This is a continuation
of the first blog that, with the advent of the information Age, will further
challenge the conventionality of mainstream history that may had misled and
kept in the dark generations and partly cause the lack of foundation, a
dysfunctional state this country seemed to be manifesting, far too long.
Mainstream history had
always taught that on 16th March, 1521 Ferdinand Magellan first
landed in Samar in the Maharlikan lands eventually known as Philippines. This will
be contested. In the first place it
would be highly improbable for Magellan’s Fleet to had landed in Samar in
Eastern Visayas as the wooden galleons before reaching the island, would had to
hurdle the treacherous waters of the Philippine Trench, so deep that the waters
continually twisted and churned due to its ocean currents (deeper than Mt.
Everest), virtually rendering any 16th Century wooden ship less likely to survive the treacherous waves wrought by its depth.
Yet, Magellan’s voyage
of ten days from the Ladrones Islands i.e. Guam to the island of “Zamal” was so
peacefully uneventful that it least likely encountered the twisting currents of
the Philippine Deep. Even the ocean Magellan had named as “Pacifico” due to the
relative calmness of the waters. The said “Zamal” island that Pigafetta
described could not be Samar in Eastern Visayas that had to be traversed from
the deepest ocean trench and its treacherous currents, but on tranquil seas
towards Samal island in Davao Gulf, Mindanao.
Pigafetta’s
description of the vicinities of Zamal so eerily described exactly as the Davao
Gulf area would be witnessed, replete with the nearby island (present day Talikod
island) with its refreshing spring, a visible highland (Mt. Apo), and
surrounded with circumjacent islands (Davao Gulf).
courtesy of RandyHi.com
Even the then
uninhabited nearby island beside Zamal that Magellan’s fleet docked fitted
accurately with Pigafetta’s description, for gratefully they found springs of
very fresh water on the island and thus called it the “Watering Place of Good
Signs”. In nearby Talikod island, water was a scarce resource for its lack of
rivers and creeks except for the spring of fine water, gushing forth even to
this day and presently located in the modern town proper.
Disregarding the mediocre
mainstream belief that Magellan’s wooden super-galleons miraculously survived
after crossing the deep and treacherous currents of the Philippine Trench as
easily as his crew eating cochi nuts and drinking tuba with the natives;
Magellan’s galleon fleet were, in a more realistic scenario, admirably swift as
to be able to traverse from Guam to Samal Island in Mindanao for mere 10 days.
It would not be surprising afterwards then, owing to the favourable windy
characteristic of the area, that the fleet enabled to travel from Samal of
Davao Gulf, to travel along the Eastern edges of Mindanao island with present
day Davao Oriental, Surigao del Sur, del Norte and on towards the tip of
present day Surigao City- in just a single day.
Hence originating from
Davao Gulf, Pigafetta dutifully recorded sightings of the four islands. Had Pigafetta’s fellow crew travelled from Samar
and not Samal, the islands were a no-show. And so in a single day, from the tip
of Surigao the fleet proceeded “west and southwest” not to Limasawa, but
towards Masao, Butuan and still in Mindanao. Masao centuries ago would had been
formed as an “islet” that not unusually accumulated especially along the wide
river deltas as it approached the seas, and Butuan River was not an exception.
Masao then was once an islet that formed from the delta of the mighty Butuan
River.
Speaking of Limasawa,
yet another ridiculous twist of blunder centuries in scale seemed to had been
played upon this country’s history. Upon analyzing the preposterousness of a
faraway island once thought of as Pigafetta’s Mazzaua, someone must had exclaimed
in vernacular, “Dili Masaua!” (not Masaua!). As mediocre as picking an island
as well as picking vernacular words, mainstream
historians therefore sang in unison, out of tune definitely, and thus
declared the misrepresented island officially as, er, Limasawa. And the rest
was bungled history.
Preposterous indeed,
and anybody inquisitive enough may be excused for the initial hysterics. For
how could the king brothers Rajah Siagu and Rajah Kulambu from the kingdoms of
Masao and Butuan, and Caraga, went on regular leisure hunting trips from
the Mindanao kingdoms to the alleged faraway Limasawa island but to ride some
16th Century high speed ferry, not to mention Pigafetta and
Magellan’s crew regularly traversing from the island to the Rajah’s kingdom,
unless on ancient speed boats. What epic bungees.
Furthermore, the names assigned to the islands by who knows who that surrounded “Limasawa” in Samar seemed to sound like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. Unfit, unfortunately. There were the islands of Homonhon, Dinagat, Sarangani. However, when placed in the context of Samal Island these names would immediately align and make sense like a seafarer’s compass would to the North pole.
As the native inhabitants were appropriately described, Pigafetta specifically mentioned of already civilized natives, respectful and hospitable, with “very good manners and gracefulness,” and with some of the “more showy,” elaborately dressed as well. The inhabitants of Samal Island were a very ancient race, so ancient that their olden history had recorded the existence of giants called the DINAGAT whose skeletal remains had been discreetly found even to this day (for more information on the Samal giants refer to links here and here).
The other ancient name
of Samal Island was PU, because accordingly the earliest tribes (Maharlikhan) prior to
its diaspora or scattering to the various corners of the World, encountered
Samal as the very first island, or “pulo” that they had seen. This further
vindicated the belief of the Bagobo Peoples in the nearby Davao mainland, which
narrated that the source of all tribes of the World originated from Cibolan in the
foothills of the Grand Old Man, Mt. Apo (link here).
From the creation myth of the Bagobo Tribe the first man and woman
Toglai and Toglibon bore their very first children who eventually separated and
scattered throughout the World. It was then prophesied that in the distant
future the offsprings of these separated children shall return back to their
land of origin, to the land of the Maharlikhas. It needed also to be mentioned
that the Bagobo’s of mainland Davao were famous for their elaborate
costumes that a foreign explorer once referred to them as “the most handsomely
dressed” among tribes, and such impression was similarly witnessed by
Pigafetta.
(By further resarch, the ancient Egyptians preserved in hieroglyph that portrayed the ancient "Habirus" with intricate weavings, known locally as "habi.")
(By further resarch, the ancient Egyptians preserved in hieroglyph that portrayed the ancient "Habirus" with intricate weavings, known locally as "habi.")
By the time of
Magellan’s arrival the island of Samal would considerably be populated by then
as now, for on the other island Samar it was otherwise sparsely populated even
today that made the possibility of his galleon fleet’s first landing there
ludicrous still.
The Sama people were accustomed
to hospitable interaction as the fame of the ancient island with its rich
history that dated even since the ancient era of giants then known as the Dinagat, and its cosmopolitan culture
attested of a place already renowned in this part of the ancient World, for
even Magellan knew of its mystery, so spectacular and fantastic as it turned
out to be known only by elite members of European knights and monarchy and
whose fame may had been dated since the legendary heroic journeys of ancient
Greeks, which this blogger will soon discuss.
This writer also had
the privilege to hear from the very words uttered by the governor of
the country’s Indigenous Tribes, in an air of mysterious, metaphysical
phenomenon that mirrored a living culture spanning thousands of years, of 5
languages that he claimed to speak. With these languages he had amazing and
profound communication with the Tibetans, with Muslims who could understand the
Aramaic language of Mohammed, and the more mysterious of tongue I had heard,
the ancient language of the giant race. From what this writer recalled the
intonations of this ancient language somewhat produced characteristic sounds of
something deep, guttural, heavy. Pigafetta mentioned of the island beside Samal
as “Humunu,” and eventually, HOMONHON. Could this deep, heavily accented word
be remnant of the ancient language of the Dinagats of Samal, the giant race?
Pigafetta also narrated about the interesting reaction, not to mention the generous hospitality of the natives upon their encounter “with demonstrations of being very joyous with our arrival”. The inhabitants of Zamal indeed had reasons to be very joyous, for as the prophecy of the Bagobo elders foretold that the children of their once separated brethren would soon return, the offsprings, paler in skin, had now arrived. The prophecy was finally fulfilled.
Pigafetta also narrated about the interesting reaction, not to mention the generous hospitality of the natives upon their encounter “with demonstrations of being very joyous with our arrival”. The inhabitants of Zamal indeed had reasons to be very joyous, for as the prophecy of the Bagobo elders foretold that the children of their once separated brethren would soon return, the offsprings, paler in skin, had now arrived. The prophecy was finally fulfilled.
It comes as a boggling
mystery why mainstream history would deliberately divert the real places that
occurred in history. As the cliché goes,
histories are written by victors. But
what if the real events that occurred did not necessarily follow the tale of
the “victors”, but actually led instead to its humiliation?
By these accounts,
rewritten, the mystery would then unfold. And reveal.
Magellan, on a specific
mission in search of the “isles of gold” as tasked by the Spanish royalty,
ultimately found the fabled “Zamal” island of whose legends enthralled since the
ancient Greeks, ultimately found on the edge of the once unknown Pacific seas,
in the presently known Davao Gulf, in Mindanao of the Maharlika lands. From
Samal island he sailed to Zugbu, eventually to Mactan and encountered formidable Maharlikan warriors, leading them the son of Rajah Luisong Tagean of whose name
Luzon island was christened. Like ancient heroes in a tragic tale, with the
Maharlikan Rajah Lapulapu and his warriors, Ferdinand Magellan ultimately met his fate.
The Spanish Empire in
its quest of subduing and colonizing foreign lands and in particular the
legendary isles profuse with gold, despite the tragic loss of the great explorer,
deemed it valuable to send a second fleet known as the Loaisa Expedition. Tracing
still the original route of Magellan the next Spanish fleet arrived not in
Sangir, Indonesia nor Sarangani, Leyte but expectedly back to Davao Gulf, this
time in SARANGANI island, Mindanao.
The ancient Sarangani
natives, with its rich history dated as old as 3000 years, already sensed the ulterior motive of the pale skinned foreigners with such hearts borne from greed
and covetousness that deemed more alien than brethren. The Sarangani inhabitants
pretended to welcome the intruders as their Samal brethren otherwise genuinely
did. This time however, from behind the offerings of vials and drinks, bladed
weapons stealthily hidden behind the warriors’ backs awaited the intruders. By
the time the bloody rampage ended, only four survivors were left, found floating
in the seas by a passing galleon of the rival Portuguese, and promptly arrested.
Magellan had crossed
the unknown Pacific seas as commissioned by the Spanish royalty in the grand
quest to find the fabled islands of gold. He eventually discovered the illustrious
Samal island in Davao Gulf. But his defeat borne from arrogance at
underestimating the Maharlikan Rajah Lapulapu and his determined men,
ultimately proved fatal and dealt a slap to Western imperial face. The second
expedition with a crew that betrayed covetousness travelled on the same route
and found itself again in Davao Gulf, this time in Sarangani island, where a
second costly defeat in the hands of Sarangani Maharlikans proved too much for
the Castillan imperial ego to bear. It seemed the true history of the land had
to be twisted and re-written, not due to victory, but humiliation.
And so there would be
need to clamour for the rightful quest to seek for what had indeed transpired,
for in its light will surely reveal answers to long held questions, and in finding the
real treasures of Truth long hidden, victory finally prevails.
(Continuation of the topic in:
of Magellan, Zamal Island, and the Golden Fleece)
(Continuation of the topic in:
of Magellan, Zamal Island, and the Golden Fleece)















