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A source claims the work that is the basis for information on this topic is dubious. Lambanog ( talk) 13:19, 7 January 2010 (UTC)
William Henry Scott had debunked the "Maragtas" and the "Code of Kalantiaw" as early as 1968. The details are in Scott's Prehispanic Source Materials for the Study of Philippine History, revised edition, Quezon City: New Day Publishers, 1984, pp. 91-103, and 132-134. These were summarized in the Halili book cited above by "Lambanog" 112.200.252.170 ( talk)dnong —Preceding undated comment added 11:04, 22 October 2010 (UTC).
But taking into consideration that after the Spanish colonization, local literary achievements in culture and government in the former territories of the Confederation of Madya-as were eclipsed by the emphasis of the Spanish colonial regime on Catholic Christian faith, and the fact that Ilonggo litearary heritage was primarily orally passed from one generation to another, as in the case of the oldest and longest epic in Hiligaynon
Hinilawod that survive in the Sulod society in the hinterlands of Panay, the local beliefs inherited by the Ilonggos from their ancestors cannot be just be hastily dismissed as fabricated. In fact, Ilongo literary works like Maragtas and the Code of Kalantiaw are something that serious historians have to study more carefully. What Walter Scott failed to consider in his judgement is the nature of the transmission of Ilonggo local literature. He just limited himself to evaluating a relatively recent attempt to put into writing what Ilonggos have bequeathed to their descendants through generations by means of oral tradition, discrediting Monteclaro as fabricating the story. What was judged was
Maragtas (book) - the printed work authored by Monteclaro. The essence of Maragtas per se was not given due treatment.
Another thing that Scott failed to consider is the fact that Monteclaro is not a professional historian who writes according to the standards of scientific research. Scott was not able to see the perspective of Monteclaro - the Ilonggo, who transmits to the next Ilonggo generations what has been passed on from the previous ages, of which he had more ample knowledge.
The third aspect that Walter Scott failed to give due consideration is the fact that Maragtas is also at the same time a literary piece. As such, facts in the story are sometimes mixed with attempts to make the narration attractive. Therefore, literary criticism has to be applied in this case, to distinguish which part is historical and which part is not.
To understand Maragtas better, one needs an appropriate method of research in order to have a thorough study of Ilonggo culture, mentality, and the remnants of their very ancient civilization. Otherwise, one will be left with a very superficial judgement of the issue. -- Sulbud ( talk) 18:39, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
We are only supposed to include informations here from reputable sources compiled by reputable scholars, not including speculations (like whether Scott is right or wrong) and original research that hasn't passed the scrutiny of academic rigor. Please refrain from adding speculations without sources. Stricnina ( talk) 07:46, 4 August 2015 (UTC)
The following sections, which have multiples issues are temporarily transferred here at the talk page, for discussions and for improvement. Please help improve these sections, before placing them back to the main part of the article. Thank you.-- Sulbud ( talk) 20:55, 9 December 2014 (UTC)
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Asides from waging wars against the Chinese empire's navy and the Hinduized states among their immediate neighbors citation needed, Madja-as was also in a state of intermittent conflict with the Kingdom of Tondo in Luzon and the Sultanate of Sulu in Mindanao citation needed. Sulu and Tondo considered Madja-as a formidable nation that, after some time, a certain Timway Orangkaya Su'il was mentioned by the second page of tarsila (of the Sulu Sultanate), that he received four Bisaya slaves (People from the Confederation of Madja-as) from Manila (presumably Dynasty of Tondo) as a sign of friendship between the two countries. Evidently, both the Kingdom of Tondo and the Sulu Sultanate formed a coalition to wage war upon belligerent Madja-as which they punished by conducting numerous slave raids into. [1] Nevertheless, Madja-as has always been a naval power back when their predecessor state citation needed, Pannai defended and policed the conflict-ridden strait of Malacca (Where 50% of maritime world trade passes through) or their current incarnation as the Confederation of Madja-as which was almost always in a state a war with most of its neighbors and had reciprocated the kidnapping and enslaving of its people by disrupting the inter-island commerce of its enemies citation needed. However, despite all the warlike exploits of Visayans, they are also known to be soft, graceful and noble in mien and speech. Subsequently, Visayan participation in Spanish colonization which supplied the bulk of the auxiliary and mercenary forces affixed to the Spaniards that conquered Manila which was then ruled by Sultan Bolkiah of Brunei, was crucial in hispanizing the Philippine archipelago, since both Luzon and Mindanao where already enemies of Madja-as already. In a way, the hispanization of the whole Philippine archipelago was a triumph for the Visayans against their age-old enemies, the states in Luzon and Mindanao.
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According to the Boxer Codex. The remnant Visayans who did not follow their Kings (Datus, or Co-equal paramount rulers in Malayo-Polynesian) to the re-established Kedatuan of Panay (After they severed themselves from the unjust ruler of Rajah Makatunao) and had remained content with the rule of Rajah Makatunao, bore witness to the supplanting of the rule under a Rajah with the rule of a Sultan.
“… It begins three hundred years (ago), a little more or less, when from the parts and provinces of the Malaya language which lie toward Meca (came) a lord of a city called Cauin. The name of this one was Sultan Yuso (Arabic Yusof), who according to what they say was king of that said city of Cauin, and he and his subjects departed from his kingdom and land bringing with him a great quantity of people in many ships, discovering many lands, and calling himself always king and lord of all the people he brought and calling them slaves. Following his voyage he arrived at the island of Borney on which they had some battles with the native Uisayas (Bisayas) so that they occupied them [the lands]; and having succeeded them (the Uisayas) well, he was settled some days in which he took a tongue of land and the fruits of it and found camphor, which is now to exist in other parts except this kingdom.
“… At the end of some days, he made port in the land of China: and asking permission in order to go ashore, he disembarked and went to see the king of China, whom he recognised as a superior king; and the said king of China conferred in him the title of king and gave him the insignia and royal (coat of) arms which nowadays the said king of Borney has; And seeing that the said Sultan Yuso was a bachelor, he married him to a Chinese woman. Accordingly it appears that the reason he persevered in the said kingdom of (Borney) was that she was a relative of the king of China. The said Chinese woman was lord of a city which was called Namtay in the kingdom of China, and the said Sultan Yuso made this marriage. He bade (farewell) to the king of China; and bringing his wife and the people with him, he returned to Borney, leaving in the said city of Namtay (one) who had charge of the rent as and property of his wife; and so (it is) nowadays although the natives of Namtay do not come with anything (for) the kings of Borney, not because the lords of the said city of Namtay have quit holding them (the rents), and they say the current rents are being held guarded for when some king of Borney might go there for it, the legacy.
“The said Sultan Yuso went to Borney. He settled there with his said slaves or vassals that he brought, and he put the native Uisayas (into) subjection, making them pay tribute. He had sons with the said (Chinese) wife. He died very old: and when he died, he left a tablet of gold. According to what they say it would be a fathom square and thin, on which he left mandates and they inscribed and wrote the kings of descended from him; and so they inscribed this said tablet which the same king kept and by his hand he inscribed his name. This tablet was lost when Doctor Fransisco de Sande, the governor who went from (these) Philippine islands, sacked Borney. It is understood that the old king, father of this one in whose possession it was, buried it or threw into the sea; and since the said king died at that time, he left no clarity (clear information) about what he did with the tablet.” [1]
It was thus, the enslavement of the remnant Visayans that were left in Islamic Nanyang (South China Sea) and Nusantara (Insular Southeast Asia), which caused the Visayans (Now Hiligaynons) who settled at Madj-as to ally with the Christian Spaniards (As well as some Butuanons, Warays and Cebuanos) in campaigns against the Bruneian Empire.
And at this point, as an ethnic group, as-a-whole, Visayans in the Visayas as contrast to the Visayans in former Srivijaya, became the high-bred sons and daughters of their Datus (Kings) who had refused to bow to the unjust rule of oppressive foreigners and were more loyal to the original Malayo-Polynesian culture, than the ones in the west, who had heaped on high-sounding Hindu or Islamic regnal titles upon themselves.
However, at that period, the Bruneian Empire had already territoriality surrounded the Visayans in an encircling pincer-movement and they (The Bruneians) were backed by the Islamic Caliphate and the Chinese Empire, of which, their respective Empires' dynasties were all inter-woven and had supported Brunei in the war against the Visayans. Furthermore, the Muslims already controlled most of the island-group of Luzon to the North and most of the island group of Mindanao to the south (Except the portions facing the Pacific Ocean). The Christianized Datus, had, when the Spanish arrived, then accepted baptism and gave great value to the even humbler honorific of merely being called "Dons" and "Doñas" in Spanish, rather than a full-on-King (Datu) in their native-language, as they formed part of the new Principalia.
They then supplied half of the troops used to punish the Warlords, (Maha)rajahs, Huangs, Sultans and puppet-Datus that accepted higher foreign ranks. And thereafter, the Visayans and Spanish forces came upon Islamic Manila, raided it and converted it. Then fought the Castille War against the Bruneian Empire. [2] Afterwards the Visayans soldiers and their Spanish captains, burned down Brunei's capital and destroyed their legendary 5-tiered floating Mosque and left. [3]
Thereafter, they decided not to invade and incorporate Brunei into the Philippines and was just content with exchanging and maintaining ties with a more amiable Sultan that thereafter rose to the throne.
Probably, in repentance to the sacking of their old edifices: in modern-times, the Philippine-owned Ayala corporation even built a grander Palace-Complex for the Sultanate of Brunei, the Istana Nurul Iman. When it was completed, the Istana Nurul Iman, became the largest residential palace in the world and the largest single family residence ever built. [4] Coincidentally, it was designed by the Visayas-born Leandro Locsin.
References
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Every source should be checked whether the Madja-as = Visayas equation applied. For example, quoting Scott when Scott himself didn't even make any Madja-as = Visayas equation should be avoided at all costs. The article has become excessively detailed because of the addition of irrelevant facts about Visayas, when there are better pages for topics regarding the irrelevant sections. For example, the whole "Religion of Madja-as" section is actually about the religion of the precolonial Visayas, which should belong to a separate section.
Also, the "Chinese accounts of Madja-as" are actually the accounts regarding Pisheya, and PiSHEYA != MADJA-AS unless you can provide me a reliable source that EXPLICITLY mentions that they are the same. According to the edit history:
https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Madja-as&diff=next&oldid=324235614
...the one who added the PISHEYA = MADJA-AS connection is Rene Bascos Sarabias Jr.. Please explain yourself and provide the source that EXPLICITLY mentions that PISHEYA = MADJA-AS. Stricnina ( talk) 19:04, 3 June 2019 (UTC)
The Spaniards reported three Mindanao chiefdoms strong enough to dominate their neighbors in the middle of the sixteenth century - Maguindanao, Butuan and Bisaya. Butuan was considered the wealthiest because of its gold, while Bisaya was considered the least of the three, though it is not clear where this Bisaya was. Earlier expeditions had called the east coast by this name (Vizaya), but Villalobos thought it was Davao Gulf - perhaps an ally or vassal of Buayan in the interior.
— W.H. Scott, Barangay: Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society
Thanks, Stricnina, for scrupulously evaluating the use of reference materials in this article. I have checked two of these.
1.) Regarding the use of A History of the Orient (authored by the anthropologists G. Nye Steiger, H. Otley Beyer, Conrado Benitez, published in Oxford in 1929), I have a copy of the book and I can attest to you that the part of this article on the Datus from Borneo is almost copied verbatim, except for the spelling of certain terms, which had different forms a century ago (e.g., "Datu" instead of "Dato" in the book). In fact I placed a quote from the book, as you requested (cf. footnote n. 3) to attest to you that indeed the data were taken from existing printed material authored by well-known anthropologis, which specialized on Philippine studies. It's probably difficult to find a copy this book not in the Philippines. But you might be able to acquire a reprint online.
2.) As to this reference material: Gaspar de San Agustin, O.S.A., Conquistas de las Islas Filipinas (1565-1615), Manuel Merino, O.S.A., ed., Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas: Madrid 1975, the primary author of the data in the book is Gaspar de San Agustin, who lived during the early years of Spanish colonization in the Philippines. However, as you can see in the details of this reference material, the book is already a product of scientific use of the primary data by an editor, who obviously worked on this printed research material in collaboration with the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas or the Spanish National Research Council. So, you can be sure that it is not just a collection of raw materials.
Anyway, I'll try to help check the other reference materials on my free time. The article is of importance to Philippine history and to the local History of Panay. Let's help develop it. -- TLS MMM ( talk) 21:52, 22 June 2019 (UTC)
Dear Rene Bascos Sarabia Jr., I have read the source named "The Visayan Raiders of the China Coast, 1174-1190 AD" by Efren B. Isorena. Thank you for providing a source that is relevant to the discussion regarding who are the "Pisheya" of the Chinese accounts. It appears that my doubts regarding Pisheya != Madja-as aren't doubts anymore, we now have a source that explicitly states that the Pisheya would not have come from Panay and Cebu. From pp. 77-78:
If the Pi-sho-ye were from the Visayas, they would not have come from Panay or Cebu. Considering further that if a northward route to Formosa was to be made, with the South China Sea closed for pangayaw, the Pacific was the only logical alternate route going north. Of the Pintados islands, those oriented to the eastern Philippine Sea were Leyte, Samar, and Bicolandia.
— Efren B. Isorena
And on page 87, the author of the article arrives at the conclusion that the Pi-sho-ye comes from eastern Samar, which was called Ibabao during precolonial times:
Perhaps, then, the Pi-sho-ye were from Ibabao. Ibabao was the prehispanic Waray name for Samar's entire eastern coast and a portion of Samar's northern coast; the western coast was always known as Samar (Tramp 1995: 201). If Alcina's informants in seventeenth century Ibabao are to be believed, some families in that time claimed to remember the times when they launched maritime raids against the coastal villages of Bicolandia and they even remembered old stories about expeditions to China (Alcina cited in Scott 1982: 22). The people of Ibabao were noted to resort easily to raids for the slightest of reasons, such as to make an impression on a woman (Alcina in Scott 1982: 22). One important aspect of the pangayaw of Ibabao was that it was performed by people from "among the more influential and more powerful" (Alcina 2002: 77). This indicates that it was socially and politically, as well as economically, motivated.
— Efren B. Isorena
The source makes it clear that Madja-as has nothing to do with the Pi-she-ya raids. I am now allowed to delete information regarding Pi-she-ya raids in a Wiki entry about Madja-as as the two are not related whatsoever according to this academic source that we have. Stricnina ( talk) 19:09, 4 June 2019 (UTC)
Cf. F. Landa Jocano, Filipino Prehistory: Rediscovering Precolonial Heritage, Manila: 2000, p. 75.
If you are looking for literal reference in ancient text, contributors may not have found what you have in mind. But use interpolation and read carefully the article with more open mind. While current contributions might be wanting in what exactly you want, they are useful in leading those engaging in continuous search for reference on the subject for improving the article.
A more collaborative attitude might be useful, instead of an arrogant stance. Until now, I still have to see your concrete contribution so that we will see how you make scientific research. All that you have been doing is deleting.
I suggest that you stop deleting reference materials and sections of the article that could help contributors in searching for better options. There are better ways of expressing that although such citations and ideas are not convincing to some researchers, yet they are also subscribed to by others. The impression that you present in your edits and comments say that you beleive that you have the monopoly of knowledge. Wikipedia is a collaborative project. -- Sulbud ( talk) 06:54, 24 July 2019 (UTC)
Many of the provide sources, like the first-hand accounts of Miguel de Loarca and Gaspar de San Agustin and the outdated works written by Isabelo de los Reyes and H. Otley Beyer, failed to mention the connection between Madja-as and many of the claims written in the page. For example, most of what is written about the Religion of Precolonial Panay is included in this page, despite the fact that none of the sources provided explicitly mentioned that the beliefs of the Madja-as of the Maragtas and the historical Precolonial Panay encountered by the Spaniards overlap. The connection being made is only implicit and without a scholarly source that attests that the religion of Madja-as coincides with the religion of the people of Panay in the dawn of the Spanish colonization, many of the claims written in the page will be considered as original research, which Wikipedia specifically does not allow.
Other possible statements that constitute original research or outright speculation are the following:
I can keep on and on, however there are just too many of these claims without sufficient supporting scholarly references. I want everyone who contributed in this Wiki page to sufficiently address these issues and stop confounding precolonial Panay and the Madja-as of Maragtas: TLS MMM, Sulbud, Darwgon0801, PulauKakatua19, Yann, Mild Bill Hiccup, Jasper0070, etc. Stricnina ( talk) 11:34, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
Update: I have read the scholar Paul Morrow's take on the "Confederation of Madya-as". According to him:
In Maragtas, Monteclaro also told the story of the creation of the Confederation of Madya-as in Panay under the rule of Datu Sumakwel and he gave the details of its constitution. In spite of the importance that should be placed on such an early constitution and his detailed description of it, Monteclaro gave no source for his information. Also, it appears that the Confederation of Madya-as is unique to Monteclaro's book. It has never been documented anywhere else nor is it among the legends of the unhispanized tribes of Panay. (emphasis mine)
— Paul Morrow, "The Maragtas Legend", [ [1]
The quote is self-explanatory. According to him, the so-called "Madja-as" has no other significant mentions outside of Monteclaro's book. Therefore, the whole Wikipedia article is built upon speculations and original research regarding the existence of a confederation with a very dubious historicity. It is time to separate fact and fiction: the "Madja-as" page should address the legend of the Confederation of Madja-as and the rest of the irrelevant content such as the religion and society of the pre-colonial Panay should be migrated in a separate section. The page should focus on what the Confederation of Madja-as meant to Monteclaro's book, the historians' take on the very existence of Madya-as, and avoid as much as possible any irrelevant content that doesn't address Madja-as directly. In the meantime, I will later delete the supposed Sumatran origins of the Madja-as people as it has no basis in facts. Stricnina ( talk) 13:07, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
Do not dismiss a local account as totally unhistorical, just because it was not written by a western historian. The current methods used by contemporary historians might be unfairly dismissive of how local historians in the past record oral traditions. Monteclaro was not a professional historian in the contemporary standard.
In assessing his work, literary criticism has to be employed to identify vestiges of historical facts from literary embellishments. Too much rigidity would unfairly dismiss and errase knowledge of ancient history.
Here is his work, still preserved in one of the libraries in the U.S. Read, including how this man obtained data through oral tradition, which was lost through the hispanization of the Island. You can find out on page two the reference to Madja-as (spelled as Maydias) as the former name of Panay:
It is not true that traces of what Monteclaro mentioned in Maragtas could not be found in legends or literary treasures (also oral) of Panay. For example. Paubari and Labaodungon, who are among the main characters of Hinilawod (the longest and oldest epic of Panay, chanted by the binucots of the hintherland tribes called "Bukidnons") are also mentioned in "Maragtas" as descendants of the datus from Borneo. However, they are not presented by Monteclaro as mythical demigods (as Hinilawod presents them). So, there is a resonance between the oldest epic of Panay with that of "Maragtas". Although the Filipino anthropologist F. Landa Jocano already discovered the Hinilawod in 1955, it seemd that William Henry Scott, who wrote his thesis in the University of Santo Tomas in 1968, was not cognisant of this cultural treasure of the Island. Thus, probably finding nothing that confirms the presence of traces of elements common to Hinilawod and Maragtas. I doubt your Paul Morrow is either aware of this.
Monteclaro's style of writing history might not be like how Scott or Morrow does it. It is clear from the text that he wrote his own annotations, too. He was not just copying. This explains the presence of Spanish terms. Whatever written text he claimed to have used as basis for his work, appears to be old notes that were attempts to write oral tradition.
I observe that his account of the Datus exploration and colonization of the Island of Maydias contains old names of towns, or names of barangays that are now parts of towns with different names. This is again some proof of the antiquity of the account.
The exact data of locations of rivers in places (old names or names of certain barangays that are now parts of towns established during the Spanish regime) in the islands of Panay (referred to as Madyias in the Maragtas) and Negros (referred to as the island of Buglas) cannot be expected from somebody who only studied the caton and some ability to count, and whose work experience was limited only to being a sacristan in Villa (Arevalo) and Janiuay. How could he invent all those precise data? Was he travelling in the mid 1800s, when the probable means of transport around the two islands of Panay and Negros was the batil? How could a sacristan have such a luxury to travel for exploration?
How was he able to know the names of months used during the pre-colonial times, whose traces can only be found from unschooled old farmers and fishermen (even now), and were almost forgotten by the learned during his time?
Or probably, was it Fr. Santaren's invention? But how could a Spaniard obtain such precise data about the geography and old names of towns, barangays, islands and rivers?
Such precision of data seems to have been from a person or persons, who were able to explore the two islands prior to Spanish colonialization. That ancient writer is the primary author, and the nature of his work (written or oral) cannot be determined because what Monteclaro wrote already has his annotations and personal narrative. Certainly, because of Monteclaro's claim to have based his account on certain old manuscripts of Maragtas, attempts were made to put the story into writing. Unlike Hinilawod, what was written in Maragtas appears to be an attempt to write history - the indigenous style as nmanifested in the writer's knowledge of the geography and culture of ancient Panay. Though, not as fantasy-laden as Hinilawod, Maragtas is not lacking of mythical accounts, e.g., appearance of mermaid and mythical crocodile which brought Kapinangan, wife of Datu Sumakwel to the island of Dipologan. That is why, textual and literary criticism is needed to identify, which are elements of factual history, from literary embellishment, which was not uncommon during the pre-colonial times.
Reading the Maragtas, without paying attention to how it was written by Monteclaro, to the author's background, and to the culture and geography of Panay and Negros is a huge error for historians.
Historians should re-evaluate their outlook toward this text. More attentive textual criticism and knowledge of the actual territory and its culture is needed.
H. Otley Beyer, who made pioneering research on Philippine anthropology, cannot just be dismissed as outdated. Perhaps there were things he discovered that contemporary anthropologists and historians overlooked.
Some filipino historians accuse the Spaniards of errasing traces of pre-colonial history and culture. I think, some contemporary historians, both local and foreign, are collaborating toward this purpose. They are actually making this succeed.
Check this:
"... los arayas que es una cierta Parcialidad de pueblos se van a una sierra muy Alta se llama mayas que esta en la ysla de Panay..." Miguel de Loarca, Relacion de las Yslas Filipinas (Arevalo, June 1582) in Blair, Emma Helen & Robertson, James Alexander, eds. (1903). The Philippine Islands, 1493–1803. Volume 05 of 55 (1582–1583). Historical introduction and additional notes by Edward Gaylord Bourne. Cleveland, Ohio: Arthur H. Clark Company. ISBN 978-0554259598. OCLC 769945704. Read pages 128 and 130.
That is probably the most that you could have about Madja-as from what was written by foreigners, if all you want is something according to the standard of foreign historians. Dismiss this and classify the article as legend, and you will make what Spaniards probably wished in colonizing and christianizing Panay. Congratulations! -- Sulbud ( talk) 07:31, 24 July 2019 (UTC)
I'm systemically editing/removing/changing many of the pages that mention Madja-as and Maragtas that present both as historical facts. I will not be removing them entirely in some instances but I will mention the legendary status of Madja-as and that Maragtas is not based on historical facts backed up by verifiable evidence. I will be linking to this talk page in those articles' various talk pages. If anyone wants to help me, feel free. I already did some edits for Iloilo#History. Chicbicyclist ( talk) 03:52, 22 May 2020 (UTC)
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A source claims the work that is the basis for information on this topic is dubious. Lambanog ( talk) 13:19, 7 January 2010 (UTC)
William Henry Scott had debunked the "Maragtas" and the "Code of Kalantiaw" as early as 1968. The details are in Scott's Prehispanic Source Materials for the Study of Philippine History, revised edition, Quezon City: New Day Publishers, 1984, pp. 91-103, and 132-134. These were summarized in the Halili book cited above by "Lambanog" 112.200.252.170 ( talk)dnong —Preceding undated comment added 11:04, 22 October 2010 (UTC).
But taking into consideration that after the Spanish colonization, local literary achievements in culture and government in the former territories of the Confederation of Madya-as were eclipsed by the emphasis of the Spanish colonial regime on Catholic Christian faith, and the fact that Ilonggo litearary heritage was primarily orally passed from one generation to another, as in the case of the oldest and longest epic in Hiligaynon
Hinilawod that survive in the Sulod society in the hinterlands of Panay, the local beliefs inherited by the Ilonggos from their ancestors cannot be just be hastily dismissed as fabricated. In fact, Ilongo literary works like Maragtas and the Code of Kalantiaw are something that serious historians have to study more carefully. What Walter Scott failed to consider in his judgement is the nature of the transmission of Ilonggo local literature. He just limited himself to evaluating a relatively recent attempt to put into writing what Ilonggos have bequeathed to their descendants through generations by means of oral tradition, discrediting Monteclaro as fabricating the story. What was judged was
Maragtas (book) - the printed work authored by Monteclaro. The essence of Maragtas per se was not given due treatment.
Another thing that Scott failed to consider is the fact that Monteclaro is not a professional historian who writes according to the standards of scientific research. Scott was not able to see the perspective of Monteclaro - the Ilonggo, who transmits to the next Ilonggo generations what has been passed on from the previous ages, of which he had more ample knowledge.
The third aspect that Walter Scott failed to give due consideration is the fact that Maragtas is also at the same time a literary piece. As such, facts in the story are sometimes mixed with attempts to make the narration attractive. Therefore, literary criticism has to be applied in this case, to distinguish which part is historical and which part is not.
To understand Maragtas better, one needs an appropriate method of research in order to have a thorough study of Ilonggo culture, mentality, and the remnants of their very ancient civilization. Otherwise, one will be left with a very superficial judgement of the issue. -- Sulbud ( talk) 18:39, 18 July 2011 (UTC)
We are only supposed to include informations here from reputable sources compiled by reputable scholars, not including speculations (like whether Scott is right or wrong) and original research that hasn't passed the scrutiny of academic rigor. Please refrain from adding speculations without sources. Stricnina ( talk) 07:46, 4 August 2015 (UTC)
The following sections, which have multiples issues are temporarily transferred here at the talk page, for discussions and for improvement. Please help improve these sections, before placing them back to the main part of the article. Thank you.-- Sulbud ( talk) 20:55, 9 December 2014 (UTC)
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Asides from waging wars against the Chinese empire's navy and the Hinduized states among their immediate neighbors citation needed, Madja-as was also in a state of intermittent conflict with the Kingdom of Tondo in Luzon and the Sultanate of Sulu in Mindanao citation needed. Sulu and Tondo considered Madja-as a formidable nation that, after some time, a certain Timway Orangkaya Su'il was mentioned by the second page of tarsila (of the Sulu Sultanate), that he received four Bisaya slaves (People from the Confederation of Madja-as) from Manila (presumably Dynasty of Tondo) as a sign of friendship between the two countries. Evidently, both the Kingdom of Tondo and the Sulu Sultanate formed a coalition to wage war upon belligerent Madja-as which they punished by conducting numerous slave raids into. [1] Nevertheless, Madja-as has always been a naval power back when their predecessor state citation needed, Pannai defended and policed the conflict-ridden strait of Malacca (Where 50% of maritime world trade passes through) or their current incarnation as the Confederation of Madja-as which was almost always in a state a war with most of its neighbors and had reciprocated the kidnapping and enslaving of its people by disrupting the inter-island commerce of its enemies citation needed. However, despite all the warlike exploits of Visayans, they are also known to be soft, graceful and noble in mien and speech. Subsequently, Visayan participation in Spanish colonization which supplied the bulk of the auxiliary and mercenary forces affixed to the Spaniards that conquered Manila which was then ruled by Sultan Bolkiah of Brunei, was crucial in hispanizing the Philippine archipelago, since both Luzon and Mindanao where already enemies of Madja-as already. In a way, the hispanization of the whole Philippine archipelago was a triumph for the Visayans against their age-old enemies, the states in Luzon and Mindanao.
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According to the Boxer Codex. The remnant Visayans who did not follow their Kings (Datus, or Co-equal paramount rulers in Malayo-Polynesian) to the re-established Kedatuan of Panay (After they severed themselves from the unjust ruler of Rajah Makatunao) and had remained content with the rule of Rajah Makatunao, bore witness to the supplanting of the rule under a Rajah with the rule of a Sultan.
“… It begins three hundred years (ago), a little more or less, when from the parts and provinces of the Malaya language which lie toward Meca (came) a lord of a city called Cauin. The name of this one was Sultan Yuso (Arabic Yusof), who according to what they say was king of that said city of Cauin, and he and his subjects departed from his kingdom and land bringing with him a great quantity of people in many ships, discovering many lands, and calling himself always king and lord of all the people he brought and calling them slaves. Following his voyage he arrived at the island of Borney on which they had some battles with the native Uisayas (Bisayas) so that they occupied them [the lands]; and having succeeded them (the Uisayas) well, he was settled some days in which he took a tongue of land and the fruits of it and found camphor, which is now to exist in other parts except this kingdom.
“… At the end of some days, he made port in the land of China: and asking permission in order to go ashore, he disembarked and went to see the king of China, whom he recognised as a superior king; and the said king of China conferred in him the title of king and gave him the insignia and royal (coat of) arms which nowadays the said king of Borney has; And seeing that the said Sultan Yuso was a bachelor, he married him to a Chinese woman. Accordingly it appears that the reason he persevered in the said kingdom of (Borney) was that she was a relative of the king of China. The said Chinese woman was lord of a city which was called Namtay in the kingdom of China, and the said Sultan Yuso made this marriage. He bade (farewell) to the king of China; and bringing his wife and the people with him, he returned to Borney, leaving in the said city of Namtay (one) who had charge of the rent as and property of his wife; and so (it is) nowadays although the natives of Namtay do not come with anything (for) the kings of Borney, not because the lords of the said city of Namtay have quit holding them (the rents), and they say the current rents are being held guarded for when some king of Borney might go there for it, the legacy.
“The said Sultan Yuso went to Borney. He settled there with his said slaves or vassals that he brought, and he put the native Uisayas (into) subjection, making them pay tribute. He had sons with the said (Chinese) wife. He died very old: and when he died, he left a tablet of gold. According to what they say it would be a fathom square and thin, on which he left mandates and they inscribed and wrote the kings of descended from him; and so they inscribed this said tablet which the same king kept and by his hand he inscribed his name. This tablet was lost when Doctor Fransisco de Sande, the governor who went from (these) Philippine islands, sacked Borney. It is understood that the old king, father of this one in whose possession it was, buried it or threw into the sea; and since the said king died at that time, he left no clarity (clear information) about what he did with the tablet.” [1]
It was thus, the enslavement of the remnant Visayans that were left in Islamic Nanyang (South China Sea) and Nusantara (Insular Southeast Asia), which caused the Visayans (Now Hiligaynons) who settled at Madj-as to ally with the Christian Spaniards (As well as some Butuanons, Warays and Cebuanos) in campaigns against the Bruneian Empire.
And at this point, as an ethnic group, as-a-whole, Visayans in the Visayas as contrast to the Visayans in former Srivijaya, became the high-bred sons and daughters of their Datus (Kings) who had refused to bow to the unjust rule of oppressive foreigners and were more loyal to the original Malayo-Polynesian culture, than the ones in the west, who had heaped on high-sounding Hindu or Islamic regnal titles upon themselves.
However, at that period, the Bruneian Empire had already territoriality surrounded the Visayans in an encircling pincer-movement and they (The Bruneians) were backed by the Islamic Caliphate and the Chinese Empire, of which, their respective Empires' dynasties were all inter-woven and had supported Brunei in the war against the Visayans. Furthermore, the Muslims already controlled most of the island-group of Luzon to the North and most of the island group of Mindanao to the south (Except the portions facing the Pacific Ocean). The Christianized Datus, had, when the Spanish arrived, then accepted baptism and gave great value to the even humbler honorific of merely being called "Dons" and "Doñas" in Spanish, rather than a full-on-King (Datu) in their native-language, as they formed part of the new Principalia.
They then supplied half of the troops used to punish the Warlords, (Maha)rajahs, Huangs, Sultans and puppet-Datus that accepted higher foreign ranks. And thereafter, the Visayans and Spanish forces came upon Islamic Manila, raided it and converted it. Then fought the Castille War against the Bruneian Empire. [2] Afterwards the Visayans soldiers and their Spanish captains, burned down Brunei's capital and destroyed their legendary 5-tiered floating Mosque and left. [3]
Thereafter, they decided not to invade and incorporate Brunei into the Philippines and was just content with exchanging and maintaining ties with a more amiable Sultan that thereafter rose to the throne.
Probably, in repentance to the sacking of their old edifices: in modern-times, the Philippine-owned Ayala corporation even built a grander Palace-Complex for the Sultanate of Brunei, the Istana Nurul Iman. When it was completed, the Istana Nurul Iman, became the largest residential palace in the world and the largest single family residence ever built. [4] Coincidentally, it was designed by the Visayas-born Leandro Locsin.
References
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Every source should be checked whether the Madja-as = Visayas equation applied. For example, quoting Scott when Scott himself didn't even make any Madja-as = Visayas equation should be avoided at all costs. The article has become excessively detailed because of the addition of irrelevant facts about Visayas, when there are better pages for topics regarding the irrelevant sections. For example, the whole "Religion of Madja-as" section is actually about the religion of the precolonial Visayas, which should belong to a separate section.
Also, the "Chinese accounts of Madja-as" are actually the accounts regarding Pisheya, and PiSHEYA != MADJA-AS unless you can provide me a reliable source that EXPLICITLY mentions that they are the same. According to the edit history:
https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Madja-as&diff=next&oldid=324235614
...the one who added the PISHEYA = MADJA-AS connection is Rene Bascos Sarabias Jr.. Please explain yourself and provide the source that EXPLICITLY mentions that PISHEYA = MADJA-AS. Stricnina ( talk) 19:04, 3 June 2019 (UTC)
The Spaniards reported three Mindanao chiefdoms strong enough to dominate their neighbors in the middle of the sixteenth century - Maguindanao, Butuan and Bisaya. Butuan was considered the wealthiest because of its gold, while Bisaya was considered the least of the three, though it is not clear where this Bisaya was. Earlier expeditions had called the east coast by this name (Vizaya), but Villalobos thought it was Davao Gulf - perhaps an ally or vassal of Buayan in the interior.
— W.H. Scott, Barangay: Sixteenth Century Philippine Culture and Society
Thanks, Stricnina, for scrupulously evaluating the use of reference materials in this article. I have checked two of these.
1.) Regarding the use of A History of the Orient (authored by the anthropologists G. Nye Steiger, H. Otley Beyer, Conrado Benitez, published in Oxford in 1929), I have a copy of the book and I can attest to you that the part of this article on the Datus from Borneo is almost copied verbatim, except for the spelling of certain terms, which had different forms a century ago (e.g., "Datu" instead of "Dato" in the book). In fact I placed a quote from the book, as you requested (cf. footnote n. 3) to attest to you that indeed the data were taken from existing printed material authored by well-known anthropologis, which specialized on Philippine studies. It's probably difficult to find a copy this book not in the Philippines. But you might be able to acquire a reprint online.
2.) As to this reference material: Gaspar de San Agustin, O.S.A., Conquistas de las Islas Filipinas (1565-1615), Manuel Merino, O.S.A., ed., Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas: Madrid 1975, the primary author of the data in the book is Gaspar de San Agustin, who lived during the early years of Spanish colonization in the Philippines. However, as you can see in the details of this reference material, the book is already a product of scientific use of the primary data by an editor, who obviously worked on this printed research material in collaboration with the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas or the Spanish National Research Council. So, you can be sure that it is not just a collection of raw materials.
Anyway, I'll try to help check the other reference materials on my free time. The article is of importance to Philippine history and to the local History of Panay. Let's help develop it. -- TLS MMM ( talk) 21:52, 22 June 2019 (UTC)
Dear Rene Bascos Sarabia Jr., I have read the source named "The Visayan Raiders of the China Coast, 1174-1190 AD" by Efren B. Isorena. Thank you for providing a source that is relevant to the discussion regarding who are the "Pisheya" of the Chinese accounts. It appears that my doubts regarding Pisheya != Madja-as aren't doubts anymore, we now have a source that explicitly states that the Pisheya would not have come from Panay and Cebu. From pp. 77-78:
If the Pi-sho-ye were from the Visayas, they would not have come from Panay or Cebu. Considering further that if a northward route to Formosa was to be made, with the South China Sea closed for pangayaw, the Pacific was the only logical alternate route going north. Of the Pintados islands, those oriented to the eastern Philippine Sea were Leyte, Samar, and Bicolandia.
— Efren B. Isorena
And on page 87, the author of the article arrives at the conclusion that the Pi-sho-ye comes from eastern Samar, which was called Ibabao during precolonial times:
Perhaps, then, the Pi-sho-ye were from Ibabao. Ibabao was the prehispanic Waray name for Samar's entire eastern coast and a portion of Samar's northern coast; the western coast was always known as Samar (Tramp 1995: 201). If Alcina's informants in seventeenth century Ibabao are to be believed, some families in that time claimed to remember the times when they launched maritime raids against the coastal villages of Bicolandia and they even remembered old stories about expeditions to China (Alcina cited in Scott 1982: 22). The people of Ibabao were noted to resort easily to raids for the slightest of reasons, such as to make an impression on a woman (Alcina in Scott 1982: 22). One important aspect of the pangayaw of Ibabao was that it was performed by people from "among the more influential and more powerful" (Alcina 2002: 77). This indicates that it was socially and politically, as well as economically, motivated.
— Efren B. Isorena
The source makes it clear that Madja-as has nothing to do with the Pi-she-ya raids. I am now allowed to delete information regarding Pi-she-ya raids in a Wiki entry about Madja-as as the two are not related whatsoever according to this academic source that we have. Stricnina ( talk) 19:09, 4 June 2019 (UTC)
Cf. F. Landa Jocano, Filipino Prehistory: Rediscovering Precolonial Heritage, Manila: 2000, p. 75.
If you are looking for literal reference in ancient text, contributors may not have found what you have in mind. But use interpolation and read carefully the article with more open mind. While current contributions might be wanting in what exactly you want, they are useful in leading those engaging in continuous search for reference on the subject for improving the article.
A more collaborative attitude might be useful, instead of an arrogant stance. Until now, I still have to see your concrete contribution so that we will see how you make scientific research. All that you have been doing is deleting.
I suggest that you stop deleting reference materials and sections of the article that could help contributors in searching for better options. There are better ways of expressing that although such citations and ideas are not convincing to some researchers, yet they are also subscribed to by others. The impression that you present in your edits and comments say that you beleive that you have the monopoly of knowledge. Wikipedia is a collaborative project. -- Sulbud ( talk) 06:54, 24 July 2019 (UTC)
Many of the provide sources, like the first-hand accounts of Miguel de Loarca and Gaspar de San Agustin and the outdated works written by Isabelo de los Reyes and H. Otley Beyer, failed to mention the connection between Madja-as and many of the claims written in the page. For example, most of what is written about the Religion of Precolonial Panay is included in this page, despite the fact that none of the sources provided explicitly mentioned that the beliefs of the Madja-as of the Maragtas and the historical Precolonial Panay encountered by the Spaniards overlap. The connection being made is only implicit and without a scholarly source that attests that the religion of Madja-as coincides with the religion of the people of Panay in the dawn of the Spanish colonization, many of the claims written in the page will be considered as original research, which Wikipedia specifically does not allow.
Other possible statements that constitute original research or outright speculation are the following:
I can keep on and on, however there are just too many of these claims without sufficient supporting scholarly references. I want everyone who contributed in this Wiki page to sufficiently address these issues and stop confounding precolonial Panay and the Madja-as of Maragtas: TLS MMM, Sulbud, Darwgon0801, PulauKakatua19, Yann, Mild Bill Hiccup, Jasper0070, etc. Stricnina ( talk) 11:34, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
Update: I have read the scholar Paul Morrow's take on the "Confederation of Madya-as". According to him:
In Maragtas, Monteclaro also told the story of the creation of the Confederation of Madya-as in Panay under the rule of Datu Sumakwel and he gave the details of its constitution. In spite of the importance that should be placed on such an early constitution and his detailed description of it, Monteclaro gave no source for his information. Also, it appears that the Confederation of Madya-as is unique to Monteclaro's book. It has never been documented anywhere else nor is it among the legends of the unhispanized tribes of Panay. (emphasis mine)
— Paul Morrow, "The Maragtas Legend", [ [1]
The quote is self-explanatory. According to him, the so-called "Madja-as" has no other significant mentions outside of Monteclaro's book. Therefore, the whole Wikipedia article is built upon speculations and original research regarding the existence of a confederation with a very dubious historicity. It is time to separate fact and fiction: the "Madja-as" page should address the legend of the Confederation of Madja-as and the rest of the irrelevant content such as the religion and society of the pre-colonial Panay should be migrated in a separate section. The page should focus on what the Confederation of Madja-as meant to Monteclaro's book, the historians' take on the very existence of Madya-as, and avoid as much as possible any irrelevant content that doesn't address Madja-as directly. In the meantime, I will later delete the supposed Sumatran origins of the Madja-as people as it has no basis in facts. Stricnina ( talk) 13:07, 2 July 2019 (UTC)
Do not dismiss a local account as totally unhistorical, just because it was not written by a western historian. The current methods used by contemporary historians might be unfairly dismissive of how local historians in the past record oral traditions. Monteclaro was not a professional historian in the contemporary standard.
In assessing his work, literary criticism has to be employed to identify vestiges of historical facts from literary embellishments. Too much rigidity would unfairly dismiss and errase knowledge of ancient history.
Here is his work, still preserved in one of the libraries in the U.S. Read, including how this man obtained data through oral tradition, which was lost through the hispanization of the Island. You can find out on page two the reference to Madja-as (spelled as Maydias) as the former name of Panay:
It is not true that traces of what Monteclaro mentioned in Maragtas could not be found in legends or literary treasures (also oral) of Panay. For example. Paubari and Labaodungon, who are among the main characters of Hinilawod (the longest and oldest epic of Panay, chanted by the binucots of the hintherland tribes called "Bukidnons") are also mentioned in "Maragtas" as descendants of the datus from Borneo. However, they are not presented by Monteclaro as mythical demigods (as Hinilawod presents them). So, there is a resonance between the oldest epic of Panay with that of "Maragtas". Although the Filipino anthropologist F. Landa Jocano already discovered the Hinilawod in 1955, it seemd that William Henry Scott, who wrote his thesis in the University of Santo Tomas in 1968, was not cognisant of this cultural treasure of the Island. Thus, probably finding nothing that confirms the presence of traces of elements common to Hinilawod and Maragtas. I doubt your Paul Morrow is either aware of this.
Monteclaro's style of writing history might not be like how Scott or Morrow does it. It is clear from the text that he wrote his own annotations, too. He was not just copying. This explains the presence of Spanish terms. Whatever written text he claimed to have used as basis for his work, appears to be old notes that were attempts to write oral tradition.
I observe that his account of the Datus exploration and colonization of the Island of Maydias contains old names of towns, or names of barangays that are now parts of towns with different names. This is again some proof of the antiquity of the account.
The exact data of locations of rivers in places (old names or names of certain barangays that are now parts of towns established during the Spanish regime) in the islands of Panay (referred to as Madyias in the Maragtas) and Negros (referred to as the island of Buglas) cannot be expected from somebody who only studied the caton and some ability to count, and whose work experience was limited only to being a sacristan in Villa (Arevalo) and Janiuay. How could he invent all those precise data? Was he travelling in the mid 1800s, when the probable means of transport around the two islands of Panay and Negros was the batil? How could a sacristan have such a luxury to travel for exploration?
How was he able to know the names of months used during the pre-colonial times, whose traces can only be found from unschooled old farmers and fishermen (even now), and were almost forgotten by the learned during his time?
Or probably, was it Fr. Santaren's invention? But how could a Spaniard obtain such precise data about the geography and old names of towns, barangays, islands and rivers?
Such precision of data seems to have been from a person or persons, who were able to explore the two islands prior to Spanish colonialization. That ancient writer is the primary author, and the nature of his work (written or oral) cannot be determined because what Monteclaro wrote already has his annotations and personal narrative. Certainly, because of Monteclaro's claim to have based his account on certain old manuscripts of Maragtas, attempts were made to put the story into writing. Unlike Hinilawod, what was written in Maragtas appears to be an attempt to write history - the indigenous style as nmanifested in the writer's knowledge of the geography and culture of ancient Panay. Though, not as fantasy-laden as Hinilawod, Maragtas is not lacking of mythical accounts, e.g., appearance of mermaid and mythical crocodile which brought Kapinangan, wife of Datu Sumakwel to the island of Dipologan. That is why, textual and literary criticism is needed to identify, which are elements of factual history, from literary embellishment, which was not uncommon during the pre-colonial times.
Reading the Maragtas, without paying attention to how it was written by Monteclaro, to the author's background, and to the culture and geography of Panay and Negros is a huge error for historians.
Historians should re-evaluate their outlook toward this text. More attentive textual criticism and knowledge of the actual territory and its culture is needed.
H. Otley Beyer, who made pioneering research on Philippine anthropology, cannot just be dismissed as outdated. Perhaps there were things he discovered that contemporary anthropologists and historians overlooked.
Some filipino historians accuse the Spaniards of errasing traces of pre-colonial history and culture. I think, some contemporary historians, both local and foreign, are collaborating toward this purpose. They are actually making this succeed.
Check this:
"... los arayas que es una cierta Parcialidad de pueblos se van a una sierra muy Alta se llama mayas que esta en la ysla de Panay..." Miguel de Loarca, Relacion de las Yslas Filipinas (Arevalo, June 1582) in Blair, Emma Helen & Robertson, James Alexander, eds. (1903). The Philippine Islands, 1493–1803. Volume 05 of 55 (1582–1583). Historical introduction and additional notes by Edward Gaylord Bourne. Cleveland, Ohio: Arthur H. Clark Company. ISBN 978-0554259598. OCLC 769945704. Read pages 128 and 130.
That is probably the most that you could have about Madja-as from what was written by foreigners, if all you want is something according to the standard of foreign historians. Dismiss this and classify the article as legend, and you will make what Spaniards probably wished in colonizing and christianizing Panay. Congratulations! -- Sulbud ( talk) 07:31, 24 July 2019 (UTC)
I'm systemically editing/removing/changing many of the pages that mention Madja-as and Maragtas that present both as historical facts. I will not be removing them entirely in some instances but I will mention the legendary status of Madja-as and that Maragtas is not based on historical facts backed up by verifiable evidence. I will be linking to this talk page in those articles' various talk pages. If anyone wants to help me, feel free. I already did some edits for Iloilo#History. Chicbicyclist ( talk) 03:52, 22 May 2020 (UTC)