History of Lalo Cagayan
-
Upload
lisa-marsh -
Category
Documents
-
view
34 -
download
0
description
Transcript of History of Lalo Cagayan
-
Lal-Lo, Cagayan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced
material may be challenged and removed. (January 2014)
Lal-lo
Municipality
Seal
Map of Cagayan showing the location of Lal-Lo
-
Lal-lo
Location within the Philippines
Coordinates: 1812N 12140ECoordinates: 1812N 12140E
Country Philippines
Region Cagayan Valley (Region II)
Province Cagayan
District 1st District
Barangays 35
Government[1]
Mayor Florante 'Anteng' C. Pascual
Area[2]
Total 702.80 km2 (271.35 sq mi)
Population (2010)[3]
Total 41,388
Density 59/km2 (150/sq mi)
Time zone PST (UTC+8)
ZIP code 3509
Dialing code 78
Income class 1st class
Lal-lo is a first class municipality in the province of Cagayan, Philippines. According to the 2010 census, it has a population of 41,388 people.[3]
During the Spanish colonial period, Lal-lo was known as the City of Nueva Segovia and was the seat of the Diocese of Nueva Segovia before it was moved to Vigan in Ilocos Sur. There is a recent move
-
in the Philippine Congress to rename Lal-lo back to its former name and reclassify the municipality again as a component city.
The current mayor of Lal-lo is Florante 'Anteng' Pascual, spouse of former Mayor Olivia Pascual, now a board member of the 1st district of Cagayan.
An international airport is currently being built in the southern part of Lal-lo. The Northern Cagayan International Airport is constructed to support the Cagayan Special Economic Zone in northern Cagayan and will also serve the seaborne traffic through Port Irene. The airport project involves the construction of a 2,200-meter runway, with a width of 45 meters, following the standards of the International Civil Aviation Organization. Once completed, the international airport can accommodate large aircraft such as the Airbus A319-100 and Boeing regional jets of comparable size.
Contents
[hide]
1 Barangays
2 Etymology
3 History o 3.1 Spanish Era o 3.2 Diocese of Nueva Segovia o 3.3 Provincial capital o 3.4 Conversion to cityhood
4 Demographics
5 Places of interest
6 Media
7 Major schools
8 References
9 External links
Barangays[edit]
Lal-lo is politically subdivided into 35 barangays.[2]
Abagao
Alaguia
Bagumbayan
Bangag
Bical
Bicud
Binag
Cabayabasan (Capacuan)
Cagoran
Cambong
Catayauan
Catugan
Centro (Pob.)
Cullit
Dagupan
Dalaya
Fabrica
Fusina
-
Jurisdiction
Lalafugan
Logac
Magallungon (Sta. Teresa)
Magapit
Malanao
Maxingal
Naguilian
Paranum
Rosario
San Antonio (Lafu)
San Jose
San Juan
San Lorenzo
San Mariano
Santa Maria
Tucalana
Etymology[edit]
Lal-lo means "twisting two strands to make a rope", or may also refer to the strong river current as it is located along Cagayan River, the longest and largest river in the Philippines.
History[edit] Spanish Era[edit]
The first European to set foot on what is now the town of Lal-lo is Juan de Salcedo, the Spanish conquistador and grandson ofMiguel Lopez de Legazpi, in 1572. Don Juan Pablo Carrion established it as a pueblo (municipality) in 1581 and named it Nueva Segovia in memory of Segovia, his hometown in Spain.
Diocese of Nueva Segovia[edit]
In 1595, Pope Clement VIII created the Diocese of Nueva Segovia and in 1596, the Dominicans accepted it as an ecclesiastical mission. Nueva Segovia had three churches: the cathedral that was under the secular clergy, and the parishes of Bagumbayan and Tocolona under the supervision of the Dominicans. But because of its distance from Manila and the constant threat of the Cagayan Rivers rampaging waters, the Diocese of Nueva Segovia was transferred to Vigan in Ilocos Sur province in 1758. The dioceses name went along with the transfer to Vigan and to avoid confusion, Bishop Miguel Garcia requested that Nueva Segovia and its suburbs renamed back to Lal-lo. The seat of the Diocese of Nueva Segovia remains in Vigan till today where is now elevated as the Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia.
The transfer affected the closure of the cathedral and the merging of the three churches into the single parish of Bagumbayan. The two other churches were abandoned and eventually destroyed because of neglect while the church of Bagumbayan, dedicated to Sto. Domingo de Guzman (Saint Dominic) became what is now the present church of Lal-lo. The remains of three bishops are interred in the church: Bishop Miguel de Benavides who was Nueva Segovias first bishop and later of Manila where he founded theUniversity of Santo Tomas, Bishop Diego de Soria who was the second bishop of the diocese, and Bishop Diego Aduarte who was the sixth.
Provincial capital[edit]
-
Lal-lo used to be the capital of Cagayan province until 1839 when the provincial seat of power was relocated to Tuguegarao. The decline of Lal-lo is the transformation of Tuguegarao as the most important town in Cagayan. It was accepted as an ecclesiastical mission by the Dominicans in 1604, 23 years after the foundation of Lal-lo.
Conversion to cityhood[edit]
Researchers have found a Spanish document which declared this municipality as a city during the Spanish regime, according to board member Maria Olivia Pascual. Pascual said a bill, which clamors for the restoration of the former Ciudad Nueva Segovia now called Lal-lo filed by 1SR Congressional District Representative Juan Ponce Enrile Jr., will be re-filed.
During the first term of Mayor Florante Pascual, he resolved that the cityhood be restored through an earlier bill filed by Enrile. However, even after sending a research delegation to Madrid to retrieve the historical document originally signed by King Philip, the team failed to locate it. The document is a basic requirement in the bid of this town for cityhood.
Under the local government code, municipalities who want to elevate themselves into cities must satisfy requirements on population, land area and income. For municipalities who were earlier declared as Spanish cities, only decrees which declared them as such is the basic requirement. Earlier, the towns of Naga (Nueva Caceres) and Vigan (Ciudad Fernandina) were elevated to cityhood status after both towns applied for their historical rights in the early 1990s. Academics clarified that there is a big difference between restoration and conversion of cities under Philippine laws.
Under the Diocese of Nueva Segovia, Lal-lo enjoyed lavish gifts from Spain and was the capital of the entire Cagayan Valley region until its transfer to Tuguegarao City in 1839.
Demographics[edit]
Population census of Lal-Lo
Year Pop. % p.a.
1990 31,373
1995 32,156 +0.46%
2000 36,529 +2.77%
2007 39,607 +1.12%
2010 41,388 +1.61%
Source: National Statistics Office[3]