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Malasiqui, officially the Municipality of Malasiqui (Pangasinan: Baley na Malasiqui; Ilocano: Ili ti Malasiqui; Tagalog: Bayan ng Malasiqui), is a municipality in the province of Pangasinan, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 143,094 people.
Don Antonio Village 860 907 819 769 Rosales: Don Benito 1,407 1,273 1,258 1,016 Pozorrubio: Don Justo Abalos (Caroan) 1,106 920 839 486 Umingan: Don Matias 1,481 1,400 1,074 777 Burgos: Don Montano 2,162 2,024 1,828 1,532 Umingan: Don Pedro 2,971 3,071 2,641 2,337 Malasiqui: Dorongan 366 358 632 667 Lingayen: Dorongan Ketaket 949 729 767 593 ...
San Carlos – San Carlos, Pangasinan; Malasiqui – Malasiqui; Polong – Polong, Malasiqui (flag stop, opened in 1939) Don Pedro – Don Pedro, Malasiqui; Quesada – Nalsian Norte, Malasiqui (now a basketball court) Bayambang (Bayambang Pasajeros) – Bayambang; Bautista (Bayambang Mercancias) – Bautista (Originally as Bayambang Freight ...
The province of Pangasinan is divided into 44 municipalities, 3 component cities, ... Malasiqui: 3rd 131.37 km 2: 50.72 sq mi 143,094 4.5% 1,100/km 2: 2,800/sq mi 73
Bayambang, Calasiao, Malasiqui, Mangaldan, Mapandan, San Fabian, San Jacinto, Santa Barbara: 2nd: Nacionalista: Re-elected in 1938. Died. District dissolved into the two-seat Pangasinan's at-large district for the National Assembly (Second Philippine Republic). # Image Member Term of office Common wealth Congress Party Electoral history ...
Saint Ildephonse of Seville Parish Church, commonly known as Malasiqui Church, is a Roman Catholic church in Malasiqui, Pangasinan in the Philippines. It is under the jurisdiction of the Archdiocese of Lingayen-Dagupan and was formerly a chapel under the parish of San Carlos.
The church was rebuilt in 1816 by Rev. Fr. Pedro de Rama. The church was later destroyed by the earthquake on March 16, 1892, and subsequent disasters up to the 1910s, requiring numerous rebuilds. The convent became the sanctuary to the Spanish rulers in Pangasinan during the 1898 Philippine Revolution against the Spanish colonial rule .
Santa Barbara lies on a plain terrain in the northern part of the Agno Valley, at the center of Pangasinan.It is just west of the business center of Urdaneta City, with centuries-old mango trees lining the national highway to Santa Barbara. 9 kilometers (5.6 mi) further west is Dagupan along Lingayen Gulf, and to its south is the town of Malasiqui and beyond it the City of San Carlos.