PH Ethnic Groups
PH Ethnic Groups
PH Ethnic Groups
The majority of the population is composed of ethnolinguistic( groups whose languages are
Austronesian also known as Malayo-Polynesian in origin. Many of these groups converted to
Christianity, particularly the lowland-coastal groups, and adopted many foreign elements of
culture. Ethnic groups include the Cebuano, Ilocano, Pangasinense, Kapampangan, Tagalog,
Bicolano, Waray, Surigaonon, Zamboangueo and Hiligaynon who are also called Ilonggo.
In western Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago, there are indigenous groups who practice Islam.
The Spanish called them Moros after the Moors (despite no resemblance or cultural ties to them
apart from their religion). In the Agusan Marsh and the highlands of Mindanao, there are native
ethnic groups collectively known as the Lumad. Unlike the Moros, these people do not practice
Islam, and maintain their animistic beliefs and traditions though some of them have converted to
Christianity as well.
The Negrito are a pre-Austronesian people who migrated from mainland Asia and were one of
the earliest human beings to settle the Philippines, around 90,000 years ago. The first known
were the people of the Callao Man remains. The Negrito population was estimated in 2004 at
around 31,000. Their tribal groups include the Ati, and the Aeta. Their ways of life remain
mostly free from Western and Islamic influences. Scholars study them to try to understand preHispanic culture.
Most Filipinos are Malayo-Polynesian, a major group within the Austronesian language family.
Other ethnic groups form a minority in the Philippine population. These include those of
Japanese, Han Chinese, Indians, Americans, Spanish, Europeans, and other ethnic groups from
other countries. Mixed-race individuals are known as Filipino mestizo.
The color of the province denotes the largest ethnic group within that province, according to the
2000 census.
A 2008 genetic study showed no evidence of a large-scale Taiwanese migration into the
Philippines. The Leeds University study, published in Molecular Biology and Evolution, showed
that mitochondrial DNA lineages have been evolving within Island Southeast Asia (ISEA) since
modern humans arrived approximately 50,000 years ago.
Population history
Prehistoric Tabon Man, found in Palawan in 1962 was, until 2007, the oldest human remains
discovered by anthropologists in the Philippines. Archaeological evidence indicates similarities
with two early human fossils found in Indonesia and China, called the Java Man and Peking
Man. In 2007, a single metatarsal from an earlier fossil was discovered in Callao Cave,
Peablanca, Cagayan. That earlier fossil was named as Callao Man.
The Negritos, several ethnic groups of the Australoid race, arrived about 30,000 years ago and
occupied several scattered areas throughout the islands. Recent archaeological evidence
described by Peter Bellwood claimed that the ancestors of Filipinos, Malaysians, and
Indonesians first crossed the Taiwan Strait during the Prehistoric period. These early mariners
are thought to be the Austronesian people (Malayo-Polynesian). They used boats to cross the
oceans, and settled into many regions of Southeast Asia, the Polynesian Islands, and Madagascar.
By the 14th century, the Malayo-Polynesian ethnic group had dominated and displaced the
Negrito population in most areas. Traders from southern China, Japan, India, Malaysia, and
Indonesia, also contributed to the ethnic, and cultural development of the islands.
By the 16th century, Spanish colonization brought new groups of people to the Philippines.
Many settled in the Philippines, and some intermarried with the indigenous population, although
intermarriage was slight. This gave rise to the Filipino mestizo or individuals of mixed
Austronesian and Spanish descent.
Far more numerous were Chinese immigrant workers, known as sangley, as many Chinese
historically had been traders. They intermarried with Filipinos, and their children and
descendants were called mestizo de sangley. The mestizo de sangleys were far more numerous
than mestizos of Spanish descent. By the 19th century, the more successful among them had
risen to become wealthy major landowners. They could afford to have their children educated in
elite institutions in the Philippines and Europe.
By the opening of the Suez Canal in the 1800s, the Spanish opened the Philippines for foreign
trade. Europeans such as the British, Germans, and French settled in the islands to do business.
By the end of the Spanish colonial period, the native ethnic groups of the Philippines began
calling themselves Filipinos, a term that had begun as self-identification for persons of Spanish
descent born in the Philippines.
Following its victory in the Spanish-American War, the United States created a colonial authority
in the Philippines in 1898. Military troops and businessmen made their way to the country,
bringing in new ethnic groups, culture and language. In the late 19th century, some Americans
proposed resettling African Americans in the Philippines, because of discrimination against them
in the South, particularly. Post-American Civil War violence against the freedmen had gone on as
southern whites struggled for political and economic dominance. The resettlement idea did not
get implemented.
The Philippines has over 180 indigenous ethnic groups, over half of which represent unique
linguistic groups.
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Ethnic
group(s)
Image
Description(s)
Bicolano
Gaddang
Ibanag
Ilokano
Notes
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Ethnic
group(s)
Image
Description(s)
Ivatan
Kapampangan
Moro
Pangasinense
Notes
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Ethnic
group(s)
Image
Description(s)
They originated from the northwestern
seaboard of Luzon and predominantly
reside in the Pangasinan province.
Sambal
Subanon
Notes
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Ethnic
group(s)
Tagalog
Visayan
Image
Description(s)
The Tagalogs, the settlers of Manila and its
surrounding areas, are one of the most
widespread groups of people in the
Philippines. The Tagalog language was
chosen as an official language of the
Philippines in the 1930s. Today, Filipino, a
de facto version of Tagalog, is taught
throughout the islands. As of the 2000
census, there were about 21.5 million
speakers of Tagalog in the Philippines, 23.8
million worldwide.
The term Visayan refers to a cluster of
lowland ethnolinguistic groups who refer to
themselves as Bisaya and mainly reside in
the Visayas region. Some of these
individuals are also found in some parts of
Mindanao. These particular groups share
nearly the same history, maritime
civilization mostly around the Visayan Sea,
culture and traditions. As such, their
languages mostly within the Visayan island
group were said to be actually one dialect
continuum of Visayan due to their great
lexical and grammatical semblance to each
other. It was also hypothesized that
scattered present-day Visayans originated
from a proto-ethnic group that fled Sri
Vijaya, a major thalassocratic empire in
Southeast Asia during 13th century. Based
on estimates from the 2010 census, there
are currently around 33 million ethnic
Visayans.
There are various Visayan languages
spoken in the Central Philippine region.
They mostly include Cebuano, Ilonggo, and
Waray-Waray. Smaller language groups are
Romblomanon, Kinaray-a Aklanon and
Masbatenyo. Although having their
indigenous language classified as Visayan
by linguists, some ethnic groups do not
identify themselves as part of the Visayan
Notes
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Ethnic
group(s)
Image
Description(s)
Notes
Zamboangueo
Tribal groups
There are more than 100 highland, lowland, and coastland tribal groups in the Philippines. These
include:
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Name(s)
Batak
Bugkalot
image
Description
The Batak is a group of
indigenous Filipino people that
resides in the northeast portion
of Palawan.
Also called Ilongot, this 2,500person tribe lives in the
southern Sierra Madre and
Caraballo Mountains, on the
east side of Luzon Island in the
Notes
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Name(s)
image
Description
Notes
Igorot
Ilongots
Kagayanen
Lumad
Mangyan
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Name(s)
Molbog
Negrito
groups
image
Description
Notes
The Negrito are several ethnic The Negrito, Aeta, Batak, and
groups of the Australoid race Mamanwa live in remote areas
who inhabit isolated parts of throughout the islands.
Southeast Asia. Their current
populations include 12
Andamanese peoples of the
Andaman Islands, six Semang
peoples of Malaysia, the Mani
of Thailand, and the Aeta,
Agta, Ati, and 30 other peoples
of the Philippines. Genetically,
Negritos are the most distant
human population from
Africans at most loci studied
thus far (except for MC1R,
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Name(s)
image
Description
Notes
Palawan
Tribes
Pala'wan
Tagbanwa
people
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Name(s)
image
Description
Notes
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Name(s)
image
Description
Notes
Others practice fishing,
hunting and industrial arts.
Their social organizations are
based on family (kin ties),
band (type of substinence
activity) and settlement
(geographic location).
Suludon
The Philippine Statistics Department does not account for the racial background or
ancestry of an individual. The official number of all types of Filipino mestizos who reside
inside and outside of the Philippines remains unknown.
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name
Chinese
Descriptions
Filipinos of Chinese ancestry form a minority in the Philippine population. Most
migrations of Chinese to the Philippines started even before the Spanish colonial
period, when foreign trade with other countries were opened to the Philippines. The
ethnically Chinese Filipinos comprise 1.3% (1.1 million) of the population.
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name
Descriptions
Arabs
the Arabs form a minority in the Philippine population. Their official population is
unknown.
Indian
Indians form a minority in the Philippine population and have been in the
Philippines since pre-colonial times. They have contributed to the unique cultural
blend in the Philippines. One source estimated the size of the Indian community in
the Philippines in 2008 at 150,000 persons. Most Indians in the Philippines belong
to either Sindhi people or Punjabi people ethnic groups, and are largely businessmen
and traders. A smaller population of Indians belonging to the Marathi ethnic group
form part of the clergy of Roman Catholic dioceses in the country.
Koreans
Other