Manila (province)

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Manila
Maynila
Former province of the Philippines

 

1571–1901
 

Location of the historical province of Manila.
Capital Manila
Mariquina (1898–1899)
Historical era Spanish era
 •  Legazpi's conquest of Maynila and Tondo 1571
 •  Became capital of colonial Philippines
 •  Occupied by Great Britain 1762–1764
 •  Sovereignty transferred to United States 1899
 •  Disestablished 1901
Today part of Caloocan, Las Piñas, Makati, Malabon, Mandaluyong, Manila, Marikina, Muntinlupa, Navotas, Parañaque, Pasay, Pasig, Pateros, Taguig, Quezon City, San Juan

Manila, also formerly known as Tondo, was a historical province in the Philippines, encompassing the former pre-Hispanic kingdoms of Tondo and Maynila.[1] In 1898, it included the City of Manila and 23 other municipalities. It was incorporated into the Province of Rizal in 1901.

Cities and municipalities

The province was composed of the City of Manila and 23 other municipalities. The districts of Binondo, Dilao, Ermita, Malate, Pandacan, Quiapo, Sampaloc, San Miguel, Santa Ana, Santa Cruz, and Tondo are often referred to as "pueblos", "arrabales" ("suburbs") or "neighbourhoods" of Manila. The name Manila originally referred to the "city within the walls" (now Intramuros), but its meaning eventually came to include the suburbs surrounding it, leading to confusion about which places constitute "Manila" in the late 19th century.[1][2] From the 1860s onward, the area was often referred to as Ciudad de Manila y sus arrabales ("The City of Manila and its suburbs") or as Manila y los pueblos de extramuros ("Manila and the communities outside the walls").[2] The present-day City of Manila includes all these areas.

The table below presents information from the cited source.[1]

City/Municipality Population (1898) Notes
Manila[A 1] 110,000
Caloocan 9,843 situated 7 miles from Manila. There are highroads to Manila, Novaliches, Mariquina, and Sampaloc.
Dilao (Paco)[A 2][A 3] 4,625 situated 3 miles from Manila.
Ermita[A 2] 4,726 situated 1¼ miles from Manila.
Las Piñas 4,000 situated 8 miles from Manila.
Malate[A 2] 2,319 situated 1⅔ miles from Manila.
Malibay[A 4] 2,890 situated 4 miles from Manila.
Mariquina[A 5] 10,313 situated 7 miles from Manila. It communicates with Caloocan by a highroad.
Montalban[A 6] 3,055 situated 16 miles from Manila.
Muntinlupa 5,068 situated 21 miles from Manila.
Navotas 9,154 situated 6¼ miles from Manila.
Novaliches[A 7] 1,871 situated 10 miles from Manila. It communicates with Caloocan and Manila by highroads.
Pandacan[A 2] 2,446 situated 2 miles from Manila.
Parañaque 9,863 situated at a distance of 6⅛ miles from Manila.
Pasig 22,000 situated 7 miles from Manila.
Pateros 2,842 situated 3 miles from Manila.
Pineda (Pasay)[A 8] 9,825 situated 3⅛ miles from Manila.
San Felipe Neri (Mandaluyong)[A 9] 5,465.
San Juan del Monte[A 10] 2,011
San Mateo[A 11] 6,700 situated 17 miles from Manila.
San Pedro Macati (Makati)[A 12] 3,921 situated about 3 miles from Manila.
Santa Ana[A 2] 2,194 situated about 3 miles from Manila.
Taguig 9,662 situated 4 miles from Manila.
Tambobong (Malabon)[A 13] 25,000 situated 3 miles from Manila.

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Map

Shown below are the locations of the municipalities of the province of Manila. Except for Montalban and San Mateo, all these areas are included in the present-day cities of Metro Manila.[3]

The province of Manila, as of 1898.

See also

References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Military notes on the Philippines: September 1898 By United States. Adjutant-General's Office. Military Information Division
  2. 2.0 2.1 Old ties and new solidarities: studies on Philippine communities, by Charles J-H. Macdonald, Guillermo Mangubat Pesigan – Shifts in the meaning of "Manila" in the Nineteenth Century – Xavier Huetz de Lemps
  3. 1901 Map of Luzon, showing the province of Manila


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