Barangay: Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society
Barangay: Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society
Barangay: Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society
Social Organization
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T H E VISAYAS
call timaguas in their language. From those who got behind the walls of the house, they
say, come those considered slaves, whom they call oripes i n their language. Those who
wen t into the kitchen and h i d i n the stove and among the pots they say are the negroes,
claiming that all the negroes there are i n the hills of Philippine Islands of the West
come from them. A n d from the others who went out of the house, they say, come all
the other nations there are i n the world, saying that these were many and that they
went to many and diverse places. (Boxer Codex 1590b, 351-52)
Datu
T h e head o f a Visayan c o m m u n i t y was a datu, what the Spaniards called
principal, chief or "a l o r d of vassals," and kadatoan were those datus regarded as autonomous. T h e w o r d meant b o t h a political office and a social
class, b o t h an incumbent ruler and all members o f the r u l i n g class of either
sex. The r i g h t to rule depended o n direct descent f r o m former rulers, so
members o f the datu class jealously guarded their lineage: a man who
became a datu simply by marrying one was called sabali. They m a r r i e d
w i t h i n their rank, either at home or abroad, l i m i t e d their heirs by b i r t h
control, and kept their daughters secluded as binokot princesseseven
their young sons, according to the epic o f H u m a d a p n o n . The rulers o f
Butuan, Limasawa, Cebu, and Maktan i n Magellan's day were all related.
But datus also took secondary wives (sandil) who produced a lesser order
o f nobility called tumao i f they were o f h i g h rank themselves, or timawa i f
they were slaves or commoners. Potli or lubus nga datu meant one o f pure
or u n m i x e d ancestry, and kalibutan ("all around") meant pedigreed o n all
four sidesthat is, all four grandparents. Brothers who were potential
competitors often m a r r i e d i n t o royal families i n other islands, or hived off
locally, so to speak, to f o u n d a new swarm. Alliances, especially marriage
alliances, recognized rank and precedence. T h e celebrated Si Katuna o f
B o h o l had vassals i n Leyte b u t was himselfj u n i o r to Si Gala, and b o t h were
ranked by Dailisan o f Panglao.
There was no w o r d for a primary datu or paramount chief, b u t those
recognized as primus inter pares were k n o w n as pangulo, head or leader;
kaponoan, most sovereign (from puno, r o o t or t r u n k ) ; or makaporos nga datu,
a unifying chief. Those who controlled seaports w i t h foreign trade generally took Malay-Sanskrit titles like Rajah (Ruler), Batara (Noble L o r d ) , or
"Sarripada" (His Highness). Magellan met three chiefs called "rajah"Awi
of Butuan, K o l a m b u o f Limasawa, and H u m a b o n of Cebua tide Spaniards always translated as king, t h o u g h Magellan learned too late that they
had neither kingdoms nor power over other datus. Sarripada, or its variants
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Social Organization
Salipada, Sipad, and Paduka, came f r o m Sanskrit Sri Paduka, and was used
by H u m a b o n and at least three o f his contemporariesKabungsuwan's
son Makaalang o f Maguindanao, Dailisan of Panglao, and the sultan o f
B r u n e i . H u m a b o n ' s brother was his Bendahara (Prime Minister), whose
son Tupas was m a r r i e d to H u m a b o n ' s eldest c h i l d a n d was his heir; one o f
his fellow datus was a Batala, and H u m a b o n himself was m a r r i e d to
Lapulapu's niece. We do n o t know what title L a p u l a p u claimed, b u t
Maktan's location p u t h i m i n a position to intercept shipping i n Cebu
harbor. W h e n Magellan tried to force h i m to acknowledge H u m a b o n as
overlord, he replied that "he was u n w i l l i n g to come and do reverence to
one w h o m he had been c o m m a n d i n g for so long a t i m e " ( A n o n , n.d.a, 21).
None o f these titles appear i n Spanish lexicons, b u t o l d Javanese hadi is
listed as kingthough no Visayan chief was named with this t i t l e a n d
mantili (minister) as "a r i c h timawa" or "one who is like a k i n g i n a t o w n "
(Mentrida 1637, 264).
These datus were part o f what social anthropologists call a c h i e f d o m
a loose federation o f chiefs b o u n d by loose ties o f personal allegiance to a
senior among t h e m . The head o f such a chiefdom exercised authority over
his supporting chiefs, b u t n o t over their subjects or territory, and his
primacy stemmed f r o m his c o n t r o l o f local or foreign trade, and the ability
to redistribute luxury goods desired by the others. Philippine chiefdoms
were usually located at river mouths where they could facilitate the sort o f
highland-lowland exchanges described by Loarca (1582, 120) i n Panay:
Those of the mountains cannot live without the fish and salt and other things and
jars and plates which come from other parts, nor can those on the coast live without
the rice and cotton which the mountaineers have.
T H E VISAYAS
Social Organization
Timawa
Spanish dictionaries always define timawa as freemen (libres) or freedm e n (libertos). They were originally the offspring or descendants of a datu's
commoner wives or slave concubines, and they were technically free because their progenitor had granted i t . But slaves could also be freed
(matitimawa), so Loarca, i n describing this social class, f o u n d it necessary to
call t h e m " t r u e " or "recognized" timawa. A l l persons liberated by their own
master were called ginoo, and m i g h t be chided, "Dika magpadayaw, kay
akun ka ginoo [ D o n ' t p u t o n airs, I ' m the one who made you g i n o o ] "
(Sanchez 1617, 204). I n English, "freedmen" has little meaning today: i n
m o d e r n societies, all citizens are free. But when Isla referred to timawa as
"citizens," he meant a privileged class, n o t ordinary people. I n sixteenthcentury Spain, citizens (ciudadanos) were the nonslave residents of chartered cities (ciudades) who enjoyed its special laws and exemptions. They
were n o t peasants, peons, serfs, tenants, or farmhandsall o f w h o m w o u l d
have been called o r i p u n i n the Visayas.
22
Timawa paid tribute called buhis or handug and, i n theory at least, were
free to transfer their allegiance to some other datu. B u t those attached to
their l o r d as personal vassals paid no tribute and rendered no agricultural
labor: thus the Boxer Codex called t h e m "knights and hidalgos." They won
their tattoos beside h i m i n battle, rowed and m a n n e d his warship, received
his favors, and shared i n the public accolade for his victories. T h e i r datu
was obligated to defend or avenge t h e m at the risk of his own person i f need
be, a n d to share booty and captives w i t h t h e m . They attended his feasts as
retainers and familiars, acting as his wine tasters, and were sometimes
h o n o r e d by receiving a cup f r o m his own h a n d f r o m which he h a d already
taken a sip. They were sent as his emissaries to open marriage negotiations
for his sons, and at the time o f his death, acted as bailiffs to enforce his
m o u r n i n g tabus, and three o f the most renowned among t h e m w o u l d
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T H E VISAYAS
These changes meant that datus no longer had need o f their timawas'
Viking-like services or means o f rewarding t h e m , nor a fresh supply o f
captives for their own use or sale. Worse, timawa were now paying tribute
to the colonial government just like datus. These were conditions which no
d o u b t gave added incentive for reducing timawa to slave status by usurious
loans or arbitrary fines. Father Sanchez (1617, 334) said, "For anything at
all, the datus w o u l d fine the timawa heavily . . . and i f they had no bahandi
to give, make them slaves." By the seventeenth century, timawa were being
referred to as commoners (plebeyos) or tungan tawo, "people in-between,"
and i n Alcina's day, the pre-Hispanic timawa were being fondly recalled as
a " t h i r d rank o f nobility." A n d even that memory was fading. "Today they
call everybody timawa who are n o t slaves," Alcina (1668a, 4:59) said, a
practice which ultimately led to the m o d e r n Visayan w o r d which means
"poor, destitute."
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Oripun
The w o r d oripun appears to be a transitive f o r m o f an archaic r o o t udip
(to live) meaning "to let live"for example, to spare life o n the field of
battle, to ransom a captive, or to redeem a debt equivalent to a man's price.
The market for these exchanges was provided by a shortage o f labor for
exploiting a r i c h natural environment; and debt slavery was prevalent
because agriculture was undeveloped, goods l i m i t e d , and interest rates
h i g h , so debtors had little collateral except their own persons. The o r i p u n
produced by these conditions were legally slaves: they could be b o u g h t and
sold. But that was all they had i n c o m m o n . Some were foreign captives or
purchases who served as victims for h u m a n sacrifice; some were members
o f their master's household and suckled at the same breast as his own
children; some were householders who gave their masters or creditors a
p o r t i o n o f their crops or labor; and some were hardly distinguishable f r o n .
freemen. Sociologically, therefore, they constituted the class w h i c h i n
contemporary European society w o u l d have been called commoners.
Individual status w i t h i n the o r i p u n class depended o n b i r t h r i g h t , inherited or acquired debt, c o m m u t e d penal sentence, or victimization by the
more powerful. O u t r i g h t captives were bihag, a n d they were marketed by
dealers i n along or botongas expensive merchandise like bahandi porcelain
and gongs, or ships and houses. O r i p u n who lived i n their master's house
were hayohay or ayuey, and those w i t h their own house and field were tuhay
or mamahay. Like datus and timawa, they bore c h i l d r e n o f their same class;
or i n the case o f m i x e d marriages, their c h i l d r e n became half- or quarterslaves who served their masters half time or quarter time. Half-slaves were
called bulan ( m o n t h ) i f their owners divided their time by the m o n t h . Debt
slaves, too, only served their creditors part time i n p r o p o r t i o n to their debt.
T h e i r owners often paid such partial slaves the balance to take f u l l possession o f them. As for householding o r i p u n , they supported themselves,
giving their masters only a share o f their labor or crops. W i t h o p p o r t u n i t y
and enterprise, they could earn enough to decrease their debt or even pay
i t off i n f u l l .
Hayohay were at the b o t t o m o f the o r i p u n social scalethose "most
enslaved," as Loarca (1582, 142) p u t i t , "the ones they mostly sell to the
Spaniards." They were domestics who lived i n their master's house, received their food and c l o t h i n g f r o m h i m , but were given one day out o f four
to work for themselves. T h e i r c h i l d r e n b o r n or raised i n his house were
gintubo, who m i g h t become favorites called sibin or ginogatan, treated like
his own c h i l d r e n and set free o n his death. I f b o t h parents were house-born
slaves like themselves, or actual purchases, they were ginlubos, and i f o f the
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T H E VISAYAS
Social Organization
Community
A datu's following was his haop or dolohan, Visayan terms to which
Tagalog barangay was added after Manila became the colonial capital.
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T H E VISAYAS
These terms all referred to the people themselves, n o t the place where they
livedfor example, "Nahaop ako kan Koan [ I belong to So-and-so's
barangay]"and they ranged i n size f r o m thirty to a h u n d r e d households
(Sanchez 1617, 225v). Haop appears to be cognate w i t h sakop, any inclusive
group, b u t especially one supportive o f a person o n w h o m they were
dependent, like c h i l d r e n o n their parents or slaves o n their master. Alms
called palos or hinapot were given by the c o m m u n i t y to one released f r o m
captivity, or to the poor by anybody selling food.
T h e villages and towns where one or m o r e haop lived were bongto or
lungsod; and hamlets or neighborhoods were gamuro, a cluster o f houses
w i t h i n earshot. C o m m u n i t y decisions affecting more than one haop required datu consensus, and so d i d alliances between settlements. B u t there
were no formal confederations, for which reason Spanish explorers always
made b l o o d compacts w i t h m o r e than one chief, f r o m chiefs o f Samar
hamlets too small to be seen f r o m the coast to those o f large communities
like Cebu spread out for several kilometers.
Members o f a haop were usually relateda parentela, or k i n d r e d . The
Boxer manuscript (1590b, 357) says that datus were obeyed because "those
i n the settlement who are n o t [their slaves] are the relatives o f the datus."
Indeed, b l o o d relationship, either real o f fictive, was considered essential
for personal security. M e n became ritual brothers, sandugo, by i m b i b i n g a
few drops o f each other's b l o o d i n wine or betel n u t , swearing to support
and defend one another u n t i l death. They m i g h t also take a c o m m o n
name, like some r i n g they exchanged or banana they ate, to become
kasungar or katawagan, or share the same clothes or sweetheart as ubas,
comrades. A n d i f they had to be separated f r o m one another, they w o u l d
swear a balata oath n o t to partake o f a certain food or d r i n k till they met
again.
Proper c o m m u n i t y conduct reinforced social structure. Members o f the
datu class were privileged to wear garments w i t h luxurious edging, and
non-datus who affected gold teeth were mocked as being yabyab, spread out
like a mat. Datus strode a r o u n d w i t h loose clothes flowing or w i t h slow
measured tread i n processions, and their b i n o k o t daughters were carried
o n men's shoulders so as never to touch the g r o u n d . C o m p e t i t i o n f r o m
peers and relatives was discouraged by restrictions o n the size and ostentat i o n o f their houses. Lower-class persons entered their presence w i t h head
bowed, twisting and wriggling their bodies, and addressed t h e m i n the
t h i r d person while squatting down, and nobody dared to spit i n their
presence. (Belching and breaking w i n d were socially acceptable, however.)
W o m e n h u n g back before passing i n f r o n t o f t h e m , and then gathered up
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Social Organization
Kinship
Early Spanish dictionaries o f Visayan languages often list Cebuano,
Hiligaynon, or Samareho variants under a single entry. This is especially
true o f kinship terminology. Thus the w o r d for father is given as amahan,
amay, and anduyon w i t h o u t distinction, t h o u g h with a Cebu variant o f amba
or ambuyon; and mother as inahan, indayon, and Hoy, with a Kiniray-a
variant, inang. Ama and Ina or Inda were terms o f special respect used as
proper nouns (for example, si Ama), and often extended to nonparents for
that purpose, while "Mama" was what people called their own father.
Fathers were also addressed affectionately as "Baba," thus himabawas a gift
to a go-between by a suitor who wished to establish such a relationship w i t h
his prospective father-in-law.
Parents' brothers and sisters were also differentiated by sex: uncles were
yoyo, oyo-an, or bata, and aunts were iyaan or dada. B u t sons and daughters
were simply anak, offspring; and so, too, brothers, sisters, and cousins o f
either sex were igkaanak, igsoon, igmanhod, igtotood, or otod. (Ofodwasapiece
cut off something; hence, kaotoran, relatives o f one lineage.) Cousins could
also be distinguished f r o m siblings as patod or ig-agaw, and second cousins
i n Kiniray-a as igkampor, while bogto or boggong tinay, "gut brothers," meant
c h i l d r e n of the same parents"like a piece of the same cord." B u t siblings
related t h r o u g h only one parent were mabaw, and stepchildren or ones
adopted were hablus.
Grandparents o f either sex, together with their brothers and sisters and
their spouses, were all apuy, apohan, or owang, or more respectfully, " L a k i "
or "Bai," sometimes with "Gurang" (mature) added. Great-grandparents
were apo, or "Bata" with or w i t h o u t laki, bai, or gurang attached. A p r u d e n t
person therefore m u t t e r e d "Laki-laki" or "Apo-apo" when leaving the
house i n order to invoke his ancestors' protection against h a r m or accidenta custom continued by Christians, Father M e n t r i d a said, "or they
say, 'Jesus.'" Grandchildren were apo, and they and all their descendants
were kaapohan, though a great-grandchild m i g h t be distinguished as apo sa
tohod j u s t as a great-grandparent was apuy sa tohodsa tohod meaning
literally "at the knee."
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T H E VISAYAS
Law
Laws were part o f the customs and traditions handed down f r o m one
generation to another: they were n o t considered products o f legislation b u t
part o f the natural order o f things. Kabtanganwere customs, b u t hahimtang
was nature or c o n d i t i o n , b o t h words derived f r o m butang, to p u t something
i n its place. T h e o r i g i n myths make i t clear that class differences were just
as natural as color o f skin, and mestizos (kalibugan) were the c h i l d r e n o f a
datu and timawa or o f u n m a r r i e d parents, as well as o f a Spaniard and a
Visayan. Alagagwas the natural awe w h i c h j u n i o r s felt i n the presence o f
seniors; hilas was ingrained reluctance to contradict parents or superiors;
and naga kahilas was for an ancestor spirit to keep a disrespectful descend138
Social Organization
ant awake with a guilty conscience. A synonym for kabtangan was kagawiyan,
f r o m gawi, to keep or preserve (for example, paragawi, a steward, or
gawiyunan, propertied people.) B u t batasor batasanwas a decree regulating
commercefor example, "Sino i n nagbatas sining iyo ipapalit [ W h o assessed this merchandise o f yours]?"and batas-batas was tariff (Sanchez
1617, 70v).
A datu acted as j u d g e (hukom) i n b o t h civil claims and c r i m i n a l cases,
sometimes i n consultation with an expert i n custom law, by hearing testimony of sworn witnesses. I f the results were inconclusive, he m i g h t order
the litigants to submit to trial by ordealfor example, retrieving an object
f r o m a pot o f b o i l i n g water with the least injury, or staying underwater
longest. Recognized crimes were theft, defamation, m u r d e r , witchcraft,
lese majesty (that is, offense to a datu's authority), and malicious vandalism
like poisoning livestock.
Penalties were fines set i n accord with the litigants' standing: crimes
against upper-class persons were fined more heavily, and an o r i p u n who
m u r d e r e d a datu was simply killed o u t r i g h t . Killings among high-ranking
datus could not be settled u n t i l a b l o o d feud had r u n its course, and
wergeld (man-price) was argued as hotly as bride-price. A l l fines were
imposed i n terms of bahandi valuables, too h i g h to be met by agricultural
products or handicrafts.
I n theory, nobody was condemned to slavery: they became slaves for
inability to meet fines. There were no sentences like i m p r i s o n m e n t or
deportation which w o u l d take labor out of p r o d u c t i o n ; rather, punishments realigned labor forces w i t h i n the community. T h e only exception
was the death penalty for convicted witches or sorcerers.
T h e most c o m m o n thefts were o f foodstuffsfor example, dangpas was
for theft of r o o t crops; ugnas for fallen fruit; sorok for bananas, sugarcane,
or coconutsand sneak thieves crept i n t o houses naked and oiled so as to
be slippery i f caught. T h e stealing o f valuables, however, was associated
with raiding and so was rare w i t h i n the community and punished severely:
first-generation
missionaries were always struck by the absence of locked
doors and coffers i n the homes o f the wealthy.
Any altercation that resulted i n w o u n d i n g had to be compensated with
hilugo, blood-price, and insult was also valid grounds for litigation. T h e
most serious was an accusation o f witchcraft, b u t there were also violent
curses like "Binaliw ka [Be changed]!" (that is, become crippled or def o r m e d ) , "Ginanitan ka [Be flayed]!" (like an animal h i d e ) , or "Nahahaan
tinay m o [Get your g u t s ] ! " ( f r o m haha, to remove marrow, or meat f r o m
shells). But insults reflecting o n a man's virility r e q u i r e d personal satisfac139
T H E VTSAYAS
Marriage
Weddings between people w i t h o u t property to share by bequest were
simple ceremonies i n which the couple partook o f the same cup or plate,
and hayohay were simply m a r r i e d off by their masters and given a few pots.
But the weddings o f datus were the most i m p o r t a n t social events i n a '
Visayan community. Since they were contracts between families rather than
individuals, they were also political events creating new alliances. (They
were often made when the m a n and woman concerned were still c h i l d r e n ,
or even before their birth.) T h e i r importance depended o n the size and
ritual settlement o f a bride-price called bugay"bride-price"
rather than
"dowry" because i t was set by the girl's father, bargained down like goods
i n a marketplace, and was n o t conjugal property. Spanish dowry (dote), o n
the other h a n d , was property a bride b r o u g h t into her marriage to be
enjoyed by her husband. Visayan bugay was shared w i t h i n the k i n group
that set the price and sealed the bargain, i n c l u d i n g the bride's brothers-inlaw i f she was a widow, and redistributed to meet their own future needs for
bride-price. A n d since it had to be r e t u r n e d i n case o f divorce, i t gave the
wife's family a vested interest i n the permanence o f the u n i o n ; indeed, a
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T H E VISAYAS
They were tied together by the hair for a short time, t h e n served a plate o f
rice, f r o m w h i c h they each took a handful and squeezed i t i n t o a ball. She
tossed hers down the house ladder, the symbol of his coming and going to
support his new family, and he threw his out the window to indicate that
her place was i n the home l o o k i n g out. T h e n , as they drank together, an
o l d man rose and made public announcement o f the match, stated the
conditions pertaining to the bride-price i n the case either one went astray,
and called o n those present to act as witnesses. He then u n i t e d their hands
over a bowl o f raw rice, which he then threw over the guests.
W h e n the newlyweds finally r e t i r e d to the bridal chamberthat is, the
bokot where she had spent her days as b i n o k o t h e r brother w o u l d bar the
groom's entrance u n t i l he gave t h e m something; slaves w o u l d ignite a
smouldering fire underneath u n t i l receiving a gift; and others w o u l d enter
the chamber w i t h b r i g h t torches and had to be paid to leave. Meanwhile,
the party went raucously o n , and i f the bridegroom's father was a m a n o f
sufficient rank and means, he presented gifts to all his new in-laws, perhaps
even their slaves. Guests playfully snatched off one another's pudong to be
r e t u r n e d only o n payment, and slaves were p e r m i t t e d to keep anything they
could grab f r o m the bridegroom's party. These prestige feasts were public
celebrations and m i g h t last as l o n g as ten days.
W h e n i t came time to fetch the bride, she required another r o u n d o f
giftsbefore crossing a river, c l i m b i n g the house ladder, or entering a
crowded r o o m . H e r father contributed bantal to the new householda
n u m b e r o f slaves equal to, or even double, the n u m b e r included i n the
bugay, b u t only for the newlyweds' use, n o t their possession: they remained
his own property. Any slaves the wife b r o u g h t along remained her personal
property j u s t like her gold and jewelry, and i f she and her husband
quarreled, they m i g h t refuse to obey h i m . A wife's paramount housekeepi n g duty was to keep her husband well clothed by weaving, sewing, trade,
or purchasesjust as u n m a r r i e d w o m e n were expected to clothe their
lovers, as B u b u n g Ginbuna does for epic hero Kabungaw. As Alcina (1668a,
4:218) said, "Both husband and lovers are accustomed to leave their
women i f they do not do dapi or darapi, which is to give t h e m the clothes
they need."
Marriage was f o r b i d d e n between first-degree k i n , b u t a niece could
marry her uncle. ( I n a Panay o r i g i n m y t h , L u p l u b a n , granddaughter of the
p r i m o r d i a l pair, m a r r i e d her mother's brother, Pandagwan.) Spanish references to polygamy differ, perhaps because o f confusion between secondary wives and concubines: Legazpi said Visayan m e n took two or three wives
i f they could afford i t , b u t C h i r i n o said the practice was very rare. Father
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C h i r i n o also said that husband and wife separated "for the least reason i n
the world"actually, for incompatibility, neglect, or misconductand a
m a n or woman who had been m a r r i e d only once was rather the exception
than the rule. Pangoli was a gift to attract back a wife who had fled to her
relatives, and legal divorce was often avoided only because o f the difficulty
o f restoring a bride-price that had already been "spent." Moreover, i f
divorce was c o m m o n , the premature death o f one partner was by no means
u n c o m m o n , so remarriages filled families w i t h half-siblings and adopted
nephews, nieces, or foundlings.
Inheritance
C h i l d r e n o f both sexes i n h e r i t e d equally unless their parents specified
some preference i n a will (bilin). Illegitimate c h i l d r e n i n h e r i t e d only at the
pleasure o f the legal heirs. B u t heritage strictly followed bloodline: stepchildren i n h e r i t e d only f r o m their actual parents, and spouses d i d not
i n h e r i t f r o m each other. A m a n and wife m i g h t bequeath to each other
conjugal property which they had accumulated together, b u t n o t what they
had i n h e r i t e d . I t was a principle o f w h i c h Spanish justices were often
unaware when trying lawsuits over contested inheritance. Two cases recorded by Alcina will illustrate.
A n u n m a r r i e d girl died who was the only c h i l d o f a widowed datu,
leaving six slaves she had i n h e r i t e d f r o m her deceased mother. H e r father
had no claim to those slaves, b u t some fifty o f her mother's k i n gathered
a r o u n d to claim their share. "Since there w o u l d n o t have been even a finger
for each," as Father Alcina (1668a, 4:227) said, search had to be made for
the " t r u n k " (puno)that is, the ultimate source o f the slaves. This proved
to be the girl's maternal grandfather, who had had three c h i l d r e n h e r
m o t h e r and two sonseach o f w h o m had i n h e r i t e d an equal n u m b e r o f
slaves, and all o f w h o m were dead. Since the girl was the last i n her mother's
line, i t was the descendants of her two uncles who had the best claim. These
were more than twenty i n all, so each was awarded a quarter-slave.
I n the other case, a childless woman adopted the daughter o f her
brother, raised her as her own daughter, and eventually m a r r i e d her off i n
another town. She then took i n a f o u n d l i n g that had been abandoned i n
the forest, w h o m she also raised as a daughter b u t could n o t legally adopt
because the parents were u n k n o w n . W h e n the woman was dying, the
f o u n d l i n g obtained a certificate f r o m the parish priest stating that she was
the woman's heir. The legally adopted daughter had by this time died b u t
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T H E VISAYAS
Social Organization
restricted stretch of beach. Datus could also lease such resources to outsiders: Legazpi (1569b, 22n.63) reported o f Visayan gold p r o d u c t i o n i n 1569,
I n some place where we know there are mines, the natives are not willing to work
them and do not, but when foreign vessels come, i n exchange for what they bring, they
agree to let them work i n the mines for the days or period contracted.
Labor, o f course, was itself a commodity that could be bught and sold
or, i n the case o f b o n d e d tinubos, rented. Indeed, i t was the commodity i n
which creditors were investing when they underwrote somebody's debt: lito
was resale, and linilito pagtubos was a person whose debt had been transferred many times f r o m one speculator to another. O r i p u n were not
bondservants w o r k i n g off their debt: lowas was the payment liquidating
slavery, made either by the slave himself or somebody o n his behalf, and
tubos was a payment w h i c h transferred title to the one who paid it.
Namomoo was to work i n somebody else's house, most frequently weaving. Lihogwere h i r e d hands compensated only with meals and with a feast
when the project was completed. Himakdul was compensation given an
agent or messenger for difficult service, and hinguliwas a k i n d o f hazardous
duty pay o n expeditions like those called moro-moro after the Spaniards
i n t r o d u c e d the concept.
I n the practice o f agriculture, terms distinguished the division o f labor,
n o t o f property. Lan-o or tagolalingwas the work a slave d i d for himself, and
tampok (literally, "a precious stone") was what he d i d for his master; and i f
he made a surabi field for himself by stealth alongside his master's, what he
was stealing was time, not land.
Householders had the r i g h t o f usufruct to the land o n w h i c h their
houses and fruit trees stood, b u t i t was n o t property held i n fee simple.
U n d e r colonial law, however, such occupation eventually became the basis
for legal title, while datus laid claim to unoccupied l a n d where they had
exercised j u r i s d i c t i o n . I n Manila, land was being sold and mortgaged with
Spanish title deeds as early as the 1590s. We do not know when this process
began i n colonial centers like Cebu and I l o i l o , b u t i n the rural Visayas it was
j u s t beginning a century after Legazpi's arrival. Alcina (1668a, 3:75-76) has
left the following l u c i d description o f indigenous land rights i n his day:
Regarding land, here there is no difference between mine and thine as i n other
parts, or the usual lawsuits in almost all of them over its dominion and possession;
because i t is so great, so extensive, and i n almost all places so good, in all islands, that
it is not only more than enough for all their inhabitants, but could be given to
thousands of farmers of those i n other parts who are begging for it and sometimes
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T H E VISAYAS
cannot farm for lack of land, while here, on the contrary, there is more than enough
and very extensive land but a shortage of those to cultivate it. A n d although i t is true
that every town or vicinity has its own boundaries and they are like their own lands and
not those of other towns, nonetheless, to anybody who comes and settles among them,
even i f he was never seen before and is unknown, they give option to choose as he will,
all and as much land as he wants without giving a penny for it or any contract, so long
as it is uncultivated.
Regarding farming or cultivating it, the one who farms or cultivates it is the owner,
and even more so i f he planted coconuts or fruit trees, which are always his, without
there ever having been disputes or lawsuits among them over it until now. God grant
that this sincerity and good will might always endure among them, because these days
it appears there have been some who wish to disrupt it somewhat, some who, by
bringing i n modern ideas [ladinecer], are spoiling it with swindling. So the ancient
good will and trust is being lost with which they used to live without grabbing from one
another, but readily giving way to the one who made first choice, and much more so
to the one who first planted coconuts, fruit trees, abaca or other things, to which they
always had right and dominion, even i f they only swear to it and then go live in another
town.
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