Download - Hist2 4 pre-spanish culture
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PRE-SPANISH CULTURE
Philippine History with Politics and Governance
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CLOTHING Male
Upper part:Collarless,
short-sleeved jacket
Lower part:balang
Headgear:putong
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CLOTHING Female:
Upper part:baro or kamisa
Lower part:saya
(Tagalogs) and patadyong (Visayan)
Tapis
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ORNAMENTS
JewelsGold, carnelian, pearl,
beads and colored glass Ornaments
Armlets, pendants, bracelets, gold rings, earrings, and leglets
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ORNAMENTS
Tattoos For men, tattoos were signs of
valor and many attributes For women, it enhanced beauty
The most tattooed were the ancient Bisayans, who were called Pintados and the Visayas as Islas de los Pintados
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HOUSES The nipa house, made of wood, bamboo, nipa palm and/or cogon grass
Generally elevated from the ground, the lower portion were storage for tools and enclosure for their animals
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HOUSES Some built it on treetops Bajaos or Sea Gypsies of Sulu made their
houses on boats Lowland: linear in character Upland: scattered and distant from each
other
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SOCIAL CLASSES Four types of social organizations
(William Henry Scott, 1994)1. Classless Society (Hanunuo, Ilongot,
Tiruray, Sulod, Batak)2. Warrior Society (Manobo of Agusan and
Cotabato, Mandaya, Bagobo, Kalinga, and so on)
3. Petty Plutocracy (Ifugao, Bontok, Kankaay, Ibaloy)
4. Principalities (Sulu and the flood plains of Pulangi River, Cotabato)
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SOCIAL CLASSES
Nobles (gat or
lakan)
Freemen (maharlika or
timawa)Dependents (alipin, ulipon, or adipen)
Social classes of the rest of the Philippine society
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SOCIAL CLASSES Types of dependents (Tagalogs)
1. Aliping namamahay – slaves that had property, lived in their houses and could without their master’s consent, and could not be sold
2. Aliping sagigilid – slaves who owned no property, lived in their master’s houses, could not marry without their master’s consent, and could be sold anytime
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SOCIAL CLASSES Types of dependents (Bisayans)
1. Tumataban – worked in their master’s house when told to do so
2. Tumarampuk – worked one day for his master
3. Ayuey – worked three days for his lord
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WOMENS’ POSITION IN THE SOCIETY Occupied a high position Laws and custom were equal
with men1. Could own and inherit property2. Could engage in trade and
industry3. Could inherit the chieftancy and
rule barangays if they were daughters of datus with no sons
4. Occupied the prestigious position of babaylan
5. Could demand that their husbands use penis pins or penis rings
Could name her children Men should walk behind women
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PERSONAL HABITS Were clean and neat
Bath regularlyTook good care of their hair by using gogo
and anointing perfumed oilsRinse their mouths and cleaned their teeth.
Used betel nut as tootbrush and salt and water as toothpaste
Regularly cleaned their homes
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MARRIAGE CUSTOMS A man belonging to one class married a
woman of the same class but this custom was not rigid
Except Muslims, they practiced monogamy but in some cases, a man could marry as many as he could but only the first wife was considered legitimate spouse
Fixed marriage Two prerequisites to marriage: (1) lover’s
servitude to the girl’s family and (2) dowry given by man to the girl’s parents
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MARRIAGE CUSTOMS
Grounds for
divorce
Adultery or
desertion
Loss of affection
Cruelty
Insanity
Childishness
Lack of sexual
satisfaction
Any divorce couple could
remarry
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GOVERNMENT Patriarchal in form. Two models:
1. Barangay was a socio-quasi political/administrative unit
2. Sultanate system Barangays were independent, each
consisted of 30-100 families and ruled by a datu or rajah
The datu exercised all government functions assisted by the elders who advised him on important matters
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GOVERNMENT Maintains inter-baranganic relations to
avoid wars
Causes of war
When one goes to another
village killed someone without cause
When wives or husbands are stolen from them
When going to another
village in the guise of
friendship
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LAWSCustomary and written lawsCovered subjects• Family relations, property rights, inheritance, contracts,
partnerships, loans, usury, crimes and their punishment, adoption and divorce.
Major crimes• Rape, incest, murder, witchcraft, insult, trespassing,
sacrilegious acts, and larceny.• Punishment: deathMinor crimes• Misdemeanours like adultery, cheating, petty theft,
perjury, disturbance of peace at night by singing, and destroying documents
• Punishment: exposure to ants, small fine, flogging, cutting the fingers of one hand, swimming for a number of hours
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JUDICIAL PROCESS
Trials were held in public
Plaintiff and
defendant plead their
case
Witnesses took an
oath to tell the truth
Barangay court
favors a litigant
with more proofs
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JUDICIAL PROCESS Dispute between datus or between
residents of different barangays were sometimes settled by arbitrtaion
When the case is not readily decided by the barangay court, a trial by ordeal was resorted to.
In Muslim communities, civil or criminal cases were decided upon by the local Islamic court. Feuds and disputes, however, involved protracted bloody confrontations between families and clans
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JUDICIAL PROCESS
Trial by ordealRiver ordeal, suspects plunge
into the river with spears and who rises first is
guilty
Boiling water ordeal,
suspects pick a stone in a pot of
boiling water and he whose arm or hand is
burned the most is guilty
Candle ordeal,
suspects are given lighted candles of the same sizes and the owner of the candle that died out first is guilty
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BOILING WATER ORDEAL
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RELIGIOUS BELIEFS AND PRACTICES They were animistic. Worshipped a supreme god, called
Bathala by the Tagalogs Believed in spirits called anitos or
diwatas
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RELIGIOUS BELIEFS AND PRACTICES
Religious leaders were called babaylan, baylana, or katalona. For Muslims, it is imam or pandita.
Worshippers of nature and ancestors
Believed in afterlife and heaven and hell
Disease or illness was attributed to the environmental spirits and the soul-spirits of dead relatives.
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DIVINATION OR MAGIC CHARMS
Fond of interpreting signs in nature as good or bad omens depending upon circumstances
Believed in black magic and manogbarang or manoghiwit
Believed in aswang or witches and many more
Believed in the efficacy of anting-anting or amulets as well as lumay or gayuma
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ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES Agriculture as the main source of livelihood.
Two types of cultivation: kaingin or slash-and-burn and wet rice farming
Less arable lands were public property while productive lands were private properties of datus and nobles
Fermented the sap coconuts and nipas into tuba and vinegar
Aside from fishing and agriculture, other industries were poultry, stock-raising, lumbering and boat-building, mining, pottery making, and weaving.
Used barter system in business transactions
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LANGUAGE AND SYSTEM OF WRITING More than a hundred languages and
dialects exist A syllabary made of 17 symbols, 3
vowels and 14 consonants Wrote on bark of trees, leaves, and
bamboo nodes, using knives, daggers, pointed stick or iron as pens and colored sap of trees and fruits as ink.
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EARLY FILIPINO ALPHABETS
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LITERATURE Had oral and written literature
Consisted of proverbs, sayings, riddles, epics, myths, and legends
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MUSIC AND DANCE Had their own musical
instruments, songs, and dances
Most popular musical instument: kudyapi
Songs included love songs, religious songs, rice planting songs, harvesting songs, rowing songs, battle songs, vending songs, and others.
Had colorful folk dances
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ARTS Native artistry was found in beads,
amulets, bracelets, earrings, and other body ornaments made of gold, green jade, red carnelian, and other attractive stones
Dyed and ornamented their clothes with designs and picturesque colors
Evident in tattoos of early Filipinos Carves statues of anitos in wood, gold,
ivory, stone, and crocodile’s teeth
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ARTS Fanciful carvings on handle of
bolos, knives, daggers, and on shields and boats
Maranao Muslims had excellent woven products and creative ornamental and decorative brass art.
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