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The history of the Philippines, many argue, did not begin with the coming of the Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan in 1521. Rather, it began in the 13th century, when 10 Datus from Borneo, each with a hundred of his kinsmen, landed in what is now known as Panay Island in the Visayas. Yet, it was Magellan, and the succeeding expeditions from Spain, who put the Philippine archipelago on the map of the world. The intrepid Magellan was dubbed the "discoverer" of the Philippines after he landed upon the island of Homonhon, near Samar, on March 16, 1521, he then claimed these islands in the name of King Philip II of Spain and named them Felipinas, the Philippines. The missionaries introduced Christianity and attempted to unify the many peoples and islands under a central government. Ferdinand Magellan was later killed in Mactan Island of Cebu in a clash with native warriors led by a chieftain named Lapu-lapu.

The Philippine archipelago has 7,107 islands which lies between 21 degrees and 5 degrees north latitude in the Western Pacific. She has a land area of 298,170 square kilometers. It extends northward toward Taiwan and Borneo to the south. On the west is the China Sea and on the east is the Pacific Ocean.

Government: The Philippine government is composed of three governing bodies: the Executive, Legislature, & Judicial. The Executive is composed of the President, elected by the people for a term of six years. The Philippine Constitution has the bicameral system, which includes the Senate and the House of Representatives. The Senate serves for a minimum of six years with 24 members lead by the Senate speaker. The House of Representatives is composed of 250 members serving for 3 years. The Speaker of the House leads the Congress. The judicial system is composed of the Chief justice and 14 associate justices. The Supreme Court is the highest court in the country.

Population: 66,117,284 in July 1990; average population density 220 persons per square kilometer; annual growth rate 2.5 percent; birth rate 29 per 1,000 (in 1991); death rate 7 per 1,000 (in 1991).

Language: Pilipino (based on Tagalog) and English (official languages). Eleven languages including Cebuano or Visaya which is also widely spoken in the southern parts of the Philippines and eighty-seven dialects indigenous to archipelago.

Education: In 1989 six years of compulsory, free elementary education provided to approximately 15 million students, more than 96 percent of age-group. Approximately 290,000 teachers in 34,000 elementary schools. Beginning at age 13, approximately 4 million students, more than 55 percent of age-group, enrolled in 5,500 secondary schools with approximately 80,000 teachers; 1.6 million enrolled in 1,675 institutions of higher education with 56,380 instructors. Supervised by Department of Education, Culture, and Sports. Literacy rate nearly 90 percent in 1990.

Religion: In 1989 approximately 82 percent Roman Catholic, approximately 9 percent associated with Iglesia ni Kristo and various Protestant denominations, 5 percent Muslim, remainder Buddhist, Daoist (or Taoist), or other religions. » More..
 
 
The Philippine History in details and numbers. Pinoy pride
Pinoy related site for the filipino