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Modeling Panay Bukidnon Settlement Patterns
David Gowey
Department of Anthropology, Northern Arizona University
REFERENCES
PURPOSE
To compare present Panay Bukidnon material culture with
examples of what is perpetuated in the archaeological record of
similar societies in order to make hypotheses concerning historical
Panay Bukidnon settlement patterns. Additionally, by looking at
16th and 17th century sites from Cebu and comparing this with
what we know of Panay Bukidnon material culture, I will propose a
model for what a hypothetical archaeological survey would recover
at Panay Bukidnon sites.
Jocano, F. Landa. Sulod Society: A Study in the Kinship System and Social Organization of a Mountain
People of Central Panay. University of the Philippines Press, 2009.
Muyco, Maria Christine. Ga Sibod Dai-a! Video, University of the Philippines. 2009.
Peterson, John A. Cebuan Chiefdoms? Archaeology of the Visayan and Colonial Landscapes in the 16th
and 17th Century Philippines. Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society, Vol. 31 (1), pgs. 46-97.
http://www.jstor.org/stable/29792516
Figure 1. http://www.ezilon.com/maps/images/asia/Philippines-physical-map.gif
Figure 2. http://kalibo.tukcedo.nl/panay_prov.jpg
Figure 3. Copyright Maria Christine Muyco.
Figure 4. Copyright author.
Figure 5.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/90/Bowl,_made_in_China_for_export_and_collected_in_t
he_Philippines,_15th_century,_porcelain_with_underglaze_cobalt_blue_floral_design.JPG
Figure 6. http://cebu-online.com/swum/assets/images/weapons.jpg
Figure 7. http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-tr1dCf-
yHj8/UVHEqgj2KKI/AAAAAAAACxY/yAW0OwFBtTY/s1600/ancient+archeological+finds+A+-+Copy.jpg
Figure 8. http://pdjeliclark.files.wordpress.com/2013/10/indian-ocean-trade.jpg
Figure 1. Physical map of the Philippines. Figure 2. Political map of Panay Island.
The Panay Bukidnon are a tribal agriculturalist society in the
Philippines, specifically the last remaining indigenous group in the
Visayas region. This poster aims to give a brief overview of their
historical and contemporary material culture as a basis for
comparison with that of pre-Hispanic Visayan peoples.
Demonstrating Panay Bukidnon cultural distinction from non-
indigenous Filipino groups is important for three main reasons:
1. establishing their status as indigenous peoples
2. leaving a cultural record for future generations of tribal members
3. increasing awareness of prolific Panay Bukidnon epic chanting
tradition [sugidanon]
Music is an important part of Panay Bukidnon life, whether related to their epic chants collectively
called the sugidanon or other songs and dances. A typical ensemble for performing the traditional
binanog [hawk-style] dance includes at least a hide and wood drum [tambur], a bamboo flute [tulali], and
a copper gong [agung] (Jocano 2009).
Clothing also serves ritual and musical
functions. A Panay Bukidnon woman dressed
for a formal occasion would wear a red
headscarf with coins sewn onto it [pudung], an
intricately embroidered camisa [blouse], and a
plaid-patterned patadyong [barrel skirt] (Jocano
2009:46).
Figures 3 and 4. Panay Bukidnon women wearing traditional panubuk [embroidery] clothing.
Figure 5. 15th Century
Chinese porcelain bowl
recovered in the
Philippines. Similar pieces
have been found
throughout the country
and still function as
prestige items among the
Panay Bukidnon (Jocano
2009:47).
• Most settlements were loosely aligned hamlets that shifted due to weather, crop failure and raiding by other groups
• Spanish sources noted a lack of hierarchical architecture like megalithic temples found elsewhere in SE Asia or chiefly dwellings
(Peterson 53-55)
• Western understandings of social hierarchy are problematic when mapped onto Visayan societies and lifeways
• Modeling past Visayan behaviors on the present requires looking through lenses of Indonesian, Muslim Malaysian, Chinese,
Spanish, American and Japanese colonialism (62)
• Lack of completed regional earthenware sequences (65)
• Inherent bias favoring recently inhabited multi-component sites due to use of surface surveys over excavation or other
belowground survey methods like proton magnetometry and ground-penetrating radar (74-86)
• Semi-tropical climate is not conducive to long-term preservation of bamboo artifacts
Data presented in this poster is part of a paper to be presented by the
author at the National Conference on the Sugidanon in Iloilo City,
Philippines (Contextualizing the Sugidanon: Proposing a Framework for
Inquiry n.p.).
Figure 6. Iron spear points from Cebu.
Figure 7. Earthenware jars and bowls from
Gigantes Island, Iloilo.
Figure 8. Map illustrating Indian Ocean trade networks used by Indonesian,
Indian, Chinese and Arabic merchants.
In his review of Laura Junker’s Cebuan archaeological model presented in Raiding, Trading, and Feasting: The Political
Economy of Philippine Chiefdoms, Peterson critiques her team’s methods heavily while also suggesting how an adaptation of her
team’s model could be used more effectively in the future. I propose that his insights would be valuable for a hypothetical survey
team working on Panay Island because of the similarities between Cebu and Panay in terms of archaeological data or lack thereof.
As with Junker’s survey, previous teams had most of their success along rivers. Using systematic stratified surface surveys,
they found a number of multi-component sites dating from the prehistoric era to the Spanish occupation, which they grouped into
four rough categories ranging from “primary regional centers of from 30-50 hectares in size” to sites “below one hectare in size,
including isolated lowland homesteads, lowland hunting/trading camps, upland villages and homesteads, upland hunting/collecting
camps, lithic production sites, and ‘other special activity sites’ with very small low-density artifact scatters’.” These sites were ranked
based on several factors, including evidence of elite burials, relative frequencies of Asian export ceramics to local earthenware, and
population density (Peterson 2003:72-74).
Several of the issues that Peterson points out are relevant to Panay-based archaeology. For instance, settlements along
rivers were populous at times but shifted due to weather and raiding, and lacked what the Spanish thought of as hierarchical
architecture, namely temples, palaces and megalithic structures. He also notes that “Visayans at contact with the Spanish appear to
have moved from place to place like nomadic desert Bedouins, and occupied a complex mosaic environment that offered a diversity
of resources, but there were few concentrations of productivity that might have fueled urban centers (53-56).” While river mouths
were best suited to larger populations, settlements were still mostly scattered and mountain peoples in other regions were known to
have migrated down into the lowlands and become Christianized, something that cannot be ruled out in investigating Panay
Bukidnon settlement patterns (63).
COMPLICATIONS OF VISAYAN ARCHAEOLOGY
TWO CEBU-BASED MODELS
CONTEMPORARY MATERIAL CULTURE