pre spanish
TRANSCRIPT
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Pre-Spanish
Era
PRE-
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Filipinos before the arrival of the
Spaniards HUNTERS
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FISHERMEN
CULTIVATORS
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Short Background
The highlanders who barely had access of seawater, because of the presence of rice terraces, only the central mountains of Luzon had well structured livelihood that resulted to a more fixed territory.
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Style of Community•The lowlanders lived in a kinship headed by a Datu or a chief within a community called Barangay .
*Kinship is a relationship between any entities that share a genealogical origin, through either biological, cultural, or historical descent
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• There was no consistent religious hierarchy that time, however animism constituted beliefs and ritual practices.
•In the 14th century, Arabs arrived, introducing Islam in the south and extending some influence even into Luzon.
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• Chinese merchants and traders arrived and settled in the ninth century A.D.
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Economic StatusThe chief means of trading
was barter. Records show that Chinese merchants came to the Philippines to trade porcelain, silk and metal ware in exchange for gold, pearls, and medicinal plants, which the Philippines is naturally rich in.
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ChineseFilipinos
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Jocano refers to the time between the 1st and 14th Century AD as the Philippines' emergent phase. It was characterized by intensive trading, and saw the rise of definable social organization.
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• The advancements that brought this period were made possible by the increased use of iron tools, which allowed such stable patterns to form.
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This era also saw the development of writing. The first surviving written artifact from the Philippines, now known as the Laguna Copperplate Inscription, was written in 900 AD, marking the end of what is considered Philippine Prehistory and the beginning of Spanish era.
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Excavations also unearthed gold ingots, known as piloncitos, the first recognized form of coinage in the country. Barter rings in different sizes, gold ornaments and beads were the other objects used as medium of exchange during the period.
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THE END………
THANK YOU!!!
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Prepared by:
Cagadas, Pauline G
& Kepes, Nali C.