Liloan, Cebu

Liloan
Municipality

Bagacay Point Lighthouse
Nickname(s): The Light of the North
Motto: Abante Lilo-an!

Map of Cebu with Liloan highlighted
Liloan

Location within the Philippines

Coordinates: PH 10°24′N 123°59′E / 10.4°N 123.98°E / 10.4; 123.98Coordinates: PH 10°24′N 123°59′E / 10.4°N 123.98°E / 10.4; 123.98
Country Philippines
Region Central Visayas (Region VII)
Province Cebu
District 5th District of Cebu
Founded 1845
Barangay 14 (see § Barangays)
Government[1]
  Type Sangguniang Bayan
  Mayor Vincent Frasco (UNA)
  Vice mayor Lucelito Pilapil
  Town Council
Area[2]
  Total 45.92 km2 (17.73 sq mi)
Population (2010 census)[3]
  Total 100,500
  Density 2,200/km2 (5,700/sq mi)
  Voter(2013) [4] 53,585
Time zone PST (UTC+8)
ZIP code 6002
IDD:area code +63 (0)32
Income class 1st class, partly urban
PSGC 072227000
Website www.liloan.gov.ph

Liloan (also spelled Liloan) is a first income class municipality in the province of Cebu, Philippines. According to the 2010 census, it has a population of 100,500.[3] In the 2013 election, it had 53,585 registered voters.[4]

Liloan lies within Metro Cebu.

History

Along its coastline, there is spot called Silot, where a whirlpool is created by the ebbs and flows of the waters from the bay. This phenomenon is called lilo in Cebuano. Because of this, the town was known as Liloan, meaning "a place where there is a lilo".

Some time in the 1970s, a newspaper article stated that the "pueblo de Liloan" was separated from the municipality of Mandaue (now Mandaue City), and was created a new municipality in 1840. However, in his "Breve reseña de lo que fue y de lo que es la Diócesis de Cebú en las Islas Filipinas," Redondo (1886) states that Liloan was created as a parish in 1845 (in 1995, Liloan celebrated its sesquicentennial - 150th – anniversary.)

The creation of the municipality of Liloan could have been at the same time the parish was established, but not earlier than its being a parish. As recorded, the first priest of Liloan served in 1845. The term of the first mayor was from 1845–1846.

During the war years (World War II), Liloan had three mayors at one time. The elected mayor was Catalino Noval. The Japanese Occupation Forces appointed another, Pascual Delgado. Not to be outdone, the Guerilla Forces also designated another, Jose Cañete.

Barangays

Liloan comprises 14 barangays:[2]

  • Cabadiangan
  • Calero
  • Catarman
  • Cotcot
  • Jubay
  • Lataban
  • Mulao
  • Poblacion
  • San Roque
  • San Vicente
  • Santa Cruz
  • Tabla
  • Tayud
  • Yati

Demographics

Population census of Liloan
YearPop.±% p.a.
1970 22,498    
1980 30,196+2.99%
1990 42,587+3.50%
1995 50,973+3.43%
YearPop.±% p.a.
2000 64,970+5.34%
2007 92,606+5.01%
2010 100,500+3.02%
Source: National Statistics Office[3][5][6]

In the 2013 election, it had 53,585 registered voters, meaning that 53% of the population are aged 18 and over.[4]

Landmarks

Lighthouse

One of the best known landmarks in Liloan is its historic lighthouse at Bagacay Point. The original lighthouse was built in 1857 by the Spanish. The current tower was constructed in 1904 by order of William Howard Taft,[7] the first Governor-General of the Philippines and later the President of the United States. The tower is 22 metres (72 ft) tall and remains in active use today, using solar energy.[8] The lighthouse was declared a National Historical Landmark in 2004 by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines (formerly known as National Historical Institute).[9]

Liloan Church (San Fernando Rey Parish Church)

The San Fernando Rey Parish Church

The designer of the church in Liloan is viewed by some as visionary. Despite Liloan having only 5,000 citizens, when the church was constructed in 1847, this local church was even larger than that of Mandaue, Cebu's second largest city.

One unusual detail about the church in Liloan is that it faces the mountains to the west, whereas most churches face the sea to the east. Some have theorized that this is because Mass is often performed in the morning; and the church is thus shielded from the morning sun, making it less hot and uncomfortable. Others have speculated that the church's direction has a symbolic significance related to church rites.

Titay's Rosquillos and Delicacies

The making of these little ringlet cookies dates back to 1907, when 21-year-old Margarita "Titay" Frasco was tinkering in her kitchen with her baking ingredients and made her new culinary creation. Kneading the dough manually and using a wooden eggbeater, some baking tins and a clay oven, she started a product that would put her little town in the national and international map of gastronomic delight.

The market for her unnamed cookie started with her neighbors and passers-by who were offered the snack with a bottle of soda. It was Sergio Osmeña (then Cebu governor, who later became Philippine president), who gave it the name "rosquillos" after the Spanish word rosca.

The biscuits have been a regular stopover of tourists and locals travelling north of Cebu. The company has withstood the taste of time. It started with just rosquillos and tablea making.[lower-alpha 1] It later expanded to an array of homemade delicacies including torta, mamon, monay, otap, CPA (chicken pork adobo), bao-bao and more.

Rosquillos Festival

Celebrated every last week of May in honor of the town's patron saint, St. Ferdinand III. Rosquillos have become a household name, a product that is aptly celebrated in a festival that Liloan could call its very own.

Economy

Liloan is home to a number of ceramics manufacturers. Their shops sell a variety of ceramic items: from ordinary plant pots, to bricks and exotic jars.

Notes

  1. pure cacao beans that are dried, roasted, ground and then formed into tablets

References

  1. "Municipality". Quezon City, Philippines: Department of the Interior and Local Government. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
  2. 1 2 "Municipal: Liloan, Cebu". PSA. Philippines: National Statistical Coordination Board. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 "Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay: as of May 1, 2010" (PDF). 2010 Census of Population and Housing. National Statistics Office. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 "2013 National and Local Elections Statistics" (PDF). Commission on Elections. 2015.
  5. "Population and Annual Growth Rates by Province, City and Municipality: Central Visayas: 1995, 2000 and 2007" (PDF). National Statistics Office. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 June 2011.
  6. Gonzales 2004.
  7. Philippines' Light to Get Makeover
  8. Bagacay Point Light
  9. Declaring of Bagacay Point Lighthouse in Liloan, Cebu a National Historical Landmark

Sources

  • Sendino y Redondo, Felipe (1886). Breve reseña de lo que fue y de lo que es la Diócesis de Cebú en las Islas Filipinas (in Spanish). Manila: Colegio de Sto. Tomas. 

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Liloan.
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