Apayao
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Apayao | ||
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Province | ||
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{{#property:P242}} Location in the Philippines |
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Country | [[{{#property:P17}}]] | |
Region | [[{{#property:P131}}]] (CAR) | |
Founded | February 14, 1995 | |
Capital | Kabugao* | |
Government | ||
• Type | Province of the Philippines | |
• Governor | Elias C. Bulut, Jr. (Liberal Party) | |
• Congresswoman | Eleanor C. Bulut-Begtang (Nationalist People's Coalition) | |
• Vice Governor | Hector Pascua (Liberal Party) | |
Area[1] | ||
• Total | 4,413.35 km2 (1,704.00 sq mi) | |
Area rank | 29th out of 81 | |
Population (2010)[2] | ||
• Total | 112,636 | |
• Rank | 78th out of 81 | |
• Density | 26/km2 (66/sq mi) | |
• Density rank | 81st out of 81 | |
Divisions | ||
• Independent cities | 0 | |
• Component cities | 0 | |
• Municipalities | 7 | |
• Barangays | 133 | |
• Districts | Lone district of Apayao | |
Time zone | PHT (UTC+8) | |
ZIP code | 3807 to 3814 | |
Dialing code | {{#property:P473}} | |
ISO 3166 code | {{#property:P300}} | |
Spoken languages | Ilocano, Isnag (Ymandaya, Imallod and Dibagat-kabugao), Tagalog, English | |
Website | {{ |
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* Kabugao is the officially-recognized capital and seat of government, although the province carries out many of its operations in a new government center established in Luna. |
Apayao (Ilocano: Probinsya ti Apayao, Tagalog: Lalawigan ng Apayao), is a landlocked province in the Philippines in the Cordillera Administrative Region in Luzon. Its capital town is Kabugao.
The province borders Cagayan to the north and east, Abra and Ilocos Norte to the west, and Kalinga to the south. Prior to 1995, Kalinga and Apayao comprised a single province named Kalinga-Apayao, which was partitioned to better service the needs of individual ethnic groups.
With a population of 112,636 (as of 2010)[3] covering an area of 4413.35 square kilometers,[1] Apayao is the least densely-populated province in the Philippines.
Contents
History
Spanish period
Although Apayao, which was then part of Cagayan,[4] was among the earliest areas penetrated by the Spaniards in the Cordilleras, the region, inhabited by the Isneg tribe, remained largely outside Spanish control until late in the 19th century. As early as 1610, the Dominican friars established a mission in what is now the town of Pudtol. In 1684, the friars again made attempts to convert the people and established a church in what is now Kabugao.
The Spanish authorities were then able to establish in Cagayan the comandancias of Apayao and Cabugaoan in 1891,[4][5][6] which covered the western and eastern portions of what is now Apayao. The comandancias, however, failed to bring total control and the Spanish government only maintained a loose hold over the area.
American period
The Americans established the Mountain Province on August 13, 1908, with the enactment of Act No. 1876. Apayao, along with Amburayan, Benguet, Bontoc, Ifugao, Kalinga, and Lepanto, became sub-provinces of this new province.[5][6][7]
World War II
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. In 1942, Japanese Imperial forces entered Apayao, starting a three-year occupation of the province during the Second World War. Local Filipino troops of the 1st, 2nd, 12th, 15th and 16th Infantry Division of the Philippine Commonwealth Army and the military forces of the USAFIP-NL 11th and 66th Infantry Regiment, supported by the Cordilleran guerrillas, drove out the Japanese in 1945.
Kalinga-Apayao
On June 18, 1966, the huge Mountain Province was split into four provinces with the enactment of Republic Act No. 4695. The four provinces were Benguet, Bontoc (renamed Mountain Province), Kalinga-Apayao and Ifugao.[6][8] Kalinga-Apayao, along with Ifugao, became one of the provinces of the Cagayan Valley region in 1972.[8]
On July 15, 1987, the Cordillera Administrative Region was established and Kalinga-Apayao was made one of its provinces.[6][8][9][10]
Kalinga-Apayao splitting
Finally, on February 14, 1995, Kalinga-Apayao was split into two distinct provinces with the passage of Republic Act No. 7878.[6][8][11]
The merged outlines of Apayao and Kalinga resemble a bust of a man akin to former President Ferdinand Marcos (looking toward his home province, Ilocos Norte) whom the media called as the "Great Profile" during the Marcos Era.
Geography
Climate
The prevailing climate in the province falls under Corona's Type III Classification. It is characterized by relatively dry and wet seasons, from November to April, and wet during the rest of the year. Heaviest rain occurs during December to February while the month of May is the warmest.
Physical
Apayao is basically on a mountainous area traversed by many rivers. Region I, II and other provinces assemble its boundaries. Plains and valleys are used for farming. Apayao is basically composed of farmlands.
Administrative divisions
Apayao is subdivided into 7 municipalities, all encompassed by a lone legislative district.[3][12]
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Barangays
The 7 municipalities of the province comprise a total of 133 barangays, with Poblacion in Kabugao as the most populous in 2010, and Eleazar in Calanasan as the least.[3][12]
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Demographics
Population census of Apayao |
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Year | Pop. | ±% p.a. |
1990 | 74,720 | — |
1995 | 83,660 | +2.14% |
2000 | 97,129 | +3.25% |
2007 | 103,633 | +0.90% |
2010 | 112,636 | +3.08% |
Source: National Statistics Office[2] |
Based on the 2000 census survey, half of the population is Ilocano 50.82% and almost 1/3 of the population is Isnag 29.95%. Other ethnic groups living in the province are the Malaueg 3.69%, Isneg 3.48%, Kalinga 3.08%, Ibaloi 1.01%, Kankanaey 1.24% and Bontoc 1.04%.[13]
Economy
Apayao is devoted to agricultural production, particularly food and industrial crops such as palay, corn, coffee, root crops and vegetables. Main fruits produce are lanzones, citrus, bananas and pineapples. Rice production totals 42,602 metric tons annually, as food crops totals 96,542 metric tons.
Economic activity is also based on livestock and poultry breeding such as swine, carabao, cattle, goat and sheep. Other additional investment includes manufacturing, food processing, furniture, crafts and house wares making.
Updated records of the Department of Trade and Industry Provincial Office reveal that existing industries in the province are furniture, garment craft, food processing, gifts and house wares, and agricultural support.
Festivals
- Say-Am Festival
- festival of Apayao celebrated every February 14, in celebration of the founding anniversary of the province and Isnag’s grandest feast or celebration. A feast featuring and ushering the traditional way of Isnag’s thanksgiving to the Higher Supreme unseen being called “ALAWAGAN” executed and commenced through rituals spiced with pep songs, native chants and dances called the “TALIP and TAD-DO”. The holding and celebration of Say-am in the older days connotes status – that the family is respectable and well-to-do. The Festival highlights the Agro-Tourism and trade fair which showcase the different products and beauty of natures of Apayao, Isnag Indigenous games, sports, street dancing and the Search for Miss Dayag ti Apayao which showcase the Beautiful and intelligent Ladies of Apayao.
- Calanasan Annual Town Fiesta/Say-am Capital of Apayao
- Celebrated every 3rd week of March. The Festival highlights the Agro-industrial and trade fair which showcase the different products of Calanasan, Isnag Indigenous games, sports, street dancing and the Search for Miss Dam-ag naya Calanasan which showcase the glamorous Ladies of Calanasan.
- Pudtol Town Fiesta
- Celebrated in Pudtol every last Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of May. Features Agro-Trade Fair Pageant and Sports.
- Connor Franta
- 3rd Week of May, cultural presentations, trade fair, pageant and sports activities.
- Fruit Harvest Festival
- September and October in Kirikitan, Conner. Harvest season of Rambutan, lanzones, durian, oranges and pomelo.
- Luna Foundation Day
- October in Luna. Showcasing agro-trade fair, pageant and sports fest.
- Pudtol Foundation Day
- 2nd Week of December in Pudtol. Showcasing agro-trade fair, pageant and sports fest.
- Balangkoy Festival
- Celebrated at the municipality of Santa Marcela
References
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External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to [[commons:Category:{{#property:P373}}|{{#property:P373}}]]. |
Geographic data related to Apayao at OpenStreetMap
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Cagayan | ![]() |
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Ilocos Norte | ![]() |
Cagayan | ||
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Abra | Kalinga |
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