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Kalinga (province)

Kalinga (IPA: [kaliŋɡa]), officially the Province of Kalinga (Ilocano: Probinsia ti Kalinga; Tagalog: Lalawigan ng Kalinga), is a landlocked province in the Philippines situated within the Cordillera Administrative Region in Luzon. Its capital is Tabuk and borders Mountain Province to the south, Abra to the west, Isabela to the east, Cagayan to the northeast, and Apayao to the north. Kalinga and Apayao are the result of the 1995 partitioning of the former province of Kalinga-Apayao which was seen to better service the respective needs of the various indigenous peoples in the area.

Kalinga

May 8, 1995

James S. Edduba (Lakas)

Jocel C. Baac (Aksyon)

3,231.25 km2 (1,247.59 sq mi)

41st out of 81

2,617 m (8,586 ft)

229,570

220,329[3]

71st out of 81

71/km2 (180/sq mi)

78th out of 81

153

3800–3808

+63 (0)74

PH-KAL

President Emilio Aguinaldo proclaimed Lubuagan town the seat of government for 73 days from March 6, 1900, to May 18, 1900, before finally fleeing to Palanan.[5][6]

Etymology[edit]

The province's name is derived from the Ibanag and Gaddang noun "kalinga", which means "enemy", "fighter", or "headtaker".[7]

History[edit]

American occupation[edit]

Kalinga was taken from Cagayan and Isabela provinces and established by the US Government through Philippine Commission Act No. 1642 on May 9, 1907, as a sub-province of Lepanto-Bontoc.[8] Kalinga province was named after Kalinga people, a tribe which migrated to Philippines from Kalinga Kingdom of ancient India after Kalinga war in 261 BCE in different phases and accepted local culture resulting fusion of different culture some of which are similar to Kalinga or Odia people of present day Odisha earlier it called Kalinga Kingdom. Kalinga was later organized as one of the sub-provinces of Mountain Province, created by Act No. 1876.[9]


In the early years, the subprovince underwent series of territorial changes. Part of Kalinga was transferred to another sub-province Bontoc through Executive Order No. 53 in 1914. In the municipal district of Pinukpuk, barrios were moved to Balbalan in 1926; as well as parts of it to Conner in Apayao in 1927.[10]

Philippine independence[edit]

Kalinga became part of a province along with Apayao when the old Mountain Province was divided into four separate provinces through Republic Act No. 4695 in 1966[9][11] and, with Abra, became part of the territories in the Cordillera Administrative Region which was created through Executive Order No. 220 in 1987.[12] Kalinga was converted into a province on May 8, 1995 by virtue of RA No. 7878 when majority of the voters in Kalinga-Apayao approved in a plebiscite the division of the province into two.[9][13]

Contemporary[edit]

On February 15, 2023, the province was certified by Guinness World Records with two titles: largest gong ensemble (in its second attempt) with 3,440 male participants, and largest banga (clay pot) dance with 4,681 female participants; both performed in a program called "Awong Chi Gangsa, Agtu'n Chi Banga" (A call of a thousand gongs, the dance of a thousand pots) in Tabuk, as part of the 4th Bodong Festival coinciding with the province's 28th founding anniversary.[14][15]

- a Kalinga warrior and leader (pangat) who opposed the Chico River Dam Project. Murdered by military personnel under the command of dictator Ferdinand Marcos. Dulag's death is remembered as one of the two occasions for the declaration of Cordillera Day in the entire Cordillera Administrative Region. His name has been inscribed in the heroes' marker in Quezon City.

Macli-ing Dulag

- a former Filipino Catholic priest and rebel who was the founder of the Cordillera People's Liberation Army, a militant group which advocated autonomy for the Cordillera region in the Philippines. He was also known by the nom-de-guerre Ka Ambo.

Conrado Balweg

- a Kalinga master tattooist (mambabatok) and recipient of the prestigious Dangal ng Haraya Award.

Whang-od

- Awarded as a National Living Treasure for his efforts to preserve the culture of Kalinga through performing arts.

Alonzo Saclag

Media related to Kalinga (province) at Wikimedia Commons

Geographic data related to at OpenStreetMap

Kalinga (province)