Who discovered the Philippines?
>> Tuesday, January 3, 2017
PERRYSCOPE
Perry Diaz
Perry Diaz
Philippine history
books have been saying that Ferdinand Magellan discovered the Philippines. But
was he really the one who discovered the Philippines?
Long before Magellan
landed in the Philippine archipelago, visitors and colonizers from other lands
had come to our shores.
The earliest evidence
of the existence of modern man — homo sapiens sapiens — in the archipelago was
discovered in 1962 when a National Museum team led by Dr. Robert Fox uncovered
the remains of a 22,000-year old man in the Tabon Caves of Palawan. The
team determined that the Tabon Caves were about 500,000 years old and had been
inhabited for about 50,000 years.
In the late 1990s,
Jared Diamond, Professor of Geography at UCLA and winner of the Phi Beta Kappa
Award in Science, and Peter Bellwood, Professor of Archaeology at the
Australian National University, postulated that the Austronesians had their
roots in Southern China. Diamond said that they migrated to Taiwan around
3,500 B.C. However, Bellwood believed that the Austronesian expansion
started as early as 6,000 B.C. Around 3,000 B.C., the Malayo-Polynesians
— a subfamily of the Austronesians — began their migration out of Taiwan.
The first stop was northern Luzon.
Over a span of 2,000
years, the Malayo-Polynesian expansion spread southward to the rest of the
Philippine archipelago and crossed the ocean to Celebes, Borneo, Timor, Java,
Sumatra, Malay Peninsula, and Vietnam; westward in the Indian Ocean to
Madagascar; and eastward in the Pacific Ocean to New Guinea, New Zealand,
Samoa, Fiji, Marquesas, Cook, Pitcairn, Easter, and Hawaii. Today, the
Malayo-Polynesian speaking people have populated a vast area that covers a
distance of about 11,000 miles from Madagascar to Hawaii, almost half the
circumference of the world.
In 2002, Bellwood and
Dr. Eusebio Dizon of the Archaeology Division of the National Museum of the
Philippines led a team that conducted an archaeological excavation in the
Batanes Islands, which lie between Taiwan and Northern Luzon. The
three-year archaeological project, financed by National Geographic, was done to
prove — or disprove — the “Out of Taiwan” hypothesis for the Austronesian
dispersal.
The archaeological
evidence that they gathered proved that the migration from Taiwan to Batanes
and Luzon started about 4,000 years ago. For the next 500 years after the
arrival of the Malayo-Polynesians in Batanes and Northern Luzon, native
settlements flourished throughout the archipelago.
The Philippine
islands’ proximity to the Malay Archipelago, which includes the coveted
Moluccas islands — known as the “Spice Islands” — had attracted Arab traders
who had virtual monopoly of the Spice Trade until 1511. By the 9th
century, Muslim traders from Malacca, Borneo, and Sumatra started coming to
Sulu and Mindanao. In 1210 AD, Islam was introduced in Sulu.
An Arab known as Tuan
Mashaika founded the first Muslim community in Sulu. In 1450 AD,
Shari’ful Hashem Syed Abu Bakr, a Jahore-born Arab, arrived in Sulu from
Malacca. He married the daughter of the local chieftain and established
the Sultanate of Sulu.
In the early 16th
century, Sharif Muhammad Kabungsuan, a Muslim preacher from Malacca arrived in
Malabang in what is now Lanao del Sur and introduced Islam to the
natives. In 1515 he married a local princess and founded the Sultanate of
Maguindanao with Cotabato as its capital. By the end of the 18th century,
more than 30 sultanates were established and flourished in Mindanao. The
Sultanates of Maguindanao and Sulu were the most powerful in the region.
Neither of them capitulated to Spanish dominion.
Chinese traders — who
were also involved in the Spice Trade — started coming to the Philippine
archipelago in the 11th century. They went as far as Butuan and
Sulu. However, most of their trade activities were in Luzon.
In 1405, during the
reign of the Ming Dynasty in China, Emperor Yung Lo claimed the island of Luzon
and placed it under his empire. The Chinese called the island “Lusong” from the
Chinese characters Lui Sung. The biggest settlement of Chinese was in
Lingayen in Pangasinan.
Lingayen also became
the seat of the Chinese colonial government in Luzon. When Yung Lo died in
1424, the new Emperor Hongxi, Yung Lo’s son, lost interest in the colony and
the colonial government was dissolved. However, the Chinese settlers in
Lingayen — known as “sangleys” — remained and prospered. Our national
hero Dr. Jose P. Rizal descended from the sangleys.
The lucrative Spice
Trade attracted the European powers. In 1511 a Portuguese armada led by
Alfonso d’Albuquerque attacked Malacca and deposed the sultanate. Malacca’s
strategic location made it the hub of the Spice Trade; and whoever controlled
Malacca controlled the Spice Trade. At that time, Malacca had a
population of 50,000 and 84 languages were spoken.
It is interesting to
note that in 1515, Tome Pires — the apothecary of Portuguese Prince Alfonso and
author of Suma Oriental (Eastern Account) — during his travel to Malacca,
wrote: “The [Luzones] are almost one people, and in Malacca, there is no
division between them…They were already building many houses and shops. They
are a useful people; they are hardworking… In Minjam, near Malacca, there must
be five hundred Luzoes, some of them important men.” It would seem to me
that those 500 Luzoes (Luzones) were the first recorded Overseas Filipino
Workers (OFWs).
One of the officers
under d’Albuquerque was Ferdinand Magellan. Magellan stayed in Malacca
for a few years and spent some time reconnoitering the surrounding areas.
He had an idea. He returned to Portugal to convince the Portuguese king
to subsidize an expedition to find a westward route to the Spice Islands.
The Portuguese king rejected his proposal and he went to Spain to get support
from the Spanish king.
He succeeded in
convincing the Spanish king. In 1519, Magellan sailed westward from Seville in
search of the Spice Islands. On March 16, 1521 — on the Feast of St.
Lazarus — he landed in the Philippine archipelago. He named the
archipelago “Islas de San Lazaro” and claimed it for the King of Spain.
What Magellan found in
the Philippines were a peaceful people with all the trappings of a civilized
society. When he arrived in Cebu, the Cebuanos welcomed him and his
party, and lavished them with hospitality. The Cebuanos were easily
converted to Christianity and they pledged allegiance — without bloodshed — to
the king of Spain. However, Lapu-Lapu, the chief of the neighboring
Mactan island refused to pledge allegiance to the Spanish king.
On April 27, 1521,
irked by Lapu-Lapu’s rejection, Magellan attacked Mactan. Lapu-Lapu and
his warriors met them on the shores of Mactan. Magellan was killed in
battle; thus, ending his dream of reaching the Spice Islands by way of a
westward route. History has been kind by crediting him for the “discovery” of
the Philippines… or rather it should it be the re-discovery of the Philippines.
***
NOTE:
I originally published this article on April 13, 2007. With the reenactment of
the Balanghai expedition, there is growing interest in pre-Hispanic Philippine
history. Like someone one said, “Know history, know self.”
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