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The Butuan Ivory Seal, housed and displayed at the National Museum of the Philippines. A replica of the balangay displayed in the city. Butuan, during the pre-colonial times, was a precolonial city-state ruled by a rajah, an Indianized kingdom known for its metallurgic industry and sophisticated naval technology.
The National Museum (NM) Davao Regional Museum, also known as the National Museum of the Philippines - Davao, is a museum in Davao City, Philippines. It is the 17th regional museum of the National Museum of the Philippines and the 4th regional museum in Mindanao (after Butuan, Zamboanga, and Sulu). [1]
The National Museum of the Philippines (Filipino: ... Museum Location Opened NMP - Butuan (NM Caraga Regional Museum) Butuan City, Agusan del Norte: 1978 NMP - Cebu
Butuan National Museum, Bayanihan, Butuan City, Agusan Del Norte Source Taken using my own camera Date 08-23-2023 Author Patrickroque01 Permission (Reusing this file)
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The Butuan Ivory Seal or BIS is an ivory stamp or seal stamp or a privy seal associated with a Rhinoceros Ivory Tusk [clarification needed], dated 9th–12th century, was found in Libertad, Butuan in Agusan del Norte in southern Philippines. Inscribed on the seal is the word Butban in stylized Kawi. Butban was presumed to
The Agusan image (commonly referred to in the Philippines as the Golden Tara in allusion to its supposed, but disputed, [1] identity as an image of a Buddhist Tara) is a 2 kg (4.4 lb), [2] 21-karat gold statuette, found in 1917 on the banks of the Wawa River near Esperanza, Agusan del Sur, Mindanao in the Philippines, [3] dating to the 9th–10th centuries.
Planks from one of the Butuan boats in the Butuan National Museum showing protruding lugs and the holes on the edges where dowels were inserted. The Butuan balangay boats were the first wooden watercraft excavated in Southeast Asia. [24] [6] They were discovered in the late 1970s in Butuan, Agusan del Norte.