Samar (province)

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Samar, officially the Province of Samar (Template:Langx; Template:Langx), or also known as Western Samar, is a province in the Philippines located in the Eastern Visayas region. Its capital is the city of Catbalogan while Calbayog is the most populous city in the province. It is bordered by Northern Samar, Eastern Samar, Leyte and Leyte Gulf, and includes several islands in the Samar Sea. Samar is connected to the island of Leyte via the San Juanico Bridge.

In 1768, Leyte and modern Samar were created out of the historical province of Samar. In 1965, Northern and Eastern Samar were created.

Fishing and agriculture are the major economic activities in the province.<ref>http://www.samar.lgu-ph.com/econo.htm Template:Webarchive Economical Data</ref>

On 8 November 2013, the province was significantly damaged by Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan), particularly the towns of Basey, Marabut and Santa Rita.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

History

Pre-history

Around 2 million to 8000 B.C., based on geologic findings, during the ice ages (2 million years – 8000 B.C.), the islands of Mindoro, Luzon, and Mindanao were connected as one big island through the islands of Samar, Leyte and Bohol.

Pre-colonial era

In 8550 B.C., diggings in Sohoton Caves in Basey, Samar showed stone flake tools. In 1200 A.D., other diggings along the Basey River revealed other stone flakes used until the 13th century.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Spanish era

In 1543, the explorer Ruy López de Villalobos, first came to the island and named it Las Islas Filipinas.

In 1596, many names, such as Samal, Ibabao, and Tandaya, were given to Samar Island prior to the coming of the Spaniards in 1596. During the early days of Spanish occupation, Samar was under the jurisdiction of Cebu.

On October 15, 1596, the first Jesuit missionaries arrived in Tinago (now Dapdap) in Tarangnan. From Tinago, the missionaries, Fr. Francisco de Otazo, Bartolome Martes and Domingo Alonzo began teaching Catechism, healing the sick and spreading the Christian faith into the interior settlements.

On June 1, 1649, the people of Palapag led by Agustin Sumuroy revolted against the decree of Governor General Diego Fajardo requiring able bodied men from the Visayas for service at the Cavite Shipyards. Like wildfire, the revolt quickly spread to the neighboring town in the Northern and Western coast of Samar and to the nearby provinces of Bicol, Surigao, Cebu, Camiguin and as far as Zamboanga. It was suppressed in 1650 by the combined forces of the Spaniards, Lutaos, and Pampangos.

In 1735, Samar and Leyte were united into one province with Carigara, in Leyte, as the capital town. In 1747, Samar and Leyte were separated for administrative effectiveness. In 1762, complaints from the Jesuits that the division was not working well, thus it was reunited again by the approval from the King of Spain.

In 1768, Jesuits were expelled in all Spanish dominions. The Franciscans arrived on September 25, 1768, and took over the administration of 14 of the 17 parishes which were under the spiritual care of the Jesuits for almost 172 years. The administration of the remaining three parishes namely Guiuan, Balangiga and Basey in the south of Samar were given to the Augustinians.

In 1777, the two provinces were divided for the last time, it was approved in Madrid in 1786 and had been effective in 1799.

In 1803, Guiuan, Balangiga and Basey were turned over to the Franciscans for the lack of Augustinian priests.

On August 11, 1841, Queen Isabella II of Spain signed a Royal Decree declaring Samar as a province.

American era

The Battle of Catubig occurred on April 15–18, 1900 during the Philippine–American War.

On April 15, 1900, the Filipino guerrillas launched a surprise attack on a detachment of the US 43rd Infantry Regiment, forcing the Americans to abandon Catubig town after the four-day siege.

In 1901, the Balangiga massacre occurred during the Philippine–American War.

On September 28, 1901, the people of Balangiga, Giporlos, Lawaan and Quinapondan in Eastern Samar surprised and attacked the American forces stationed there, killing 48 American soldiers. To avenge their defeat, American general Jacob H. Smith ordered his men to turn Samar into a "howling wilderness".

On April 10, 1910, upon the papal bull of Pope Pius X separated the islands of Samar and Leyte from the Diocese of Cebu and erected the Diocese of Calbayog comprising both islands. Pablo Singzon de Anunciacion was named first Bishop and consecrated on June 12, 1910.

Japanese era

In 1942, the occupying Imperial Japanese forces arrived in the province of Samar.

On October 24, 1944, the Battle off Samar took place as Vice Admiral Takeo Kurita's Center Force warships clashed with several allied naval vessels in a collision course. His forces sank escort carrier Template:USS, destroyers Template:USS and Template:USS, and escort destroyer Template:USS, but at a cost of his cruisers Chikuma, Template:Ship, and Template:Ship. Despite being a tactical victory for the Imperial Japanese Navy, it did not alter the course of the Philippines campaign.

Postwar era

On June 19, 1965, the Philippine Congress along with the three Samar Representatives, Eladio T. Balite (1st District), Fernando R. Veloso (2nd District) and Felipe J. Abrigo (3rd District), approved Republic Act No. 4221 dividing the region of Samar into three divisions: Northern Samar, Eastern Samar, and Western Samar. Each region adopted a new capital: Catbalogan (Western Samar), Borongan (Eastern Samar), and Catarman (Northern Samar).<ref name=ChanRobles-RA4221>Template:Cite web</ref> The law was later ratified by the majority of voters through a plebiscite held on November 9, 1965.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref> Esteban Piczon, the last governor of undivided Samar, continued as the first governor of Western Samar, while the aforementioned representatives were re-elected for the new provinces in 1965. The first provincial officials of Western Samar were elected on November 14, 1967, and on January 1, 1968, they officially assumed office.

On June 21, 1969, under Republic Act No. 5650, Western Samar was renamed Samar with Catbalogan still as the capital.<ref name="ChanRobles-RA5650">Template:Cite web</ref>

Marcos dictatorship

Template:Main The beginning months of the 1970s had marked a period of turmoil and change in the Philippines, as well as in Samar.<ref name="amnestyInternational1981">Template:Cite web</ref> respectively<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Robles2016">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name ="GazetteHistoryProtest">Template:Cite web</ref> During his bid to be the first Philippine president to be re-elected for a second term, Ferdinand Marcos launched an unprecedented number of foreign debt-funded public works projects. This caused<ref name=Balbosas1992>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Balisacan&Hill2003">Template:Cite book</ref> the Philippine economy to take a sudden downwards turn known as the 1969 Philippine balance of payments crisis, which led to a period of economic difficulty and a significant rise of social unrest.<ref name="Cororaton1997">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="Celoza1997">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Kessler1989">Template:Cite book</ref> Template:Rp With only a year left in his last constitutionally allowed term as president, Ferdinand Marcos placed the Philippines under Martial Law in September 1972 and thus retained the position for fourteen more years.<ref name ="Kasaysayan9ch10">Template:Cite book</ref> This period in Philippine history is remembered for the Marcos administration's record of human rights abuses,<ref name="McCoy199909202">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="Abinales&Amoroso20052">Template:Cite book</ref> particularly targeting political opponents, student activists, journalists, religious workers, farmers, and others who fought against the Marcos dictatorship.<ref name="Rappler">Template:Cite news</ref> In Samar province itself, there were a number of Human rights violations particularly associated with the various political detainees at Camp Lukban in Barangay Maulong, which was then still under the Philippine Constabulary.<ref name="amnestyInternational1981"/>

This era also saw the construction of the San Juanico Bridge between Samar and Leyte, which began as one of the high-visibility foreign-loan funded projects of Ferdinand Marcos’ 1969 reelection campaign, and finished four years later in time to be inaugurated on then-First Lady Imelda Marcos' birthday on July 2, 1973.<ref name="litup">Template:Cite news</ref> The project was initially criticised as a white elephant by officials at the National Economic and Development Authority, noting that it was "useless and expensive to maintain",<ref name="RoelLandingin20080213"> Template:Cite web</ref> because its average daily traffic was too low to justify the cost of its construction.<ref name="RoelLandingin20080213" /> As a result, its construction has been associated with what has been called the Marcoses' "edifice complex"<ref name="Afinidad-Bernardo 2016">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="MartialLawMuseumEdificeComplex">Template:Cite web</ref> although economic activity in Samar and Leyte has since finally caught up with the bridge's intended function.<ref name="MartialLawMuseumEdificeComplex" /> At the time, its name was used as a slang term for onte of the torture methods used by the Marcos dictatorship, in which a person being beaten while the victim's head and feet lay on separate beds and the body is suspended as though to form a bridge.<ref name="Pedroso2014">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The Marcos era was a time of significant deforestation in Samar and throughout the Philippines, with the forest cover of the Philippines shrinking until only 8% remained.<ref name="Dixon2010">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Inoue2013">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="nhcp3">Template:Cite webTemplate:Cbignore</ref> In Samar, one of the major companies given Timber License Agreements (TLAs) to cut down trees during Martial Law was Dolores Timber, which was owned by Juan Ponce Enrile.<ref name="nhcp3"/> Enrile was the government official Ferdinand Marcos put in place to approve Timber License Agreements during Martial Law.<ref name="nhcp3"/>

Contemporary

The capital town Catbalogan became a component city by virtue of Republic Act No. 9391 which sought to convert the municipality into a city. The law was ratified on June 16, 2007. However, the cityhood status was lost twice in the years 2008 and 2010 after the League of Cities of the Philippines questioned the validity of the cityhood law. The cityhood status was reaffirmed after the Supreme Court finalized its ruling on February 15, 2011, which declared the cityhood law constitutional.

On November 8, 2013, Typhoon Haiyan, locally known as Typhoon Yolanda, hit Samar province.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> More than 300 people perished on the first day it hit the province.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In June 2018, a friendly fire incident happened between Philippine National Police and the Armed Forces of the Philippines under the administration of Rodrigo Duterte. The incident led to the death of numerous police officials of Waray ethnic origin.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

On January 22, 2019, House Bill No. 8824 was introduced in the House of Representatives by Representative Edgar Mary Sarmiento to establish a new province called "Northwestern Samar", consisting of nine municipalities and one city of Samar's 1st congressional district, of which Calbayog would be the designated capital. The bill is yet to be reviewed.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Geography

Samar province covers a total area of Template:ConvertTemplate:PSGC detail occupying the central-western sections of the Samar island in the Eastern Visayas region. The province is bordered on the north by Northern Samar, east by Eastern Samar, south by Leyte and Leyte Gulf, and west by the Samar Sea.

Administrative divisions

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Political divisions

The province of Samar comprises two congressional districts, 24 municipalities and two component cities. It has a total of 952 barangays.

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City Template:Small municipalityTemplate:Ref label DistrictTemplate:PSGC detail Population Template:PSGC rubric AreaTemplate:PSGC detail Density Template:Abbr CoordinatesTemplate:Ref label
Template:SmallTemplate:PH census Template:SmallTemplate:PH census km2 Template:Nowrap /km2 Template:Nowrap
Almagro 1st Template:Percent and number 8,942 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 23 Template:Coord
Basey 2nd Template:Percent and number 55,480 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 51 Template:Coord
Calbayog City 1st Template:Percent and number 183,851 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 157 Template:Coord
Calbiga 2nd Template:Percent and number 22,982 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 41 Template:Coord
Catbalogan City 2nd Template:Percent and number 103,879 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 57 Template:Coord
Daram 2nd Template:Percent and number 42,879 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 58 Template:Coord
Gandara 1st Template:Percent and number 34,434 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 69 Template:Coord
Hinabangan 2nd Template:Percent and number 13,673 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 21 Template:Coord
Jiabong 2nd Template:Percent and number 18,342 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 35 Template:Coord
Marabut 2nd Template:Percent and number 16,962 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 24 Template:Coord
Matuguinao 1st Template:Percent and number 7,288 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 20 Template:Coord
Motiong 2nd Template:Percent and number 15,156 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 29 Template:Coord
Pagsanghan 1st Template:Percent and number 7,945 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 13 Template:Coord
[[Paranas, Samar|Paranas Template:Small]] 2nd Template:Percent and number 30,557 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 44 Template:Coord
Pinabacdao 2nd Template:Percent and number 18,252 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 24 Template:Coord
San Jorge 1st Template:Percent and number 17,184 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 41 Template:Coord
San Jose de Buan 2nd Template:Percent and number 7,769 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 14 Template:Coord
San Sebastian 2nd Template:Percent and number 8,057 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 14 Template:Coord
Santa Margarita 1st Template:Percent and number 26,348 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 36 Template:Coord
Santa Rita 2nd Template:Percent and number 41,591 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 38 Template:Coord
Santo Niño 1st Template:Percent and number 12,863 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 13 Template:Coord
Tagapul-an 1st Template:Percent and number 8,473 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 14 Template:Coord
Talalora 2nd Template:Percent and number 8,057 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 11 Template:Coord
Tarangnan 1st Template:Percent and number 24,992 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 41 Template:Coord
Villareal 2nd Template:Percent and number 28,230 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 38 Template:Coord
Zumarraga 2nd Template:Percent and number 16,295 Template:PAGR Template:Convert Template:Convert 25 Template:Coord
Total 793,183 780,481 Template:PAGR 6,048.03 Template:Convert Template:Sigfig Template:Convert 951 Template:Small

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Demographics

File:Catbalogan Samar.jpg
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The population of Samar (province) in the 2020 census was 793,183 people,Template:PH census with a density of Template:Convert.

Religion

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Catholicism

Samar (Western Samar) is predominantly Roman Catholic. The Catholic Hierarchy (2014) states that 95 percent of its population adhere to Roman Catholicism.

Others

Some other Christian believers constitute most of the remainder such as Rizalista, Iglesia Filipina Independiente, Born-again Christians, Iglesia ni Cristo, Baptists, Methodists, Jehovah's Witnesses, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Seventh-day Adventist, and Members Church of God International (MCGI). Muslims are also present and a few mosques are located within the province.

Languages and dialects

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Residents of Samar are mostly Waray, the fifth largest cultural-linguistic group in the country. 90.2 percent of the household population speaks the Waray-Waray language, while 9.8 percent also speak Cebuano; 8.1 percent Boholano; 0.07 percent Tagalog; and 0.5 percent other languages.

There are two types of Waray spoken in the province, Waray Lineyte-Samarnon which is spoken from the southernmost tip of the province up to the municipality of Gandara and Waray Calbayog, an intermediary between the Waray of Northern Samar and the Waray of Samar, spoken in Calbayog, Santa Margarita, and in some parts of Tagapul-an, Santo Niño, Almagro and Matuguinao.

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Economy

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Former governors

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File:Samar Provincial Capitol (Rizal Avenue, Catbalogan, Samar; 04-27-2023).jpg
Samar Provincial Capitol

Notable personalities

19th & 20th Centuries

  • Senate President José Avelino<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> — the first President of the Senate of the Third Republic of the Philippines and the second President of the Liberal Party came from Calbayog, Samar. He was Senate President pro tempore to President Manuel Quezon prior to the establishment of the Commonwealth. He was the grandfather of Filipino actor Paulo Avelino.
  • Lieutenant Benedicto Nijaga<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>— nicknamed Biktoy, one of the "Thirteen Martyrs of Bagumbayan", executed on January 11, 1897, in Bagumbayan (Luneta Park). During a raid of a printing press in Binondo, the Spaniards found and confiscated subversive documents including a list of members of the Katipunan. Benedicto Nijaga was on the list as a collector of revolutionary funds. Upon the order of Gov. Polavieja to arbitrarily arrest all suspected members of the Katipunan, Nijaga was arrested while he was campaigning for revolutionary funds.
  • Cardinal Julio Rosales<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> — (September 18, 1906 – June 2, 1983) the second Archbishop of Cebu, was a Filipino cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. A native of Calbayog, he made his studies at the Seminary of Calbayog and was ordained in his hometown on June 2, 1929. From 1929 to 1946, he did pastoral work in the diocese of Calbayog. He was consecrated bishop of Tagbilaran on September 21, 1946.
  • Lucio Godina (March 8, 1908 – November 24, 1936) & Simplicio Godina (March 8, 1908 - December 8, 1936)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> — were pygopagus conjoined twins from the island of Samar in the Philippines.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Born in 1908, these boys from the Philippines later made the trip to the United States, where they became sideshow attractions in such hubs of ‘entertainment’ as Coney Island. In 1928, after various legal difficulties – including narrowly avoiding jail when a man was injured in an alleged drunk driving incident – they married identical (but not conjoined) twin sisters, Natividad and Victorina Matos, in Manila. At the age of 21 they married Natividad and Victorina Matos, who were identical twins. They performed in various sideshow acts, including in an orchestra on Coney Island and in dance with their wives. After Lucio died of rheumatic fever in New York City, doctors operated to separate him from Simplicio. Simplicio survived the operation, but died shortly thereafter due to spinal meningitis.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

21st Century

References

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