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One datu, Paiburong, was given the territory of Irong-Irong, which is now the province of Iloilo in the Philippines; the third chapter tells of the romance of Sumakwel, Kapinangan and her lover Gurung-garung; the fourth chapter concludes the tale of the ten datus, telling about their political arrangements and their circumnavigation of the ...
It was mentioned in Pedro Monteclaro's book titled Maragtas. It was supposedly created by Datu Sumakwel to exercise his authority over all the other datus of Panay. [1] Like the Maragtas and the Code of Kalantiaw, the historical authenticity of the confederation is disputed. [2]
The Code of Rajah Kalantiaw was a supposed legal code in the epic history Maragtas of Panay, allegedly written in 1433 by Datu Kalantiaw, a chieftain on the island of Negros in the Philippines.
The original Code was purportedly discovered in the possession of a Panay datu in 1614. At the time of Pavón's writing in 1839 it was supposedly owned by a Don Marcelio Orfila of Zaragoza. On July 20, 1915, Robertson submitted a paper about the Kalantiaw Code to the Panama-Pacific Historical Congress in California and then published an English ...
According to the Maragtas by Pedro Alcantara Monteclaro of Miagao, Iloilo, after the settlement of the Ten Bornean Datus, some datus left Malandog to head towards Batangas, one of whom was Datu Balensuela. [Notes 1] The book also claimed that these datus were the primogenitors of the Tagalog people. [14]
The ten datus, led by Datu Puti, sailed northward with their families and communities, landing on Panay after departing Borneo. [9] There are claims that the narrative of the Maragtas is dated to 1200 to fit with the transition of the Srivijayan Empire to Majapahit but there is no written evidence about this, nor there are any existing claims ...
The Binirayan Festival commemorates the legend of the arrival of the ten Bornean datus on the island of Aninipay now known as Panay. (See the legend of Maragtas.)As Governor Evelio B. Javier, the Father of Binirayan Festival, reminded the Antiqueños during the earlier celebrations, "let us gather the strands and memories of our past, as we look back with pride, that we may look ahead with ...
Batan was believed to be the seat of the government of Datu Bendahara Kalantiaw III, the promulgator of the Code of Kalantiaw in 1433. [5] The code is a collection of 17 laws said to have been used during the time of the Datu before the coming of the Spaniards. [6] The Code of Kalantiaw was later proven to be a fraud. [7]