| Item Call Number |
GE00134 |
| Status |
Available |
| Barcode |
GE00134 |
| Local Free-text Call Number (oclc) |
- Classification number - GE00134
|
| Main Entry |
- Corporate name or jurisdiction name as entry element - Ayala Museum Research Team
|
| Title Statement |
- Title - Bohol provincial capitol
- Statement of responsibility, etc. - Ayala Museum Research Team
|
| General Note |
- General note - Capitol building in Tagbilaran City. When the Jesuit missionaries first arrived in Bohol in 1596, the island was a part of Cebu and was called recidencia, headed by a Spanish encomendero named Pedro de Gamboa. It had many villages, combined into six by the Jesuits to facilitate the conversion of natives to Catholicism. The largest towns then were Loboc, Baclayon and Maribojoc (then called Malabohoc) with the smaller villages of Panglao, Inabangan and Caypilan (Cabilao) attached to the larger ones as visitas. On July 22, 1854, it became a separate province by virtue of a royal decree which made it a politico-military province together with the island of Siquijor which is now a part of Negros. This statues remained until the end of the Spanish regime.
|
| Additional Physical Form Available Note |
- Additional physical form available note - With prints
|
| Immediate Source Of Acquisition Note |
- Source of acquisition - Filipinas Heritage Library
|
| Ownership And Custodial History |
- History - Filipinas Heritage Library
|
| Subject Chronological Term |
- Chronological term - 1970
|
| Subject Topical Term |
- Topical term or geographic name as entry element - Provinces and cities
|
| Subject Geographic Name |
- Geographic name - Tagbilaran City
|
| Subject Faceted Topical Term |
- Focus term - 1970
- Focus term - amrt
- Focus term - architecture
- Focus term - bohol
- Focus term - seat of provincial government
- Focus term - tagbilaran
- Focus term - visayas
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