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Filipino culture

This page presents some important features of the different regional cultures that make up the Filipino people according to ethnolinguistic classification. This grouping, however, does not mean that these cultures can be easily distinguished from one another. There are more things that these groups share than things that tell them apart.

Approximately 150 languages spoken by different ethnolinguistic groups all over the Philippine islands. Three of these languages serve as regional lingua francas: Ilokano in Northern and Central Luzon; Tagalog in Southern, and parts of the Central regions of Luzon; and Cebuano in the Visayas, Mindanao and some areas in Palawan.

Tagalog is the basis of the national language, Filipino, which is also one of the two official languages along with English. It also serves as the national lingua franca.

There are eight major languages based on the number of speakers: Tagalog, Cebuano, Ilokano, Hiligaynon/Ilonggo, Waray, Bikolano, Pangasinense, and Kapampangan. Apart from the ethnolinguistic groups, a uniquely diverse culture has evolved in Northern Luzon and in Mindanao and the southern islands of the Philippine archipelago.

The Paleolithic Culture
The story of man in the Philippines goes back to the middle of the Ice Ages. In geologic terms this is known as the Pleistocene Epoch which has been dated from 1 to 3 million years. During this period the entire earth underwent great upheavals. At least four times the climate of the world became cold and waters from the oceans were turned to ice and became deposited in the polar regions in the form of glaciers or sheets of ice.

The earliest evidence for the presence of people in the Philippine archipelago appeared in Cagayan Valley. These were in the form of stone tools found in the same rock formation as fossils of an extinct elephas. These date back to between .9 to .7 million years or roughly some 750,000 years ago.

Elsewhere in the world as in Indonesia and China the Homo erectus species were dated to at about this age and older. Later population genetics studies suggested that about 50,000 years ago some Proto-malay populations appeared in the country: the Mamanua of Lake Mainit; and between 30,000 to 20,000 years ago the Negrito made their appearance. Evidences point to two streams, one - probably older, is a movement along the eastern side of the archipelago and going farther north along the coast, while the later one coming through Borneo and Palawan affected the western side of the Philippines including Luzon. The Austronesian populations of the archipelago showed their presence between 6,000 to 7,000 years B.C. » More..