Anao, Tarlac
Encyclopedia
Anao is a 5th class municipality in the province of Tarlac, Philippines
Philippines
The Philippines , officially known as the Republic of the Philippines , is a country in Southeast Asia in the western Pacific Ocean. To its north across the Luzon Strait lies Taiwan. West across the South China Sea sits Vietnam...

. According to the latest census, it has a population of 10,806 people in 2,086 households.

As the smallest municipality, Anao covers a total land area of 23.87 square kilometres. The area occupied by the municipality was formerly a part of Pangasinan
Pangasinan
Pangasinan is a province of the Republic of the Philippines. The provincial capital is Lingayen. Pangasinan is located on the west central and peripheral area of the island of Luzon along the Lingayen Gulf, with the total land area being 5,368.82 square kilometers . According to the latest census,...

. It is 34 kilometers east of the provincial capitol and nestling on the Tarlac-Nueva Ecija border. Located in the north-eastern part of Tarlac, it is bounded on the north by San Manuel
San Manuel, Tarlac
San Manuel is a 5th class municipality in the province of Tarlac, Philippines. According to the latest census, it has a population of 23,463 people in 4,176 households.-Barangays:San Manuel is politically subdivided into 15 barangays.* Colubot* Lanat...

, in the east by Nampicuan
Nampicuan, Nueva Ecija
Nampicuan is a 5th class municipality in the province of Nueva Ecija, Philippines. According to the latest census, it has a population of 11,786 people in 2,227 households.-History:...

, on the south by the Ramos
Ramos, Tarlac
Ramos is a 4th class municipality in the province of Tarlac, Philippines. According to the latest census, it has a population of 16,889 people in 3,528 households.-Barangays:Ramos is politically subdivided into 9 barangays.* Coral-Iloco* Guiteb...

 and on the west by the Paniqui
Paniqui, Tarlac
Paniqui is a first class municipality in the province of Tarlac, Philippines. According to the latest census, it has a population of 83,311 people in 16,828 households....

 and Moncada
Moncada, Tarlac
Moncada is a 1st class municipality in the province of Tarlac, Philippines. According to the latest census, it has a population of 54,547 people in 10,144 households.-Barangays:Moncada is politically subdivided into 37 barangays.* Ablang-Sapang...

.

History

The area where Anao is located was inhabited before 1800 by people from the Ilocos Region
Ilocos Region
The Ilocos region or Region I is a Region of the Philippines and is located in the northwest of Luzon. It borders to the east the regions of the Cordillera Administrative Region and Cagayan Valley and to the south the region of Central Luzon...

. In 1835, a group of immigrants from Paoay, Ilocos Norte
Paoay, Ilocos Norte
Paoay is a 4th class municipality in the province of Ilocos Norte, Philippines. According to the latest census, it has a population of 23,117 people in 4,567 households.-Barangays:Paoay is politically subdivided into 32 barangays.* Bacsil* Cabagoan...

 reached the region and first settled near a creek on the bank where there were balete trees. These immigrants called their settlement "Balete". The immigrants found that the region where they settled has many agricultural prospects and this attracted more immigrants who came from the north, especially from the town of Paoay. The settlement expanded and became a barrio named Balete which later changed to Barrio Anao deriving from the Ilocano word "Danao" which means creek. By that time, balete trees were extinguished and the barrio was adjacent in all directions by creeks. Paniqui then stood as one municipality and had a road extended toward the east to Barrio Anao. Paniqui had more rights to claim Anao as its barrio and the people of the barrio accepted the claim.

RESURECCION DE KATIPUNAN: Anao, 1900

by: Lino L. Dizon, Ph.D.
Center for Tarlaqueflo Studies
Tarlac State University

The town of Anao is poised drowsily but placidly on the extremity of the province of Tarlac, towards the trail-blaze of the rising sun. Its stolid folks, composed of ostly Ilokano migrants from the same sun-scorched Ilocos region with drippings of Tagalogs from the Nueva Ecija border, believed that their stoic town’s etymology was from the symbolic and verdant anahaw, (Livistona rotundifolia). Tradition had it that some icmo (betel leaf) vendors of yore, descending for the pueblo of Paniqui, propagated stories on the abundance of anahaw from this remote place (then only a barrio of the latter); thus the said palm becoming the reference point. It was gelded to anao to achieve a mellifluous sound, for the sake of the rigid natangken Ilocano tongue. But for the rest, tracing the town’s provenance from the gregarious panau or kogon, (Imperata cylidrica), is more apt, considering the geographical fact that Tarlac province largely emerged out of an enormous slope of the tarlac plant, resembling the cogonales.

It was only during the last quarter of Spanish rule, on March 16, 1870 (three years prior to the formation of the alcaldia of Tarlac) that Anao became an independent pueblo from its matriarch, Paniqui. Don Fruto Pastor, a brawny Ilokano from Paoay, Ilocos Norte and part of the first wave of immigrants and pioneering settlers of the former barrio, became its first Gobernadorcillo. Yet, the matrilineal relationship persisted for some time more, especially on economic and ecclesiastical spheres.

Some people believed that Anao was actually derived from anaoang, an Ilocano word for an indigenous boiler for cooking sugar; which was made of a chimney with a covered viaduct. This type of sugar produce was then sold at the Paniqui poblacion. Later on, with the installation of the more efficient muscovados and sugar mills in Paniqui, the farmers of Anao had to transport their harvest of sugar cane in their mother town. Hitherto, Paniqui has been providential in meeting the basic needs of the people of Anao; as a mercado of their products and necessities. And though the town was politically separated from Paniqui in 1870, it was only in 1930 that an independent parish (dedicated to San Juan de Nepomuceno) was erected for the former; spawning for its inhabitants a tedious period of spiritual dependence on the Vicariate of Santa Rosa (Paniqui), which was one of the oldest in the province. By deduction, it could be assumed that Anao’s history is a mere penumbra to the very lucid and historical path of Paniqui.

Nevertheless, like in an abanico made of anahaw needle-leaves, there could be intricate designs in its otherwise simplistic smalltown history. And looking intently on the details of such tapestry, it is possible that certain segments could be illuminated and it will not surprising that these could overshadow the enormous history of the mother town itself.

For one, there was Anao’s heroic but largely forgotten son, Don Procopio Evangelista, a proto-martyr of the Revolution; not only of the province but of the whole Philippine archipelago. A respected principalia of the town, he was its gobernadorcillo in 1891 - 1892. Don Procopio was also responsible for the proliferation of Masonic members in Tarlac. With the eventual crackdown of the instigators of the Revolution in 1896, he was imprisoned by Spanish authorities at the Bilibid on charges of sedition, together with some prominent Tarlaqueno citizens. And as relayed by Teodoro M. Kalaw, they were meted death penalty through the firing squad at Bagumbayan on December 14, 1896; two weeks earlier than that of the national hero, Dr. Jose Rizal.

Almost a year later, on November 17, 1897, while the Tarlaqueño general, Francisco Makabulos, was embattled in his campaigns against the massive Spanish brigade of General Ricardo Monet on the footholds of Sinukuan (Mt. Arayat), the revolucionarios of Anao stormed the colonial arsenal in the town plaza; only to be repulsed, however, by the superior arms of the enemies.

On October 23, 1899, concurrent with the appointment of Tarlac town as the capital of the Aguinaldo revolutionary government, Msgr. Gregorio Aglipay summoned the Filipino clergy in the church of Paniqui. Known as the infamous Paniqui Assembly in history, it brought forth the controversial Constituciones Provisionales de la Iglesia Filipina that provided temporary regulations for the church in the Philippines due to the exigencies of war (and forerunning the schism with the Roman Catholic Church or the Iglesia Catolica Apostolica Romana). Yet, old folks of San Francisco, Anao, according to W.H. Scott, were persistent that the assembly actually took place in their humble chapel; perhaps a way of saying that their Madre Iglesia was again tampering on their role.

But of interest on the role of Anao during the revolution was an insurrecto document of November 22, 1900 that fell into the hands of the American military historian, J.R.M. Taylor. It was about the reconvening of a Katipunan Society in the town. As a backgrounder, Emilio Aguinaldo, upon his assumption as the undisputed leader of the Revolution and with the eventual death of Andres Bonifacio in 1897, called for the disbandment of the Katipunan; to pave the way for the revolutionary character of the struggle. Yet, with the collapse of the Revolutionary government in Tarlac on November 10, 1899 against the American invaders, the desperado Aguinaldo exhorted for the resurrection of the Katipunan in the localities that had continued the fight for independence; mainly through sporadic and remnant guerilla units.

Don Isidro Pantaleon, with the nom-de-guerre Patalim, being the revolutionary secretary of the pueblo of Anao, attested on the response of the people on the exhortation of their beleaguered president.

The meeting was held at an undisclosed house in Anao, at 2:00 p.m, presided by Kapatid Domingo Kanon. The first and foremost agenda was on the reorganization of Katipunan in the town, following the instructions of the Commanding General of Central Luzon (the limping body organized by Aguinaldo to supervise what was left of the revolutionary army) as read by Kapatid Restituto Javier, with the nom-de-guerre Mapangahas, to “promptly obtain the independence of our beloved country.” Other matters agreed upon were the formation of a special police body against traitors to “the holy cause which we defend” and for the provision of an efficient mailing system to be abreast with the system of communication. There was also a tone of anticipation that members who joined the resurrected Katipunan would be eligible for inclusion in the regular army of the Republic and would “stand ready to perform such service as our country may call upon them to perform, they will not be permitted to excuse themselves from the performance of such duty and in case of disobedience on their part such punishment as the other brothers consider fitting will be inflicted.” And taking their oaths before God and Country, the members adjourned, with the agreement that the secrets of the reconvened society would not be revealed - or guilty ones would be punished with death!

Nothing was heard again of this resurrection. But in reviewing the date of the said assembly, a striking phenomenon could be gleaned; i.e., it was convened at a time when majority of the revolutionaries in the province of Tarlac (including General Makabulos who surrendered five months earlier), and the whole archipelago for that matter, had already given up the fight. By that time also, the complacent Tarlaquenos, as most Filipinos, were brushing their English to welcome the victorious Americans. Who would have thought indeed that in a far-flung area of the province a couple of hard-headed and misinformed revolucionarios was still optimistic that the Filipinos would achieve their independence?

Some people of Anao are not convinced of the flora origins of their town; rather they thought of it as danao, an Ilokano for creek. It might have been far-fetched, but there is a near-truth that would be revealed: i.e., the stance of the town at the expanse of the revolution. Unlike the bigger towns of the province that have portrayed themselves as enormous water-worlds at the initial phase of the struggle only to succumb to its tempers and finally to stagnate; Anao was a stream that ever flowed, on the mainstream of our history.

(Originally appeared in Tarlac Observer, Vol. VI, 12, Sept. 22-26, 1996)

Demographics

Anao is predominantly an Ilocano-speaking town although most are fluent in Tagalog
Tagalog language
Tagalog is an Austronesian language spoken as a first language by a third of the population of the Philippines and as a second language by most of the rest. It is the first language of the Philippine region IV and of Metro Manila...

. Other languages like Kapampangan
Kapampangan language
The Pampangan language, or Kapampangan , is one of the major languages of the Philippines. It is the language spoken in the province of Pampanga, the southern half of the province of Tarlac and the northern portion of the province of Bataan. Kapampangan is also understood in some barangays of...

 and Pangasinan
Pangasinan language
The Pangasinan language or Pangasinense is one of the twelve major languages in the Philippines....

 are spoken by about 10% of the population.

Aglipayan and Roman Catholicism are two of the predominant religions.

Barangays

Anao is politically subdivided into 18 barangay
Barangay
A barangay is the smallest administrative division in the Philippines and is the native Filipino term for a village, district or ward...

s.
  • Baguindoc (Baguinloc)
  • Bantog
  • Campos
  • Carmen
  • Casili
  • Don Ramon
  • Hernando
  • Poblacion
  • Rizal
  • San Francisco East
  • San Francisco West
  • San Jose North
  • San Jose South
  • San Juan
  • San Roque
  • Santo Domingo
  • Sinense
  • Suaverdez

  • External links

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