BARRETTOTESORO-MeaningsObjectsCalatagan-2013

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The Meanings of Objects Calatagan and Archaeological Research in the Philippines

Author(s): GRACE BARRETTO-TESORO


Source: Philippine Studies: Historical & Ethnographic Viewpoints , sept 2013, Vol. 61, No.
3, Archaeology of Meanings (sept 2013), pp. 263-296
Published by: Ateneo de Manila University

Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/42634764

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GRACE BARRETTO-TESORO

The Changing
Meanings of Obje
Calatagan and
Archaeological
Research in the
Philippines

As objects with a biography, artifacts- acquired by individuals or

institutions, displayed in museums or privately appreciated- gain different

meanings during production, acquisition, deposition in archaeological

contexts, recovery, and analysis. This article examines the artifacts

recovered from Calatagan, Philippines, to understand the layers


and dynamic meanings of objects as commodities, mortuary goods,
archaeological data, museum objects, and private collection items. It
demonstrates the influence of archaeological practice in the Philippines on

the interpretation of the Calatagan sites and artifacts. By understanding


how meanings are produced, this article illumines different contexts in
which artifacts are utilized and create multiple experiences for people.

KEYWORDS: ARCHAEOLOGY • MEANINGS OF OBJECTS • INTERPRETATION •


CALATAGAN

PSHEV 61, NO. 3 (2013) 263-96 © Ateneo de Manila University

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specific as emblage of artifacts using the concept of the
biography of objects. It se ks to show how the meanings of
objects are acquired in the context of the history and practice
This biography objects specific of archaeology article areofasarecmhableolaogey oinftahceqPhiuirliepdpinaiems, sfoocubsjiencgtso.nianrttifoacitns the demonstrate of It the se ks artifacts Philippines, context to show using the of the many focusing how the history the concept meanings meanings and on practice artifacts of of the of a
excavated from Calatagan, Batangas, as a case study. In pursuing this
objective, this article describes the excavations in Calatagan from the 1930s
to the most recent one. The biographies of objects recovered from Calatagan
are mapped, starting from their acquisition in the past as commodities, to
their deposition as mortuary objects, their recovery and the interpretation of
these artifacts as archaeological evidence, and their roles as part of museum
col ections and sources of data. This article demonstrates that these artifacts

exist in multiple contexts: as individual objects and as part of an as emblage.


Lastly, it shows how the development of archaeology as practiced in the
Philippines has influenced the interpretations and perspectives of scholars
and the public regarding the Calatagan sites and artifacts.

Archaeological Excavations in Calatagan


Calatagan remains the single most important location of archaeological
diggings in the Philippines. Most of the excavations, which were formally
initiated in the 1940s, were conducted on the western coast of the Calatagan
peninsula in Batangas province (fig. 1). The large number of burials recorded
and the range of artifacts recovered revealed interesting aspects of ancient
Philippine societies.
In 1934 middens and archaeological materials, such as Chinese
porcelain fragments, were observed during the preparation of a polo field
in the Zobél estate (Beyer 1947; Cruz 1958; Fox 1959). Enrique Zobél,
the owner of the property, recognized the sherds' importance, prompting
him to contact the National Museum. In response the National Museum
sent Ricardo E. Galang, who visited the area and collected stone adzes and
chisels (Beyer 1947). Unfortunately the artifacts that Galang recovered were
destroyed during the Second World War (Fox 1959).
After the Second World War, Olov R. T. Janse (1941, 1944-1945,
1947), conducted the first systematic excavation in Calatagan. A Swedish
archaeologist, Janse was director of an archaeological expedition to Indochina,
sponsored by the Direction des Musées Nationaux in France, the Louvre,
the French governor general of Indochina, and l'Ecole Française ďExtréme-

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Fig. 1. Map of Calatagan showing the distribution of burial sites excavated by Fox from 1958 to 1961

BARRETTO-TESORO / CALATAGAN AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH 265

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Orient in Hanoi (Kanji 2005). After leading excavations in Vietnam and
China, he came to the Philippines. The materials recovered from the Janse
excavation in Calatagan were shipped to the Harvard-Yenching Institute
and are now in the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at
Harvard University (Kanji 2005). Some skeletal materials and local vessels
from Janse s (1944-1945) excavation were deposited at the University of
Santo Tomas in Manila.

In early 1958 Enrique's son Fernando Zobél and Jose McMicking, assisted
by local residents, initiated amateur diggings that resulted in widespread
looting (Cruz 1958). Zobél and McMicking soon realized the cultural and
historical potential of the area, which had been part of the Hacienda de
Calatagan owned by the Zobéls. What started as salvage archaeology and
the interest of private individuals in the precolonial past turned into full-
scale excavations in 1958 and 1960-1961, which Robert Fox supervised with
the objective of recovering human remains and artifacts. The Zobéls and
McMickings largely sponsored the 1958 excavations, which were intended
to rescue archaeological materials from being looted by local residents. The
1960s excavations were likewise conducted to salvage more artifacts.
More than 1,000 burials from open-pits, including infant jar burials,
have been recorded in Calatagan since the 1940s. Most of the skeletons
were found to be in supine position, but some were flexed. The most
common finds from the burials were earthenware vessels and foreign
ceramics. Earthenware vessels included undecorated and decorated forms.

The undecorated earthenware vessels consisted of cooking pots, spouted


vessels called kendiy lobed pots locally known as kinalabasa (squash-like),
bowls, and pots resembling cooking vessels but with flat-and-depressed
bases instead of round bases. The decorated earthenware pots contained
incised lines and punctuations. Decorations included incised triangles.
The earthenware bowls and kendi were local copies of foreign forms.
The foreign ceramics were from China, Vietnam, and Thailand. Forms
included jarlets, saucers, bowls, and plates. Many of the foreign ceramics
were monochromes, while some of the plates and bowls had floral patterns.
The sites have been dated to the fifteenth century AD based on the
foreign ceramics (Fox 1959). Nonceramic objects recovered in the burials
included human skulls, shells, animal bones, giant clams, glass bracelets
and glass beads, stone statues, metal implements, Chinese coins, a gold
sheet, a gold ring, and spindle whorls (Fox 1959). The Calatagan Pot with

266 PSHEV 61, NO. 3 (2013)

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inscriptions on its shoulder was recovered by a farmer during a weekend
break in the 1960-1961 excavations (Dizon 2003b; Guillermo and Paluga
2008- 2009). As a result, its exact provenience is unknown. Most of the
earthenware vessels that have been recovered are currently stored at the
National Museum of the Philippines. Some Calatagan artifacts are now
part of the Lopez Memorial Museum and Library (Artifact Inventory List
from Calatagan 2005).
In 1959 Fox published the results of the 1958 excavations. In 1982
Main and Fox published a descriptive analyses and classification of the
Calatagan earthenware vessels. Analyses of the ceramics from the 1960 to
1961 excavations remained unpublished (Fox 1961) until 2008 (Barretto-
Tesoro 2008a).
Since earlier excavations in Calatagan were undertaken mainly on the
western coast, the National Museum spearheaded a project that surveyed
and eventually undertook excavations on the eastern coast of the peninsula
in the 1990s (Ronquillo and Ogawa 1996). They recorded and recovered
burial jars belonging to an earlier period, 1695+ 20 BP and 2820±40 BP
(Dela Torre 2003). The sites and artifacts discussed here are from the 1958
to 1961 excavations.

Calatagan Artifacts: A Biography


The discussion below elucidates how the meanings and interpretations of
objects are multiple, changing, and context dependent. I argue that the
meanings of the Calatagan objects, although generally referred to as grave
objects, are multiple at any given time and through time, depending on who
is viewing them. The viewer may be the producer or end-user of the artifact,
merchant, archaeologist, scholar, student, researcher, laborer, property owner,
local resident, museum curator, or private individual. These individuals have
diverse socioeconomic, cultural, and educational backgrounds, which may
affect how they see the artifact. The biography begins with the acquisition
of the artifacts through to their becoming museum pieces. However, this
course of events does not mean that the artifacts tread along a unilineal path,
for they can take multiple paths and move in and out of a specific context.
Foreign objects found in the Calatagan burials consist of porcelains that
were traded from China, Vietnam, and Thailand in the fifteenth century. At
an early stage in the biography of these objects, they were sold by merchants
as commodities for daily use» After the ancient inhabitants of Calatagan

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/';-=09 )(8* =-0/']

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acquired these trade goods, they transformed some of the porcelains into
burial goods or burial jars. Centuries later these objects were recovered by
residents of Calatagan unintentionally while fields were being plowed. Prior
to the 1958 excavations, many local residents used the Ming ceramics for
their own tableware (Fox 1959). One Calatagan resident used the sherds to
"pave his salt beds" because the stoneware sherds were "superior to red tile
for evaporating the salt" (ibid., 338, n. 9). To the local residents the imported
ceramics had neither historical nor symbolic value; instead they found in
them a utilitarian and practical value. The local residents whom Fox met
in Calatagan in the late 1950s were migrants to the area. They possessed
neither historical nor biological associations with the human bones and
other objects they had encountered in their fields. The most obvious use
they thought of for the plates and bowls was for kitchen use, which in a sense
was their original purpose.
When archaeologists arrived to excavate in 1958, the residents found
the excavations more important than the objects. Community members who
worked as laborers to assist Fox and his team in the excavations were paid a daily
wage (Cruz 1958), which helped them earn additional income. Moreover,
hosting the visitors, including the American Fox, gave local residents social
prestige (Caubalejo 2005). Subsequently the people who owned the land,
where the excavations sites were located, sold these properties.
During the 1958 and 1960-1961 excavations, mortuary items (such as
the foreign ceramics, which had been merchandise objects) and domestic
items (such as the used cooking pots) became archaeological specimen. In
the hands of scholars who came from different perspectives, the Calatagan
artifacts became sources of archaeological data. Their interpretations
were based on the excavator's particular research agenda and the existing
theoretical paradigm at the time of the excavation or study. Thus, Janse
(1941, 1944-1945, 1947), who was influenced by the diffusion-migration
theories of the 1940s,1 was interested in the impact of the Ming Dynasty on
Indochina and the Philippines. He excavated Ming pieces from sixty graves
in three cemeteries in Calatagan. In the 1950s Foxs (1959) interpretation
focused on the grave objects, but he gave no sufficient explanation for the
distribution of the grave goods, the demand for specific pottery types, and the
apparent chosen locations in the graves for particular items (fig. 2).

Fig. 2. An example of a grave in Calatagan containing an earthenware vessel and porcelain bowls
and plate. Source: Fox 1959, plate 6.

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In the early 1980s Main and Fox (1982) wrote a comprehensive description
of the earthenware vessels from twelve Calatagan sites. Their descriptions
centered on forms, clay, temper, temper size, paste, slip, firing, and designs,
which comprised the bases for the classification of the vessels into three
pottery complexes. They assessed the chronology of pottery forms and designs
by comparing manufacturing techniques used on the Calatagan vessels with
pottery obtained from other sites. The aim was to identify the "ancestors" of
the Calatagan types in order to determine the spread of pottery types from
their putative origin. This type of investigation ensued from the typological
analyses that were common during the 1970s when archaeologists became
interested in the evolution of artifact styles. The purpose of reconstructing
the "genetic affiliations" of artifacts, in this case earthenware vessels, was
to investigate when and whence stylistic and technological attributes and
innovations originated and spread. Results of the analyses could provide
information about cultural interactions and population movements.
Fox's (1959) analyses of the porcelains also focused on manufacturing
and painting techniques. He noted the low quality of the porcelains but
maintained that they were good sources for the study of the development of
ceramic studies in mainland Asia, including kiln activity, production periods,
and trade. Main and Fox's (1982) work focused on the production of foreign
ceramics because ceramicists were interested in the quality of these items,
including the question of how they reached the Philippines. Tradeware
ceramics could be used as temporal markers in archaeological sites, making
it imperative to know porcelain designs and their manufacturing techniques.
Porcelain production could also indicate where the tradeware ceramics had
been fired; hence information on kiln locations could be deduced, which
in turn could reveal their role in the maritime trade networks at a given
historical period.
Excavations produce numerous recording forms, including inventory
forms, burial forms, and artifact analyses forms. These forms, which are
submitted to the National Museum, are integral to archaeological practice
because they become the sources of data for future investigators. In the
absence of the actual materials, archaeologists can still collect information
about the artifacts from the excavation forms. In other words, the artifacts
can be studied indirectly, with the researcher relying on the recorder's
perception of the materials. The excavation records become the virtual
images of the artifacts.

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During the data gathering for my masters thesis and doctoral
dissertation, I encountered the original burial sketches, preliminary analysis
forms, and the burial and specimen inventory records from the Calatagan
sites dating to 1958 and 1960-1961 (Barretto 2002; Barretto-Tesoro 2007).
These documents also included letters to sponsors and short reports on the
status of the excavations. On one hand, I was delighted to hold the actual
records and documents on the excavations that yielded notes handwritten by
Fox and his team members some of whom had become well-known Filipino
archaeologists (fig. 3). Ecstatic with the burial sketches, I copied information
on the forms and scanned them. On the other hand, I was worried that the
yellowing and brittle sheets were in danger of progressive deterioration. It
would be better if future researchers handled printouts of digital copies of
the documents and forms rather than the originals. If records are not stored
properly, needless to say, valuable information about the Philippines s past
will be lost.2

The only available Calatagan artifacts that can be accessed physically


are those found in the National Museum, the Ayala Museum, and the Lopez

Fig. 3. Original excavation documents of the Calatagan burials located at the Records Section,
Archaeology Division, National Museum. Burial information being collected by Jethro Barretto, the
author's brother

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Museum. In addition to the available artifacts and the published materials
(Barretto-Tesoro 2008a; Chang 2013; Fox 1959; Main and Fox 1982), only
the excavation documents remain sources of information on other artifacts

that are now part of private collections. The Calatagan objects in these
collections exist but may not be accessible for analyses; to researchers the
records are the only available sources of data. Thus the Calatagan artifacts
now exist in two forms: as physical materials stored somewhere and as
constructed images based on records.

Calatagan Artifacts as Museum Objects


After excavations in the 1960s and analyses of these objects in the 1980s,
the Calatagan artifacts became museum pieces. By 2005 many earthenware
vessels from Calatagan had been kept in the Ceramic Storage Room of the
National Museum. The pots were stored in open shelves. Accession numbers
written on the pots could be cross-referenced with the excavation documents
(Anon. 1961a, 1961b, 1961c; Evangelista 1966; Fox and Santiago 1960; Fox
and Santiago 1 960- 1 96 1 ; Paniza et al . 1 960- 1 96 1 ; Paniza et al . 1 96 1 ; Santiago
1961; Santiago and Penuliar 1961). Some pots did not have accession codes,
but their forms indicated that they were recovered from the same area. In
2005 a visit to the storage room showed that, while the earthenware objects
rested in open shelves, some foreign ceramics were stored inside cabinets,
which could suggest the different values these objects were assigned by
museum personnel. According to Eusebio Dizon (2012), current Curator
I of the National Museum s Archaeology Division, the porcelains could
have been stored in the cabinets for security reasons because of their higher
market value compared with earthenware vessels. In 2012 the objects were
moved to a new storage location (ibid.).
In the former Ceramic Storage Room, one item was memorable. It was a
small jar that still contained the remains of an infant. The jar labeled Grave
19 was found in Talisay, one of the sites in Calatagan. The imported jar
had two lugs, and its upper body was glazed. I did not expect to see human
remains inside any of the pots or jars in the Ceramic Storage Room. I had
expected skeletal remains to be stored in a secure environment that arrests
further deterioration of the osteological sample. This jar was probably moved
to the new storage room mentioned above.
It is difficult to assess whether the original excavators recognized the
infant whose remains were found in the jar was once an individual. Based on

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personal experience and observations, there is a tendency for excavators to
treat human remains as specimens assigned with alphanumeric codes, such
as Grave 19. For some archaeologists, human bones are sources of data that
can yield information either unique to a specific skeleton or generalizable
to a bigger population. This distinct characteristic enables the archaeologist
to recognize the specimen as an individual after gleaning more information
that reveals how the person lived. For other archaeologists, there is instinctive
recognition that the human remains once belonged to individual persons
and thus must be treated with respect. In other countries this very concept
has led to the repatriation of human remains for reburial where they were
recovered (Parker Pearson 1999; Smith 2004).
In the case of the jar labeled Grave 19, it appears to me that, once in
a storage room, the artifacts are stripped of their significance and become
objects that literally are hidden from view. The artifacts' relationships with the
body and other artifacts in the grave are imperceptible due to the conditions
of the storage area. Materials of the same raw material, form, and make are
expected to be stored or kept together due to varying requirements of storage
space and containers. More importantly, different artifacts demand diverse
preservation measures. Thus, what is lost in storage areas is the contextual
significance of the objects at the site level.
However, the objects' biography expands at this stage because
comparisons can be made with other assemblages from other sites in a different
geographical location and/or another time period, allowing archaeologists
to explore and consider other cultural connections and meanings. For
instance, these comparisons may shed light on the relationships of Calatagan
earthenware vessels with other earthenware vessels, the differential burial
treatment of infants, locations of objects in graves, the use of human skulls
as mortuary furniture, and the active selection of porcelains with specific
decorations. Some objects may be exclusive to a site. The collective and
individual connections of artifacts emphasize the multidirectional paths
and multilinear biographies of objects. This point is explored further in
the section below, which deals with how artifacts become part of private
collections.

A quick look around the current exhibit galleries of the National Museum
in Manila reveals that Calatagan artifacts are not visible. Whether they are
indeed exhibited in the National Museum is not apparent. When I was
doing research for my dissertation in 2005, 1 inspected the National Museum

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records, which indicated that some Calatagan artifacts were on exhibit in one
provincial branch of the National Museum. In 2005 I personally observed
a glass bracelet from Calatagan displayed at the National Museum branch
in Bolinao, Pangasinan. The records show that porcelain plates, bowls, and
saucers from Calatagan were likewise displayed at the Bolinao branch, but I
did not see them in the exhibit during my visit.
The current exhibits at the National Museum and its branches present
the archaeological history of the Philippines in a conventional and linear
manner. It starts with the geological formation of the Philippine islands, moves
on to the Pleistocene and Palaeolithic periods, then to the Neolithic Period
and Metal Age, and then to the Protohistoric period. To the Protohistoric
period belong the Calatagan sites. As such, some Calatagan artifacts, such
as ornaments and porcelains displayed in other National Museum local
branches, have been included in exhibits to highlight the developing
long-distance trade from the tenth century to the fifteenth century. The
Calatagan artifact exhibited in the Bolinao branch of the National Museum
was presented as evidence of trade links during the precolonial period.
As of this writing, the current National Museum exhibits make no
mention of the significance of the Calatagan finds as grave goods or what
they meant to the users of the artifacts. There is an inclination toward a
linear storytelling of the Philippine^ past as part of a macroscopic view of
precolonial polities wherein artifacts from different sites, such as Calatagan,
are employed as evidence of the different time periods of Philippine
prehistory. This linear narrative is rooted in the culture history paradigm
that permeates Philippine archaeology (Mijares 1998; Santiago 2001). This
theoretical approach orders artifacts (and sites) in a chronological sequence
based on stylistic and technological features that enable archaeologists to
date sites based on presence and absence of artifact types. Diffusion and
migration were used to explain similarities in artifact style and technology;
hence, it was important to trace the artifacts' "genetic" affiliations, which
was the concern of early Calatagan scholars such as Olov Janse, Dorothy
Main, and Robert Fox. Even in an earlier publication on the reconstruction
of Philippine prehistory, Fox (1967) does not mention the significance of
Calatagan; however, he includes photos of foreign ceramics from Calatagan
as evidence of the "Age of Contact and Trade with the East."
The distribution and display of the Calatagan artifacts in provincial
branches of the National Museum also removes them from their

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archaeological contexts as grave objects and their implications in burial
practices; they are viewed merely as trade items. Porcelain trade is seen
as the beginning of the Protohistoric period dating from the tenth to the
sixteenth centuries. This period is usually described in the context of
long-distance trade between maritime polities in Southeast Asia. It allows
scholars to trace the maritime trade routes that brought Thai, Annamese,
and Chinese ceramics to the Philippines, including the development of
ceramic technology and production. The linear narrative on regional trade
is a synthesis of trade activities that track the distribution of imported items
from its source in Southeast Asia. The emphasis on trade items, such as
ceramics, within the linear narrative tends to downplay local meanings of
foreign materials because the focus is on the trade network rather than on
the local values attached to these items.

In 2005 the Calatagan artifacts stored in the National Museum became


a source of data to study social identities in the past, to recover some of their
original meanings beyond being mere trade goods. My work ( Barre tto-Tesoro
2008a) hypothesized that various identities could be inferred from the burials
by analyzing the qualitative attributes of the ceramics and their locations in
the graves in relation to the body of the deceased. Cultural affiliations were
symbolized by the inclusion of undecorated locally made earthenware vessels
placed near the head and feet of the deceased, the general location of the
burials, and the manner of burial (Barretto-Tesoro 2008b). The remains of
some infants, perhaps due to their age, were placed in jars, which were then
buried. Social status in Calatagan was expressed through the placement of
trade ceramics that were decorated with solar and bird motifs and found on

top or near the pelves; the solar and bird motifs marked the prestige statuses
of the socioeconomic and ritual leaders (Barretto-Tesoro 2008c).
This interpretation differed from earlier studies that determined status
based on the density and type of foreign items present in burial sites (Bacus
1996; Junker 1999). The number and presence of foreign ceramics in
the Calatagan burials did not automatically translate to economic wealth
because some graves contained only one porcelain, but it had solar or bird
motifs. Some burials contained imitation prestige markers in the form of
foreign ceramics, without the associated prestige motifs, found on the pelvis.
Other status markers could have been the earthenware vessels with triangle
patterns on its shoulder that could be interpreted as solar designs. The
inhabitants of Calatagan in ancient times actively selected foreign ceramics

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with sun and bird symbols to be used as status markers in the graves (Barretto-
Tesoro 2008c). Both symbols were considered potent motifs based on the
indigenous belief system (Salazar 2004, 2005), which could have influenced
the selection and use of porcelains with said designs.
The same Calatagan assemblage was investigated by Kuang-Jen Chang
(2013) to explore the value of objects based on their location around the
body. Using quantitative-based approaches, Chang demonstrated that local
tastes played a role in the consumption of certain forms of trade ceramics in
Calatagan but did not mention specific reasons that could have influenced
these local preferences. In my work (Barretto-Tesoro 2008c), considering
both forms and decorations, I attributed local preferences of ceramics to
identity and status entrenched in reciprocity and local cosmology. Chang
and I utilized independent methods and arrived at similar results in terms of
the location of ceramic forms in the grave.

Private Collections and an Outdoor Museum

Some materials excavated from Calatagan have ended up in private collect


As mentioned above, the Zóbel and McMicking families provided financ
support for the field expenses during the 1958 excavations (Fox 1959). As
of the agreement, they received 65 percent of the excavated ceramics (C
1958; Fox 1959). Whole ceramic pieces from the 1958 diggings are display
at the Ayala Museum in Makati City; in addition, six small sacks of ceram
sherds are stored in crates in the same museum (Bautista 2007). Similarly
recognition of his valuable support, Eugenio Lopez Sr. received a token s
of the recovered artifacts from the 1960s excavations. The Lopezs Calata
collection consists of foreign ceramics, local earthenware vessels, g
bracelets, glass beads, spindle whorls, net weights, and metal spears. They
now housed in relatively good condition in the Lopez Memorial Museum
Library located in Pasig City, Metro Manila. However, some items in pri
collections come from unsystematic diggings around Batangas. Nonethele
because the forms of these pots are similar to those coming from Calata
their provenance cannot be denied (Valdes 2003).
Unlike the objects in private collections, the Calatagan materi
that are physically available for analyses have the potential for their l
histories to be expanded, as academic interest in them continues. T
can be investigated from different perspectives and subjected to diffe
methodological analyses. But the objects in private collections can linge

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a state of restricted access, unless the owner displays them in museums such
as what the Lopezes and Ayalas have done. They then become museum
pieces.
Starting in the early decade of this century a trend in archaeology has
been the development of site museums (Bautista 2005; Renfrew and Bahn
2000) or even temporary exhibits in the vicinity of archaeological sites (Paz
2005; Valientes 2009) where visitors can view not just the artifacts but also the
site. Site museums and/or exhibits are seen as promoting awareness of local
heritage that encourages locals to become stewards of archaeological sites.
In Calatagan a site museum has been established inside the Golden Sunset
Village Resort and Spa, a first-class resort built on top of what was previously
known as Kay Tomas and Pulong Bakaw, the two sites excavated by Fox in
1958. The property owner, a television personality, had not been aware that
the property he purchased was an archaeological site. During construction
of the resort, laborers came across many pieces of broken ceramics. Giovanni
Bautista (2007), then a graduate student at the Archaeological Studies
Program of the University of the Philippines (UP-ASP) who works for the
National Museum, informed the owner of the property's significance. After
consultations, an outdoor museum was established to "add prestige, value,
and feature" to the resort (ibid., 117). A memorandum of agreement was
signed between the National Museum and the owner, with the former
providing information about the archaeology of Calatagan as well as replicas
and photographs of artifacts recovered from the sites.
The gallery was inaugurated in March 2007. This outdoor museum,
which is now a popular feature of the resort, makes the visitors' stay more
significant because of the history attached to the place. The outdoor
museum endeavors to widen the target market of museums; however, the
museum gallery is located inside a resort property and inaccessible to local
residents. Although the audience is limited, the outdoor museum should
still be seen as an accomplishment in its own right. Its viewing is incidental
to visiting the resort, making the museum experience unimposing. Visitors
of the resort can give their own interpretations to the artifacts and site and
discuss their ideas with their companions. The outdoor museum provides
visitors with another dimension of the site as they are physically standing
where the graves were found.
The discussion thus far has mapped the movement of the Calatagan
artifacts from one context to another. Despite acquiring different meanings

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as archaeological materials, museum pieces, records, identity markers, trade
objects, local products, and tokens, the Calatagan artifacts have been viewed
perennially as mortuary objects. They have also been used as evidence
in studies dealing with topics not related to burial practices such as long-
distance trade, ceramic production, ornamentation, and metadata. To date,
the Calatagan materials await renewed interest from scholars for them to be
investigated using current theoretical paradigms. The next section narrates
the history of archaeological research in the Philippines, which will help
explain how its development influenced the different interpretations of the
Calatagan artifacts.

Philippine Archaeology and Calatagan,


1880s to the early 1880s
This section and the next draw from major publications that have reviewed
the state of Philippine archaeology (Evangelista 1969; Dizon 1994; Mijares
1998; Paz 2009; Santiago 2001; Ronquillo 1985) to explore what researchers
have considered as key advances in this field. It demonstrates that the layers
of meanings of the Calatagan sites and artifacts have been influenced by
the history of archaeological research in the Philippines. It focuses on how
the theoretical milieu and archaeological practice of a given period have
prompted scholars and private individuals to view the Calatagan artifacts in
specific ways.
As in other Southeast Asian countries, foreign scholars and enthusiasts
initiated archaeological practice in the Philippines in the 1880s. These
scholars included Alfred Marche, Feodor Jagor, and Alexander Schandeberg
(Muijzenberg 2008; Ronquillo 1998). Marchess collection, consisting of
human bones, foreign ceramics, shell ornaments, glass and bronze objects,
gold ornaments, wooden coffins, and burial urns, is now stored in Paris
and Madrid. At the turn of the twentieth century, during the American
occupation, many American scholars came to the Philippines to conduct
academic studies. H. Otley Beyer, considered the father of Philippine
anthropology, was known for his diffusion-migration theories of the peopling
of the Philippines, which posited that each succeeding group that arrived
in the Philippines brought with them a more advanced technology. The
diffusion-migration theories became prevalent around this period. From
1921 to 1924 Carl Guthe (1927, 1929), head of the University of Michigan
Philippine Expedition, conducted systematic surveys and collected

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prehispanic materials from the central Philippines. Currently stored at the
University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology, the artifacts include
earthenware vessels, Southeast Asian and Chinese ceramics, shell artifacts,
and assorted types of beads.
Prior to the 1900s, no archaeological activity- not even looting- took
place in Calatagan. According to Fox (1959), the area where the sites were
located was covered with forest until the end of the Second World War.

Calatagan was a hunting ground for the Roxas and Zobél families from 1812
until a town was established in 191 1, when the estate owners donated parcels
of land to the town and church (Barretto-Tesoro 2008a). In addition, less
than 200 people inhabited the area in 1900. However, by 1916 migrants
started arriving in Calatagan when the sugar (central) mill started operations.
The absence of archaeological activity and looting in this area around this
period was primarily due to the low density of inhabitants. With the influx of
migrants, the land began to be cultivated in the 1920s (Fox 1959) and people
became acquainted with archaeological materials that they accidentally
uncovered while plowing the land for farm production. The artifacts, as
mentioned above, were used mostly as domestic items.
The National Museum, created in 1901, became involved in the
Calatagan sites when reports about looting became rampant from the 1930s
until the 1950s. In the 1940s, Janse (1941, 1944-1945, 1947) excavated
three sites in Calatagan as part of his investigation of the impact of the
Ming Dynasty on Southeast Asian societies. Diffusion-migration theories
influenced Janse's excavation in Calatagan in the 1940s as he was searching
for the Ming Dynasty connection in the Philippines.
The 1950s saw an increase of Filipino participation in archaeological
research in their capacity as assistant archaeologists, scientific illustrators,
artists, and excavators (Ronquillo 1985). Earlier studies on how specific
cultures reached the Philippines began to be challenged, although
the historical-cultural approach was still the basis for archaeological
interpretations. Excavation techniques and recording methods were also
becoming more systematic. Radiocarbon dating started to be employed in
Philippine sites in the early 1950s. These transitions can be attributed to
developments of theoretical paradigms in the West, the increasing interest
of Filipinos in Philippine prehistory, and developments in technology
and methods to refine dating techniques. Although Fox was an American,
his institutional affiliation at the time of his excavations was the National

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Museum, and his team was primarily composed of Filipinos. One of the
members of the excavation team was the late Alfredo Evangelista (200 1 ), who
later led excavations in other parts of the Philippines. Filipinos also drew the
burial sketches (Barretto-Tesoro 2008a). Despite the Filipinos' participation
in the excavation, only Fox (1959; Main and Fox 1982) published on the
Calatagan finds prior to the 1990s. The general lack of publications on
Calatagan by Filipinos can be attributed to the absence of formally trained
Filipinos at the time of the excavations.
Although no research questions were explicitly formulated prior to the
excavations, Fox produced very good excavation records so that fifty years later
researchers could still refer to those documents in order to produce scholarly
work. This clearly indicates the systematic nature of Foxs excavations in
Calatagan.
What makes Calatagan exceptional is the spatial extent of the cemeteries
along the western coast; the scale of excavations unheard of in the 1950s
in the Philippines; Fox's application of standard methods of retrieving
and recording archaeological evidence; and the enormity of the project in
terms of sites, quantities of artifacts, and number of burials. The Calatagan
excavations defined an era in the history of Philippine archaeology.
It marked a clear break from the antiquarian approach of the late 1800s
until the early 1900s. In this earlier period, Philippine archaeological and
ethnological materials helped augment the collection of foreign museums
such as Harvard's Peabody Museum, the University of Michigan's Museum
of Anthropology, the Musée de l'Homme, and the National Ethnographic
Museum in Leiden.

Although Guthe had employed relatively standardized methods as early


as the 1920s, including recording the provenience of the artifacts, describing
sites, maintaining a field journal, and illustrating artifacts, all collected artifacts
were shipped to the University of Michigan. Early foreign practitioners of
archaeology saw Philippine materials as objects of curiosities or evidence
of external cultures either interacting with local populations or migrating
to the Philippines. This approach was evident in Janse's interpretation
of the Calatagan finds mentioned above. The interest in the Calatagan
excavations centered on the large quantities of foreign ceramics that were
found, which was evident in the treatment of the trade ceramics in Fox's
1959 publication in which a special section was devoted to foreign ceramics.
Fox's main interest in the ceramics was their production, distribution, and

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classification in the sites. Years later, Fox attempted to understand the
Calatagan materials, particularly the earthenware vessels, in the context of
Philippine prehistory (Main and Fox 1982). The role of maritime trade in
the prehispanic Philippines was also highlighted (Fox 1959).
In the 1960s a number of Filipino students became interested in
archaeology and even conducted excavations as part of their academic program
(Locsin et al. 2008; Ronquillo 1985). In the 1970s ethnoarchaeological
research was conducted among the Agta Negrito and the Kaiinga (Longacre
1981, 1999; Longacre et al. 1988, 2000; Longacre and Skibol994; Ronquillo
1985). The National Museum also began actively searching for evidence of
human antiquity in Cagayan Valley and Palawan (Fox 1970). Also during the
1970s, more research collaborations were established between Filipinos and
foreign archaeologists (Ronquillo 1985). It was also from the 1970s through
to the 1980s that American archaeologists utilized Philippine data to test
hypotheses regarding the social development of societies, political economy,
and trade in the context of an island environment (Hutterer 1974, 1976,
1977a, 1977b, 1986, 1991). Despite the numerous excavations from the
1970s to the 1980s, most of the interpretations regarding archaeological sites
continued to be framed from a foreign perspective, mostly offered by non-
Filipino scholars.
Between the mid-1960s and the 1980s, no archaeological work was
conducted in Calatagan. After Fox s 1959 publication on the 1958 Calatagan
excavations, the next published work was on the classification of the
Calatagan earthenware vessels by Main and Fox in 1982. The archaeology
practitioners from the 1960s to the 1970s were mostly engaged in salvage
archaeology (Ronquillo 1985) or proponents of state-sponsored projects on
human antiquity (Paz 2009). The fifteenth-century burial sites of Calatagan
had to wait. Research before the 1980s focused on "culture history, cultural
chronology, [and the] typology of prehistoric material cultures, using the
unilineal development stages of cultural evolutionary theory" (Dizon 1994,
199). This approach was evident in the nature of the interpretations offered
for the materials recovered from Calatagan, which focused on the typology of
ceramics, the dating of the sites based on foreign ceramics, and the "genetic"
relationships of local pottery with pottery from other sites in the Philippines
(Main and Fox 1982). The culture history approach also influenced the
linear presentation of materials in museum exhibits. As mentioned above,
several Calatagan objects were separated from their original context and

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used to represent a specific period under a linear framework that followed
the conventional cultural chronology from the Palaeolithic to the Historic
Period, thus ignoring the objects' significance in the burial.
Beyond the materials recovered in excavations, the 1958 excavations
in Calatagan spawned widespread looting of archaeological sites and
treasure hunting in the Philippines. Fox employed many local workers
during the excavations. He taught them the rudiments of excavation and
identification. These laborers influenced others to become treasure hunters,
who methodically made their way across Batangas, parts of southern Luzon,
Palawan, and the islands south of Luzon (Barretto-Tesoro et al. 2009).
Fuelled by formal archaeological research, private collections became
in vogue beginning in the late 1960s (Gotuaco et al. 1997; Paz 1992; Peralta
1982; Valdes 2003). The ownership of antiquities served to validate the high
and cultured status of the owners (Brodie and Luke 2006; Paz 1992; Poulter
2007) . More than concern for the monetary and aesthetic values of the objects,
according to Brodie and Luke (2006), people collected antiquities because
they were motivated by power, status, reputation, and other psychological
needs. Giving access to these private collections through donations, loans,
and scholarly analyses reinforced the owner's social standing (ibid.).
Some private collections sustained the illicit antiquities trade, through
which artifacts were viewed as commodities that were sold by laborers
and diggers and as status symbols from the collectors' perspective (Paz
1992). Other collections came from systematic excavations conducted in
collaboration with archaeologists (Desroches et al. 1996; Goddio et al.
2002; Locsin and Locsin 1967; Tenazas 1968) or, in the case of the private
Calatagan collections, the Ayalas and Lopezes received token shares from
the excavations in their capacity as sponsors of these excavations.
Paz (1992) conducted an ethnographic study of the trade of antik hukay7
or artifacts from ancient graves in the Philippines that were sold by pothunters
or middlemen-pothunters to middlemen or middlemen-owners of antique
shops, who in turn sold these objects to collectors. Pothunters performed
the actual diggings. Pothunters and middlemen viewed antik hukay as
commodities, and therefore they saw these items as having economic or
monetary value. Collectors, commonly belonging to the economic elite,
viewed the antik hukay as having a symbolic value attached to their status as
elites. Paz revealed that, even at the level of pothunters, there was symbolic
value in trading in antik hukay in the form of good business ethics that ensured

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good relations among pothunters and with buyers. Middlemen and collectors
tended to be more profit driven in their relationships. Paz found that the
underlying impetus for the elite to collect artifacts is rooted in magnifying
power and status. The reasons for pothunting and collecting were therefore
distinct, although monetary exchange took place at all levels. Paz (ibid., 35)
likewise described the "value transformations" of artifacts from "exchange
value to a use value, going through the cycle and back again," which he
attributed to human society. In my view, this value transformation is akin
to the changing perspectives on the meanings of objects as demonstrated in
this article.

Although access to private collections may be restricted, eventually


these objects can be viewed by a broad audience through permanent
exhibits such as the Calatagan objects in the Ayala and Lopez museums, the
Philippine precolonial pottery collection and Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
gold collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Manila, and the Philippine
ancestral gold collection at the Ayala Museum. The publication of high-
quality images also makes private collections accessible to the larger cultural
elite and academic communities, although these publications tend to be
expensive coffee table books so that their circulation is limited.
Most catalogues of ceramics and other materials in private collections
were published by private institutions and societies such as the Oriental
Ceramics Society of the Philippines (Brown 1989; Gotuaco et al. 1997;
OCSP 1993; Valdes and Diem 1991; Valdes et al. 1992), the Ayala Foundation
(Capistrano-Baker 201 1; Valdes 2003), the Eugenio Lopez Foundation, Inc.
(Valdes et al. 1992), and the Yuchengco Museum (Tan 2007). Some private
institutions linked up with academics to provide context and history to their
collections (Brown 1989; Capistrano-Baker 2011; Peralta 1982; Tan 2007;
Valdes 2003; Valdes et al. 1992). The Bangko Sentrai ng Pilipinas likewise
published a book on their gold collection (Villegas 2004). Again, the status
of the collectors belonging to the economic elite is reinforced through such
publications.
The Calatagan excavations also validated the acquisition by private
collectors. Fox (1959) generated financial support from private individuals
through grants to the National Museum for the Calatagan excavations.
Consequently this support facilitated the presence of Calatagan artifacts
in private collections (Cruz 1958; Fox 1959) as token shares were given
to supporters. At present, artifacts recovered from systematic excavations

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using scientific methods are obviously more credible than those dug by
pothunters. Scientifically excavated artifacts that are now part of private
collections did not only have aesthetic value, but also cultural, historical,
and archaeological significance. The involvement of private individuals in
archaeological research, such as the Ayala and Lopez families (Fox 1959;
Tenazas 1968), who received a token share of the excavated materials, has
helped in protecting archaeological sites and can also be seen as a form
of archaeological resource management (cf. Paz 2009) to the extent that
it sanctioned collecting through scientific research rather than through
"looting." In recent years, private collectors have become interested in
the history of their collections. As Paz (ibid.) has noted, collectors aspire
to know more about the context of their finds, prompting the publication
of catalogues of these collections. In 2005 the Lopez Memorial Museum
highlighted the historical and cultural significance of the Calatagan artifacts
in their collection through an exhibit (Legaspi-Ramirez 2005).

Philippine Archaeology and Calatagan


since the late 1980s

In 1 988 the Archaeology Division at the National Museum formally separ


from the Anthropology Division. This administrative restructuring crea
more opportunities for the National Museum to conduct archaeological w
in the country, such as underwater archaeology as well as environmenta
impact assessments.
Dizon (1994) had noted that the research trend during the 198
combined inductive and deductive approaches. Research projects utilizin
the deductive method were very few and spearheaded mainly by forei
or Filipino archaeologists who had formal training. Although there we
Filipino scholars actively conducting research in Philippine archaeology
the 1980s, which eventually led to the creation of the Archaeology Divis
the reconstruction of Philippine prehistory was still dominated by for
scholars (Mijares 1998). The presence of foreign archaeologists in the 19
and 1980s and the use of scientific methods and analyses did not influ
local archaeological interpretation, which was still coming largely from
cultural-historical approach (Mijares 1998; Santiago 2001). Archaeolo
research by local scholars in the 1980s was not problem-oriented. Rather,
research usually adopted a reactive approach wherein sites were excavat
after they were reported, usually as a result of becoming threatened (Mi

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1998). Hence, there was a growing need to establish an academic institution
in the Philippines that offered formal courses and degrees in archaeology
(Dizon 1994).
In response to the challenges faced in the 1980s, the UP-ASP was created
in 1995. It has become a base for research-oriented projects and education.
In this program, each member of the faculty leads his or her research projects
and supervises excavations. Hukay , the UP-ASP's peer-reviewed journal that
was launched in 1998, is now an international publication with foreign
contributors and referees. The UP-ASP has been engaged in collaborative
efforts with the National Museum, the University of San Carlos in Cebu, and
other academic units in the University of the Philippines System. It has also
collaborated with foreign institutions such as the Institut de Paléontologie
Humaine, the Australian National University, the University of Washington,
the University of Guam, and the University College Dublin. Due to new
research questions and technology, sites such as the Tabon Cave and Callao
Cave have been reexcavated and artifacts reanalyzed to generate more data
about the earliest humans in the Philippines and Southeast Asia (Dizon
2003a; Jago-on 2007, 2008; Lewis et al. 2007-2008; Mijares 2007-2008;
Mijares et al. 2010; Schmidt 2009).
The surveys and excavations on the east coast of the Calatagan peninsula
in the 1990s were part of a joint project between the National Museum and
Japanese archaeologists (Ronquillo and Ogawa 1996). The joint research
project's primary aims were to look for habitation sites in Calatagan, to
survey the eastern coast of the peninsula, and to search for the context of the
Calatagan Pot. Although no fresh information about the Calatagan Pot was
revealed, the project resulted in the discovery of sites along the eastern coast
dating earlier than the fifteenth-century Calatagan burials on the west. The
jar burial sites on the east date to the Metal Age. Radiocarbon dates show
that the burials date to more than 2000 years ago (Dizon 2003b). Dating
the relationship of the jar burials on the east with the inhumations on the
west has not yet been established. Nevertheless, the project showed that
Calatagan was inhabited much earlier than previously known.
In addition, in the early part of the twenty-first century, British
excavation techniques, introduced by a British-trained Filipino, were
incorporated in local field excavations (Paz 2003). The direct impact of
the British technique on Philippine archaeology has been the use of the
context recording system in excavations wherein all sediment layers and

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archaeological features (i.e., pits, graves, walls, posts, holes) are assigned
context numbers. A context is a unit of record produced by a single action
in the past (Museum of London Archaeology Service 1994). The context
numbers are placed in a matrix to indicate the chronological sequence
of deposits. The Calatagan finds that were excavated in the 1950s were
recorded using a different method. Nevertheless, I used a contextual-
analyses approach, introduced in the United Kingdom (Hodder 1986
and 1987), in interpreting the Calatagan graves (Barretto-Tesoro 2008a).
Associations and connections of objects with other objects and with the
body of the deceased in individual graves were analyzed. Each grave in the
study sample was broken down. The analyses included types of materials,
designs and forms of ceramics, and locations of the objects in reference
to the body and other objects. These kinds of analyses have led to a new
level of understanding of the function of the Calatagan grave objects as
indicators of different identities (ibid.).
By the 1990s, as linkages with foreign institutions strengthened, the
inscribed Calatagan Pot was scientifically dated in 1992 through the
assistance of William Longacre of the University of Arizona (Dizon 2003b).
The Calatagan Pot was subjected to direct dating using Accelerated Mass
Spectroscopy (AMS) (ibid.). However, the results produced inconsistent
dates as the pot had been contaminated by the petroleum-based products
that were used in making casts. The sample from the exterior dated to 6000
BC and the interior sample dated to 2000-2500 BC.
Since the establishment of the UP-ASP in 1995, Filipino and foreign
scholars have regained interest in the rich potential of Calatagan for
archaeological research (Barretto 2002; Barretto-Tesoro 2008a; Bautista
2007). The appeal of Calatagan has been the ready accessibility to scholars
of both the sites and the collections from the early excavations. Revisiting
and reexcavating sites and reanalyzing artifacts have become an ongoing
trend due to new theoretical frameworks and technology (Barretto-Tesoro
2011; Dizon 2003b; Jago-on 2007, 2008), which have influenced the
reinvestigation of Calatagan. Recently there has been renewed interest in
the Calatagan Pot, which has resulted in several readings of the inscriptions
(Borrinaga 2009; Comandante 2013; Guillermo n.d.; Guillermo and Paluga
2008-2009; Oropilla 2008; Salazar 2008; Tiongson n.d.).
Several transliterations of the inscriptions have been put forward
after more than forty years since the Calatagan Pot was recovered. The

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experimental method utilized by Ramon Guillermo combined paleography,
cryptography, and trial-and-error methods. Guillermos method granted
him decipherments in two languages: Tagalog and Bisaya (Guillermo n.d.;
Guillermo and Paluga 2008-2009). Tiongson (n.d.), using Guillermos
transliteration, consulted an old Tagalog dictionary dated 1613 and
came up with a different result. Borrinaga (2009) read the inscription
counterclockwise, that is, opposite the direction in which others read the
inscriptions. Like Tiongson, he consulted an old Bisaya dictionary dated
1616. Rolando Borrinaga 's Bisaya transliteration differed from Guillermo
and Paluga 's (2008-2009). Salazar likewise used Guillermo's transliteration
but came up with a different interpretation. Oropilla and Comandante each
had a separate reading of the inscription using different methods. Despite
the differences in the methods and decipherments of the inscriptions on the
Calatagan Pot, all these scholars have concluded that the pot was specifically
produced for a ritual purpose. This kind of inquiry reflects the growing
interest in ancient ritual, cosmology, and spirituality worldwide and in the
Philippines (Amano Jr. 2011; Barretto-Tesoro 2008c; Lara 2010; Paz 2012;
Paz and Vitales 2008; Reyes 2010; Rountree et al. 2012; Vitales 2009).
Recent theoretical developments in archaeology have initiated new
research questions on the Calatagan artifacts such as studies on identity,
ethnicity, status, symbolisms, cosmology, and heritage management, to name a
few (Barretto-Tesoro 2008a; Bautista 2007). In terms of heritage management,
Philippine archaeologists have realized the importance of including the
public and local community in site management and heritage protection
(Paz 2005; Valientes 2009). Bautista (2007), through the National Museum,
has effectively implemented a cultural resource management program that
involves a commercial institution located in Calatagan. The case of the Golden
Sunset Village Resort and Spa discussed above is instrumental in promoting
the archaeology of Calatagan to its clientele. It is through such strategies that
heritage preservation and commercial expansion can be combined.
One of the latest interpretations regarding the grave goods in Calatagan
is the recognition that- rather than seeing the materials as merely burial
furniture - these materials were actively selected by the inhabitants of
Calatagan in ancient times as symbols marking various identities such
as cultural affiliation, status, and personal and elite identities. This
interpretation underscores the contextual-analyses approach described
above, which has been utilized in my research on the Calatagan burials

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(Barretto-Tesoro 2008a). Furthermore this approach has enabled the
demonstration of the link between cosmology and the negotiation of an
elite identity in the past.

Conclusion

Using the Calatagan artifacts as case study, this article has demonstrated
that the objects are a means to an end; in possessing and analyzing them
they acquire diverse meanings for different individuals. How and wh
they acquire their meanings is the central theme of this discussion. The
meanings of objects do change throughout an artifacts lifetime (Appadur
1986; Kopytoff 1986). The creation of those meanings is greatly impacted
by the nature of archaeological practice at any given time. Utilizing the
biographical approach and tracking the trajectories of the artifacts enable
us to comprehend how the artifacts' meanings changed for the people wh
excavated, examined, possessed, stored, and displayed them.
The many and changing meanings of the Calatagan materials an
excavations suggest that meanings changed with how agents at variou
times perceived these objects. The people who possessed and used the
objects gave them meanings, which could be multiple and dependent o
their contexts and how people from various sectors viewed them (De La P
2008). The Calatagan objects are no exceptions. These objects had their own
histories prior to their function as mortuary goods. Despite the collective term
"Calatagan artifacts," it has been proposed here that these objects have held
different meanings. Some of the artifacts, such as the foreign ceramics traded
by Southeast Asian and Chinese merchants, started as commodities. Some
were household supplies and implements that were locally manufactured.
Some trade items were tokens shared with trading parties that later becam
symbolic of status and potency. Foreign ceramics were later transformed in
mortuary items. They acquired the status of artifacts during the systemat
excavations in Calatagan. They were also given as tokens to sponsors of th
excavations. To scholars and collectors, the foreign objects were proof of
the precolonial trade network of the Philippines. The burials were taken
evidence of the elaborate belief system that the ancient Filipinos practice
before Spanish colonization. The earthenware pots were seen as eviden
for the level of craft production, while the skeletons could point to past
pathology.
Moreover, an assemblage of artifacts can have a shared collective
biography, even as individual objects and specific types of objects can have

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their own separate biographies. An object that shares a collective biography
with others while possessing its own biography highlights the notion that
biographies can be multilinear and multidirectional, depending on the
contexts in and out of which objects circulate. All the Calatagan objects were
grave furniture, and shared a collective biography, yet individual Calatagan
artifacts might have their own meanings. Archaeologists may choose to
analyze or exhibit only the earthenware vessels or porcelains or nonceramic
objects from Calatagan. The analysis can bestow new meanings to a specific
group of artifacts; hence, they can achieve new biographical paths that are
separate and different from other artifacts from the same site.
Research in Calatagan mirrors the history of the practice of
archaeology in the Philippines. This article has outlined the development
of archaeological research in the Philippines and addressed how research
trends have influenced the ways the Calatagan sites and artifacts have been
interpreted. In this light, archaeologists in the Philippines need to look at
innovative ways to navigate the layers of meanings behind the artifacts and
sites in contemporary society, which otherwise would remain hidden.

Notes
This article is a substantially revised version of a talk delivered at the Lopez Memorial Museum
and Library on 12 July 2008. I am thankful to the National Museum of the Philippines and the
Lopez Memorial Museum and Library for allowing access to the Calatagan records and materials
during the research. Dr. Eusebio Z. Dizon answered some of my queries regarding the Ceramic
Storage Room at the National Museum. Thanks to Janine Ochoa, Anna Pineda, and Danny
Galang for commenting on early drafts of this article. Emil Robles prepared the Calatagan map
(fig. 1 ) included in this article. My heartfelt gratitude goes to the residents of Calatagan who
shared their views and opinion on the excavations. Lastly, I would like to thank the two anonymous
reviewers and the editors of this journal whose comments helped improve this article.

1 The diffusion-migration framework aims to explain culture change via the spread of material
culture, ideas, and cultural traits from one source to other cultures through trade and/or
migration. The framework's underlying idea is that cultures change and advance in a unilinear
direction because of an external source; it disregards or overlooks internal innovations as the
source of cultural development. By identifying the source and recipient cultures, archaeologists
can map the spread of cultures chronologically.

2 Preservation of the excavation records through digitization is important in storing data for future
scholars. To date the Archaeology Division is in the process of digitizing all their records, which
is an important step in the proper management of written archaeological information. The same
idea was proposed by Bautista (2007) in his MA thesis.

BARRETT0-TES0R0 / CALATAGAN AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESEARCH 289

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296 PSHEV 61, NO. 3 (2013)

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