Nueva Vizcaya

From Vero - Wikipedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:About Template:More citations needed Template:Use mdy dates Template:Use Philippine English Template:Infobox settlement

Nueva Vizcaya, officially the Province of Nueva Vizcaya,Template:Efn is a landlocked province in the Philippines located in the Cagayan Valley region in Luzon. Its capital and largest town is Bayombong. It is bordered by Benguet to the west, Ifugao to the north, Isabela to the northeast, Quirino to the east, Aurora to the southeast, Nueva Ecija to the south, and Pangasinan to the southwest. Quirino province was created from Nueva Vizcaya in 1966.

Template:TOC limit

Etymology

The name Nueva Vizcaya is derived from the name of the province of Biscay (called Vizcaya in Spanish, Bizkaia in Basque) during the Spanish colonial period. This can be seen in the right part of the seal, a representation of the heraldic of Vizcaya in Spain.

History

Spanish colonial era

File:Northern philippines map.JPG
An old map showing the province and its original borders.

The areas of present-day Nueva Vizcaya used to be part of the vast Provincia de Cagayan.<ref name=FastFactsPhilProv /> Organized religion in Nueva Vizcaya dates back to the year 1607, when the Dominican Order arrived in the province. It was not until 1609, however, that the first settlement of a religious order was established in the southern half of the province. In 1702, a convent was erected in Burubur at the foot of the Caraballo Mountains in Santa Clara, which is now a barangay in the town of Aritao. It was on this site that the first mass in Nueva Vizcaya was celebrated and the first baptism of a Christian convert was held.

Spanish conquest of Nueva Vizcaya was slow and difficult, and expeditions had to be sent recurrently due to the natives' refusal to accept Spanish sovereignty. In some of these expeditions, services of some local chieftains were used, the most famous of which was that commanded by Mariano Oscariz, in 1847–1848, which carried him clear through the province across to Palanan on the eastern coast of Luzon.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 1818, Nueva Ecija annexed the towns of Palanan from Isabela, as well as Cagayan, Nueva Vizcaya, Quirino, Baler, Casiguran, Infanta (formerly called Binangonan de Lampon) and Polillo Islands from Tayabas, and part of Rizal.<ref name=":1"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 1839, upon the advice of the alcalde mayor of Cagayan,<ref name=NuevaVizcayaGov>Template:Cite web</ref> Luis Lardizabal, then-Governor General of the Philippines created the politico-military province of Nueva Vizcaya.<ref name=FastFactsPhilProv>Template:Cite book</ref> The order was approved by a Royal Decree on April 10, 1841. The name Nueva Vizcaya was named after Biscay, Spain, the hometown of Lardizabal. The original province covered the areas of present-day Nueva Vizcaya, Quirino, Ifugao, Apayao, Kalinga, and Benguet, Batanes, a large portion of Isabela, as well as north Aurora.<ref name=FastFactsPhilProv /> After Nueva Vizcaya was created, it included the present area occupied by the province plus present-day Mountain Province, much of Isabela, Quirino, & north Aurora.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite web</ref>

Civil government was established in the province by the Philippine Commission in 1902 during the American Colonial Period of the Philippines.<ref name=NuevaVizcayaGov />

The territories of Nueva Vizcaya were greatly reduced when Nueva Vizcaya ceded a big portion of its north-eastern territory, including Camarag, its first capital, now Echague, to form the province of Isabela in May 1856.<ref name=FastFactsPhilProv /><ref name=NuevaVizcayaGov />

American colonial era

In 1908, the northwestern territory of Nueva Vizcaya was annexed to the newly organized sub-province of Ifugao.<ref name=FastFactsPhilProv /> The survey executed by the Bureau of Lands in 1914 further caused the diminution of its area and reduced again upon the enactment of the Administrative Code of 1917.<ref name=NuevaVizcayaGov /> North areas of present-day Aurora (composed of present towns of Dilasag & part of Casiguran) were annexed to Tayabas (now Quezon) in 1905. In 1918, the area of modern Aurora north of Baler (composed of Dinalungan, Dipaculao, & Maria Aurora, besides Casiguran & Dilasag) was transferred to the authority of Nueva Vizcaya, but returned to Tayabas in 1946.

The province of Nueva Vizcaya was also included in the 12th district of the Philippine Senate during the American period. The district included Mountain Province (present-day Apayao, Kalinga, Mountain Province, and Benguet), Cotabato (undivided), Agusan (undivided), Davao (undivided), Zamboanga (undivided), and Sulu (undivided). The province was included in the district because of its ethnic compatibility with Mountain Province and other indigenous domains in the Cordilleras and Mindanao.

File:Seal of Nueva Vizcaya.svg
Official rendering of the seal used by Provincial Government

Japanese occupation

File:NuevaVizcaya&EcijaArchjf6178 18.JPG
Gateway Arch near Dalton Pass

During the Pacific War of the Second World War, the Japanese captured Nueva Vizcaya and established a "comfort station" in the province, where Filipino "comfort women" were enslaved, routinely gang-raped, and murdered under Japanese control.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Dalton Pass was the scene of a major battle between the Empire of Japan, the Commonwealth of the Philippines and American forces, with the Allies winning on May 31, 1945.<ref name=FastFactsPhilProv /><ref name=Smith>Smith, R.R., 2005, Triumph in the Philippines, Honolulu: University Press of the Pacific, Template:ISBN</ref>Template:Rp

Philippine Independence

In 1971, with the passage of Republic Act No. 6394, Quirino, which was then a sub-province of Nueva Vizcaya, was separated from its mother province and made into a regular province.<ref name=FastFactsPhilProv /><ref name=NuevaVizcayaGov /><ref name=ChanRobles1>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=QuirinoOrg>Template:Cite web</ref>

Geography

Surrounded by North Luzon's three large mountain ranges, Nueva Vizcaya is generally mountainous, varying from steep mountains to rolling hills, with some valleys and plains.<ref name=NuevaVizcayaGov /> It is bordered on the west by the Cordillera mountains, on the east by the Sierra Madre mountains, and on the south by the Caraballo Mountains.<ref name=FastFactsPhilProv /> The province (and the entire Cagayan Valley) are separated from the Central Luzon plains by the Caraballo Mountains.

The province has a total land area of Template:Convert.Template:PSGC detail The southernmost province in the Cagayan Valley region, Nueva Vizcaya lies approximately Template:Convert north of Metro Manila and can be reached by land via the Cagayan Valley Road (Maharlika Highway).

Administrative divisions

Nueva Vizcaya comprises 15 municipalities, with Bayombong as the provincial capital and major educational center, Bambang (the agricultural hub) and Solano (the financial district) as the major commercial centers, and Kayapa as the summer capital and "vegetable bowl" of the province. All municipalities are encompassed by a lone legislative district,Template:PSGC detail but are separated into two districts for purposes of representation in its provincial board. The 1st District comprises the municipalities of Ambaguio, Bagabag, Bayombong, Diadi, Quezon, Solano and Villaverde, while the 2nd District is composed of the municipalities of Alfonso Castañeda, Aritao, Bambang, Dupax del Norte, Dupax del Sur, Kayapa, Kasibu and Santa Fe.

Geographically, the western half of Nueva Vizcaya is part of the main Cordilleras, while its eastern half is part of the Caraballos, the meeting point of the Cordilleras and the Sierra Madre. There have been grassroot moves to reunify Nueva Vizcaya with the Cordillera Region due to cultural and geographical harmony, however, none have been introduced in Congress.

File:Ph fil nueva vizcaya.png
Political map of Nueva Vizcaya

Template:Col-begin Template:Col-break

MunicipalityTemplate:ThinspTemplate:Efn-lrTemplate:Efn-lr Population Template:PSGC rubric AreaTemplate:PSGC detail DensityTemplate:ThinspTemplate:Small Template:Abbr
Template:Small<ref name=Pop-2024>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:SmallTemplate:PH census km2 Template:Nowrap /km2 Template:Nowrap
Template:Coord Alfonso Castañeda Template:Percent and number 8,539 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 6
Template:Coord Ambaguio Template:Percent and number 15,472 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 8
Template:Coord Aritao Template:Percent and number 42,197 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 22
Template:Coord Bagabag Template:Percent and number 37,985 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 17
Template:Coord Bambang Template:Percent and number 55,789 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 25
Template:Coord Bayombong Template:Percent and number 67,714 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 25
Template:Coord Diadi Template:Percent and number 19,236 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 19
Template:Coord Dupax del Norte Template:Percent and number 33,295 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 15
Template:Coord Dupax del Sur Template:Percent and number 21,224 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 19
Template:Coord Kasibu Template:Percent and number 41,776 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 30
Template:Coord Kayapa Template:Percent and number 26,469 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 30
Template:Coord Quezon Template:Percent and number 24,055 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 12
Template:Coord Santa Fe Template:Small Template:Percent and number 18,276 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 16
Template:Coord Solano Template:Percent and number 65,287 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 22
Template:Coord Villaverde Template:Small Template:Percent and number 20,118 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 9
Total 530,106 497,432 Template:PAGR 4,813.88 Template:Convert Template:Sigfig Template:Convert 275
Template:Color boxTemplate:ThinspProvincial capital Template:Color boxTemplate:ThinspMunicipality

Template:Notelist-lr

Template:Col-end

Barangays

Template:Main The 15 municipalities of the province comprise a total of 275 barangays, with Roxas in Solano, Nueva Vizcaya as the most populous in 2010, and Santa Rosa in Santa Fe, Nueva Vizcaya as the least.Template:PH census

Demographics

File:PSM V77 D532 Ilongot men and woman of oyao nueva vizcaya.png
Ilongot tribe from Oyao in Nueva Vizcaya

Template:Philippine Census

The population of Nueva Vizcaya in the 2020 census was 497,432 people,Template:PH census with a density of Template:Convert.

Nueva Vizcaya is home to about 18 indigenous peoples, which includes the major tribes of the Ifugao Template:Small, Gaddang Template:Small, Isinai Template:Small, Dumagat Template:Small, Kalanguya Template:Small, and the Bugkalot Template:Small. Indigenous peoples' groups have filed for ancestral domain titles covering parts of the province.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

The Ilokano population in the province are not indigenous as they were part of the labor force initially needed by the Spanish administration to work on the tobacco plantations beginning in the 1700s, and later immigrants with skills construct churches and other structures needed for development. Indigenous tribes were not cooperative with the Spaniards. After several insurrections by the locals, Spanish officials chose to import trained labor from established settlements in the coastal regions of Pangasinan and Ilocos. So, it was deliberated in the Spanish Congress the need for in migration of labor. After it was voted by a majority and approved by the king, Ilocanos started to migrate and were given homestead. Thus, the start of the migration of Ilocanos in the province.<ref name="Inquirer-AmmunganFest">Template:Cite news</ref>

Every last week of May, these ethnolinguistic groups gather to celebrate the Ammungan festival (formerly Panagyaman festival), a week-long affair culminating on May 24, the province's foundation day.<ref name="Inquirer-AmmunganFest" />

Since Nueva Vizcaya's birth as a province, traces of the culture and customs of its early settlers—the Igorots [Ilongots (Bugkalot), Ifugaos, Isinais, Kalanguya], Gaddangs, and the Pangasinans—can still be seen.<ref name="Inquirer-AmmunganFest" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The influx of civilization and the infusion of modern technology to the life stream of the province induced immigration from adjacent provinces. The province was pushed to be included in the Cordillera Autonomous Region because the province is technically within the Cordillera, however, it did not came to be due to the failure to enact an autonomous Cordillera by the national government. Today, questions linger on the exclusion of Nueva Vizcaya despite the province being culturally and geographically linked to the Cordilleras. The province also has the largest Igorot population outside the Cordillera region. Tagalogs live along the border of Nueva Ecija and in the capital, Bayombong.

Languages

Nueva Vizcaya province possesses one of the most diverse array of indigenous languages in Luzon, a testimony to its cultural and geographic linkages with the Cordillera mountain range. The indigenous languages of the province listed by the Komisyon ng Wikang Filipino are the Bugkalut language, Ibaloy language, Ifugaw language, Iguwak language, Irungdungan language, Isinay language, Kalanguya language, and Kankanaey language. During the later part of the Spanish regime, people from Ilocos region migrated to the province through the recommendation of Spanish officials in the province. It was deliberated in the Spanish court in Spain and with a majority vote and approval of the king of Spain, Ilocanos were allowed to migrate to the province. Thus, the importation of the Ilocano language and culture started, becoming the lingua franca of the province. Ilocano accents were affected by the native languages of the peoples whom Ilocanos intermingled with. Remarkably, the economy of the province started to grow because of the industry of the Ilocanos as well as through their innate talent in entrepreneurship and in other industries including agriculture. As Nueva Vizcaya was part of Provincia de Cagayan which is the predecessor of Cagayan Valley, a few residents speak Ibanag, which was the lingua franca of Provincia de Cagayan before it was replaced by Ilocano.

Religion

Roman Catholics are about 63% of the population of the province.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Other faiths are divided among Aglipayan Church, Iglesia ni Cristo which form about 5–6% of the province population,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Jehovah's Witnesses, Baptist, Methodist, Pentecostals, Seventh-day Adventist and other Evangelical Christians which forms about 17%–20% of the province's population<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Nueva Vizcaya Statistical Tables psa.gov.ph Template:Webarchive</ref> as well as Muslims and indigenous Cordilleran religions. Template:Clear left

Economy

Template:Stack

File:Fresh tilapia.jpg
Fresh tilapia catch

Agriculture is the main industry in the province, together with rice, corn, fruits and vegetables as major crops.<ref name=FastFactsPhilProv /> Nueva Vizcaya is a major producer of citrus crops in the country, principally pomelo, ponkan and oranges. The Nueva Vizcaya Agricultural Terminal in Bambang supplies the demand of neighboring provinces and Metro Manila. The province became the leading producer of ginger in the Philippines in 2024 with an output of 7,140 metric tons, leading the Department of Agriculture to designate it as the country's ginger capital.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

There is a mining industry in the province such as the Didipio mine in the municipality of Kasibu, which added to the provincial income.<ref name="TheStandar-OceanaGold">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="TheStandard-OceanaGold2">Template:Cite news</ref> However, mining activities have also been alleged to have dried up water sources, polluted the environment, and endangered livelihoods of farmers and fisherfolk.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> According to the Mines and Geosciences Bureau, deposits of metallic minerals discovered in the province are copper, gold, molybdenum and pyrite. Non-metallic deposits include red clay, white clay and limestone, with sand and gravel being the most abundant deposits in the province.<ref name="DENRGovPH-MGB">Template:Cite web</ref>

Template:Clear left

Government

Template:See also Nueva Vizcaya has one congressional district, although there has been a longtime proposal to divide the province into two congressional districts.

Members of the Nueva Vizcaya Provincial Council (2022Template:Snd2025)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Position Provincial Official
Provincial Governor Atty. Jose V. Gambito
Provincial Vice Governor Eufemia A. Dacayo
District Representative (Lone District of Nueva Vizcaya) Rep. Timothy Joseph Cayton
Provincial Board Members Patricio Dumlao Jr.
Byron Sevillena
Delbert Tidang
Eunice Gambol
Atty. Primo Percival Marcos
Roland Carub
Pablo Kindot
Atty. Edgardo C. Balgos
Florante S. Gerdan
Elma Pinao-an Lejao
Eufemia Dacayo
Victor Gines Jr.
Marizel Reyes
Samuel Balinhawang

Culture

Template:Main

Every May, the province holds the Ammungan Festival, a five-day festival in celebration for its founding anniversary. The word "Ammungan" is a Gaddang word meaning "gathering" symbolizing the unity of the different ethnolinguistic groups in the province. The festival showcase different shows including cultural showcase, beauty pageant, agri-trade fair, tourism expo, dance competitions and a concerts.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Education

Nueva Vizcaya has the following education institutions, among others.

  • Saint Catherine's School (Bambang)
  • Saint Jerome's Academy
  • Nueva Vizcaya State University, with campuses in Bayombong and Bambang.
  • Saint Mary's University (Bayombong)
  • Muir Woods Academy, Inc. (Bayombong)
  • Philippine Science High School – Cagayan Valley Campus (Bayombong)
  • Aldersgate College (Solano)
  • Sierra College (Bayombong)
  • PLT College, Inc. (Bayombong)
  • JARS Academy (Bayombong)
  • King's Colleges of the Philippines (Bambang)
  • Saint Mary's School of Dupax
  • Saint Teresitas's Academy of Aritao
  • Dupax del Norte National High School
  • Dupax del Sur National High School
  • Ganao National High School
  • Saint Catherine of Siena
  • Saint Louis School (Solano)
  • Solano High School (Solano)
  • Nueva Vizcaya General Comprehensive High School (Bayombong)
  • Northern Luzon Technical Institute (Bayombong)
  • Nueva Vizcaya Caregiver Academy (Solano)
  • Nueva Vizcaya Institute (Aritao)
  • Solano Institute of Technology (Solano)
  • Vizcaya Institute of Computer Science (Bayombong)
  • Aurora Christian School (Bambang)

Notable personalities

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

Template:Reflist

Template:GeoGroup

Template:Geographic location

Template:Nueva Vizcaya Template:Navboxes

Template:Authority control