Camiguin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This is the article on the island province of Camiguin in the Philippines. There is a different Camiguin Island, part of the Babuyan Islands, also in the Philippines.
| Province of Camiguin | |
Provincial seal of Camiguin |
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![]() Map of the Philippines with Camiguin highlighted |
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| Region | Northern Mindanao (Region X) |
| Capital | Mambajao |
| Divisions | |
| - Highly urbanized cities | 0 |
| - Component cities | 0 |
| - Municipalities | 5 |
| - Barangays | 58 |
| - Congressional districts | 1 |
| Population | 2nd smallest |
| - Total (2000) | 74,232 |
| - Density | 323/km² (16th highest) |
| Area | 2nd smallest |
| - Total | 229.8 km² |
| Founded | 1565 |
| Spoken languages | Cebuano, Kinamigin |
| Governor | Jurdin Jesus Romualdo (Lakas-CMD/NPC) |
Camiguin is a small island province of the Philippines off the northern coast of Mindanao. It belongs to the Northern Mindanao region.
Its capital is Mambajao and it is the second-smallest province both in population and land area. Only Batanes is smaller. The island of Camiguin is in the Bohol Sea about 10 kilometers north of Misamis Oriental.
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Camiguin is accessible by air and sea from Cebu City however trips are limited. Most fly in to Cagayan de Oro City in Misamis Oriental Province, the gateway to Northern Mindanao. One would then take a 1.5 hours bus or hired van from Cagayan de Oro City to the port of Balingoan. Ferries leave Balingoan to Camiguin Island every hour from 6:00 am until 5:00 pm.
The people of Camiguin are called "Camiguingnons". The main occupation of the people is fishing and farming, with copra providing the greatest income contribution. Other plantations are abaca, rice, mangoes, lanzones and other fruit trees. Small cottage industries are increasing in number to accommodate the influx of visitors. The population is of Visayan descent. "Cebuano" and "Hiligaynon" are the main dialects. Cebuano is the main language while a few speak Kinamigin, an ancient dialect. Nearly everyone speaks English fairly well.
Among the prominent families are of Spanish and Chinese descent namely the Sia, Paderanga, Reyes, Dychauco, Tee, and Neri.[citation needed]
Reports from Dept. of Trade and Industry (DTI), total amount of trade and investments for the year 2001 reached to 195.645 million pesos broken down from the following sector:
- Agri-Based: PHP28.027M
- Services: PHP64.116M
- Consumer manufacturers: PHP1.230M
- Others (bank releases): PHP80.888M
- Trading: PHP21.385M
Total: PHP195.645 M
Camiguin is subdivided into 5 municipalities.
Camiguin is composed of four young stratovolcanoes overlying older volcanic structures. One of these, Hibok-Hibok, last erupted in 1953 and is still considered active. The other major volcanic edifices are Mt. Vulcan (671 meters, northwest of Hibok-Hibok ), Mt. Mambajao (1552 meters, in central Camiguin), Mt. Ginsiliban (581 meters, southernmost Camiguin), and Mt. Uhay (north of Mount Ginsiliban). There are also domes and cones at Campana Hill, Minokol Hill, Tres Marias Hill, Mt. Carling, Mt. Tibane, and Piyakong Hill.
The name Camiguin is derived from the native word “Kamagong”, a tree of the Ebony family that thrives near lake Mainit in the Province of Surigao del Norte. The original inhabitants of Camiguin were “manobos” who migrated from Surigao. The old native language in Camiguin is called “Kinamigin”, which is similar to the dialect spoken in Surigao.
Old Spanish documents indicate that the renowned explorers, Ferdinand Magellan and Miguel López de Legazpi landed in Camiguin in 1521 and 1565, respectively. The first Spanish settlement in what was later to be known as Guinsiliban was established in 1598. Guinsiliban comes from the old Kinamigin word “Guinsiliban” which means “to look out for pirates from a watchtower”. An old Spanish watchtower where the Camiguinons kept watch for Moro pirates still stands in Guinsiliban. The first major Spanish settlement established in 1679 was called Katagman or Katadman (known as Catarman). The settlement grew and prospered to what is now Barangay Bonbon. On May 1, 1871, Mt. Vulcan Daan erupted and destroyed the town. A portion of the town sank beneath the sea. After the eruption, the settlement moved to were the Catarman town center is presently located. Today, all the remains of old Catarman are the ruins of the ancient Spanish church, a convent and a bell tower. Sagay, located south of Catarman, was formally established as a town in 1848. The word Sagay is derived from the name of poisonous fruit tree that grow in the area. Mambajao became a town in 1855. The name was coined from the Visayan terms “mamahaw”, meaning to usher breakfast, and “bajao”, which is leftover boiled rice. In the early 1900s, Mambajao prospered to become the busiest port in Northern Mindanao. Mahinog was established as a municipality in 1860. The name Mahinog comes from a Cebuano word meaning “to ripen” or “to become ripe”. Although Guinsiliban was the oldest settlement in the island, it was only in 1950 when it became a municipality. Both Mahinog and Guinsiliban were formally governed from Sagay.
In 1901, in the middle of the Philippine-American War (1898-1904), American soldiers landed in Camiguin to assume political control over the island. A group of Camiguinons, armed with bolos and spears, led by Valero Camaro fought for the island’s independence from foreign invasion during a short battle in Catarman. Valero Camaro was killed by a bullet on the forehead. He became one of the unsung Camiguin patriots of the early independence movement. In 1903, the first public school in Camiguin was built in Mambajao and in 1904 the first public water system was installed. On June 18, 1942, the Japanese Imperial Army landed in Camiguin and set up a government in Mambajao. The Japanese Army gutted down central Mambajao in reprisal to guerrilla activities helped from the Commonwealth Philippine forces there. The remains of some of these buildings still exist today.
In 1945 Landed to the Philippine forces in camiguin by the attack by the Japanese forces defeated in the isalnd during World War II.
On July 4, 1946, the country gained independence from the United States of America and became the Republic of the Philippines. From 1946 to 1958, Camiguin was part of Misamis Oriental. In 1958, it became a sub-province and in 1968, a full-fledged province with Mambajao as its provincial capital.
From 1948 to 1951, Mt. Hibok-Hibok constantly rumbled and smoked. Its minor eruption in 1948 caused little damage and loss of life. In 1949, its eruption caused 79 deaths due to landslides. In the morning of December 4, 1951, the volcano erupted again. This, time, however, it unleashed boiling lava, poisonous gases, and landslides enough to destroy nearly 19 squares kilometers of land particularly in Mambajao. All in all, over 3,000 people were killed. Before the eruption of Mt. Hibok-Hibok in 1951, the population of Camiguin had reach 69,000. After the eruption, the population was reduced to about 34,000 due to massive out-migration.
Camiguin was part of Misamis Oriental until 1958 when it became a sub-province. It was made into a separate province on June 18, 1966, but was formally inaugurated only in 1968.
Several centuries-old churches are found in various parts of the island. One of the famous churches is the Sto. Rosario Church in the municipality of Sagay built in 1882, and the church ruins of San Roque in Barangay Bonbon. Another famous church located in Baylao is said to be miraculous during the volcanic eruption and claimed to have saved many lives.
This island is also famous for it's underwater sunken cemetery, submerged after a volcanic eruption of the Daan in 1871. The place is marked by a huge cross installed in 1982.[1]
Ancestral Homes Camiguin Island is famous for its ancestral homes gracefully dotting the streets all over the island
On September, 2007, The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) signed a memorandum of agreement with the Camiguin provincial government for the implementation of a 5-year integrated coastal resource management system in 40 coastal barangays (villages) and 5 municipalities. Gov. Jurdin Jesus Romualdo said the 5-year project got P 116 million funding from the New Zealand Agency for International Aid (NZAID). The system includes granting of livelihood enterprises for small-scale fishermen and 10,378 households will benefit from the project. [2]
At least four vertebrate species are believed to be endemic to Camiguin:
- Bullimus gamay, a rodent
- Apomys camiguinensis, a mouse
- Loriculus camiguinensis, the Camiguin Hanging-parrot
- Oreophryne nana, a frog.
- ^ "Camiguin is famous for..." - Department of Tourism
- ^ Inquirer.net, Camiguin gets NZ funding to protect coastal resources
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| Catarman • Guinsiliban • Mahinog • Mambajao • Sagay |
