The City of Iloilo (Filipino: Lungsod ng Iloilo,
Hiligaynon: Ciudad sang Iloilo) is the capital of,
but independent from, the province of Iloilo. It is
the economic hub of the Western Visayas region, as
well as the center of the Iloilo-Guimaras Metropolitan
Area.
Iloilo was historically one of the major agricultural
centers of the Philippines, exporting sugar, copra,
bananas, mangoes and other natural resources during
the Spanish and American colonial periods.
In the 2007 census, Iloilo City had a population
of 418,710 households with a 2.0% annual growth rate.
History
Even before the Spanish colonizers came, Iloilo
had a flourishing economy. Lore has it that in the
13th century, ten Bornean datus came to the island
of Panay and gave a gold hat (salakot) and a long
golden necklace as a peace offering to the gods and
goddesses of the plains and valleys of the island.
One datu, named Paiburong, was given the territory
of Irong-Irong.
In 1566, as the Spanish conquest of the Philippines
was underway and moving north toward Manila, the Spaniards
under Miguel López de Legazpi came to Panay
and established a settlement in Ogtong (now Oton).
He appointed Gonzalo Ronquillo as deputy encomiendero,
a position which would later become governor in later
years.
In 1581 Ronquillo moved the town center approximately
12 km east due to recurrent raids by Moro pirates
and Dutch and English privateers, and renamed the
area La Villa de Arevalo in honor of his hometown
in Ávila, Spain.
In 1700, due to ever-increasing raids especially
from the Dutch and the Moros, the Spaniards again
moved their seat of power some 25 km eastward to the
village of Irong-Irong, which had a natural and strategic
defense against raids and where, at the mouth of the
river that snakes through Panay, they built Fort San
Pedro to better guard against the raids which were
now the only threat to the Spaniards' hold on the
islands. Irong-Irong or Ilong-Ilong was shortened
to Iloilo and with its natural port quickly became
the capital of the province.
In the late 18th century, the development of large-scale
weaving industry started the movement of Iloilo's
surge in trade and economy in the Visayas. Sometimes
referred to as the "Textile Capital of the Philippines",
the products were exported to Manila and other foreign
places. Sinamay, piña and jusi are examples
of the products produced by the looms of Iloilo. Because
of the rise of textile industry, there was also a
rise of the upper middle class. However, the introduction
of cheap textile from UK and the emergence of the
sugar economy, the industry waned in the mid-19th
century.
Museo Iloilo is the repository of Iloilo's past.
The waning textile industry was replaced however
by the opening of Iloilo's port to world market in
1855. Because of this, Iloilo's industry and agriculture
was put on direct access to foreign markets. But what
triggered the economic boom of Iloilo in the 19th
century was the development of sugar industry in Iloilo
and its neighboring island of Negros. Sugar during
the 19th century was of high demand. Nicholas Loney,
the British vice-consul in Iloilo developed the industry
by giving loans, constructing warehouses in the port
and introduced new technologies in sugar farming.
The rich families of Iloilo developed large areas
of Negros, which later called haciendas because of
the sugar's high demand in the world market. Because
of the increase in commercial activity, infrastructures,
recreational facilities, educational institutions,
banks, foreign consulates, commercial firms and much
more sprouted in Iloilo. Due to the economic development
that was happening in Iloilo, the Queen Regent of
Spain raised the status of the town into a city, honored
it with the title La muy leal y noble ciudad de Iloilo,
and in 1890, the city government was established.
In 1896, the initial reaction of Ilonggos in the
outbreak of the Revolution in Manila was hesitant.
Yet because of the Spanish colonizers blow by blow
defeat by at first with the Katipunan and later by
the Americans, Ilonggos later on got involved with
the fight for independence. On the other hand, after
surrendering Manila to the Americans, the Spanish
colonial government moved their seat of power to Iloilo.
In October of 1898, the Ilonggo leaders agreed to
revolt against the Spaniards. By December 25, 1898,
the Spanish government surrendered to the Ilonggo
revoltionaries in Plaza Alfonso XVII (Plaza Libertad
today). Although the Ilonggos were victorious, the
American forces arrived in Iloilo in late December
1898 and started to mobilize for colonization by February
1899. Resistance was the reaction of Ilonggos upon
the invasion which went up until 1901.[1]
In 1900, at the coming of the Americans, the first
Baptist church in the Philippines was established
under the banner of the Northern Baptists, today known
as the Jaro Evangelical Church. American Baptist mission
activities gave birth to the Central Philippine University
in 1905, among other schools to provide education
to locals, particularly theological training for ministers
to be deployed throughout the country. Iloilo thus
became the center of Baptist missions in the islands,
and the home of the Convention of Philippine Baptist
Churches.
The Americans reverted the city's status into a township
again, yet because of the continuous commercial activities
and because it was an important port of call in the
Visayas-Mindanao area, it gained cityhood status once
more in July 16, 1937 incorporating the towns of Molo,
Jaro, Mandurriao, La Paz and Villa de Arevalo. During
the Commonwealth era, Iloilo was prosperous and was
popularly known as The Queen City of the South.
However, prosperity did not continue as the sugar's
demand was declining, labor unrests were happening
in the port area that scared the investors away and
the opening of the sub-port of Pulupandan in Negros
Occidental, has moved the sugar importation closer
to the sugar farms. By 1942, the Japanese invaded
Panay and the economy moved into a standstill.
During World War II, Iloilo was controlled by several
Japanese Battalions, Japan's ultimate goal was to
entrench itself deeply into the Philippines so that
at the close of the war they could occupy it just
as the Spanish and the Americans had years before.
However, when Filipino & American forces liberated
Iloilo from Japanese military occupation on March
25, 1945 the remnants of these battalions were held
in Jaro Plaza as a make-shift detention facility.
By the end of the war, Iloilo's economy, life and
infrastructure were damaged. However, the continuing
conflict between the labor unions in the port area,
declining sugar economy and the deteriorating peace
and order situation in the countryside and the exodus
of Ilonggos to other cities and islands that offered
better opportunities and businessmen moved to other
cities such as Bacolod and Cebu led to Iloilo's demise
in economic importance in southern Philippines.
By the 1960s towards 1990s, Iloilo's economy progressed
in a moderate pace. The construction of the fish port,
international seaport and other commercial firms that
invested in Iloilo marked the movement of the city
making it as the regional center of Western Visayas.