Page 5 of 35 FirstFirst ... 234567815 ... LastLast
Results 41 to 50 of 341
  1. #41
    C.I.A. nealotol's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Gender
    Male
    Posts
    2,443
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default Re: Whose the real QUEEN City of the South? Cebu? or Iloilo?


    CEBU man jud tingali..

  2. #42

    Default Re: Whose the real QUEEN City of the South? Cebu? or Iloilo?

    QUEEN CITY OF THE SOUTH,

    last 2 weeks ago (dominggo) sa channel 7 nakakita gyud ko anang ilang island festival ang show ato nga time ILO-ILO FESTIVAL. which is nakabutang pa gyud sa banner nga WELCOME TO THE QUEEN CITY OF THE SOUTH ILO-ILO! gi announce pa gyud sa MC.

    para nako. Walay makabawi sa titulo sa cebu
    gikan sa namat-an nakog kahayag ang cebu maoy gidungog kanunay nga maoy naghupot ana nga titulo. bisan nag elementary pa ta kanunay gitudlo nga ang cebu maoy QUEEN CITY OF THE SOUTH..

  3. #43

    Default Re: Whose the real QUEEN City of the South? Cebu? or Iloilo?

    I go for Cebu too. Majority of the people acknowledges Cebu as the Queen of the South these days.

  4. #44

    Default Re: Whose the real QUEEN City of the South? Cebu? or Iloilo?

    sauna ddaw ilo-ilo pero karon cebu na

  5. #45

    Default Re: Whose the real QUEEN City of the South? Cebu? or Iloilo?

    Ilo-Ilo is history CEBU is the present and the King in the future haha...wla baya silay King's Court, Queensland,Prince Court ug Jade Court wahaha...We have it all here in Cebu.. I been there sa Ilo-Ilo but dili jud ma compare ang progress.

  6. #46

    Default Re: Whose the real QUEEN City of the South? Cebu? or Iloilo?

    cebu man..

  7. #47

    Default Re: Whose the real QUEEN City of the South? Cebu? or Iloilo?

    Quote Originally Posted by tatajhun View Post
    Ilo-Ilo is history CEBU is the present and the King in the future haha...wla baya silay King's Court, Queensland,Prince Court ug Jade Court wahaha...We have it all here in Cebu.. I been there sa Ilo-Ilo but dili jud ma compare ang progress.
    indeed...........hehe

  8. #48

    Default Re: Whose the real QUEEN City of the South? Cebu? or Iloilo?

    Iloilo is the rightful owner of the title base on facts and evidence.
    ILOILO: a story of betrayal and redemptions as the Queen City of the South

    Ever wondered how Iloilo became the QUEEN CITY OF THE SOUTH? The title is a a moniker of the previously bestowed decree by the Queen Regent Maria Cristina of Spain: “LA MUY LEAL Y NOBLE CIUDAD DE ILOILO“.

    Iloilo old sealSuch title was too long for the lazy Spaniards to use in their official transactions with the English-speaking countries. An English description was coined to introduce Iloilo especially to the Australian merchants who are the chief buyers of Iloilo’s sugar shipment. Hence the title QUEEN REGENT’S CITY IN THE SOUTH was born.

    The constant use of the long title to describe Iloilo went on until a new one came out that simplified the writing of articles in sugar shipment manifesto and documentation. Hence the title QUEEN’S CITY IN THE SOUTH.

    With the Queen Regent’s favor resting upon Iloilo (one of the only two Spanish provinces in the Philippines; the other being Manila) the sugar industry flourished even more and Iloilo’s economy catapulted to enormous heights. The Spanish Government then has already made Iloilo as the second major seat of power with all administrative functions channeling from Iloilo & Manila only. No other province in the south was as important and as progressive as Iloilo.

    Hence the title QUEEN CITY OF THE SOUTH sprung out.

    The QUEEN CITY OF THE SOUTH title was then made as Iloilo’s official nickname when Iloilo was legally declared a city for the second time by the virtue of the Commonwealth Act No. 158 in 1937.

    The book written by the Augustinian Father Policarpio Hernandez titled “ILOILO, The Most Noble City: History and Development 1566-1898.” narrates the circumstances of how Iloilo City won for itself the accolade “La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad de Iloilo”

    “When Andres Bonifacio’s Katipunan launched the revolt against Spain at the outskirts of Manila on 30 August 1896, the Ilongo elite was caught by surprise. They immediately responded with protestations of outrage and affirmed their loyalty to Mother Spain. The Ilongos themselves were united in their support of Spain during the first two years of the revolutionary period, nipping in the bud local separatist movements and eventually battling the troops of General Emilio Aguinaldo.

    A few days after the Cry of Balintawak, the Jaro Ayuntamiento, comprised entirely of native Ilongos, convened in a special session on 1 September. It condemned the Manila uprising as an unpatriotic act ‘that finds no echo in the hearts of the Jarenos.’ Iloilo towns also condemned the Manila uprising, and the neighboring provinces of Capiz, Antique and the Negros Island followed suit. Emboldened by this outpouring of love and loyalty toward Spain, the Ilongo elite, with the backing of the Spanish and foreign communities of Iloilo, initiated the organization of loyal volunteers in the region to be sent to quell the Tagalog rebellion. Five hundred native troops volunteered and an Ilongo Volunteer Battalion was formed under the cadre of mostly Spanish officers.

    With enthusiasm compensating for their poor military training, the Ilongo Volunteers gathered at Plaza Alfonso XII (present-day Plaza Libertad) for blessings prior to their departure to Manila. A massive overflow of pro-Spanish patriotism marked the occasion that was attended, in full force, by local Spanish authorities and the Iloilo Ayuntamiento.

    As per report of the Diario de Manila, the Ilongo Volunteers embarked on the ship Brutus as folk heroes, cheered by the people who sent them off en masse. Bishop Leandro Arrue and the city officials, led by Governor Ricardo Monet, joined the multitude that wished the Ilongo volunteers luck in their fight for the Mother Country.

    Divided into two companies, the Volunteer Battalion arrived in Manila on 16 January 1897. It easily became one of the largest native contingent to serve the government forces against the insurgent soldiers of General Emilio Aguinaldo in the battlegrounds of Cavite province. Regular financial contributions, mainly from the families of the Ilongo elite, supported the Ilongo Volunteers throughout their years of service. The first fund raising campaign in March 1897 generated some 1,615 pesos. Among the leading contributors were Felix de la Rama and Eugenio Lopez, as well as other urban elite families from both Iloilo and Jaro. Before this, as per the report of Diario de Manila, some 40,000 pesos had already been collected when the Ilongo Battalion embarked for Manila, ‘an amount at the time that would last them for four months…..’

    As expected, the Ilongo Volunteers established for themselves a distinguished combat record in the battles of Cavite against Aguinaldo’s revolutionary forces. Once the pact of Biak-na-Bato was signed, the Battalion returned to Iloilo on April 1898. Just like their departure, their homecoming galvanized the people into more public outpourings and manifestations of pro-Spanish loyalty and patriotism.

    The Spanish Crown did not let the effort of the Ilongos go unheralded. Queen Maria Cristina issued a special royal decree, dated 10 March 1898, which awarded Iloilo City the perpetual title La Muy Noble Ciudad for its exemplary conduct, its laudable actions during the Tagalog insurrection, and for being the first in organizing, arming and supporting the Ilongo Volunteers.

    Such filial devotion of the Ilongos to the Mother Country was understandable. Their allegiance to Spanish rule was a form of loyalty at once comprehensible. Allowed a more liberal degree of local autonomy by the Maura administration reforms of 1893, the leaders of Iloilo, Jaro and the other towns of Panay and Negros thought the uprising and revolt against Spanish rule were preposterous. Involved as they were in the development of Iloilo and Negros, enjoying the prosperity of the sugar boom during the past decades, the Ilongos had always considered themselves part of Spain, their grievances against the Mother Country nil.”

    In other words, the Spanish honorific “La Muy Leal y Noble Ciudad” which has fostered a certain distinction and a sense of “home-town” pride among Iloilo City natives is in fact really an award given by Spain for their act of “betrayal” as many people of today would claim against the fight for Philippine nationhood.

    With all that has been negatively said about that act, I still don’t consider it an act of betrayal since the Philippines were not united then and Iloilo was just blessed enough to have been free or minimally affected by the Spanish oppression. The act therefore made by the Ilonggos in siding with Spain was just an initial reactionary move since Spain was so good to all of Iloilo.

    Fortunately as the years pass, Iloilo has awakened from the supposed hypnotic effect of Spain and many Ilonggos begin to fight the oppression. In fact, the very people who fought side by side with the Spaniards are the very ones fight against them.

    Many of the Ilonggos who initially sided with Spain were recognized and honored by the National Historical Institute for the massive revolutionary movement that they have established against Spain.

    In fact many Ilonggos later on joined with the national revolutionary movement.
    Gen. Pablo S. Araneta of the Revolutionary Government of Visayas.
    Gen. Marciano S. Araneta of the cantonal Government in Negros.
    Don Gregorio S. Araneta of the Malolos Republic.

    The National Historical Institute (NHI) recognized the patriotic contributions of afore-mentioned Ilonggo Heroes with the installation of Statues and/or Historical Markers in their honor.

    Gen. Martin T. Delgado – Sta. Barbara Plaza-Iloilo
    Gen. Pablo S. Araneta – Molo (Convent) Plaza-Iloilo City
    Gen. Aniceto L. Lacson – Talisay Plaza-Negros Occidental
    Gen. Juan A. Araneta – Bago Plaza-Negros Occidental
    Gen. Marciano S. Araneta – La Carlota Plaza-Negros Occidental
    Don Gregorio S. Araneta – R.Hidalgo Street Quiapo-Manila
    Gen. Pantaleon S. Villegas – Carcar Plaza, Cebu
    Gen. Leandro L. Fullon – San Jose Plaza-Antique

    The title may have been associated with an act many people of today would consider treacherous nevertheless, the same people who committed such “treacherous” act are the most instrumental people in helping Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo win the fight.

    To honor the valiant help of the Ilonggos and the people of Panay, the second of the 3 stars in the Philippine flag was meant not for the entire Visayas but for the island of Panay only.

    Source:
    MY OPINIONS MATTER..... ALL THE TIME

  9. #49

    Default Re: Whose the real QUEEN City of the South? Cebu? or Iloilo?

    Unarguable, Cebu City is. Now.

  10. #50

    Default Re: Whose the real QUEEN City of the South? Cebu? or Iloilo?

    The first queen city of the south is IloIlo base on my research...and now is cebu...

  11.    Advertisement

Page 5 of 35 FirstFirst ... 234567815 ... LastLast

Similar Threads

 
  1. Please "LIKE" the Cebu City "The Queen City of the South" Fan Page
    By imeanbusiness21 in forum Websites & Multimedia
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 03-13-2013, 07:06 PM
  2. Cebu to vie for top spot in 7 Wonders Cities of the World
    By palmcentro in forum Destinations
    Replies: 10
    Last Post: 10-27-2012, 09:13 AM
  3. Whose the real QUEEN City of the South? Cebu? or Iloilo?
    By starsunltd in forum General Discussions
    Replies: 174
    Last Post: 06-07-2011, 05:50 AM
  4. What makes Cebu the "Queen City of the South" ?
    By isaac95 in forum General Discussions
    Replies: 52
    Last Post: 05-30-2011, 05:03 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
about us
We are the first Cebu Online Media.

iSTORYA.NET is Cebu's Biggest, Southern Philippines' Most Active, and the Philippines' Strongest Online Community!
follow us
#top