Presentation 5
Presentation 5
Presentation 5
MIndanao
MANOBO
Manobo simply means “people” or
“person”; alternate names include Manuvu
and Minuvu. The term may have
originated from “Mansuba,” a
combination of man (people) and suba
(river).
The total national population including the
subgroups is 749,042 (NM 1994); occupying
core areas from Sarangani island into the
Mindanao mainland in the provinces of Agusan
del Sur, Davao provinces, Bukidnon, and North
and South Cotabato.
The groups occupy such a wide area of
distribution that localized groups have assumed
the character of distinctiveness as a separate
ethnic grouping such as the Bagobo or the
Higaonon, and the Atta. Depending on specific
linguistic points of view, the membership of a
dialect with a supergroup shifts.
Groups of Manobo Dancers
A tentative but more specific classification that needs
attention divides the Manobo into a number of major
groups, some of which are:
(1) Ata subgroup: Dugbatang, Talaingod, and
Tagauanum;
(2) Bagobo subgroup: Attaw (Jangan, Klata, Obo,
Giangan, Guiangan), Eto (Ata), Kailawan (Kaylawan),
Langilan, Manuvu/Obo, Matigsalug, (Matigsaug, Matig
Salug), Tagaluro, and Tigdapaya
(3) Higaonon subgroup: Agusan, Lanao, and
Misamis;
(4) North Cotabato: Ilianen, Livunganen, and
Pulenyan;
(5) South Cotabato: Cotabato (with subgroup
Tasaday and Blit), Sarangani, Tagabawa;
(6) Western Bukidnon: Kiriyeteka, Ilentungen,
and Pulangiyen;
(7) Agusan del Sur;
(8) Banwaon;
(9) Bukidnon; and others. The various
subgroupings are not sufficiently defined at
present.
The Manobo occupy and have adapted to various
ecological niches ranging from the coastal to the
rugged mountain highlands of the interiors of
Mindanao. The different subgoups are highly
dispersed transecting the entire island of
Mindanao
Nowadays, the structure of leadership is
gradually changing with an overlay of the
contemporary civil structures radiating from the
governor of the province down to the level of the
sitio councilman often assumed by the better
educated younger generation of the community.
The groups are largely Christianized and there
are survivors of some belief systems.
The groups are largely Christianized and there
are survivors of some belief systems. The
national education system has also largely
penetrated the more nucleated areas and
minimally the more inaccessible rural areas. The
distinctive character of ethnic dress has mostly
given way to commercial clothing, with ethnic
materials finding their way to the antique trade.
MAMANWA