Kiangan-- Heritage town of Ifugao
>> Sunday, May 31, 2015
HISTORICAL NOTES
Daniel B. Codamon
Kiangan
was once the largest in area and population among the municipalities of Ifugao
until it bore two daughter municipalities, the municipality of Lamut in 1959
and Asipulo in 1992 reducing its land area and population drastically.
In colonial times from the Spanish, American
and Japanese periods and the first three years after the grant of Philippine
Independence in 1946, Kiangan was the military and political capital of Ifugao.
As center of government in the province for
60 years, it was also the center of education and commerce and at least a
number of the people of the place had first access to education and rose to
prominence and leadership in government compared with the other municipalities
of the province.
This proved to be the foremost factor that
gave Kiangan an advantage over the other towns in the historical development of
Ifugao.
Kiangan
may not be the capital town of the province anymore as it was transferred to the
municipality of Lagawe because of its more strategic location, but the history
of Ifugao cannot be written without referring to the history of Kiangan.
The
name Kiangan is derived from the word “Kiyyangan”, an ancient village that no
longer exist. But a small mound surrounded by rice fields located about 4
kilometers from the center Barangay of Poblacion serves as the physical reminder of the first
human settlement of the original ancestors of the Ifugao people.
Local
folklore says that the real “Kiyyangan” Village in Sitio Habbiyan of Barangay
Munggayang is the original settlement of the Ifugaos as often mentioned in the
Ifugao epic ‘Hudhud”, the “Baki” (Ifugao prayer), “Tonton” (genealogical
narration) and other oral history of Ifugao acknowledging the town as the
cradle of the Ifugao race.
As
such, Kiyyangan holds pre-eminence in the mindset of Ifugao elders like the
“mumbaki” (native priest) who performs the “baki”.
The
ancient Kiyyangan village was once a large thriving community on the west bank
of the Ibulao River from across the neighboring town of Lagawe proper but is
now just a part of Kiangan municipality.
In
the more popular Ifugao myth, Kiyyangan is the first Ifugao village of the
mythological Ifugao ancestors, Wigan and Bugan who descended from the
“Kabunyan” (skyworld), a story similar to that of Adam and Eve in the Bible.
Long
time ago, the “Pugaw” (the physical world or earth) which is the sixth realm in
the cosmos according to ancient Ifugao concept, was not yet inhabited but game
animals like deer and wild pigs abound that served as the hunting ground of the
deities from the “Kabunyan” like Wigan who also finds the soil of the place
fertile for farming.
Pugaw
is where the name “Ipugaw” (from the earth or where mortal human beings live)
originated which was later changed to Ifugao by the Spaniards who came to the
province.
So
Wigan and Bugan decided to settle near the west bank of the Ibulao River and
called it “Kiyyangan”. Their children married among themselves since they were
the only ones living in the place and soon “Pugaw” was populated by the
descendants of Wigan and Bugan.
Ibulao
River is the largest of the four rivers in Ifugao that flows to the Magat Dam
of which the “hudhud” chanters refer to
as the “kadaklan” ( big river”) and “punbangnan” (rice dikes) denoting the
early settlement and rice fields of “Kiyyangan” near its banks.
Aside
from the mythological narrations, modern theories on the origin of the Ifugao
people were explained in the books written by famous historians and scholars
who visited and stayed in the province like Henry Otley Beyer, Roy Barton, Fr.
Francis Lambrecht and Felix Keesing that complement the mythical theories and oral
literature of the Ifugaos.
Historically
also, ancient kiyyangan is referred to by scholars as the precursor of what is
now known as the town of Kiangan . However they are not the same since Old
Kiangan is now a part of Barangay Munggayang which is a smaller political
subdivision of Kiangan.
Archaeological
studies show that
Kiangan indeed is the cradle of
Ifugao race and civilization.
In June 2012, after more than three weeks of
excavation, the IfugaoArchaelogical Project (IAP) disclosed in their report
their findings regarding the “Old Kiyyangan Village” that constitutes the 1st
Field Season of the IAP, a community led project with the Save the Ifugao
Terraces Movement (SITMO), the local government of Kiangan, National Museum of
the Philippines, University of the Philippines Archaelogical Studies Program
and the University of Guam.
the IAP crew opened five trenches or excavation units to obtain
subsurface information about the site in which Trench 1 provided a buried
irrigation ditch called “alak” in the Ifugao-Tuwali dialect, Trench 2 showed
shallow river terrace, Trench 3 and 4 offered a valuable information of the
life of the old Kiyyangan settlers and Trench 5 holds a large water jar used as
a dog burial.
The IAP concluded that the excavation
provided the opportunity to look at an early Ifugao village life and that the
artifacts recovered suggest a thriving community activity such as hunting deer
and probably cultivating rice, taro and sweet potatoes.
Based on the radiocarbon dates (c14)
conducted on the artifacts found in the excavation by the IAP, it indicates
that the area was settled or found as early as 1,000 years ago.
Learning and understanding all these oral
traditions, folklore, mythological stories, historical facts and archaelogical
studies clarify and make undisputable that Kiangan is the Heritage Town and the
Cradle of the Ifugao race and civilization.
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