Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Augustinian Convent in Tondo was approved by the provincial chapter on May 3, 1572. Its visitas were Lubao, Betis and Calumpit. Fray Alonzo Alvarado, OSA was the first Augustinian religious to direct the church. In 1572, Tondo Church added visitas in northern suburbs, including Malolos. Through Fray Diego Ordoñez de Vivar, Tondo extended ...
Zip codes: 1012 (Tondo South) 1013 (Tondo North) Area codes: 2: Tondo is a district ... Prehispanic Source Materials for the Study of Philippine History, Quezon City ...
Also known as the Tondo Cathedral, the church stood on a 2,000-square-meter lot at 227 (formerly 111) Calle Azcarraga (now Claro M. Recto Avenue), but was totally destroyed on February 6, 1945, through the indiscriminate bombing by American forces during World War II. Felix de la Cruz was assigned as the first priest of Tondo Cathedral, where ...
The Santo Niño de Tondo is a Catholic title of the Child Jesus associated with a religious image of the Christ Child. [1] The image was brought to the Philippines during the expedition of Miguel López de Legazpi in 1572, and is the second-oldest image of the Child Jesus in the Philippines after the Santo Niño de Cebú .
City/Municipality Population as of 2020 [7] Number of barangays Manila: 1,846,513: 897 Caloocan: 1,661,584: 188 Las Piñas: 606,293: 20 Makati: 629,616: 23 Malabon
Tondo (Tagalog:; Baybayin: ᜆᜓᜈ᜔ᜇᜓ, Kapampangan: Balayan ning Tundo), erroneously referred to as the Kingdom of Tondo, was a Tagalog and Kapampangan settlement which served as a major trade hub located on the northern part of the Pasig River delta on Luzon Island.
A former visita of Tondo, Malabon was founded on May 21, 1599. On May 17, 1614, it became an independent parish, with Padre Luis Gutierrez as vicar prior. [2] When Padre Diego de Robles became prior of Malabon in 1621, he began the construction of the first stone church a year after. [citation needed]
The school was transferred to the present site of Manila Cathedral School in Tayuman, Tondo, known before as the "Instituto de Mujeres" co-owned by Doña Rosa Sevilla's family and the Archdiocese of Manila. When the Instituto de Mujeres decided to transfer in Governor Forbes St., Manila, the Archdiocese of Manila purchased the entire lot thus ...