Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
The history of Luzon covers events that happened in the largest island of the Philippine Archipelago, Luzon. Luzon wrested the record of having the oldest man ever discovered in the Philippines with discovery of the Callao Man in 2007, which predated the Tabon Man by around 20,000 years. [1]
Archives. I. The Cordillera Region. The mountainous region of the Cordillera, located in the northern part of Luzon, Philippines, is home to the country’s seven major ethnolinguistic groups namely: the Tinggian, Isneg, Kalinga, Kankana-ey, Ibaloy, Ifugao and Bontok.
15 Οκτ 2007 · In the past century especially since the mid-20th century, much ethnographic information have been gathered on the indigenous peoples of the Cordillera region and the adjacent Ilocos and Cagayan Valley regions of Northern Luzon.
Felix Keesing’s The Ethnohistory of Northern Luzon (1962) and William Henry Scott’s The Discovery of the Igorots (1974) explored events and cultural elements that integrated the Ilocos, Cordillera, Cagayan and Pangasinan into a coherent historical narrative.
2 Ιαν 1995 · 1941-12-10 Japanese troops landed on northern Luzon in the Philippines. 1941-12-22 Japan's invasion leader lands on Luzon, Philippines. 1965-09-28 Taal Volcano explodes on Luzon in the Philippines, killing an estimated 100 people. 1995-01-02 Bus crashes in Luzon Philippines, 29 killed.
These communities were the Igorots of Northern Luzon, the Aetas of Central Luzon and the Moros of Mindanao in South Philippines. Throughout the 300 years of Spanish colonization, these communities continued to enjoy independence by being able to practice their own systems and ways of life.
The first regional archives in the Cordillera and Northern Luzon that primarily acquires and makes accessible to scholars historical documents.