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  2. Anito - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anito

    When Spanish missionaries arrived in the Philippines, the word "anito" came to be associated with these physical representations of spirits that featured prominently in pag-anito rituals. During the American rule of the Philippines (1898–1946) , the meaning of the Spanish word idolo ("a thing worshiped") was further conflated with the English ...

  3. Animism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animism

    Animism is not peripheral to Christian identity but is its nurturing home ground, its axis mundi. In addition to the conceptual work the term animism performs, it provides insight into the relational character and common personhood of material existence. [3] The Christian spiritual mapping movement is based upon a similar worldview to that of ...

  4. Religion in pre-colonial Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_pre-colonial...

    These records mention the independent states that comprised the Philippine archipelago, rather one united country as the Philippines are organized today. Early Philippine states became tributary states of the powerful Buddhist Srivijaya empire that controlled trade in Maritime Southeast Asia from the 6th to the 13th centuries.

  5. Indigenous Philippine folk religions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_Philippine_folk...

    Third, Filipinos believed that events in the human world were influenced by the actions and interventions of these spirit beings. [3] Anito were the ancestor spirits (umalagad), or nature spirits and deities in the Indigenous animistic religions of precolonial Philippines.

  6. List of Philippine mythological figures - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Philippine...

    The following is a list of gods, goddesses, deities, and many other divine, semi-divine, and important figures from classical Philippine mythology and indigenous Philippine folk religions collectively referred to as Anito, whose expansive stories span from a hundred years ago to presumably thousands of years from modern times.

  7. Religion in the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_the_Philippines

    The Baháʼí Faith in the Philippines started in 1921 with the first Baháʼí first visiting the Philippines that year, [73] and by 1944 a Baháʼí Local Spiritual Assembly was established. [74] In the early 1960s, during a period of accelerated growth, the community grew from 200 in 1960 to 1000 by 1962 and 2000 by 1963.

  8. Filipino shamans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filipino_shamans

    After the Philippines was ceded to the United States after the Spanish–American War, he was initially made "military chief" of La Castellana, Negros Occidental under the American government. However, he picked up armed resistance again in 1899 in the Philippine–American War. He surrendered on August 6, 1907, to American authorities and was ...

  9. Cultural achievements of pre-colonial Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cultural_achievements_of...

    The cultural achievements of pre-colonial Philippines include those covered by the prehistory and the early history (900–1521) of the Philippine archipelago's inhabitants, the pre-colonial forebears of today's Filipino people. Among the cultural achievements of the native people's belief systems, and culture in general, that are notable in ...

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    anito philippinesindigenous philippine spirits