There are Six Distinguishing Periods in The History of The Philippines
1. The Pleistocene Period
In
this period ice covered large parts of Earth and what are islands today
were part of the land mass above sea before the ice melted and the sea
rose to its present levels. Between 3,000 and 1,000 years ago much of
the ice melted on Earth ending the Ice Age. Pottery has been found
dating 1,500 B.C.E. and bronze, copper and gold artifacts have been found
and dated 500 to 400 B.C.E.
2. The Austronesian Arrival to Luzon about 2,500 B.C.
From
Taiwan in about 2,500 was one of the greatest expansion of human
settlements. This was the migration of the Tai Kadai speaking
Austro-asian fisherman farmers from Taiwan. Originally these people
migrated from China, 150 kilometers away between 4,000 and 3,000 BCE.
These marine explorers ventured and made settlements from Madagascar
off the coast of Africa, to Hawaii, New Zealand and throughout all of
Borneo, Java, The Malay Peninsula and the Indo Malayan Archipelago.
Archaelogical discoveries from the Cagayan Valley in North Luzon
include stone tools and pottery from Taiwan of the same period.
This
Austro-asian migration through out the Philippines formed the basis of
what we now refer to as the indigenous population. There are over 1,00
Austro-asian languages or dialects [ depending on how they are
classified ]. In the Philippines the major Austroasian languages are,
Tagalog, Cebuano, Ilocano, Hiligaynon and Bicolano. In total there are
87 Austroasian languages in the Philippines.
3. The Pre-Hispanic Period
The
two principal ethnic cultures prior to the arrival of the Spaniards
were the Taga-ilog or Tagalogs and the Visayans. The social structures
then of these two groups is discussed in the Philippines People sections
of this Site.
The other one hundred or so other ethnic groups also
occupied areas of The Philippines. Originally all these groups were
animists, until the arrival of the Muslim settlers and the conversion
to Islam or Catholicism
4. Arrival of Islam
Marco
Polo on his return to Venice in 1292 reported that southern Sumatra had
before then converted to Islam. Malayan Islamic scriptures date from
1326 and Muslim scholars are recorded in the Sulu Archipeligos of the
Philippines in 1380. In 1400 the Northern Province of Ache in Sumatra
converted to Islam.
Hindus and Buddhists in the region were overtaken
by Islam with its popular appeal. Hinduism and Buddhism were used to
deify the rulers and entrench their rule, Islam on the other hand
offered the individual a way for personal salvation. The Molaccas
converted in 1414 and the Sultan of Malacca in 1447.
Two reasons why
Islam spread were because it was spread by traders who ventured
throughout the archipelago and because its believers were given access
to guns which were then new powerful weapons. Islam then controlled
trade. It was not until Vasco Da Gama settled Goa in India and later
destroyed Malacca and the Islam control of it did European power take
hold. The Indian Hindu and the Catholic Europeans [ the Portuguese and
the Spaniards ] resented the roll of Islam.
5. Spanish Colonization
The
Spanish explorer, Ruy Lopez de Villalobos [ 1500 – 1544 ] sailed from
New Spain [ ‘’ Nueva Espana ‘’ which was the Viceroy ruled Spanish
colonial territory from 1525 to 1821 and which included modern Mexico,
Central America south to Costa Rica and most of what is now Southwest
United States, including all or parts of California, Nevada, Utah,
Colorado, Wyoming, Arizona, Texas and New Mexico ] in 1542 across the
Pacific Ocean to explore the Philippines. He landed at the southern
coast of Luzon and later the Islands of Samar and Leyte. Here he named
them ‘’ Las Islas Felipinas ‘’. He was subsequently defeated by local
inhabitants and forced to abandon his settlements. He sought refuge in
the Moluccas Islands which were then controlled by the Portuguese. He
was imprisoned there and later died on the Island of Amboyna. His
surviving crew escaped and returned to Mexico.
The Philippines
was a colony of New Spain, administered between 1565 and 1821 when
Spain lost this and other Territories to the United States of America.