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  2. Peoples of Palawan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peoples_of_Palawan

    Their language and alphabet, farming methods, and common belief in soul relatives are some of their cultural similarities. [1] After the death of Ferdinand Magellan, the remnant of his fleet landed in Palawan. Magellan's chronicler, Antonio Pigafetta, in his writings, described the cultivated fields of the native people populating the Palawan ...

  3. Palawan people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palawan_people

    The Palawans were originally a tribe in Southern Palawan until agrarian settlers started to occupy their once vast domain. The tribe would exploit the most fertile piece of land and move on to next. Their family units were very small, possibly due to high mortality rates. They built their houses usually on a hillside but close to the river or ...

  4. Tagbanwa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tagbanwa

    A sample of the Tagbanwa script at the Museo Palawan (Museum of Palawan). The Tagbanwa people have their own native languages (Aborlan Tagbanwa, Calamian Tagbanwa, and Central Tagbanwa) and writing system, however, they are also proficient in speaking the Palawano language and several other dialects like Tandulanon, Silanganon, and Baras in ...

  5. Handbook of South American Indians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handbook_of_South_American...

    The Handbook of South American Indians is a monographic series of edited scholarly and reference volumes in ethnographic studies, published by the Smithsonian Institution between 1940 and 1947. [ 1 ] In 1932, Baron Erland Nordenskiöld agreed to edit the series for the National Research Council Division of Anthropology and Psychology; however ...

  6. Cuyunon people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuyunon_people

    Cuyonon refers to an ethnic group populating the Cuyo Islands, along with northern and central Palawan. The Cuyonons hail originally from Cuyo and the surrounding Cuyo Islands, a group of islands and islets in the northern Sulu Sea, to the northeast of Palawan. They are considered an elite class among the hierarchy of native Palaweños.

  7. Tagbanwa script - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tagbanwa_script

    The Tagbanwa languages (Aborlan, Calamian and Central), which are Austronesian languages with about 8,000-25,000 [2] total speakers in the central and northern regions of Palawan, are dying out as the younger generations of Tagbanwa are learning and using non-traditional languages such as Cuyonon and Tagalog, thus becoming less knowledgeable of their own indigenous cultural heritage.

  8. Batak people (Philippines) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batak_people_(Philippines)

    They are also not reproducing to sustain their population. [11] As a result, Batak are being absorbed into a more diffuse group of upland indigenous peoples who are slowing losing their tribal identities, and with it their unique spirituality and culture; there is even some debate as to whether or not they still exist as a distinct ethnic entity.

  9. Cuyo, Palawan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuyo,_Palawan

    Poverty incidence of Cuyo 5 10 15 20 25 30 2006 28.80 2009 20.37 2012 13.84 2015 10.01 2018 11.38 2021 21.03 Source: Philippine Statistics Authority Fort Cuyo Further information: Fort Cuyo During the early Spanish period, purposely to protect the Cuyonon from sporadic Moro attacks, Fort Cuyo was constructed and finished in 1680. The original complex of stone and mortar was a square with four ...