were in the Philippines. One of these languages is the Alabat Island Agta language. The language was classified as Critically Endangered, meaning the youngest speakers are grandparents and older, and they speak the language partially and infrequently and hardly pass the language to their children and grandchildren anymore.[53]

Religion

Majority of Quezon's inhabitants practice Roman Catholicism and other Christian denominations like Iglesia Filipina Independiente. Most non-Christians practice Islam, indigenous Philippine folk religions, animism, or atheism.

Government

 
Vice Governor
Anacleto A. Alcala III

The Quezon Provincial Board or the Sangguniang Panlalawigan is the provincial legislature.

Incumbent officials

  • Governor: Angelina Tan
  • Vice Governor: Anacleto A. Alcala III

Economy

Farming and fishing are the main sources of livelihood in the province. Commercial, industrial, and banking activities are mostly concentrated in the south-central part of the province.

Agro-industry

Quezon province is called “Cocolandia”, with the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) confirming the province is the top coconut producer in Calabarzon—composed of Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Rizal and Quezon—and in the whole country. This stems from the fact that agricultural activities drive its economy. People mainly engage in farming and fishing operations.[61][62]

Quezon has a total agricultural area of 403,935 hectares representing 51 percent of the total provincial land area. Of this, 375,026 hectares are planted with coconut in 2018, making Quezon the province with the largest coconut production area in the Philippines. Also, Quezon is the top coconut producing province in terms of total coconut production in the country with 1,449,926.81 metric tons.[63]

Quezon is the country's leading producer of coconut products such as desiccated coconut, virgin coconut oil, coconut juice, coconut oil[14] and copra. A large part of the province is covered in coconut plantations. Several large companies geared toward processing coconuts have factories in the province. This includes companies in Candelaria including Peter Paul Philippine Corporation, Primex Coco Products Inc., Pacific Royal Basic Foods, SuperStar Corporation, and Tongsan Industrial Development Corporation which are focused on processing desiccated coconut and other specialty coconut products.[citation needed] Other companies in Lucena like Tantuco Enterprises, and JNJ Oil Industries on the other hand are focused on producing coconut oil and other coconut oil based products like margarine, and lard.[citation needed] Because of the coconut industry, copra traders from provinces like Marinduque, Romblon, and Masbate regularly visit the province.

However, the coconut industry is faced with several threats from cocolisap to the coconut lumber trade.[64] When cocolisap posed a huge threat to the coconut industry, the government had to act swiftly with countermeasures aimed at fighting the coconut scaling insect.[65]

Aside from coconuts, Quezon is also the most important agricultural province among the provinces in Calabarzon in terms of producing staple food items such as rice and corn. The province supplies 200,000 MT of rice and corn annually or around 42% of the total rice and corn requirement of the region.[66] Other major crops are rice, corn, banana, and coffee.

Fishing

Because of its long coastline and the presence of numerous marshes and bays, fishing is also a large part of the province's economy. Quezon accounts for 33% or around 132,239 MT of fish produced in the region. Several fish port complexes exist in the province, including ports in Atimonan, Lucena, Infanta, and Guinayangan. These ports serve as hubs for the trade of fish and other aquatic resources like round scad, anchovies, tuna, and groupers. The province has three fishing districts. The first is found in the northeast encompassing Lamon Bay. The southeast portion includes the Ragay Gulf while the south central portion covers Tayabas Bay. Aside from fishing, aquaculture is also important in the coastal municipalities of the province. Bangus and prawns are among the most cultured species.[66]

Forestry

Due to its proximity to the southern fringes of the Sierra Mountain range. Northern Quezon has been a hotspot for illegal logging. Frequent raids in towns like Mauban often yield hardwood timber like Narra and Kamagong.[67]

Commerce and banking

The capital city of Lucena is considered to be the economic center of the province. There are currently three malls in the province. Two of them are located in Lucena namely SM City Lucena and Pacific Mall Lucena. Citymall, located in Tiaong, is the third mall in the province. Major banks like BDO, Metrobank, Land Bank, BPI, PNB, RCBC, UnionBank, among other Manila-based banks are present in the western part of the province. BDO however made a move to establish a regional head office at Lucena due to the growing demand and economic importance of the province itself. On the other hand, namely QCRB, Rural Bank of Atimonan and Card Bank rural banks serve most if not all municipalities of the province.

Several rural banks were also established in Quezon namely Rural Bank of Dolores, United Rural Bank of Lopez, Rural Bank of Lucban, Rural Bank of General Luna, and Rural Bank of Sampaloc.[68]

Infrastructure

Transportation

 
Portion of Marikina–Infanta Highway (also known as Marcos Highway or Marilaque Highway) in Infanta.

Roads

 
Portion of Famy-Real-Infanta Road (N601), in Real.
 
Manila South Road, part of Pan-Philippine Highway (N1/AH26), in Sariaya.

Quezon has a total of 931 kilometers (578 mi) of national roads, mostly paved with concrete.[69] Pan-Philippine Highway (N1/AH26), which comprises most of Manila South Road, and Quirino Highway (N68), the Quezon leg of Andaya Highway form the highway backbone network, and the secondary and tertiary roads interconnect most cities and municipalities, except for Infanta, Real, and General Nakar, whose highways used to access those municipalities interconnect with the national highway network in Laguna and Rizal or Manila East Road and Marcos Highway. The provincial government maintains provincial roads which supplements the national roads.

In order to spur development in the province, several proposals have been made to expand the expressway network to Quezon. The South Luzon Expressway, which terminates at Santo Tomas, Batangas, will be extended to Barangay Mayao, Lucena with the construction of Toll Road 4 (SLEX TR-4)[70] Three expressways being proposed for construction includes the Manila – Quezon Expressway (MQX), which will pass through Rizal and eastern Laguna,[71] Quezon-Bicol Expressway (QuBEx), which will link between Lucena and San Fernando, Camarines Sur.[72] and Toll Road 5 (SLEX TR-5) extending SLEX to Matnog, Sorsogon.[73]

Public Transportations

Quezon Province's public transportation mainly include jeepneys and tricycles. Transportation between town usually serve by jeepney, UV express and buses. Buses serves as the main mode of transportation to and from Metro Manila as well as nearby provinces. Bus companies like JAC Liner, JAM Liner, DLTBCo, N. Dela Rosa Liner, AB Liner, P&O liner, Supreme, AH, and Superlines has a terminal in the province.

Railroads

The South Line of Philippine National Railway's north–south railway passes through the different towns of Quezon from Tutuban to Bicol. This includes stops in Lucena, Pagbilao (Malicboy), Agdangan, Plaridel, Gumaca, Lopez (Hondagua), Calauag (Aloneros), and Tagkawayan.[74] However, no trains are operating along this line as of present.

Seaports

The Dalahican Port and Cotta Port in Lucena provide direct access to the neighboring island provinces of Marinduque, and Romblon. The Port of Real provides access to the islands of Polillo while the Atimonan and Gumaca ports provide access to the island of Alabat. The port in San Andres provides access to Masbate and Burias islands.

Airports

There are several airports that exist in Quezon. This includes the Lucena Airport, Pagbilao Grande Airport, Alabat Airport (Alabat Island) Jomalig Airport (Jomalig Island), and the Balesin (Tordesillas) Airport (Balesin Island). Only Balesin Airport is being used as of present for Manila-Balesin flights.

Energy

 

Quezon is home to several power plants that supply energy to the Luzon grid. The Pagbilao Power Station is the first power plant in the province. Located at Isla Grande in Pagbilao, the 735 MW coal fueled power plant started operations as early as 1993. This power plant is currently being managed by Team Energy Corp. and is undergoing a 420 MW expansion.[75] The Mauban Power Station is also a coal fueled power plant located in Barangay Cagsiay I. Managed by Quezon Power, the 420 MW power plant started operations in the year 2000.[76] The third power plant, a 600 MW coal fueled plant, is currently in the planning stage and is going to be located in Barangay Villa Ibaba in the town of Atimonan.[77] Together, these three provide jobs to the people as Quezon as well as addressing the energy needs of the province and the greater Luzon area.

There are three power distributors in the province, namely Meralco, Quezon I Electric Cooperative (QUEZELCO-I), and Quezon II Electric Cooperative (QUEZELCO-II). Meralco provides electricity to the province's second district as well as the adjacent towns of Pagbilao, Lucban, Sampaloc, Mauban and Tayabas City. QUEZELCO-I distributes power to the towns of the province's 3rd and 4th districts, as well as Santa Elena, Camarines Norte, and Del Gallego, Camarines Sur. QUEZELCO-II distributes power to the towns of the province's first district, except for the towns served by Meralco.

Water security

The Quezon Metropolitan Water District (QMWD), formerly known as the Lucena Pagbilao Tayabas Water District or LUPATA, serves the Metro Lucena area including Lucena City, Tayabas City, and Pagbilao. In 2020, Prime Water took over the administration and operation of QMWD.[78] It draws its water largely from the May-it Spring although this source has prove inadequate to supply the area.[79] Other towns are served by their own water districts. Some areas like the Infanta area are characterized by highly productive aquifers but other areas like Mauban and Atimonan have no significant water productivity.[41]

Due to the pressures of a growing population, Quezon is one of the provinces from which the government plans to source part of the demand for water of Metro Manila. In General Nakar, construction is ongoing as of 2016 on a tunnel to divert water from the Sumag River to Angat Dam.[80] The tunnel will link up with the Umiray-Angat Transbasin Project to provide water to Angat Dam.[80] Aside from this, there are plans for the construction of the New Centennial Water Source Project – Kaliwa Lower Dam and the Kanan Dam in Northern Quezon for power generation and water supply of Metro Manila.[81] The Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Quezon is against the construction of this project stating that it will not allow water from the Agos River, both on the left (kaliwa) and on the right (kanan) sides of the river.[81] Locals fear that the construction of the project would cause massive destruction of forests, crops, animals and property in the Metro REINA (Real-Infanta-General Nakar) area.[81] After Typhoon Vamco (Ulysses) severely hit the province (especially the northern part of Quezon) in late 2020, which made its landfall there three times and produced flooding in Daraitan in Tanay (Rizal province), General Nakar and Infanta, groups reiterated the call for opposition of Kaliwa Dam and instead pushed for the protection of the Sierra Madre Mountains.[82]

Tourism and culture

Tourism is still a minor but growing part of the province's economy. Several attractions draw tourists from the Philippines and abroad including festivals, beaches, old structures, and other sights.

Quezon Province has a huge potential for optimum utilization of and considerable revenue generation from the tourism sector. There are approximately 709 tourist destinations. 321 of which are natural, 32 man-made, 74 historical, 78 cultural/festival/ fiesta, 1 agri-tourism, 203 resort/hotel/restaurant and 14 religious attractions. Majority of the tourism-related activities are handled by the municipal LGUs in collaboration with the private sector.

In 2018, total tourist arrivals into the province were recorded at 1,101,846. Same-day visitors reached 10,989,183 mostly by domestic tourists.[63]

Festivals

 
Pahiyas 2012

Among the festivals of Quezon, the three most prominent and famous are the Pahiyas Festival of Lucban, the Niyugyugan Festival of Quezon Province and Katang Festival of Calauag.

The Pahiyas Festival is the thanksgiving celebration of the people in Lucban for the Feast of St. Isidore Labrador, the patron saint of farmers. Held every May 15, during the Pahiyas Festival people of Lucban decorates their houses in the most creative manner. They uses their harvest vegetables and grains like rice, chayotes, radishes, tomato, sweet potato, squash and the colorful kiping. Kiping is an ornament made of grounded rice flour shaped into leaves and dyed in different colors. These materials are used to make the houses colorful during the event which Pahiyas is famous for.[83]

The Niyugyugan Festival is a relatively new festival that started in 2012 celebrating the province's main product, the coconut. The festival celebrates the diversity of every town in the province through an expo. During this expo, the different towns build their own booths showcasing the best qualities of their town and then presents the products that their respective towns produce. During this event, towns also join the Float Parade and Street Dancing Competition.[84]

According to journalist and multi-awarded international boxing judge Rey Danseco, Calauag, one of the rich coastal municipalities of the province, celebrates Katang Festival (Crab Festival). The annual colorful and exciting festivities take place several days until May 25, the town's founding anniversary. Tourists from neighboring towns, provinces, and other countries join the fun and witness Calaugeneans’ unique fiesta celebration and presentations of indigenous products, delicacies, and different ways of cooking Katang. The Karera ng Katang (Crab Race) and Pabilisan at Paramihan ng Maitataling Katang (Crab Tying Race) are some of the highlights of the festivities. The Philippines’ Department of Tourism promotes the Katang Festival as "A festival highlighting the Higanteng Alimango as their icon. The feast celebrates the abundance of mud crab in the province.“ Katang Festival has foremost aims of promoting Agro-Tourism and solidifying Calauag's distinction as source of best variety and most delicious crab and other marine products such as shrimp (hipon or swahe) and giant Asian tiger prawn (sugpo) in the Philippines.[85][86]

Other colorful festivals are Mayohan sa Tayabas (Tayabas City), Agawan Festival (Sariaya), Araña't Baluarte (Gumaca), Pasayahan sa Lucena(Lucena City), Candle Festival (Candelaria), Boling Boling Festival (Catanauan), Maubanog Festival (Mauban), Kaway Festival (Tagkawayan), Laguimanoc Festival (Padre Burgos), Tariktik Festival (Polillo), Centurion Festival (Mulanay, San Narciso, General Luna), Buhusan Festival (Lucban), Kubol ng Macalelon (Macalelon), Hambujan Festival (Dolores), Pamaypayan Festival (Lopez), Coconut Festival (Alabat), Kayakas Festival (Perez), Mais Festival (Tiaong), Gayang Festival (Guinayangan), Tagultol Fishing Festival (Atimonan), Palay Iskad Festival (Buenavista), Maisan Festival (San Andres) and Papag at Bilao Festival (Pagbilao)

Beaches and springs

 
Sunrise in Real, Quezon

To the north, the island of Balesin (part of Polillo) has become playground to the rich and famous.[citation needed] The exclusive island resort features seven resorts, providing its members the luxury of choosing to stay in differently themed villas.[87] Although quite far, Salibungot beach of Jomalig is known to backpackers for its golden shores.[tone] Real on the other hand is becoming known for surfing.[citation needed] Pulong Pasig in Calauag and Cagbalete Island of Mauban are known for white beaches.[citation needed]

In the south central portion of the province, the beaches of Guisguis in Sariaya have long been considered a local destination.[citation needed] Several resorts including Villa del Prado Resort, Dalampasigan Beach Resort and the Montevista Beach Resort are some of the resorts in the area.

The Mainit Hot Spring in Tayabas is popular among locals.[citation needed]

Baroque churches, heritage houses, and other attractions

 
Villa Sariaya

Quezon is home to heritage houses from the early 20th century built in the American architecture of the time such as the Enriquez-Gala Mansion, Gala-Rodriguez House and Villa Sariaya. Not only do these houses tell stories of the opulence afforded by coconut landlords but also gives us a glimpse of the uncertainty during wartime.[24] Some of these stunning buildings are considered endangered due to road widening plans within the poblacion that will destroy these cultural icons forever.[88]

The country life of the Philippines is what the Villa Escudero in Tiaong offers to its guests.[citation needed] Featuring its waterfall restaurant, the plantation resort actually has deep historical roots tracing its origins back to the coconut growing industry of Quezon. Other Spanish-era structures also exist outside Sariaya such as the Casa de Comunidad de Tayabas, Malagonlong bridge.

Minor Basilica de San Miguel in Tayabas and St. Louis Bishop Parish in Lucban are other testament of Spanish History in the province.

Aside from the old churches, Kamay ni Hesus Healing Grotto which is very popular for the pilgrims, is located at Lucban.

Other attractions that tourist may visit Perez Park, Quezon Natural Park (Zigzag Road, Atimonan), and Tayabas Capitol.

Quezon also has large venue for concert and sporting events. Quezon Convention Center and Alcala Sports Complex.

Mountains

Mount Banahaw is a pilgrimage site for some locals who believe the mountain to be holy. Although considered an active volcano, hiking has been popular with both religious pilgrims as well as hikers. There are two trails to the mountain, both originating from Barangay Kinabuhayan in the town of Dolores. The most frequently used trails are the Cristalino and Tatlong Tangke, taking an average of 9 and 5 hours, respectively but both converges at the volcano's summit. At the peak are viewpoints, labeled as Durungawan I, II, and III, which are the usual destination for pilgrims and hikers. However, due to pollution and trash left by these visitors, Mt. Banahaw was closed to the public until further notice.

Food

As one of the consistent top producers of coconut, Quezon Province is also dubbed as the "Coconut Capital of the Philippines".[89] With the abundance of coconuts in the area, Quezon became famous for its native liqueurs such as lambanog and tubâ. Quezon's food is richly influenced by the native ingredients found in the area like coconut and other agricultural crops. As such, gata or coconut milk can be found in different dishes like ginataang suso (snail), kulawo, sinugno, sinantulan and pinais.[90] Since Quezon has long coastline, food with seafood as main ingredient is common in the province. As the province is relatively near Bicol, Laguna and Batangas, some Batangas, Laguna and Bicol dishes like lomi, buko pie, and laing are relatively common in the area.

Some of the unique dishes from Quezon include Pansit Habhab, Lucban longganisa, Pansit Chami, Hardinera, Sinantomas, Bumbay (Batsoy), Dinayukan and other dishes made of native fern called pako. Quezon is also known for popular pastries and delicacies such as Budin, Puto Bao, Yema cake, Letse Puto, Minukmok, Tikoy/Kalamay, Kalabasang Pilipit, Pinagong and pitsi pitsi.[90][91][92][93][94][95]

Education

There are 1032 public school in Quezon. 818 school are primary while 214 are secondary school. These are under monitoring and supervision of Division of Quezon and Lucena.

The provinces is also the home for some educational institutions and universities. Southern Luzon State University, PUP - Lopez Campus, Dalubhasaan ng Lungsod ng Lucena and Quezon National Agriculture School are the state university and institution in Quezon. Also in the province are the private institution like Manuel S. Enverga University Foundation, AMA Computer College-Lucena, Maryhill College, Sacred Heart College, STI College Lucena, Tayabas Western Academy, St. Anne College, Calayan Education Foundation, ABE International College of Business and Economic, Holy Rosary Catholic School.

Notable people

 
President Manuel L. Quezon with Calauag Mayor Tomas B. Morato -- Photo courtesy of the Morato Family

Explanatory notes

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External links

Map all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 
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  • Official website of Quezon province
  • Local Governance Performance Management System

quezon, this, article, about, philippine, province, person, whom, named, after, manuel, other, uses, disambiguation, officially, province, tagalog, lalawigan, province, philippines, located, calabarzon, region, luzon, kalilayan, first, known, name, province, l. This article is about the Philippine province For the person whom it is named after see Manuel L Quezon For other uses see Quezon disambiguation Quezon a officially the Province of Quezon Tagalog Lalawigan ng Quezon is a province in the Philippines located in the Calabarzon region on Luzon Kalilayan was the first known name of the province It was later renamed Tayabas In honor of the former governor of the province who later became the second president of the Philippines and the first to be freely elected Manuel L Quezon the province s name was then changed to Quezon Lucena the provincial capital seat of the provincial government and the most populous city of the province is governed independently from the province as a highly urbanized city To distinguish the province from Quezon City it is sometimes called Quezon Province Quezon TayabasProvince from top left to right Mt Banahaw de Lucban Quezon Provincial Capitol Quezon boundary arch in Tiaong Alijiban Island Cagbalete Island and Malagonlong BridgeFlagSealNicknames Land of Thousand Colors Kalupaan ng Libong Kulay Cocolandia of the Philippines Kabisera ng Kaniyugan 1 2 Food Basket of Calabarzon 3 Motto s Walang Tamad sa Quezon 4 Pilipinas Quezon Naman Healing QuezonAnthem Lalawigan ng Quezon Quezon Hymn source source Location in the PhilippinesOpenStreetMapCoordinates 13 56 N 121 37 E 13 93 N 121 62 E 13 93 121 62 Coordinates 13 56 N 121 37 E 13 93 N 121 62 E 13 93 121 62CountryPhilippinesRegionCalabarzonFounded1591 as Kalilayan Secession from Laguna1754 as Tayabas Re establishedMarch 12 1901 as Tayabas Named forManuel L QuezonCapitaland largest cityLucenaGovernment GovernorAngelina D L Tan NPC Vice GovernorAnacleto A Alcala III NPC LegislatureQuezon Provincial BoardArea 5 Total8 989 39 km2 3 470 82 sq mi Rank8th out of 81Highest elevation Mount Banahaw 2 170 m 7 120 ft Population 2020 census 6 Total1 950 459 Rank13th out of 81 Density220 km2 560 sq mi Rank45th out of 81 excludes Lucena Demonym s Quezonian English Quezonin Tagalog Tayabeno a Spanish archaic Tayabasin Tagalog archaic Divisions Independent cities1 Lucena Highly urbanized city Component cities1 Tayabas Municipalities39 AgdanganAlabatAtimonanBuenavistaBurdeosCalauagCandelariaCatanauanDoloresGeneral LunaGeneral NakarGuinayanganGumacaInfantaJomaligLopezLucbanMacalelonMaubanMulanayPadre BurgosPagbilaoPanukulanPatnanunganPerezPitogoPlaridelPolilloQuezonRealSampalocSan AndresSan AntonioSan FranciscoSan NarcisoSariayaTagkawayanTiaongUnisan Barangays1 209including independent cities 1 242 DistrictsLegislative districts of Quezon shared with Lucena Demographics Ethnic groupsTagalog 81 Bicolano 11 Bisaya 6 Others 2 Time zoneUTC 8 PHT ZIP code4300 4342IDD area code 63 0 42ISO 3166 codePH QUESpoken languagesTagalog Tayabas dialect EnglishWebsitewww wbr quezon wbr gov wbr phQuezon is southeast of Metro Manila and is bordered by the provinces of Aurora to the north Bulacan Rizal Laguna and Batangas to the west and the provinces of Camarines Norte and Camarines Sur to the east Part of Quezon lies on an isthmus connecting the Bicol Peninsula to the main part of Luzon The province also includes the Polillo Islands in the Philippine Sea Some marine parts of the Verde Island Passage the center of the center of world s marine biodiversity are also in the province A major tourism draw to the province is Mount Banahaw The mountain is surrounded by spiritual mysticism with many Anitist adherents Christian cults and Christian organizations staying on the mountain The mountain was also one of the most sacred sites for pre colonial Tagalog people before the arrival of the Spanish Numerous pilgrims visit the mountain especially during Holy Week Contents 1 History 1 1 Precolonial period 1 1 1 Spanish colonial period 1 2 American colonial period and World War II 1 3 Post war period 1 3 1 Name change from Tayabas to Quezon 1 3 2 Rise of the coconut industry 1 3 3 Establishment of the Province of Aurora 1 4 During the Marcos dictatorship 1 5 Contemporary period 1 5 1 Quezon Camarines Norte boundary dispute 1 5 2 Failed proposal to divide Quezon 2 Geography 2 1 Physical characteristics 2 2 Climate 2 3 Administrative divisions 3 Demographics 3 1 Languages 3 2 Religion 4 Government 4 1 Incumbent officials 5 Economy 5 1 Agro industry 5 2 Fishing 5 3 Forestry 5 4 Commerce and banking 6 Infrastructure 6 1 Transportation 6 1 1 Roads 6 1 2 Public Transportations 6 1 3 Railroads 6 1 4 Seaports 6 1 5 Airports 6 2 Energy 6 3 Water security 7 Tourism and culture 7 1 Festivals 7 2 Beaches and springs 7 3 Baroque churches heritage houses and other attractions 7 4 Mountains 7 5 Food 8 Education 9 Notable people 10 Explanatory notes 11 References 12 External linksHistory EditPrecolonial period Edit Archaeological excavations in the province attest to its rich precolonial past Archaeological materials including burial jars human bones shell midden and pot shreds have been discovered at different sites in Bondoc Peninsula including the towns of San Narciso San Andres Mulanay and Catanauan The most recent excavations were conducted in Catanauan by the Catanauan Archeological and Heritage Project citation needed According to the preliminary report released by the Catanauan Archaeological and Heritage Project several excavations were conducted in the 1930s One of the excavations was conducted in San Narciso where archaeologists found burial jars The site inspected by Ricardo Galang resulted in the discovery of burial jars near the coast Galang also went to San Andres where excavations yielded 14th and 15th century ceramics as well as shell bracelets and beads According to the journal as well at a site named Tala archaeologists discovered a glazed Chinese jar containing bone fragments from the early Ming dynasty Looking at other archaeological sites located in adjacent areas like Marinduque and Masbate it can be inferred that these excavations date back to the metal period of the archipelago 11 In 2012 at Mt Kamhantik in the town of Mulanay 15 limestone coffins were discovered Carbon dating on a human tooth found it to be at least 1 000 years old According to the archaeologists the village is proof that the ancient inhabitants of the area practiced a more sophisticated way of life Metal tools are believed to have been used to carve the coffins and this is the first of its kind discovered in the archipelago The remains are said to date back to the 10th to 14th century 12 Spanish colonial period Edit Territorial evolution of Quezon Originally what now forms Quezon was divided among the provinces of Batangas Laguna and Nueva Ecija However at different points in time the boundaries of Quezon changed and included parts of Aurora Marinduque and Camarines Norte At the early period of Spanish colonization the province of Aurora was called El Principe Infanta was called Binangonan de Lampon and southern Quezon was called Kalilayan The first European to explore the area was Juan de Salcedo in 1571 1572 during his expedition from Laguna to Camarines provinces 13 14 In 1574 Father Diego de Oropesa founded the town of Bumaka now known as the municipality of Gumaca 13 In 1591 the province was created and was called Kaliraya or Kalilayan after the capital town which later became Unisan 15 In 1595 the Diocese of Caceres was established by Pope Clement VIII as a suffragan of Manila The diocese covered the entire Bicolandia region plus the towns in Kalilayan and the Contracosta towns At that time the towns on the eastern seaboard were pertained to as the Contracosta and included towns from Mauban Binangonan de Lampon to El Principe 16 The destruction of Kalilayan in 1604 by a big fleet of Moro pirates caused the inhabitants to transfer to Palsabangon Pagbilao Depredation and plunder by the Moros from Jolo and Brunei were rampant during the 1600s Slavery is one reason for the proliferation of these raids A padron for Calilaya was ordered after Tayabas suffered severely from Moro raids It is said that 187 people were either captured or killed while 400 people fled Fear from these raids are the primary reason as to the permanent movement of settlements along the coast further inland as well as a general decline in population Frequent invasions by the moros disrupted the food production in the province affecting the nutrition of its inhabitants Maternal malnutrition was even cited as one of the primary causes of infant mortality at that time By 1701 the previously densely settled coastal areas of the province was described as consisting of rancherias whose inhabitants depended on wild products 17 In 1705 the Military Comandancia of Nueva Ecija was created and was governed by Governor General Fausto Cruzat y Gongora It included huge swathes of Central Luzon the Contracosta towns as well as the Kalilayan area 18 In 1749 the capital was transferred to the town of Tayabas from which the province got its new name 13 In a report by a Spanish priest named Fr Bartolome Galan in 1823 he describes the economy of the province According to his report Tayabas had poor soil and the terrain is hilly which meant that conditions were not that suitable for agriculture compared to other places The people grew upland rice wheat beans and vegetables Surplus rice was sold in San Pablo and Majayjay on Mondays the market day of those towns Cattle breeding was rampant in towns like Tayabas Pagbilao Tiaong and Sariaya Also unlike other provinces haciendas were not so many in Tayabas Instead residents owned most of their own land 19 The people of Tayabas as in other areas are actively trading with Manila Santa Cruz Laguna was the entrepot for all goods going to the capital The people from Lucban made products of buri and pandan leaves like hats sleeping mata and the like which they traded They along with the people of Mauban also went to Polillo at that time part of Nueva Ecija to buy sea slugs shells and beeswax Being a rich agricultural area the town of Tayabas traded rice coconuts and panocha with nearby towns of Majayjay Lucban Sariaya Pagbilao Mauban Gumaca and Atimonan In turn they traded fish from Pagbilao rice from Sariaya and high quality abaca products from Mauban and Atimonan Lucban as well as Tayabas benefitted greatly from the high commercial activity of Chinese and Chinese mestizos in the pueblos 19 Gumaca being a town with little arable land depended heavily on the sea They collected sea slugs and tortoise shell from Alabat and traded with the mountain people there for beeswax in exchange for clothing They even sometimes ventured to Burias Island in the Ragay Gulf in search for these goods These products were then sent to Tayabas for shipment to Manila Gumaca also traded items from nearby pueblos like vinegar and clothing for gold and abaca from Naga in the Bicol region 19 It was also around this time that the Confradia de San Jose was active in the province caused by the growing inequality between the poor and the upper classes This organization was directed mostly on the poor and neither admitted Spaniards nor mestizos 19 In 1853 the new military district of Tayabas was carved from Nueva Ecija and included present day Southern Quezon as well as present day Aurora In 1858 Binangonan de Lampon and the Polilio Islands were separated from Nueva Ecija to form part of Infanta 18 According to the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines the two Franciscan friars named Fray Juan de Plasencia and Fray Diego de Oropesa were the ones responsible for bringing Christianity to the area The Franciscans are also credited for spreading Christianity to towns and parishes across the province including Mauban Sariaya and Gumaca 20 Between 1855 and 1885 El Principe was established as its own Military Comandancia with its capital in Baler citation needed After years under the Spanish regime the colonized people grew discontented with the Spaniards over the centuries The most important event in the history of the province was the Confradia Revolt in 1841 which was led by the famous Lucbanin Apolinario de la Cruz popularly known as Hermano Pule The province under General Miguel Malvar was also among the earliest to join the Philippine Revolution The Revolutionary Government took control over the province on August 15 1898 citation needed American colonial period and World War II Edit Tayabas province in 1918 Northern portion Southern portion The Americans then came and annexed the Philippines A civil government was established in the province on March 12 1901 and Lucena was made the provincial capital citation needed During the pacification of the archipelago by the Americans insurrections were a commonplace in what was then Tayabas Insurgents from neighboring provinces of Laguna and Batangas often use Tayabas as their base of operations as well as their source of supplies An insurgent government with connections to Gen Malvar and Pedro Caballes was even said to be based in Infanta This has led the American in charge Brigadier General J F Bell to decide to return to Tayabas with a larger contingent Bell acknowledged the importance of the ports of Tayabas as sources of supplies to the insurrection such that he believed that closing all the ports in the province might convince the leaders of the resistance to surrender 21 In 1902 the district of El Principe was transferred from the jurisdiction of Nueva Ecija to Tayabas 15 In the same year Marinduque became part of Tayabas province by virtue of Act 499 enacted by the Philippine Commission 22 However by 1920 Act 2280 was passed by the Philippine Congress reestablishing Marinduque as a separate province citation needed Because of the distance between Tayabas and Bicol and the growing population Tayabas came under the jurisdiction of the Diocese of Lipa in 1910 20 Japanese occupation of the province during World War II began on December 23 1941 when the Japanese Imperial Army landed in Atimonan The General Headquarters of the Philippine Commonwealth Army and Philippine Constabulary was stationed in Tayabas from January 3 1942 to June 30 1946 are military operates against the Japanese Occupation incomprehensible The occupation witnessed the brutal murders of prominent sons of Tayabas April 4 1945 was the day the province was liberated as the combined Filipino and American army forces reached Lucena further explanation needed Post war period Edit Name change from Tayabas to Quezon Edit After the war on September 7 1946 Republic Act No 14 changed the name Tayabas to Quezon in honor of Manuel L Quezon the Commonwealth president who hailed from Baler which was one of the province s towns 23 Rise of the coconut industry Edit Even before the Philippines gained its independence the province has already depended heavily on coconuts This history can clearly be seen through the opulent houses built in the town of Sariaya during this period Coconuts served as the main source of income for the landed class of Sariaya and this allowed them to build the ancestral houses that we see today 24 This has led some companies like Peter Paul to establish its presence in Candelaria to manufacture products like desiccated coconut as early as this period 25 Establishment of the Province of Aurora Edit In June 1951 the northern part of Quezon specifically the towns of Baler Casiguran Dilasag Dingalan Dinalongan Dipaculao Maria Aurora and San Luis was made into the sub province of Aurora 26 Aurora was the name of the president s wife Aurora Quezon Aurora was finally separated from Quezon as an independent province in 1979 27 During the Marcos dictatorship Edit Main article Dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos Quezon Province was not spared the social and economic turmoil during the Dictatorship of Ferdinand Marcos including his 1971 suspension of the writ of habeas corpus his 1972 declaration of martial law and his continued hold on power from the lifting of martial law in 1981 until his ouster under the People Power Revolution of 1986 One major event that took place during this period was the Guinayangan massacre of February 1 1981 in which Military elements opened fire on a group of about coconut farmers who were marching towards the Guinayangan plaza air to protest the coco levy fund scam Two people were killed and 27 were wounded 28 29 Among the Quezon citizens who were victims of forced disappearances during the Marcos dictatorship were human rights worker Albert Enriquez of Lucena who documented military abuses as a volunteer for Task Force Detainees of the Philippines and activist Ramon Jasul who founded the Bagong Kabataan ng Lukban New Youth of Lucban in his hometown Enriquez was abducted by armed men on Aug 29 1985 30 while Jasul was abducted in Makati as part of the Southern Tagalog 10 incident of late July 1977 31 Neither were ever seen again and both were eventually honored by having their names engraved on the wall of remembrance at the Philippines Bantayog ng mga Bayani 32 Contemporary period Edit Quezon Camarines Norte boundary dispute Edit In 1989 the province of Quezon represented by Governor Hjalmar Quintana was involved in a boundary dispute with the province of Camarines Norte represented by Roy Padilla over 9 barangays of over 8 000 hectares at their border These barangays are Kagtalaba Plaridel Kabuluan Don Tomas Guitol Tabugon Maualawin Patag Ibaba and Patag Iraya The boundary dispute originated from Act 2711 or the Revised Administrative Code which was enacted in 1917 33 Section 42 of Act 2711 defines the Tayabas Camarines Norte boundary as Camarines Norte and Tayabas boundary The boundary separating the Province of Camarines Norte from the Province of Tayabas begins at a point on the eastern shore of Basiad Bay and extends to a peak known as Mount Cadig in such manner as to bring the territory of the barrio of Basiad entirely within the municipality of Capalonga in Camarines Norte and to exclude the same from the territory of Calauag in Tayabas From Mount Cadig it extends along the crest of a mountain range a distance of 50 kilometers more or less to a peak known as Mount Labo thence in a southwesterly direction a distance of 25 kilometers more or less to a prominent stone monument at the source or headwaters of the Pasay River thence along the meandering course of said river in a southerly direction a distance of 1 kilometers more or less to the Gulf of Ragay 34 In 1922 the then Chief of the Executive Bureau acted upon the authority of the Secretary of the Interior 33 This ruling by the then chief was never implemented even with repeated efforts of the provincial government of Camarines Norte and the Secretary of Interior The Chief delineated the border as follows Starting from the peak of Mt Labo as a common corner between the provinces of Tayabas Camarines Sur and Camarines Norte thence a straight line is drawn to the peak of Mt Cadig thence a straight line is drawn to the point of intersection of the inter provincial road between Camarines Norte and Tayabas with the Tabugon River thence following the course of the river to its mouth at Basiad Bay 33 In the legal dispute Quezon raised two points of contention First is that Act 2711 already delineated the boundaries of the province Second is that the Chief of the Executive Bureau had no power nor authority to change the boundaries of the province Regarding the first issue the court stated that it is true that Act 2711 delineated the boundary but it did not delineate the entirety of the boundary The point on the eastern shore of Basiad Bay was never specifically located thus needing further delineation On the second issue the court stated that the Chief did not alter the borders in any way The Chief worked with the requirement that the point be on the eastern shore of Basiad Bay He was also acting on the consideration of Act 2809 the Act establishing Camarines Norte which states that Camarines Norte be established with the borders it had before merging with Camarines Sur The court then ruled in favor of Camarines Norte and ordered the provincial government of Quezon to transfer all its authority and jurisdiction to the former 33 By 2001 the Provincial Government of Quezon this time represented by Governor Eduardo Rodriguez the Provincial Government of Camarines Norte as represented by Governor Roy Padilla went back to court Even with the judgment on the 1989 case was executory by 1990 the provincial government of Quezon did not abide by the court s ruling In 1991 a DENR technical team conducted a survey of the area and erected a monument marker to delineate the boundary of the area However by October 1991 Quezon Governor Eduardo Rodriguez and Calauag Mayor Julio Lim caused the removal of the marker Throughout the proceedings several government agencies including the Department of Budget and Management Comelec as well as the Philippine Statistics Authority recognized the jurisdiction of the town of Santa Elena Camarines Norte over the 9 barangays In 2000 Judge Regino held Governor Rodriguez and Mayor Lim guilty of contempt with a maximum imprisonment of 6 months as well as a fine of 1 000 pesos for the erection of a new boundary marker 35 Failed proposal to divide Quezon Edit Main article 2008 Quezon del Sur creation plebiscite In 2007 Republic Act No 9495 proposed to further divide Quezon into Quezon del Norte and Quezon del Sur Quezon del Norte was to be composed of the first and second congressional districts of the province Burdeos General Nakar Infanta Jomalig Lucban Mauban Pagbilao Panukulan Patnanungan Polilio Real Sampaloc Tayabas Candelaria Dolores San Antonio Sariaya Tiaong and Lucena with Lucena as its capital Quezon del Sur with its capital at Gumaca would have been composed of the third and fourth congressional districts Agdangan Buenavista Catanauan General Luna Macalelon Mulanay Padre Burgos Pitogo San Andres San Francisco San Narciso Unisan Alabat Atimonan Calauag Guinayangan Gumaca Lopez Perez Plaridel Quezon and Tagkawayan The act lapsed into law without the signature of President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo on September 7 2007 36 As required by law the COMELEC held a plebiscite on December 13 2008 60 days after law took effect The majority of the votes cast overwhelmingly rejected the division therefore the split did not push through Geography Edit Mount Banahaw seen from the Atimonan Pagbilao border Physical characteristics Edit Quezon east of Metro Manila is the 8th largest province in the Philippines having an area of 8 989 39 square kilometers 3 470 82 sq mi 37 It is the largest province of Calabarzon comprising 879 660 hectares or 53 21 of the total land area of the region 38 Of this area 513 618 hectares is categorized as agricultural land 38 The northern part of the province is sandwiched between the Sierra Madre mountain range and the Philippine Sea The southern part consists of the Tayabas Isthmus which separates the Bicol Peninsula from the main part of Luzon Island and the Bondoc Peninsula which lies between Tayabas Bay and Ragay Gulf Because of this majority of towns in the province have access to the sea The province is bounded by the provinces of Aurora Bulacan Rizal Laguna Batangas Camarines Sur and Camarines Norte It is bounded to the east by the Pacific Ocean and to the south by Tayabas Bay The province is said to be characterized by a rugged terrain with patches of plains valleys and swamps The major islands of Quezon are Alabat Island and Polillo Islands Mount Banahaw an active volcano is the highest peak at 2 169 meters 7 116 ft 39 It supplies geothermal power to the Mak Ban Geothermal Power Plant 40 The province has a total of 1 066 36 km of coastline 38 and has several bays including Burdeos Bay Lamon Bay Calauag Bay Lopez Bay Ragay Gulf Pagbilao Bay and Tayabas Bay The Infanta Watershed has extensive and highly productive aquifers while Mauban and Atimonan have no significant groundwater 41 According to the DENR in 2003 Quezon had 231 190 hectares of forest cover 42 However due to rampant illegal logging as well as kaingin these forests are constantly threatened Climate EditBecause of the sheer size of Quezon different areas have different climate patterns Most of the province falls under Type IV Climate which means that rains are evenly distributed throughout the year Polillo Infanta and parts of Calauag fall under Type II climate which means that there are no dry seasons but there is a pronounced wet season from November to April Parts of the western towns of Tiaong San Antonio Dolores and Candelaria as well as the tip of Bondoc Peninsula including parts of Mulanay San Francisco San Narciso and San Andres fall under Type III climate This means that there is a relatively dry season from November to April citation needed Although these are the patterns observed it is important to note that with climate change these patterns have become more erratic Typhoons have become stronger through the years causing problems such as power outages road blockages landslides flashfloods and crop damages Administrative divisions Edit Quezon comprises 39 municipalities and one component city Tayabas which are organized into four legislative districts and further subdivided into 1 209 barangays The capital Lucena is independent of the administrative and fiscal supervision of the province but is eligible to vote for provincial officials Political Map of Quezon Provincial capital and highly urbanized city Component city Municipality City or municipality District 37 Category Population p a Area 37 Density Barangay Coordinates A 2020 6 2015 43 km2 sq mi km2 sq miAgdangan 3rd 5th Class Municipality 0 7 12 764 12 851 0 13 31 54 12 18 400 1 000 12 13 52 30 N 121 54 48 E 13 8749 N 121 9134 E 13 8749 121 9134 Agdangan Alabat 4th 5th Class Municipality 0 8 15 936 15 630 0 37 57 61 22 24 280 730 19 14 06 04 N 122 00 44 E 14 1012 N 122 0121 E 14 1012 122 0121 Alabat Atimonan 4th 1st Class Municipality 3 3 64 260 63 432 0 25 239 66 92 53 270 700 42 14 00 02 N 121 55 17 E 14 0006 N 121 9215 E 14 0006 121 9215 Atimonan Buenavista 3rd 4th Class Municipality 1 6 31 160 30 047 0 69 161 35 62 30 190 490 37 13 44 15 N 122 28 02 E 13 7376 N 122 4673 E 13 7376 122 4673 Buenavista Burdeos 1st 4th Class Municipality 1 3 24 644 26 760 1 56 199 82 77 15 120 310 14 14 50 24 N 121 58 12 E 14 8399 N 121 9700 E 14 8399 121 9700 Burdeos Calauag 4th 1st Class Municipality 3 7 71 809 73 139 0 35 324 71 125 37 220 570 81 13 57 30 N 122 17 14 E 13 9582 N 122 2873 E 13 9582 122 2873 Calauag Candelaria 2nd 1st Class Municipality 7 1 137 881 117 434 3 10 129 10 49 85 1 100 2 800 25 13 56 00 N 121 25 21 E 13 9334 N 121 4224 E 13 9334 121 4224 Candelaria Catanauan 3rd 1st Class Municipality 3 7 72 752 71 073 0 45 253 07 97 71 290 750 46 13 35 34 N 122 19 20 E 13 5929 N 122 3223 E 13 5929 122 3223 Catanauan Dolores 2nd 4th Class Municipality 1 7 32 514 28 891 0 83 62 60 24 17 520 1 300 16 14 00 57 N 121 24 04 E 14 0157 N 121 4011 E 14 0157 121 4011 Dolores General Luna 3rd 4th Class Municipality 1 3 24 804 26 494 1 25 101 02 39 00 250 650 27 13 41 17 N 122 10 16 E 13 6881 N 122 1710 E 13 6881 122 1710 General Luna General Nakar 1st 1st Class Municipality 1 8 34 225 29 705 2 73 1 343 75 518 82 25 65 19 14 45 48 N 121 38 07 E 14 7634 N 121 6353 E 14 7634 121 6353 General Nakar Guinayangan 4th 3rd Class Municipality 2 3 44 045 45 155 0 47 214 12 82 67 210 540 54 13 53 51 N 122 27 14 E 13 8974 N 122 4539 E 13 8974 122 4539 Guinayangan Gumaca 4th 1st Class Municipality 3 7 71 942 73 877 0 50 189 65 73 22 380 980 59 13 55 17 N 122 06 05 E 13 9215 N 122 1015 E 13 9215 122 1015 Gumaca Infanta 1st 1st Class Municipality 3 9 76 186 69 079 1 88 342 76 132 34 220 570 36 14 44 45 N 121 38 50 E 14 7458 N 121 6472 E 14 7458 121 6472 Infanta Jomalig 1st 5th Class Municipality 0 4 7 667 7 417 0 63 53 93 20 82 140 360 5 14 41 49 N 122 19 47 E 14 6970 N 122 3297 E 14 6970 122 3297 Jomalig Lopez 4th 1st Class Municipality 4 9 94 657 95 167 0 10 355 38 137 21 270 700 95 13 52 57 N 122 15 40 E 13 8825 N 122 2611 E 13 8825 122 2611 Lopez Lucban 1st 2nd Class Municipality 2 7 53 091 51 475 0 59 130 46 50 37 410 1 100 32 14 06 52 N 121 33 17 E 14 1144 N 121 5548 E 14 1144 121 5548 Lucban Lucena 2nd Highly Urbanized City 278 924 266 248 0 89 80 21 30 97 3 500 9 100 33 13 56 06 N 121 36 45 E 13 9350 N 121 6124 E 13 9350 121 6124 Lucena Macalelon 3rd 4th Class Municipality 1 4 27 312 28 188 0 60 124 05 47 90 220 570 30 13 44 46 N 122 08 13 E 13 7462 N 122 1369 E 13 7462 122 1369 Macalelon Mauban 1st 1st Class Municipality 3 6 71 081 63 819 2 07 415 98 160 61 170 440 40 14 11 20 N 121 43 52 E 14 1889 N 121 7310 E 14 1889 121 7310 Mauban Mulanay 3rd 1st Class Municipality 2 8 55 576 53 123 0 86 420 00 162 16 130 340 28 13 31 23 N 122 24 15 E 13 5231 N 122 4043 E 13 5231 122 4043 Mulanay Padre Burgos 3rd 4th Class Municipality 1 2 23 488 22 460 0 86 69 10 26 68 340 880 22 13 55 00 N 121 48 58 E 13 9166 N 121 8162 E 13 9166 121 8162 Padre Burgos Pagbilao 1st 1st Class Municipality 4 0 78 700 75 023 0 92 170 96 66 01 460 1 200 27 13 58 28 N 121 41 07 E 13 9745 N 121 6854 E 13 9745 121 6854 Pagbilao Panukulan 1st 4th Class Municipality 0 8 16 376 13 546 3 68 226 61 87 49 72 190 12 14 55 59 N 121 48 58 E 14 9331 N 121 8160 E 14 9331 121 8160 Panukulan Patnanungan 1st 5th Class Municipality 0 8 15 052 14 606 0 57 139 20 53 75 110 280 6 14 45 19 N 122 13 01 E 14 7552 N 122 2169 E 14 7552 122 2169 Patnanungan Perez 4th 5th Class Municipality 0 7 12 767 12 173 0 91 57 46 22 19 220 570 14 14 11 38 N 121 55 33 E 14 1938 N 121 9257 E 14 1938 121 9257 Perez Pitogo 3rd 4th Class Municipality 1 2 22 798 23 019 0 18 73 39 28 34 310 800 39 13 46 59 N 122 05 19 E 13 7830 N 122 0886 E 13 7830 122 0886 Pitogo Plaridel 4th 5th Class Municipality 0 5 10 129 10 935 1 45 18 19 7 02 560 1 500 9 13 57 24 N 122 01 01 E 13 9568 N 122 0170 E 13 9568 122 0170 Plaridel Polillo 1st 3rd Class Municipality 1 6 31 908 30 582 0 81 253 00 97 68 130 340 20 14 43 03 N 121 56 15 E 14 7176 N 121 9375 E 14 7176 121 9375 Polillo Quezon 4th 5th Class Municipality 0 8 15 886 15 228 0 81 71 22 27 50 220 570 24 14 00 22 N 122 11 03 E 14 0060 N 122 1841 E 14 0060 122 1841 Quezon Real 1st 1st Class Municipality 2 0 38 678 35 979 1 39 337 92 130 47 110 280 17 14 39 56 N 121 36 13 E 14 6655 N 121 6036 E 14 6655 121 6036 Real Sampaloc 1st 5th Class Municipality 0 7 13 629 13 907 0 38 104 78 40 46 130 340 14 14 09 40 N 121 38 18 E 14 1610 N 121 6382 E 14 1610 121 6382 Sampaloc San Andres 3rd 4th Class Municipality 1 9 37 454 35 780 0 87 172 93 66 77 220 570 7 13 19 25 N 122 40 39 E 13 3235 N 122 6774 E 13 3235 122 6774 San Andres San Antonio 2nd 4th Class Municipality 1 8 35 891 33 467 1 34 60 99 23 55 590 1 500 20 13 53 45 N 121 17 36 E 13 8957 N 121 2932 E 13 8957 121 2932 San Antonio San Francisco 3rd 2nd Class Municipality 3 2 62 097 61 473 0 19 303 96 117 36 200 520 16 13 20 49 N 122 31 12 E 13 3469 N 122 5200 E 13 3469 122 5200 San Francisco San Narciso 3rd 3rd Class Municipality 2 6 51 058 48 461 1 00 263 58 101 77 190 490 24 13 33 56 N 122 33 59 E 13 5656 N 122 5665 E 13 5656 122 5665 San Narciso Sariaya 2nd 1st Class Municipality 8 3 161 868 148 980 1 59 212 16 81 92 760 2 000 43 13 57 46 N 121 31 27 E 13 9629 N 121 5243 E 13 9629 121 5243 Sariaya Tagkawayan 4th 1st Class Municipality 2 8 54 003 51 832 0 78 534 35 206 31 100 260 45 13 57 57 N 122 32 21 E 13 9657 N 122 5393 E 13 9657 122 5393 Tagkawayan Tayabas 1st Component City 5 8 112 658 99 779 2 34 230 95 89 17 490 1 300 66 14 01 35 N 121 35 30 E 14 0263 N 121 5918 E 14 0263 121 5918 Tayabas Tiaong 2nd 1st Class Municipality 5 4 106 265 99 712 1 22 168 38 65 01 630 1 600 31 13 57 33 N 121 19 22 E 13 9593 N 121 3228 E 13 9593 121 3228 Tiaong Unisan 3rd 4th Class Municipality 1 3 25 448 26 884 1 04 124 15 47 93 200 520 36 13 50 21 N 121 58 35 E 13 8393 N 121 9763 E 13 8393 121 9763 Unisan Total B 1 950 459 1 856 582 0 94 8 743 84 3 376 02 220 570 1 209 see GeoGroup box Coordinates mark the town center and are sortable by latitude Total figures exclude the highly urbanized city of Lucena In the 1800s when Jean Mallat de Bassilan conducted a survey of the province it only had 17 towns 44 Administrative divisions and population of Tayabas in 1800s Town Tributes InhabitantsTayabas 4 283 5 21 418Lucban 2 829 5 14 147Saryaya 1 722 5 8 614Tiaon 692 3 460Dolores 450 2 250Mauban 1 323 6 615Atimonan 1 176 5 880Gumaca 1 848 9 240Pagbilao 496 2 480Pitogo 276 1 380Macalelon 155 775Catanauan 450 2 250Mulanay 305 1 525Obuyon 265 1 325Calauag 63 315Apad 63 315Guinyangan 212 1 060Total 83 049In 1902 during the American period Tayabas was divided as follows 45 Administrative divisions and population of Tayabas in 1902 Town PopulationAlabat 4 516Atimonan 11 203Baler 2 417Bondoc 1 330Calauag 3 185Casiguran 2 067Catanauan 4 108Guinayangan 3 870Gumaca 5 234Infanta 10 283Lopez 8 549Lucban 10 227Lucena 9 375Macalelon 4 759Mauban 12 021Mulanay 2 149Pagbilao 6 085Pitogo 3 454Polillo 2 164Sampaloc 1 263San Narciso 2 501Sariaya 12 453Tayabas 14 740Tiaong 9 527Unisan 2 692Total 150 262Demographics EditPopulation census of QuezonYearPop p a 1903148 581 1918206 037 2 20 1939340 273 2 42 1948393 894 1 64 1960610 599 3 72 YearPop p a 1970825 859 3 06 1975933 566 2 49 19801 021 397 1 81 19901 221 831 1 81 19951 359 992 2 03 YearPop p a 20001 482 955 1 87 20071 646 510 1 45 20101 740 638 2 04 20151 856 582 1 24 20201 950 459 0 97 excluding Lucena Source Philippine Statistics Authority 43 46 47 When the Census of the Philippine Islands was conducted in 1902 during the American era Tayabas excluding the subprovince of Marinduque had a total population of 153 065 2 803 were considered as wild or part of the non Christian tribes like the Aetas while 150 262 people were considered as civilized 48 Of the civilized population 75 774 were males while 74 488 were female 287 were of mixed descent while the rest are categorized as Brown 49 The population of Quezon in the 2020 census was 1 950 459 people 6 with a density of 220 inhabitants per square kilometre or 570 inhabitants per square mile When Lucena City is included for geographical purposes the province s population is 2 122 830 people with a density of 234 km2 606 sq mi The inhabitants are mostly Tagalogs The population is concentrated in the flat south central portion which includes Lucena City Sariaya and Candelaria After World War II Infanta and surrounding towns received migrants from Manila Laguna Rizal and Batangas People from Marinduque moved to the southern part of the Tayabas Isthmus and the Bondoc Peninsula Ilocanos from Ilocos Region Cagayan Valley Central Luzon and Cordillera Administrative Region migrated to the northernmost towns of General Nakar Infanta and Real many Ilocanos also arrived from some places of Aurora after Aurora was separated from Quezon in 1979 Bicolanos from Bicol Region migrated to the easternmost towns of Calauag and Tagkawayan 50 Filipino Chinese also have a long history in Quezon In 1939 the province ranked 5th among all provinces including Manila in terms of the concentration of Filipino Chinese This ethnic group has a long history of being active in business and commerce as shown by the business chambers existent before However as the Chinese intermarried with locals these groups have dwindled in number Population of Filipino Chinese 51 Province 1903 1918 1939Tayabas 479 1 274 4 069The province used to be home to various Aeta tribes Other terms used to call them include Umag Ata Atid and Itim The Aeta used to clear coconut plantations and other odd jobs in exchange for food or clothing These people though seem as uncivilized by some have a very rich culture Some forms of their art include body scarification The Aeta cause wound on their skin in various parts of their body including back arms legs hands calves and abdomen They then irritate them during healing using fire lime and other materials to form scars They also bore holes on their septum and then proceed to decorate it with a sliver of bamboo The Aeta also have various musical instruments like the nose flute and the gurimbaw a stringed instrument made of coconuts fibers from lukmong vines and bamboo 52 Languages Edit There are five indigenous languages in Quezon province There are the dominant Tagalog language the Manide language in the east and a small portion in the north the Agta Dumagat Umiray language in the north and a small area in the center the already extinct Katabaga language which used to be in the south and the endangered Alabat Agta in Alabat island The province primarily speaks Tagalog dialect called Tayabas Tagalog that resembles a dominant part of Batangas Tagalog with presence of Ilocano loanwords in northern municipalities of Quezon while presence of Bicolano and Cebuano loanwords in southern municipalities of Quezon The Tayabasin dialect of the local Quezonians is also known for distinctive expressions like hane kawasa and yano In 2010 UNESCO released its 3rd world volume of Endangered Languages in the World where 3 critically endangered languages were in the Philippines One of these languages is the Alabat Island Agta language The language was classified as Critically Endangered meaning the youngest speakers are grandparents and older and they speak the language partially and infrequently and hardly pass the language to their children and grandchildren anymore 53 Religion Edit Majority of Quezon s inhabitants practice Roman Catholicism and other Christian denominations like Iglesia Filipina Independiente Most non Christians practice Islam indigenous Philippine folk religions animism or atheism Government Edit GovernorAngelina Tan Vice GovernorAnacleto A Alcala III The Quezon Provincial Board or the Sangguniang Panlalawigan is the provincial legislature Incumbent officials Edit Governor Angelina Tan Vice Governor Anacleto A Alcala IIIEconomy EditPoverty Incidence of Quezon Source Philippine Statistics Authority 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 Farming and fishing are the main sources of livelihood in the province Commercial industrial and banking activities are mostly concentrated in the south central part of the province Agro industry Edit Quezon province is called Cocolandia with the Philippine Statistics Authority PSA confirming the province is the top coconut producer in Calabarzon composed of Cavite Laguna Batangas Rizal and Quezon and in the whole country This stems from the fact that agricultural activities drive its economy People mainly engage in farming and fishing operations 61 62 Quezon has a total agricultural area of 403 935 hectares representing 51 percent of the total provincial land area Of this 375 026 hectares are planted with coconut in 2018 making Quezon the province with the largest coconut production area in the Philippines Also Quezon is the top coconut producing province in terms of total coconut production in the country with 1 449 926 81 metric tons 63 Quezon is the country s leading producer of coconut products such as desiccated coconut virgin coconut oil coconut juice coconut oil 14 and copra A large part of the province is covered in coconut plantations Several large companies geared toward processing coconuts have factories in the province This includes companies in Candelaria including Peter Paul Philippine Corporation Primex Coco Products Inc Pacific Royal Basic Foods SuperStar Corporation and Tongsan Industrial Development Corporation which are focused on processing desiccated coconut and other specialty coconut products citation needed Other companies in Lucena like Tantuco Enterprises and JNJ Oil Industries on the other hand are focused on producing coconut oil and other coconut oil based products like margarine and lard citation needed Because of the coconut industry copra traders from provinces like Marinduque Romblon and Masbate regularly visit the province However the coconut industry is faced with several threats from cocolisap to the coconut lumber trade 64 When cocolisap posed a huge threat to the coconut industry the government had to act swiftly with countermeasures aimed at fighting the coconut scaling insect 65 Aside from coconuts Quezon is also the most important agricultural province among the provinces in Calabarzon in terms of producing staple food items such as rice and corn The province supplies 200 000 MT of rice and corn annually or around 42 of the total rice and corn requirement of the region 66 Other major crops are rice corn banana and coffee Fishing Edit Because of its long coastline and the presence of numerous marshes and bays fishing is also a large part of the province s economy Quezon accounts for 33 or around 132 239 MT of fish produced in the region Several fish port complexes exist in the province including ports in Atimonan Lucena Infanta and Guinayangan These ports serve as hubs for the trade of fish and other aquatic resources like round scad anchovies tuna and groupers The province has three fishing districts The first is found in the northeast encompassing Lamon Bay The southeast portion includes the Ragay Gulf while the south central portion covers Tayabas Bay Aside from fishing aquaculture is also important in the coastal municipalities of the province Bangus and prawns are among the most cultured species 66 Forestry Edit Due to its proximity to the southern fringes of the Sierra Mountain range Northern Quezon has been a hotspot for illegal logging Frequent raids in towns like Mauban often yield hardwood timber like Narra and Kamagong 67 Commerce and banking Edit The capital city of Lucena is considered to be the economic center of the province There are currently three malls in the province Two of them are located in Lucena namely SM City Lucena and Pacific Mall Lucena Citymall located in Tiaong is the third mall in the province Major banks like BDO Metrobank Land Bank BPI PNB RCBC UnionBank among other Manila based banks are present in the western part of the province BDO however made a move to establish a regional head office at Lucena due to the growing demand and economic importance of the province itself On the other hand namely QCRB Rural Bank of Atimonan and Card Bank rural banks serve most if not all municipalities of the province Several rural banks were also established in Quezon namely Rural Bank of Dolores United Rural Bank of Lopez Rural Bank of Lucban Rural Bank of General Luna and Rural Bank of Sampaloc 68 Infrastructure EditTransportation Edit Portion of Marikina Infanta Highway also known as Marcos Highway or Marilaque Highway in Infanta Roads Edit Portion of Famy Real Infanta Road N601 in Real Manila South Road part of Pan Philippine Highway N1 AH26 in Sariaya Quezon has a total of 931 kilometers 578 mi of national roads mostly paved with concrete 69 Pan Philippine Highway N1 AH26 which comprises most of Manila South Road and Quirino Highway N68 the Quezon leg of Andaya Highway form the highway backbone network and the secondary and tertiary roads interconnect most cities and municipalities except for Infanta Real and General Nakar whose highways used to access those municipalities interconnect with the national highway network in Laguna and Rizal or Manila East Road and Marcos Highway The provincial government maintains provincial roads which supplements the national roads In order to spur development in the province several proposals have been made to expand the expressway network to Quezon The South Luzon Expressway which terminates at Santo Tomas Batangas will be extended to Barangay Mayao Lucena with the construction of Toll Road 4 SLEX TR 4 70 Three expressways being proposed for construction includes the Manila Quezon Expressway MQX which will pass through Rizal and eastern Laguna 71 Quezon Bicol Expressway QuBEx which will link between Lucena and San Fernando Camarines Sur 72 and Toll Road 5 SLEX TR 5 extending SLEX to Matnog Sorsogon 73 Public Transportations Edit Quezon Province s public transportation mainly include jeepneys and tricycles Transportation between town usually serve by jeepney UV express and buses Buses serves as the main mode of transportation to and from Metro Manila as well as nearby provinces Bus companies like JAC Liner JAM Liner DLTBCo N Dela Rosa Liner AB Liner P amp O liner Supreme AH and Superlines has a terminal in the province Railroads Edit The South Line of Philippine National Railway s north south railway passes through the different towns of Quezon from Tutuban to Bicol This includes stops in Lucena Pagbilao Malicboy Agdangan Plaridel Gumaca Lopez Hondagua Calauag Aloneros and Tagkawayan 74 However no trains are operating along this line as of present Seaports Edit The Dalahican Port and Cotta Port in Lucena provide direct access to the neighboring island provinces of Marinduque and Romblon The Port of Real provides access to the islands of Polillo while the Atimonan and Gumaca ports provide access to the island of Alabat The port in San Andres provides access to Masbate and Burias islands Airports Edit There are several airports that exist in Quezon This includes the Lucena Airport Pagbilao Grande Airport Alabat Airport Alabat Island Jomalig Airport Jomalig Island and the Balesin Tordesillas Airport Balesin Island Only Balesin Airport is being used as of present for Manila Balesin flights Energy Edit Quezon is home to several power plants that supply energy to the Luzon grid The Pagbilao Power Station is the first power plant in the province Located at Isla Grande in Pagbilao the 735 MW coal fueled power plant started operations as early as 1993 This power plant is currently being managed by Team Energy Corp and is undergoing a 420 MW expansion 75 The Mauban Power Station is also a coal fueled power plant located in Barangay Cagsiay I Managed by Quezon Power the 420 MW power plant started operations in the year 2000 76 The third power plant a 600 MW coal fueled plant is currently in the planning stage and is going to be located in Barangay Villa Ibaba in the town of Atimonan 77 Together these three provide jobs to the people as Quezon as well as addressing the energy needs of the province and the greater Luzon area There are three power distributors in the province namely Meralco Quezon I Electric Cooperative QUEZELCO I and Quezon II Electric Cooperative QUEZELCO II Meralco provides electricity to the province s second district as well as the adjacent towns of Pagbilao Lucban Sampaloc Mauban and Tayabas City QUEZELCO I distributes power to the towns of the province s 3rd and 4th districts as well as Santa Elena Camarines Norte and Del Gallego Camarines Sur QUEZELCO II distributes power to the towns of the province s first district except for the towns served by Meralco Water security Edit The Quezon Metropolitan Water District QMWD formerly known as the Lucena Pagbilao Tayabas Water District or LUPATA serves the Metro Lucena area including Lucena City Tayabas City and Pagbilao In 2020 Prime Water took over the administration and operation of QMWD 78 It draws its water largely from the May it Spring although this source has prove inadequate to supply the area 79 Other towns are served by their own water districts Some areas like the Infanta area are characterized by highly productive aquifers but other areas like Mauban and Atimonan have no significant water productivity 41 Due to the pressures of a growing population Quezon is one of the provinces from which the government plans to source part of the demand for water of Metro Manila In General Nakar construction is ongoing as of 2016 on a tunnel to divert water from the Sumag River to Angat Dam 80 The tunnel will link up with the Umiray Angat Transbasin Project to provide water to Angat Dam 80 Aside from this there are plans for the construction of the New Centennial Water Source Project Kaliwa Lower Dam and the Kanan Dam in Northern Quezon for power generation and water supply of Metro Manila 81 The Sangguniang Panlalawigan of Quezon is against the construction of this project stating that it will not allow water from the Agos River both on the left kaliwa and on the right kanan sides of the river 81 Locals fear that the construction of the project would cause massive destruction of forests crops animals and property in the Metro REINA Real Infanta General Nakar area 81 After Typhoon Vamco Ulysses severely hit the province especially the northern part of Quezon in late 2020 which made its landfall there three times and produced flooding in Daraitan in Tanay Rizal province General Nakar and Infanta groups reiterated the call for opposition of Kaliwa Dam and instead pushed for the protection of the Sierra Madre Mountains 82 Tourism and culture Edit Parini Na source source A sample of Parini Na by Clark Aranilla The song refers to Quezon s life culture and traditions Problems playing this file See media help Tourism is still a minor but growing part of the province s economy Several attractions draw tourists from the Philippines and abroad including festivals beaches old structures and other sights Quezon Province has a huge potential for optimum utilization of and considerable revenue generation from the tourism sector There are approximately 709 tourist destinations 321 of which are natural 32 man made 74 historical 78 cultural festival fiesta 1 agri tourism 203 resort hotel restaurant and 14 religious attractions Majority of the tourism related activities are handled by the municipal LGUs in collaboration with the private sector In 2018 total tourist arrivals into the province were recorded at 1 101 846 Same day visitors reached 10 989 183 mostly by domestic tourists 63 Festivals Edit Pahiyas 2012 Among the festivals of Quezon the three most prominent and famous are the Pahiyas Festival of Lucban the Niyugyugan Festival of Quezon Province and Katang Festival of Calauag The Pahiyas Festival is the thanksgiving celebration of the people in Lucban for the Feast of St Isidore Labrador the patron saint of farmers Held every May 15 during the Pahiyas Festival people of Lucban decorates their houses in the most creative manner They uses their harvest vegetables and grains like rice chayotes radishes tomato sweet potato squash and the colorful kiping Kiping is an ornament made of grounded rice flour shaped into leaves and dyed in different colors These materials are used to make the houses colorful during the event which Pahiyas is famous for 83 The Niyugyugan Festival is a relatively new festival that started in 2012 celebrating the province s main product the coconut The festival celebrates the diversity of every town in the province through an expo During this expo the different towns build their own booths showcasing the best qualities of their town and then presents the products that their respective towns produce During this event towns also join the Float Parade and Street Dancing Competition 84 According to journalist and multi awarded international boxing judge Rey Danseco Calauag one of the rich coastal municipalities of the province celebrates Katang Festival Crab Festival The annual colorful and exciting festivities take place several days until May 25 the town s founding anniversary Tourists from neighboring towns provinces and other countries join the fun and witness Calaugeneans unique fiesta celebration and presentations of indigenous products delicacies and different ways of cooking Katang The Karera ng Katang Crab Race and Pabilisan at Paramihan ng Maitataling Katang Crab Tying Race are some of the highlights of the festivities The Philippines Department of Tourism promotes the Katang Festival as A festival highlighting the Higanteng Alimango as their icon The feast celebrates the abundance of mud crab in the province Katang Festival has foremost aims of promoting Agro Tourism and solidifying Calauag s distinction as source of best variety and most delicious crab and other marine products such as shrimp hipon or swahe and giant Asian tiger prawn sugpo in the Philippines 85 86 Other colorful festivals are Mayohan sa Tayabas Tayabas City Agawan Festival Sariaya Arana t Baluarte Gumaca Pasayahan sa Lucena Lucena City Candle Festival Candelaria Boling Boling Festival Catanauan Maubanog Festival Mauban Kaway Festival Tagkawayan Laguimanoc Festival Padre Burgos Tariktik Festival Polillo Centurion Festival Mulanay San Narciso General Luna Buhusan Festival Lucban Kubol ng Macalelon Macalelon Hambujan Festival Dolores Pamaypayan Festival Lopez Coconut Festival Alabat Kayakas Festival Perez Mais Festival Tiaong Gayang Festival Guinayangan Tagultol Fishing Festival Atimonan Palay Iskad Festival Buenavista Maisan Festival San Andres and Papag at Bilao Festival Pagbilao Beaches and springs Edit Sunrise in Real Quezon To the north the island of Balesin part of Polillo has become playground to the rich and famous citation needed The exclusive island resort features seven resorts providing its members the luxury of choosing to stay in differently themed villas 87 Although quite far Salibungot beach of Jomalig is known to backpackers for its golden shores tone Real on the other hand is becoming known for surfing citation needed Pulong Pasig in Calauag and Cagbalete Island of Mauban are known for white beaches citation needed In the south central portion of the province the beaches of Guisguis in Sariaya have long been considered a local destination citation needed Several resorts including Villa del Prado Resort Dalampasigan Beach Resort and the Montevista Beach Resort are some of the resorts in the area The Mainit Hot Spring in Tayabas is popular among locals citation needed Baroque churches heritage houses and other attractions Edit Villa Sariaya Quezon is home to heritage houses from the early 20th century built in the American architecture of the time such as the Enriquez Gala Mansion Gala Rodriguez House and Villa Sariaya Not only do these houses tell stories of the opulence afforded by coconut landlords but also gives us a glimpse of the uncertainty during wartime 24 Some of these stunning buildings are considered endangered due to road widening plans within the poblacion that will destroy these cultural icons forever 88 The country life of the Philippines is what the Villa Escudero in Tiaong offers to its guests citation needed Featuring its waterfall restaurant the plantation resort actually has deep historical roots tracing its origins back to the coconut growing industry of Quezon Other Spanish era structures also exist outside Sariaya such as the Casa de Comunidad de Tayabas Malagonlong bridge Minor Basilica de San Miguel in Tayabas and St Louis Bishop Parish in Lucban are other testament of Spanish History in the province Aside from the old churches Kamay ni Hesus Healing Grotto which is very popular for the pilgrims is located at Lucban Other attractions that tourist may visit Perez Park Quezon Natural Park Zigzag Road Atimonan and Tayabas Capitol Quezon also has large venue for concert and sporting events Quezon Convention Center and Alcala Sports Complex Mountains Edit Mount Banahaw is a pilgrimage site for some locals who believe the mountain to be holy Although considered an active volcano hiking has been popular with both religious pilgrims as well as hikers There are two trails to the mountain both originating from Barangay Kinabuhayan in the town of Dolores The most frequently used trails are the Cristalino and Tatlong Tangke taking an average of 9 and 5 hours respectively but both converges at the volcano s summit At the peak are viewpoints labeled as Durungawan I II and III which are the usual destination for pilgrims and hikers However due to pollution and trash left by these visitors Mt Banahaw was closed to the public until further notice Food Edit As one of the consistent top producers of coconut Quezon Province is also dubbed as the Coconut Capital of the Philippines 89 With the abundance of coconuts in the area Quezon became famous for its native liqueurs such as lambanog and tuba Quezon s food is richly influenced by the native ingredients found in the area like coconut and other agricultural crops As such gata or coconut milk can be found in different dishes like ginataang suso snail kulawo sinugno sinantulan and pinais 90 Since Quezon has long coastline food with seafood as main ingredient is common in the province As the province is relatively near Bicol Laguna and Batangas some Batangas Laguna and Bicol dishes like lomi buko pie and laing are relatively common in the area Some of the unique dishes from Quezon include Pansit Habhab Lucban longganisa Pansit Chami Hardinera Sinantomas Bumbay Batsoy Dinayukan and other dishes made of native fern called pako Quezon is also known for popular pastries and delicacies such as Budin Puto Bao Yema cake Letse Puto Minukmok Tikoy Kalamay Kalabasang Pilipit Pinagong and pitsi pitsi 90 91 92 93 94 95 Education EditThere are 1032 public school in Quezon 818 school are primary while 214 are secondary school These are under monitoring and supervision of Division of Quezon and Lucena The provinces is also the home for some educational institutions and universities Southern Luzon State University PUP Lopez Campus Dalubhasaan ng Lungsod ng Lucena and Quezon National Agriculture School are the state university and institution in Quezon Also in the province are the private institution like Manuel S Enverga University Foundation AMA Computer College Lucena Maryhill College Sacred Heart College STI College Lucena Tayabas Western Academy St Anne College Calayan Education Foundation ABE International College of Business and Economic Holy Rosary Catholic School Notable people Edit President Manuel L Quezon with Calauag Mayor Tomas B Morato Photo courtesy of the Morato Family Tommy Abuel actor Lucban Vitaliano Aguirre 58th Secretary of the Department of Justice Mulanay Proceso Alcala 43rd Secretary of the Department of Agriculture Lucena City Leo Austria former PBA player current SMB coach in the PBA Sariaya Quezon Mac Baracael professional Filipino basketball player Pagbilao Quezon Ana Capri actress Infanta Mel Chionglo film director and production designer Lucena Fides Cuyugan Asensio National Artist of the Philippines for Music Lucena Rey Danseco WBC Award winner International Boxing Judge and sports editor Calauag Lopez and Gumaca Horacio de la Costa Jesuit historian the first Filipino Provincial Superior of the Society of Jesus in the Philippines Mauban Agnes Devanadera former Solicitor General and former Acting Secretary of the Department of Justice Sampaloc Alice Dixson actress Philippine Cinema Buenavista Guillermo Eleazar PNP Chief who has previously served as chief of the Quezon City Police District Director of the PNP Calabarzon and the National Capital Region Police Office Tagkawayan Quezon Arturo Enrile 24th Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines Lucena Josefina Guerrero spy and war heroine Lucban Angel Lagdameo Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Jaro and former President of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines Lucban Rio Locsin actress Candelaria Quezon Mark Magsumbol first Filipino player in 31 team American Basketball Association ABA Calauag Ahtisa Manalo Bb Pilipinas International 2018 Candelaria Quezon Raimund Marasigan musician Eraserheads Sandwich Pedicab Cambio Candelaria Mau Marcelo winner Philippine Idol TV5 Lucena Paz Marquez Benitez author of Dead Stars 1925 short story writer educator and editor Lucena Emilio Z Marquez former bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Lucena first Bishop of Gumaca Lopez Quezon Pauline Mendoza actress model Lucban Quezon Lily Monteverde movie producer Sariaya Manoling Morato former Chairman of the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office Calauag Tomas Morato last municipal President and first Mayor of Calauag and Quezon City First Representative of the 2nd District of Tayabas Manuel L Quezon s best friend Calauag Edgar Mortiz actor director Infanta Orlando Nadres writer screenwriter director Tayabas City Jose Francisco Oliveros A bishop who served as the second Bishop of the Diocese of Boac Marinduque and fourth Bishop of the Diocese of Malolos Quezon Quezon Leo Oracion first Filipino mountaineer to successfully reach the Mt Everest summit Lucban Quezon Paraluman actress Tayabas City Marcelito Pomoy Filipino Singer Philippine Got Talent champion America s Got Talent 3rd Runner up Calauag Gil M Portes a Filipino film director film producer and screenwriter Pagbilao Hermano Pule religious leader who founded and led the Cofradia de San Jose Lucban Raymundo Punongbayan former director PHIVOLCS Calauag Manuel L Quezon the second President of the Philippines Baler now a part of Aurora Claro M Recto former Senator former Associate Justice of the Philippine Supreme Court Tiaong Kris Psyche Resus Miss Philippines Earth 2010 Infanta Rene Saguisag former senator Mauban Ice Seguerra Filipino actress and singer Calauag Lorenzo Tanada III Congressman Liberal Party Spokesman Gumaca Wigberto Tanada former Liberal Party President and former senator Gumaca Lorenzo Tanada former Senator Gumaca Chris Tsuper radio DJ of Love Radio Lucban Romeo Vasquez actor Tayabas CityExplanatory notes Edit UK ˈ k eɪ z ɒ n US ˈ k eɪ s ɒ n s ɔː n s oʊ n 7 8 9 10 Tagalog pronunciation ˈkɛson References Edit Philippine Coconut Statistic 2018 PDF Philippine Coconut Authority Quezon Province has been known as Cocolandia for being the top coconut producer in the Philippines FILIPIKNOW https bar gov ph index php media resources news and events 158 building climate resilient communities ATAGAN Alternatibong Tahanan ng mga Akda at GAwang Nasaliksik Tayabas Quezon Studies Center List of Provinces PSGC Interactive Makati City Philippines National Statistical Coordination Board Archived from the original on January 17 2013 Retrieved November 22 2013 a b c Census of Population 2020 Table B Population and Annual Growth Rates by Province City and Municipality By Region PSA Retrieved July 8 2021 Quezon City The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved April 18 2019 Quezon City Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved April 18 2019 Quezon City dead link US and Quezon City Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on August 6 2020 Quezon City Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved April 18 2019 Paz Victor Ragragio Andrea Medrana Jack Preliminary Archaeological Survey of the Municipality of Catanauan Bondoc Peninsula Quezon Province Catanauan Site Reports Archived from the original on May 2 2018 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 1 000 year old village found in Philippines Telegraph co uk Archived from the original on May 1 2017 Retrieved February 7 2017 a b c History of Quezon Province Provincial Government of Quezon Archived from the original on October 1 2016 Retrieved April 4 2016 a b Ramos Lily O July 18 2012 Quezon province s impressive historical and cultural heritage Balita ph Retrieved April 4 2016 a b Aurora Philippines History www aurora ph Archived from the original on February 8 2017 Retrieved February 7 2017 The Archdiocese Archdiocese of Caceres caceres naga org Archived from the original on February 8 2017 Retrieved February 7 2017 Newson Linda 2009 Conquest and Pestilence in the Early Spanish Philippines Hawaii University of Hawaii Press p 147 ISBN 9780824832728 a b Jose Diocese of San Diocese of San Jose Nueva Ecija History www dioceseofsanjose org Archived from the original on February 8 2017 Retrieved February 7 2017 a b c d Shiraishi Takashi 2018 Reading Southeast Asia New York Cornell University pp 128 130 a b Diocese of Lucena www cbcponline net Archived from the original on October 4 2017 Retrieved February 7 2017 Ramsey Robert 2007 A Masterpiece of Counterguerrilla Warfare BG J Franklin Bell in the Philippines 1901 1902 Combat Studies Institute Press pp 12 13 Full text of Acts of the Philippine commission no 1 1800 archive org Retrieved February 5 2017 Republic Act No 14 An Act to Change the Name of the Province of Tayabas to Quezon Chan Robles Virtual Law Library Archived from the original on January 15 2016 Retrieved January 6 2016 a b The stunning endangered heritage buildings of Sariaya GMA News Online Archived from the original on February 5 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 Peter Paul Official Website The Premier Manufacturer of Quality Coconut Products www peterpaul com ph Archived from the original on February 3 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 Republic Act No 648 An Act Creating the Subprovince of Aurora Which Shall Comprise the Municipalities of Baler Casiguran Dipaculao and Maria Aurora Province of Quezon Chan Robles Virtual Law Library June 14 1951 Archived from the original on April 24 2016 Retrieved April 4 2016 Batas Pambansa Blg 7 An Act Separating the Sub Province of Aurora from the Province of Quezon and Establishing It as an Independent Province Chan Robles Virtual Law Library Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved April 4 2016 Doyo Ma Ceres P Martial law massacres Retrieved June 19 2018 Gavilan Jodesz October 23 2018 Massacres incidents of violence against farmers RAPPLER Retrieved December 6 2022 Inquirer Philippine Daily September 22 2018 Tish Jessica Hermon and other missing martial law activists INQUIRER net Retrieved December 6 2022 The Cruelty of Enforced Disappearances An Abhorrent Crime Against Humanity Bulatlat Bulatlat September 20 2008 Retrieved April 2 2018 ENRIQUEZ Albert R Bantayog ng mga Bayani website Retrieved December 6 2022 a b c d G R No 80796 www lawphil net Archived from the original on February 8 2017 Retrieved February 7 2017 An Act Amending the Administrative Code Retrieved February 7 2017 Province of Camarines Norte vs Province of Quezon 80796 October 11 2001 J Sandoval Gutierrez En Banc sc judiciary gov ph Archived from the original on October 12 2016 Retrieved February 7 2017 Republic Act No 9495 An Act Creating the Province of Quezon del Sur The LAWPHiL Project September 7 2007 Archived from the original on February 25 2014 Retrieved November 22 2013 a b c Province Quezon PSGC Interactive Quezon City Philippines Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved January 8 2016 a b c Provincial Government of Quezon www quezon gov ph Archived from the original on February 14 2017 Retrieved February 13 2017 Active Volcanoes Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology July 30 2008 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved January 6 2016 Makiling Banahaw National Geothermal Association of the Philippines Inc NGAP Archived from the original on June 5 2016 Retrieved June 26 2016 a b State of Region s ENR calabarzon denr gov ph Archived from the original on December 5 2016 Retrieved February 5 2017 Forest Cover within CALABARZON calabarzon denr gov ph Archived from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 a b Census of Population 2015 Highlights of the Philippine Population 2015 Census of Population PSA Retrieved June 20 2016 A Bertrand 1846 Les Philippines histoire geographie moeurs Volume 1 Paris p 266 United States Philippine Commission 1900 1916 1905 Census of the Philippine Islands Taken Under the Direction of the Philippine Commission in the Year 1903 Vol 3 U S Government Printing Office p 86 Census of Population and Housing 2010 Population and Annual Growth Rates for The Philippines and Its Regions Provinces and Highly Urbanized Cities PDF NSO Retrieved June 29 2016 Census of Population and Housing 2010 Region IV A Calabarzon Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay NSO Retrieved June 29 2016 United States Philippine Commission 1905 Census of the Philippine Islands Taken Under the Direction of the Philippine Commission in the Year 1903 Vol 3 U S Government Printing Office p 16 United States Philippine Commission 1905 Census of the Philippine Islands Taken Under the Direction of the Philippine Commission in the Year 1903 Vol 2 U S Government Printing Office p 210 Wernstedt Frederick Spencer Joseph 1967 The Philippine Island World A Physical Cultural and Regional Geography University of California Press p 425 Wong Kwok Chu 1999 The Chinese in the Philippine Economy 1898 1941 Quezon City Ateneo University Press p 17 Untitled PDF UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in danger www unesco org Archived from the original on December 18 2016 Retrieved May 2 2018 Poverty incidence PI Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved December 28 2020 https psa gov ph sites default files NSCB LocalPovertyPhilippines 0 pdf publication date 29 November 2005 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files 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 Quo vadis Quezon BusinessMirror The Natural Beauty of Cocolandia Quezon Philippines a b https quezon gov ph general information about a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Mallari Delfin T Jr February 2017 Almost P200K worth of illegally cut coconut lumber seized in Quezon newsinfo inquirer net Archived from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 Mallari Delfin T Jr June 23 2014 War against coconut pest starts in Quezon province newsinfo inquirer net Archived from the original on November 1 2016 Retrieved February 5 2017 a b Provincial Commodity Investment Plan PDF Archived PDF from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 Locsin Joel May 2015 Cops Seize P4 5M worth of illegally cut logs in Quezon Province GMA News Retrieved September 20 2018 BSP Banks in Quezon www bsp gov ph Retrieved February 27 2020 Kilometer count tabulated from data for the 4 district engineering offices in Quezon in the 2015 Road Data Archived April 7 2017 at the Wayback Machine by the Department of Public Works and Highways SOUTH LUZON EXPRESSWAY SLEX TOLL ROAD 4 TR 4 Department of Public Works and Highways www dpwh gov ph Archived from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved February 6 2017 Manila Quezon Expressway Department of Public Works and Highways www dpwh gov ph Archived from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved February 6 2017 QUEZON BICOL EXPRESSWAY Department of Public Works and Highways www dpwh gov ph Archived from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved February 6 2017 TRB Declares South Luzon Expressway SLEX Toll Road 5 And Pasig River Expressway Projects As Toll Road Projects DOTr August 5 2020 Retrieved August 21 2020 Route Map www pnr gov ph Archived from the original on February 8 2017 Retrieved February 7 2017 BusinessWorld Pagbilao expansion seen operational in late 2017 www bworldonline com Archived from the original on January 30 2018 Retrieved February 5 2017 Quezon Power Philippines Limited Co www qpl com ph Archived from the original on February 4 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 Our Business MGen www meralcopowergen com ph Archived from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 news quezon www lwua gov ph Archived from the original on February 18 2017 Retrieved February 17 2017 Asian Development Bank 2010 Water District Management Sector Project PDF Subproject Appraisal Report Quezon Metro Water District 4 Archived PDF from the original on February 18 2017 a b Mallari Delfin T Jr August 15 2016 1 dead 5 missing as flood hits MWSS tunnel in Quezon newsinfo inquirer net Archived from the original on February 8 2017 Retrieved February 7 2017 a b c Bello John May 16 2015 Local govts residents reject construction of dam for power generation Metro Manila water supply BusinessMirror www businessmirror com ph Archived from the original on March 31 2016 Retrieved February 7 2017 Mayuga Jonathan L December 1 2020 Ulysses revives opposition to P12 billion Kaliwa Dam project Jonathan L Mayuga BusinessMirror Retrieved January 21 2021 The Pahiyas Festival Lucban San Isidro Pahiyas Festival Archived from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 Provincial Government of Quezon www quezon gov ph Archived from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 Katang Festival Calauag Annual Foundation Celebration Archived from the original on December 4 2016 Retrieved May 25 2017 Katang Festival Calauag Foundation Celebration Archived from the original on June 14 2017 Retrieved May 25 2017 corporation alphaland Balesin Island Overview www balesin com Archived from the original on December 28 2016 Retrieved February 5 2017 Heritage group protests DPWH road widening project in Sariaya Quezon GMA News Online Archived from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved February 5 2017 Coconut Statistics 2018 Philippine Coconut Authority PDF Philippine Statistics Authority a b The flavors of Quezon province GMA News Online Archived from the original on February 8 2017 Retrieved February 7 2017 Quezon delicacies Archived from the original on February 8 2017 Retrieved February 7 2017 Open secrets of Lucban s food treasures July 31 2013 Must experience South Tagalog food tour From Patis adobo with buko meat to Ugu Bigyan s pako salad March 7 2012 glossaryoffilipinofood blogspot com Flavors of the Philippines Flavorful Heritage of Quezon Culinary External links EditMap all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as KML Wikimedia Commons has media related to Quezon province Official website of Quezon province Local Governance Performance Management System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Quezon amp oldid 1133750053, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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