Balbalan

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Balbalan, officially the Municipality of Balbalan, is a municipality in the province of Kalinga, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 12,914 people.Template:PH census

History

Spanish colonial era

The Spaniards made at least 10 incursionsTemplate:Refn into the land of the Kalingas from the early 1600s to the late 1800s, four of which were made from the west (Abra) primarily targeting the regions of Banao and Guinaang.[1] Although they succeeded around the mid-1800s in establishing a telegraph station in Balbalasang (where, incidentally, they appointed the noted Banao leader Juan Puyao as a gobernadorcillo or councilor) and subsequently hacking out an Ilocos-Abra-Kalinga-Cagayan trail, they failed to establish a foothold in Kalinga.[2]

Prior to the establishment of American rule in Kalinga, the ethnic sub-groups covered by the present geopolitical configuration of Balbalan were, like other Kalinga communities at that time, organized according to an indigenous system or concept of local governance operating within a “bilateral kinship group” circumscribed by semi-permanent territorial boundary.Template:Refn[3]

This period saw the rise of several community leaders often mentioned in Balbalan orature: Sagaoc, Balutoc, Masadao, Gaddawan, Dawegoy, Lang-ayan, Bayudang, Gammong, et al.

American colonial era

When the Americans imposed their system of government over the archipelago, the land of the Kalingas became one of the highlights of their so-called “pacification campaign.” On 18 August 1907, Kalinga, then a sub-province of Lepanto-Bontoc, came under the control of Lt. Gov. Walter Franklin Hale who established his seat of government in Lubuagan where he organized the sub-province into four districts: Tinglayan-Tanudan; Balbalan-Pasil; Pinukpuk-Tobog (Tabuk), and Liwan (Rizal).[4]

A year later, Act 1870 of the Philippine Commission carved the old Mountain Province out of northern Luzon with Kalinga as one of its five sub-provinces. Kalinga was immediately reorganized into five municipal districts — Lubuagan (including Tanudan and Pasil), Balbalan (including Balinciagao), Tabuk (with Liwan or Rizal), Tinglayan, and Pinukpuk — each led by presidents. Among these municipal chiefs was PuyaoTemplate:Refn who served in that capacity for close to 24 years under five subprovincial chief executives: Walter F. Hale (1907–1915), Alex F. Gilfilan (1915), Samuel E. Kane (1915–1919), Tomas Blanco (1918–1923), and Nicasio Balinag (1923–1936). Puyao did not run for office during the first local elections in the area in 1934, and was succeeded by Awingan. Three years later, municipal chief executives became known as “Municipal District Mayors.”[5]

In 1942 a Japanese garrison was established in Balbalan.

Geography

Balbalan is situated Template:Convert from the provincial capital Tabuk, and Template:Convert from the country's capital city of Manila.

Barangays

Balbalan is politically subdivided into 14 barangays. Each barangay consists of puroks and some have sitios.

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  • Ababa-an
  • Balantoy
  • Balbalan Proper
  • Balbalasang
  • Buaya
  • Dao-angan
  • Gawa-an
  • Mabaca
  • Maling (Kabugao)
  • Pantikian
  • Poswoy
  • Poblacion (Salegseg)
  • Talalang
  • Tawang

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Climate

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Demographics

Template:Philippine Census

In the 2020 census, the population of Balbalan was 12,914 people,Template:PH census with a density of Template:Convert.

Economy

Template:PH poverty incidence

Government

Local government

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Balbalan, belonging to the lone congressional district of the province of Kalinga, is governed by a mayor designated as its local chief executive and by a municipal council as its legislative body in accordance with the Local Government Code. The mayor, vice mayor, and the councilors are elected directly by the people through an election which is being held every three years.

Elected officials

Members of the Municipal Council
(2022–2025)[6]
Position Name
Congressman Allen Jesse C. Mangaoang
Mayor Almar P. Malannag
Vice-Mayor Rowina Alison M. Damian
Councilors Marc Alvin M. Page
Paul B. Bog-acon
Clarence D. Tongdo
Edwin Bruce B. Astudillo
Rex L. Dulansi
Bernabe C. Basingan
Dennis C. Baggas
John Smith S. Gullayan

Education

The Balbalan Schools District Office governs all educational institutions within the municipality. It oversees the management and operations of all private and public, from primary to secondary schools.[7]

Secondary schools

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  • Balbalan Agricultural and Industrial School
  • Balbalan National High school
  • St. Paul's Memorial School of Kalinga
  • St. Theresita High School of Salegseg
  • Western Kalinga National High School

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See also

Notes

Template:Reflist

References

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Works cited

Books
  • Bacdayan, Albert. The Peace Pact System of the Kalingas in the Modern World. Ann Arbor, MI: University Microfilms, Inc., 1967.
  • Barton, Roy F. The Kalingas: Their Institutions and Custom Law. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1949.
  • De Los Reyes, Angelo J. & Aloma M. De Los Reyes, eds. Igorot: A People Who Daily Touch the Earth and Sky. Vol. II. Baguio City: Cordillera Schools Group, 1986.
  • DILG-CAR. Cordillera Almanac Vol. 1 : Local Government Units. Baguio City: DILG-CAR, 1999.
  • Dozier, Edward P. Mountain Arbiters: The Changing Life of a Philippine Hill People. Tucson, AZ: The University of Arizona Press, 1966.
  • The Kalinga of Northern Luzon, Philippines. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1967.
  • Finin Gerard A. The Making of the Igorot: Contours of Cordillera Consciousness. Manila: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 2005.
  • Jenista, Frank Lawrence. The White Apos: American Governors on the Cordillera Central. Quezon City: New Day Publishers, 1987.
  • Lawless, Robert. The Social Ecology of the Kalingas of Northern Luzon. Ann Arbor, MI: Xerox University Microfilms, 1975.
  • Scott, William Henry, ed. German Travelers on the Cordillera (1860–1890). Manila: Filipiniana Book Guild, 1975.
  • The Discovery of the Igorots: Contacts with the Pagans of Northern Luzon. Quezon City: New Day Publishers, 1974.
  • Sugguiyao, Miguel. The Kalinga Hilltribe of the Philippines. Manila: ONCC, 1990.
Periodicals
  • Dannang, Noe. “The Rotary Way of Curbing Vindictive Killings.” The Highland Leader. October 1994, 5.
  • Scott, William Henry. “Notes on the History of the Mountain Provinces – IV.” University of Baguio Journal, IX-1 (1974): 1-4

External links

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  1. Scott 1974, 2; Bacdayan 1967, 17; Lawless 1975, 43-45
  2. cf. Scott 1974, 249; Sugguiyao 1990, 15; Bacdayan, 17-18; Dozier 1966, 29-32
  3. Barton 1949, 32; cf. Dozier 1967, 12 f; Sugguiyao, 4.
  4. Sugguiyao, 16
  5. De Los Reyes 1986, 28; Sugguiyao, 22; Jenista, 70,259
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