Quezon

Not to be confused with Quezon City in Metro Manila.
For other places with the same name, see Quezon (disambiguation).
Quezon
Tayabas
Province
Province of Quezon

Quezon Provincial Capitol Building

Quezon Provincial Capitol Building

Flag

Seal

Location in the Philippines
Coordinates: 14°10′N 121°50′E / 14.17°N 121.83°E / 14.17; 121.83Coordinates: 14°10′N 121°50′E / 14.17°N 121.83°E / 14.17; 121.83
Country Philippines
Region Calabarzon (Region IV-A)
Founded
  • 1591 (as Kalilayan)
  • March 2, 1901 (as Tayabas)
  • September 7, 1946 (as Quezon)
Capital Lucena
Government
  Type Sangguniang Panlalawigan
  Governor David C.Suarez (NUP)
  Vice Governor Samuel B. Nantes (LP)
Area[1]
  Total 9,069.60 km2 (3,501.79 sq mi)
Area rank 6th out of 80
Population (2010 census)[2]
  Total 1,740,638
  Rank 13th out of 80
  Density 190/km2 (500/sq mi)
  Density rank 44th out of 80
  Excludes Lucena City
Divisions
  Independent cities
  Component cities
  Municipalities
  Barangays
  Districts 1st to 4th districts of Quezon (shared with Lucena City)
Demographics
  Ethnic groups
  Languages
Time zone PHT (UTC+8)
ZIP code 4300–4342
IDD:area code +63 (0)42
ISO 3166 code PH-QUE
Website www.quezon.gov.ph

Quezon (Tagalog pronunciation: [ˈkɛson]) is a province of the Philippines in the Calabarzon region of Luzon island. The province was named after Manuel L. Quezon, the second President of the Philippines, and its capital is Lucena City.

Quezon is southeast of Metro Manila and is bordered by the provinces of Aurora to the north, Bulacan, Rizal, Laguna and Batangas to the west and the provinces of Camarines Norte and Camarines Sur to the east. Part of Quezon lies on an isthmus connecting the Bicol Peninsula to the main part of Luzon. The province also includes the Polillo Islands in the Philippine Sea.

A major tourism draw to the province is Mount Banahaw. The mountain is surrounded by spiritual mysticism with many cults and religious organizations staying on the mountain. Numerous pilgrims visit the mountain especially during Holy Week.

History

Precolonial and Spanish eras

Originally, what now forms Quezon was divided among the provinces of Batangas, Laguna, and Nueva Ecija. The first European to explore the area was Juan de Salcedo in 1571-1572, during his expedition from Laguna to Camarines provinces.[3][4]

In 1591, the province was created and called Kaliraya or Kalilayan, after the capital town which later became Unisan. In 1749, the capital was transferred to the town of Tayabas, from which the province got its new name.[3]

Depredation and plunder by the Moros were rampant during the Spanish regime, because they opposed the colonizers, especially in their efforts to spread Christianity. The destruction of Kalilayan in 1604 by a big fleet of Moro pirates caused the inhabitants to transfer to Palsabangon (Pagbilao).

However, even the colonized people grew discontented with the Spaniards over the centuries. The most important event in the history of the province was the Confradia Revolt in 1841, which was led by the famous Lucbano, Apolinario de la Cruz, popularly known as Hermano Pule. The province, under General Miguel Malvar, was also among the earliest to join the Philippine Revolution. The Revolutionary Government took control over the province on August 15, 1898.

American period and World War II

The Americans then came and annexed the Philippines. A civil government was established in the province on March 12, 1901, and Lucena was made the provincial capital.

Tayabas province in 1918
Northern Tayabas in 1918
Northern portion
Southern Tayabas in 1918
Southern portion

Japanese occupation of the province during World War II began on December 23, 1941, when the Japanese Imperial Army landed in Atimonan. The General Headquarters of the Philippine Commonwealth Army and Philippine Constabulary was stationed in Tayabas from January 03, 1942 to June 30, 1946 are military operates against the Japanese Occupation. The occupation witnessed the brutal murders of prominent sons of Tayabas. April 4, 1945 was the day the province was liberated as the combined Filipino and American army forces reached Lucena.

After the war, on September 7, 1946, Republic Act No. 14 changed the name Tayabas to Quezon, in honor of Manuel L. Quezon, the Commonwealth president who hailed from Baler, which was one of the province's towns.[5]

Separation of Aurora sub-province

In June 1951, the northern part of Quezon (specifically, the towns of Baler, Casiguran, Dipaculao and Maria Aurora ) was made into the sub-province of Aurora.[6] Aurora was the name of the president's wife, Aurora Quezon. Aurora was finally separated from Quezon as an independent province in 1979.[7]

Attempted splitting of Quezon

In 2007, Republic Act No. 9495 was proposed to further divide Quezon into Quezon del Norte and Quezon del Sur. Quezon del Norte was to be composed of the first and second congressional districts of the province (Burdeos, General Nakar, Infanta, Jomalig, Lucban, Mauban, Pagbilao, Panukulan, Patnanungan, Polilio, Real, Sampaloc, Tayabas, Candelaria, Dolores, San Antonio, Sariaya, Tiaong and Lucena), with Lucena as its capital. Quezon del Sur, with its capital at Gumaca, would have been composed of the third and fourth congressional districts (Agdangan, Buenavista, Catanauan, General Luna, Macalelon, Mulanay, Padre Burgos, Pitogo, San Andres, San Francisco, San Narciso, Unisan, Alabat, Atimonan, Calauag, Guinayangan, Gumaca, Lopez, Perez, Plaridel, Quezon and Tagkawayan). The act lapsed into law without the signature of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo on September 7, 2007.[8]

As required by law, the COMELEC held a plebiscite on December 13, 2008, 60 days after Republic Act No. 9495 took effect. The majority of the votes cast rejected the division, therefore the split did not push through.

Geography

Political map
Mount Banahaw seen from the Atimonan-Pagbilao border

Quezon, east of Metro Manila, is the 8th largest province in the Philippines having an area of 892,601 hectares (8,926.01 km2). The northern part of the province is sandwiched between the Sierra Madre mountain range and the Philippine Sea. The southern part consists of the Tayabas Isthmus, which separates the Bicol Peninsula from the main part of Luzon Island, and the Bondoc Peninsula which lies between Tayabas Bay and Ragay Gulf.

The major islands of Quezon are Alabat Island and Polillo Islands. Mount Banahaw, an active volcano, is the highest peak at 2,169 metres (7,116 ft).[9] It supplies geothermal power to the Makban Geothermal Power Plant.

Administrative divisions

Quezon comprises 39 municipalities and one component city named Tayabas, which are organized into four legislative districts and further subdivided into 1,209 barangays.

The capital, Lucena City, is independent from the administrative and fiscal supervision of the province, but is eligible to vote for provincial officials.

  •    Provincial capital and highly urbanized city
  •    Component city
  •      Municipality
City or municipality[A] District[10] Population (2010)[10][11] Area[10] Density Brgy. Coordinates[B]
km2 sq mi /km2 /sq mi
Agdangan 3rd 0.7% 11,567 31.54 12.18 370 960 12 13°52′30″N 121°54′48″E / 13.8749°N 121.9134°E / 13.8749; 121.9134 (Agdangan)
Alabat 4th 0.9% 16,120 57.61 22.24 280 730 19 14°06′04″N 122°00′44″E / 14.1012°N 122.0121°E / 14.1012; 122.0121 (Alabat)
Atimonan 4th 3.5% 61,587 239.66 92.53 260 670 42 14°00′02″N 121°55′17″E / 14.0006°N 121.9215°E / 14.0006; 121.9215 (Atimonan)
Buenavista 3rd 1.7% 29,053 161.35 62.30 180 470 37 13°44′15″N 122°28′02″E / 13.7376°N 122.4673°E / 13.7376; 122.4673 (Buenavista)
Burdeos 1st 1.4% 24,166 199.82 77.15 120 310 14 14°50′24″N 121°58′12″E / 14.8399°N 121.9700°E / 14.8399; 121.9700 (Burdeos)
Calauag 4th 4.0% 69,223 324.71 125.37 210 540 81 13°57′30″N 122°17′14″E / 13.9582°N 122.2873°E / 13.9582; 122.2873 (Calauag)
Candelaria 2nd 6.4% 110,570 129.10 49.85 860 2,200 25 13°56′00″N 121°25′21″E / 13.9334°N 121.4224°E / 13.9334; 121.4224 (Candelaria)
Catanauan 3rd 3.8% 65,832 253.07 97.71 260 670 46 13°35′34″N 122°19′20″E / 13.5929°N 122.3223°E / 13.5929; 122.3223 (Catanauan)
Dolores 2nd 1.6% 27,702 62.60 24.17 440 1,100 16 14°00′57″N 121°24′04″E / 14.0157°N 121.4011°E / 14.0157; 121.4011 (Dolores)
General Luna 3rd 1.5% 25,373 101.02 39.00 250 650 27 13°41′17″N 122°10′16″E / 13.6881°N 122.1710°E / 13.6881; 122.1710 (General Luna)
General Nakar 1st 1.5% 25,973 1,343.75 518.82 19 49 19 14°45′48″N 121°38′07″E / 14.7634°N 121.6353°E / 14.7634; 121.6353 (General Nakar)
Guinayangan 4th 2.4% 41,669 214.12 82.67 190 490 54 13°53′51″N 122°27′14″E / 13.8974°N 122.4539°E / 13.8974; 122.4539 (Guinayangan)
Gumaca 4th 4.0% 69,618 189.65 73.22 370 960 59 13°55′17″N 122°06′05″E / 13.9215°N 122.1015°E / 13.9215; 122.1015 (Gumaca)
Infanta 1st 3.7% 64,818 342.76 132.34 190 490 36 14°44′45″N 121°38′50″E / 14.7458°N 121.6472°E / 14.7458; 121.6472 (Infanta)
Jomalig 1st 0.4% 6,884 56.65 21.87 120 310 5 14°41′49″N 122°19′47″E / 14.6970°N 122.3297°E / 14.6970; 122.3297 (Jomalig)
Lopez 4th 5.2% 91,074 355.38 137.21 260 670 95 13°52′57″N 122°15′40″E / 13.8825°N 122.2611°E / 13.8825; 122.2611 (Lopez)
Lucban 1st 2.7% 46,698 130.46 50.37 360 930 32 14°06′52″N 121°33′17″E / 14.1144°N 121.5548°E / 14.1144; 121.5548 (Lucban)
Lucena 2nd 246,392 80.21 30.97 3,100 8,000 33 13°56′06″N 121°36′45″E / 13.9350°N 121.6124°E / 13.9350; 121.6124 (Lucena)
Macalelon 3rd 1.5% 26,419 124.05 47.90 210 540 30 13°44′46″N 122°08′13″E / 13.7462°N 122.1369°E / 13.7462; 122.1369 (Macalelon)
Mauban 1st 3.5% 61,141 415.98 160.61 150 390 40 14°11′20″N 121°43′52″E / 14.1889°N 121.7310°E / 14.1889; 121.7310 (Mauban)
Mulanay 3rd 2.9% 50,826 420.00 162.16 120 310 28 13°31′23″N 122°24′15″E / 13.5231°N 122.4043°E / 13.5231; 122.4043 (Mulanay)
Padre Burgos 3rd 1.2% 20,161 69.10 26.68 290 750 22 13°55′00″N 121°48′58″E / 13.9166°N 121.8162°E / 13.9166; 121.8162 (Padre Burgos)
Pagbilao 1st 3.8% 65,996 170.96 66.01 390 1,000 27 13°58′28″N 121°41′07″E / 13.9745°N 121.6854°E / 13.9745; 121.6854 (Pagbilao)
Panukulan 1st 0.7% 12,511 226.61 87.49 55 140 12 14°55′59″N 121°48′58″E / 14.9331°N 121.8160°E / 14.9331; 121.8160 (Panukulan)
Patnanungan 1st 0.8% 13,865 139.20 53.75 100 260 6 14°45′19″N 122°13′01″E / 14.7552°N 122.2169°E / 14.7552; 122.2169 (Patnanungan)
Perez 4th 0.7% 12,039 57.46 22.19 210 540 14 14°11′38″N 121°55′33″E / 14.1938°N 121.9257°E / 14.1938; 121.9257 (Perez)
Pitogo 3rd 1.2% 21,380 73.39 28.34 290 750 39 13°46′59″N 122°05′19″E / 13.7830°N 122.0886°E / 13.7830; 122.0886 (Pitogo)
Plaridel 4th 0.6% 10,238 35.05 13.53 290 750 9 13°57′24″N 122°01′01″E / 13.9568°N 122.0170°E / 13.9568; 122.0170 (Plaridel)
Polillo 1st 1.6% 28,125 253.00 97.68 110 280 20 14°43′03″N 121°56′15″E / 14.7176°N 121.9375°E / 14.7176; 121.9375 (Polillo)
Quezon 4th 0.9% 15,142 71.22 27.50 210 540 24 14°00′22″N 122°11′03″E / 14.0060°N 122.1841°E / 14.0060; 122.1841 (Quezon)
Real 1st 2.0% 35,189 563.89 217.72 62 160 17 14°39′56″N 121°36′13″E / 14.6655°N 121.6036°E / 14.6655; 121.6036 (Real)
Sampaloc 1st 0.8% 13,107 104.78 40.46 130 340 14 14°09′40″N 121°38′18″E / 14.1610°N 121.6382°E / 14.1610; 121.6382 (Sampaloc)
San Andres 3rd 1.9% 33,586 60.99 23.55 550 1,400 7 13°19′25″N 122°40′39″E / 13.3235°N 122.6774°E / 13.3235; 122.6774 (San Andres)
San Antonio 2nd 1.8% 31,681 172.93 66.77 180 470 20 13°53′45″N 121°17′36″E / 13.8957°N 121.2932°E / 13.8957; 121.2932 (San Antonio)
San Francisco (Aurora) 3rd 3.3% 57,979 303.96 117.36 190 490 16 13°20′49″N 122°31′12″E / 13.3469°N 122.5200°E / 13.3469; 122.5200 (San Francisco)
San Narciso 3rd 2.6% 45,386 263.58 101.77 170 440 24 13°33′56″N 122°33′59″E / 13.5656°N 122.5665°E / 13.5656; 122.5665 (San Narciso)
Sariaya 2nd 8.0% 138,894 212.16 81.92 650 1,700 43 13°57′46″N 121°31′27″E / 13.9629°N 121.5243°E / 13.9629; 121.5243 (Sariaya)
Tagkawayan 4th 2.9% 50,833 534.35 206.31 95 250 45 13°57′57″N 122°32′21″E / 13.9657°N 122.5393°E / 13.9657; 122.5393 (Tagkawayan)
Tayabas 1st 5.3% 91,428 230.95 89.17 400 1,000 66 14°01′35″N 121°35′30″E / 14.0263°N 121.5918°E / 14.0263; 121.5918 (Tayabas)
Tiaong 2nd 5.3% 91,599 168.38 65.01 540 1,400 31 13°57′33″N 121°19′22″E / 13.9593°N 121.3228°E / 13.9593; 121.3228 (Tiaong)
Unisan 3rd 1.4% 25,186 124.15 47.93 200 520 36 13°50′21″N 121°58′35″E / 13.8393°N 121.9763°E / 13.8393; 121.9763 (Unisan)
Total[C] 1,740,638 8,989.39 3,470.82 190 490 1,209 (see GeoGroup box)
  1. ^ Former names are italicized.
  2. ^ Coordinates mark the town center, and are sortable by latitude.
  3. ^ Total figures exclude the highly urbanized city of Lucena.

Demographics

Population census of
Quezon
YearPop.±% p.a.
1990 1,221,831    
1995 1,359,992+2.03%
2000 1,482,955+1.87%
2007 1,646,510+1.45%
2010 1,740,638+2.04%
Excludes Lucena City
Source: National Statistics Office[2]

The inhabitants are mostly Tagalogs. The population is concentrated in the flat south-central portion which includes Lucena City, Sariaya, and Candelaria. After World War II, the Infanta area received migrants from Manila, Laguna and Batangas. People from Marinduque moved to the southern part of the Tayabas Isthmus and the Bondoc Peninsula. And people from Bicol Region migrated to Southern Towns of Calauag and Tagkawayan.

Economy

Quezon is the country's leading producer of coconut products such as coconut oil[4] and copra. A large part of the province is covered in coconut plantations. Other major crops are rice, corn, banana, and coffee. Fishing is also a large part of the province's economy.

Notable people from Quezon

Metro Lucena

Metro Lucena has an estimated population of 700,000 which is mostly concentrated in the flat south-central portion of Quezon, which includes the cities of Lucena City and Tayabas, Sariaya, Candelaria, Lucban & Pagbilao. The people are often characterized as friendly and hardworking. It is the center of commerce and tourism in Quezon Province.

City or
municipality
Nickname/s Income
class
No. of
barangays
Area
(km2)
Population
(2007)
Population
(2010)
Pop. density
(per km2)
Candelaria Industrial Town of Quezon 1st Class municipality 25 129.1 105,997 110,570 857
Lucban Summer Capital of Quezon
Home of the Pahiyas Festival
2nd Class municipality 32 154.15 45,616 46,698 303
Lucena City Cocopalm City of the South
Biofuel City
The Gateway to the South
Entertainment Capital of Southern Luzon
1st Class city
(Highly urbanized)
33 83.17 236,390 246,392 2963
Pagbilao Power Port of Quezon 1st Class municipality 27 177.6 62,561 65,996 372
Sariaya Heritage Town of Quezon 1st Class municipality 43 245.3 128,248 138,894 566
Tayabas City Home of the Finest Lambanog
City of Festivals
The City of Eleven Bridges
6th Class component city 66 230.95 87,252 91,428 396

References

  1. "List of Provinces". PSGC Interactive. Makati City, Philippines: National Statistical Coordination Board. Retrieved 22 November 2013.
  2. 1 2 "Population and Annual Growth Rates for The Philippines and Its Regions, Provinces, and Highly Urbanized Cities" (PDF). 2010 Census and Housing Population. National Statistics Office. Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  3. 1 2 "History of Quezon Province". Provincial Government of Quezon. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  4. 1 2 Ramos, Lily O. (18 July 2012). "Quezon province’s impressive historical and cultural heritage". Balita.ph. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  5. "Republic Act No. 14; An Act to Change the Name of the Province of Tayabas to Quezon". Chan Robles Virtual Law Library. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  6. "Republic Act No. 648 - An Act Creating the Subprovince of Aurora, Which Shall Comprise the Municipalities of Baler, Casiguran, Dipaculao and Maria Aurora, Province of Quezon". Chan Robles Virtual Law Library. 14 June 1951. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  7. "Batas Pambansa Blg. 7 - An Act Separating the Sub-Province of Aurora from the Province of Quezon and Establishing It as an Independent Province". Chan Robles Virtual Law Library. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  8. "Republic Act No. 9495: An Act Creating the Province of Quezon del Sur". The LAWPHiL Project. September 7, 2007. Retrieved 22 November 2013.
  9. "Active Volcanoes". Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology. 30 July 2008. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  10. 1 2 3 "Province: Quezon". PSGC Interactive. Makati City, Philippines: Philippine Statistics Authority - National Statistical Coordination Board. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  11. "Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay: as of May 1, 2010 (CALABARZON)" (PDF). 2010 Census of Population and Housing. National Statistics Office. Retrieved 5 January 2016.

External links

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