FORT SAN PEDRO

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A monument to Cebu’s turbulent past, the Fort San Pedro in Cebu City served different purposes at various times in the island’s history.

The fort began as a single triangular bastion when it was first built with logs and mud in 1565, with Spanish conquistador Miguel Lopez de Legazpi breaking ground for the structure. It served as the nucleus of the first Spanish settlement in the Philippines.

Fort San Pedro is the oldest and smallest fort in the Philippines. Built by the Spaniards to repel sieges by hostile natives and Muslim pirates, the fort was deemed finished in 1738, some 200 years after it started construction.

The fort’s name was taken from Legaspi’s flagship “San Pedro” in which he sailed the Pacific Ocean in 1565. Little was known about the fort from its construction in 1565 until it was mentioned in 1739 in an official report to King Philip II of Spain.

In the report, the fort–Fuerza San Pedro–was described as triangular in shape, made of stone and mortar, and with three bastions named La Concepcion, (southwest side), Ignacio de Loyola (southeast), and San Miguel (northeast).

The report also told of a large building called the “Cuerpor de Guardia”, where personnel that manned the fort lived; a “Vivende del Teniente”, the sleeping quarters of the fort lieutenant; a well; and a powder magazine that served as storage for the fort’s arms and gunpowder supply.

The structure was also described as having a total area of 2,025 square meters, with walls that are 20 feet high and eight feet thick, and towers that rise 30 feet from the ground.

Over the centuries, the fort had many uses.

It became a prison for local rebels during the Philippine revolution from 1896 to 1898.

The fort was turned over to Cebuanos by American Commodore George Dewey after the decisive Battle of Manila Bay, which happened on May 1, 1898 or a few days after war was declared between Spain and the United States.

The fort at one time or another also became the American Warwick Barracks during the American Regime, got turned into classrooms where Cebuanos received formal education from 1937 to 1941, used as prison camp and fortification for Japanese soldiers during World War II or from 1941 to 1945, served as hospital when battle for liberation was fought, and became an army camp from 1946 to 1950.

The Cebu Garden Club took over and turned the inner part of the fort into a miniature garden in 1950 while its upper deck served as offices for government agencies. The fort courtyard was used as a zoo in 1957.

In ruins and with only its two towers recognizable in 1968, the fort underwent restoration. Coral stones from under the seas of Cebu’s coastal towns were used to restore the fort to make it as close to the original as possible.

Fort San Pedro is now a museum-park where Spanish artifacts, documents, paintings, sculptures, sword fragments, cannons, and helmets and Ming porcelain pieces of various sizes are displayed.

Visitors pay a nominal 10-peso fee to enter the tourism landmark. The fort is located in Barangay San Roque in Cebu City. In front of the fort is another city landmark, the Plaza Independencia, and to its side is the Cebu Central Post Office, which is near Pier 1.

http://living.cebunetwork.com/fort-san-pedro-cebu-city/2006/05/15/

MAGELLAN’S CROSS

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Close to 500 years ago, Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan planted a huge Christian cross in Sugbu (now Cebu) to celebrate the baptism into the Roman Catholic religion of island chief Rajah Humabon, his wife, and some 500 of their followers on April 21, 1521.

The 485-year-old cross, called Magellan’s Cross, now stands at a small chapel located across Cebu City Hall and along Magallanes Street. The street is named after Magellan, Magallanes being the Spanish translation of the Portuguese explorer’s name.

A sign below the cross says the original Magellan’s Cross is encased in the tindalo wood cross displayed in the center of the chapel. This is to protect it from people who chipped away parts of the cross believing it has miraculous powers or as souvenirs. Some, however, say that the original cross planted by Magellan was destroyed or lost and what stands there now is a replacement planted by Spaniards who came after the Portuguese explorer.

Magellan was killed on April 27, 1521 in what is now known as the Battle of Mactan. The Portuguese explorer died when his men fought Mactan natives led by the island’s chieftain, Lapu-Lapu.

Cebu City Hall now uses the cross as a symbol and the chapel’s image can be found in the city seal. Many other Cebu-based government and non-government organizations use Magellan’s Cross in their seals and logos.

The cross is a popular tourist attraction together with other Cebu historical landmarks like the Fort San Pedro, built by the Spanish conquistador who came some 40 years after Magellan, and the Basilica Minore del Sto. Niño, considered the oldest church in the Philippines.

Within the vicinity of Magellan’s Cross are Cebu guitar vendors and shellcraft and woodcraft displays. The products are popular with the locals and tourists.

Magellan’s Cross, as with many areas and landmarks in Cebu, is currently being renovated and restored in preparation for the province’s hosting of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) Summit this December.

ALEXIA MARI CHRISTENING

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Welcome to the Christian World ! . . . Alexia Mari

The angels light another star
each time there is a birth,
to celebrate each precious child
the good Lord sends to earth.

One tiny hand to guide and hold,
One tiny life to shape and mold;
each child, a gift from God above,
a symbol of His strength and love.

Twinkle, twinkle tiny light,
little eyes that shine so bright,
a precious baby from heaven above,
fills our hearts with so much love.

ALEXIA MARI S. OBDIANELA Christening
November 19, 2006

Basilica Minor of st. Michael Archangel, Tayabas Quezon
Casitas Hotel, Tayabas Quezon

BASILICA MINOR DEL SANTO NINO

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The church was built by Miguel Lopez de Legaspi and Fr. Andres Urdaneta
on the site where the image of Santo Nino was found in 1565. The church
was however destroyed by fire on November 1, 1568 and was subsequently
rebuilt in 1602 under the administration of Juan Albaran and was
rehabilitated in 1740.

On May 1965, the church was conferred the title of Basilica Minor del
Santo Nino
by Cardinal Antonuitte, Papal Legate during the Fourth
Centennial celebration of the Christianization of Cebu.

In 1521 Ferdinand Magellan gave the Santo Nino Image to Queen Juana as
a baptismal gift. Some 40years later in 1565 Miguel Lopez arrived in
Cebu and on finding the native extremely hostile he an his army
besieged the settlement and set fire to it.

It was in one of these burnt out homes that a soldier Juan Camus found
the image of the Santo Nino unscathed. From that point the Cebuanos
have venerated the image as their Patron Saint.

The image is kept in the Parish Convent and a replica adorned with gold and precious stones and enshrined behind glass is housed in a side alter inside the Basilica Minor Del Santo Nino.

Pit Senor Sto. Nino!

MAYOR VERING NADRES LUAU PARTY !!!

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Birthday Blessings

Instead of counting candles,
Or tallying the years,
Contemplate your blessings,
As your birthday nears.

Consider special people
Who love you, and who care,
And others who?ve enriched your life
Just by being there.

Think about the memories
Passing years can never mar,
Experiences great and small
That have made you who you are.

Another year is a happy gift,
So cut your cake, and say,
"Instead of counting birthdays,
I count blessings every day!"

October 29, 2006
Kundiman Bar & Restaurant
Tayabas, Quezon

13th HALOWEEN PARTY

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The invites:

TRICK OR TREAT ? . . . PLENTY OF TREATS . . . OR MAYBE A TRICKS . . .
YOU ARE INVITED TO JOIN OUR
13TH HALOWEEN PARTY AT MARDIO’S HAUS ON
OCT. 31, 9:31PM . . . ITS GONNA BE A BOOTIFUL WHITE WATERING PARTY . .
. PLS. COME IN WHITE !

TODOS LOS SANTOS “UNDRAS”

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Todos los Santos ‘Undras’ began as a very solemn occasion where every
Filipino (at least the Christian/Catholic ones) go to cemeteries where
their relatives are buried and conduct a vigil there. Undras at its
core is a very Filipino tradition that emmbodies the value of family
ties, family unity.

They would visit the cemetery the day before to clean up the burial
site (repaint the tombstones, mow the grass around the grave, etc) so
that on the day itself, the grave would look respectable.

And on the day itself, people are probably in a somber mood while they
pray for the souls of their departed relatives in the hopes of getting
them out of purgatory.

Nowadays though, it?s a more pleasant and merry occassion. It becomes a
chance for relatives to have a get-together. Of course there is still
the prayers but there is also the catching up with family and relatives afterwards.

Tayabas Municipal Cemetery
Lovely Meadow Memorial Park
Tayabas, Quezon