Whoever shall not remember to look back their origin; Hence, they cannot reach their destination - this applies the law of attraction and physics any multiplication of energy should observed always the origin. People don't observe this law in life, instead they just pre-occupied by thoughts for Nothing and continue whatever they want. When we
In the midst of my
The ancient name of my beloved HOMELAND PHILIPPINES IS: OPHIR
Ophir is found mainly in Tarshis which is called now the whole Philippines not to confuse, Ophir is the Luzon island of the Philippines when it is first discovered by the Portuguese then finally the Spaniards. Until they called it OPHIR THE WHOLE PHILIPPINES.
To unlock the secrets of the Spaniards in voyage is to search mainly the land of OPHIR indeed, because of its abundance of GOLD and other precious stones and metals as described by King Solomon in the old testament of the holy bible to continue my blog, here are some of my findings.
What the Spaniards believed
After the death of King Solomon, Ophir was abandoned and soon forgotten. After the passage of hundreds of
What happened to the Hebrew or Jewish settlements that were established Process the gold before they were shipped back to King Solomon? Nobody also knew. However, we knew that because of their religious beliefs the Hebrews tend to survive as a separate enclave wherever they settled.
Historical facts
In Spain there is a book called Coleccion General
This same volume also contains the official documents regarding the voyage of Ferdinand Magellan. It also contains the logbook of Francisco Albo, the chief pilot of the ship Victoria. This
Since this book contains important documents, we can discern that the Spaniards did not really believe that Ophir was in India. In fact the Cabot expedition that left Spain on April 3, 1526 had a secret mission, "to search for a route to Tarsis, OPHIR, Oriental Cathay (China), and Japan."
Document No. 98 describes how to locate the land of Ophir. The travel guide started from the Cape of Good Hope in Africa to India, to Burma, to Sumatra, to Moluccas, to Borneo, to Sulu, to China, then finally Ophir.
Ophir was "
This group of islands could not be Japan because the Moluccans did not get there. It could not be Taiwan because it is not "of many islands." Only the present day Philippines could satisfy the description.
Jewish Settlements
Along the route described by Document No. 98 are locations of old Jewish settlements.
It would not be surprising for that was the procedure used by King Solomon's fleet.
Settlements were established at selected places to trade and process the gold and silver. The ships will collect the gold and silver and bring it to King Solomon. To the credit of the Hebrew people, their settlement remained true to the Jewish faith even for thousands of years. Settlements were found in India, Burma, Sumatra, and Vietnam (Annam and Cochin China).
Who Were the Lequios?
Spanish records mention of a mysterious
According to Documents 98, the
The Hebrew word "LEQOT" or "LIQQET" means to gather, to glean. It resembles closely the word Lequios. It will fit the men of King Solomon's fleet who gathered gold and silver. (Note: The Hebrew alphabet has no small letters.)
Where Was Ophir?
There is no doubt that the group of islands in front of China towards the sea is the present day Philippines. The question is where was Ophir located in the Philippines?
Ancient Chinese records say that the ancient trading places in the Philippines were Ma-
Dr. Jose Rizal identified "Pulilu" as Bo-
OPHIR
The Ancient-Name of the Islands of the Philippines
(Only the descendants of Levites Datu Gerson, Datu Merari and few descendants of Datu Cohat reached the island of Ophir, but the High Priest comes in the lineage of Aaron left in Yahrushalom)
People in the Islands of Ophir
Who is Ophir
Ophir
Psalms 45:9, Isaiah 13:12, Job 22:24, 28:16, 1Chron. 24:4, 1:23, Genesis 10:25-26.
In Genesis 10:25-30 “ And Heber were born two sons: the name of one was Peleg, for his days was the earth divided and his brother’s name was Yoktan. And Yoktan begat Almodad, and Sheleph, and Hazarmaveth, and Yerah, and Hadoram, and Uzal, and Diklah, and Obal, and Abimael, and Sheba, and OPHIR, and Havilah, and Yobab; all these were the sons of Yoktan. And their dwelling was from Mesha, as thou goest unto Sephar a mount of the EAST”.
The language of Ophir
The language of Heber is the same language of Adam and when the language was confused, only Heber retained the original language of Adam and was called Hebrew from Heber’s name and therefore the language of his two sons Peleg and
The language of Abraham
Peleg
Historians said about Ophir
The western writers garlanded the Philippine land with more names such as
When the first European
Reference
Sources: http://addiebantug.blogspot.com/2012/08/ophir-ancient-name-of-islas-del-oriente.html
"Where
is Tarshish and Ophir"
During the early period of European colonization, the Biblical lands of Tarshish and Ophir,or Tarsis and Ofir, as they were called, held the
imagination of European explorers. Not only was it believed that the "lost
tribes" of Israel were to be found in these lands, but also untold wealth.
To these kingdoms King Solomon and King Hiram of Tyre sent ships for trade that
"brought from Ophir great plenty of almug trees, and precious stones,"
(I Kings 10:11). Concerning Tarshish it is written: "Fro the king's ships
went to Tarshish with the servants of Hiram: every three years once came the
shop sof Tarshish bringing gold and silver, ivory, and apes, and peacock."
(II Chronicles 9:21)
In Samuel Purchas's well-known travel compendium Purchas His Pilgrim, he devotes the entire first chapter to a discussion of Tarshish and Ophir. In particular, he arguesstrenously that it is beloved Britain and not Spain that
deserved the title as the modern Tarshish and Ophir. Curiously, in Careri's
journal of his visit to the Philippines, he mentions that he would not go into
the argument raging in Europe at that time over whether the Philippines was
originally populated by the descendants of Biblical Tarshish.
In modern times, scholars have attempted to relate Tarshish andOphir with a
number of areas, none of which include the Philippines. However, things were
different in Europe prior to the discovery of the Philippines. There, they
believed that Tarsis and Ofir were some lands far to the east of biblical
Israel. Their reasoning was actually quite logical. King Solomon built the port
from which ships departed for Tarsis and Ofir at Ezion-Geber on the coast of
the Red Sea. The return journey took about three years, so obviously the
location must be somewhere far to the East. In modern times, some scholars have
tried to suggest that Solomon's navy circumnavigated Africa to reach the Mediterranean, but the seafaring Europeans
of those times would not consider such nonsense. Tarsis and Ofir were unknown
lands beyond the Golden Chersonese of Ptolemy. Their discovery would
undoubtedly bring untold wealth and great fame in the minds of the people of
those times.
But what, one may ask, has this to do with the Philippines? The truth is that the search for Tarsis and Ofir was directly related to the "discovery" of these islands by Magellan!
Magellan and the Search for Ophir
Magellan's contemporary, Duarte Barbosa, wrote that the people of Malacca (in modern Malaysia) had described to him an island group known as the Lequios whose people were as "rich and more eminent than the Chins (Chinese)," and that traded "much gold, andsliver in bars, silk,
rich cloth, and much very good wheat, beautiful porcelains and many other
merchandise."
However, Barbosa was not the only one to mention the Lequios during Magellan's time. About a decade after Magellan's voyage, Ferdinand Pintohad wrote in his
journal of the experience of his crew and himself after being shipwrecked on
the Lequios! Pinto was traveling through the Malay Archipelago at the time and
he describes the Lequios islands as belonging to large group of islands many of
which were rich in gold and silver. He mentions that at that time the Portugese
were familiar with Japan and China, and also with the island of
"Mindanaus" or Mindanao, so the Lequois islands must have been
somewhere between these two areas. Furthermore, Pinto even goes as far as to
give the exact latitude of the main Lequios island. He states that is was
situated at 9N20 latitude and that the island was on a merdian similar to that
of Japan.
Now, in Magellan's timeall exploration was done by latitude sailing and dead
reckoning, as no navigational clocks were in use. Latitude sailing required
fixing one's latitude precisely by means of an astrolabe. Longitude could only
be approximated roughly by using a patent log to track the distance the ship
has travelled in any particular direction. When Magellan began to suspect he
was nearing the region of the Moluccas he deliberately steered on a north
course and then turned westward at a latitude of 13 degrees North according to
both Pigafetta and Albo. Pigafetta states that the reason was to get near the
port of "Gaticara" which was the Cattigara mentioned by Ptolemy. In
the book, Magellan's Voyage around the World, the author, Charles E. Nowell,
offers another possible reason for Magellan steering so far to the north of the
Moluccas. He notes that Magellan himself had rewrote part of Barbosa's book
referring to the Lequios, and in his version Magellan substituted
"Tarsis" and "Ofir" for the world
"Lequios."
Although these lands are not mentioned inMagellan's contract , less than six
years after his voyage, Sebastian Cabot signed a contract with Spain which did
have as one of its objectives the "lands of Tarshish and Ophir."
Magellan had been to Malacca himself, and probably many have heard of the
community of Filipino workers and merchants that lived there under the
protection of the king of Malacca. Probably many of you already know of the
theory that Black Henry, the slave Magellan purchased at Malacca, may have
belonged to the Filipino community of Malacca as he was able to speak with the
natives at Limasawa. Whatever the case, we know from his own pen that Magellan
thought the Lequios islands might be the same as the Biblical Tarsis and Ofir,
and it may be that his idea of the position of the Lequios was partly shaped by
Barbosa's book, and partly by information he may have received from Filipinos
in Malacca. Was the fact that Black Henry was able to converse with the people
living at the latitude given by Pinto (but not with the people of Samar or
Leyte) a coincidence, or something planned in advance from information gleaned
in Malacca?
Even after their discovery, many still regarded the Philippines, rich in gold and silver, to be the same as ancient Tarsis and Ofir. Father Colin, referred to them as such in the early 1600's and even at the turn of the century, the Philippine historian Pedro Paterno, still claimed that the Philippines were really Tarshish and Ophir! Whatever one thinks of theseclaims though , the
search for the Biblical El Dorado appears to have played an important role in
the European discovery of the Philippines.
Chryse , the "Golden One," is the name given by ancient Greek writers
to an island rich in gold to the east of India. Pomponius Mela, Marinos of Tyre
and the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea mention Chryse in the first century CE.
It is basically the equivalent of the Indian Suvarnadvipa the "Island of
Gold." Josephus calls it in Latin Aurea, and equates the island with
biblical Ophir, from where the ships of Tyre and Solomon brought back gold and
other trade items.
Chryse is often coupled with another island Argyre the "Island of
Silver" and placed beyond the Ganges. Ptolemy locates both islands east of
the Khruses Kersonenson the "Golden Peninsula" i.e. the Malaya
Penisula . North of Chryse in the Periplus was Thin, which some consider the
first European reference to China.
In addition to gold,Chryse was also famed for having the finest tortoise shell
in the world according to the Periplus. Large ships brought trade goods back
and forth between Chryse and the markets at the mouth of the Ganges.
Chin-lin
In ancient Chinese literature, a mysterious region beyond their southern border in Annam was known as Chin-lin "Golden Neighbor" and the Southeast
Asian border was also called the "Golden Frontier."
When China invaded Annam (northern Vietnam) in the first century BCE, the kingdom of Champa fortified villages along the old caravan trail. This path became Route Colonial 9 during the French colonial period, and it was used by the Americans to build the McNamara Line of fortified bases during the Vietnam War.
With this fortified line, the rugged Central Highlands and a policy of constant piracy, the Champa kingdom held the Chinese at bay for a thousand years. After the fall of the Chin dynasty in the 5th century, Cham raids on Tongking became so frequent that the governor appealed to the emperor for assistance. A war of attrition between China and Champa began that lasted until the rise of the T'ang dynasty. During this time though , China was well aware of the golden lands
far to the south. The Buddhist pilgrim I-Tsing mentions Chin-Chou "Isle of
Gold" in the archipelago south of China on his way back from India.
Zabag and Wakwak
The kingdoms of Zabag and Wakwak, famed among the medieval Muslims as rich in gold, referred to the eastern islands of the Malay archipelago i.e.the
Philippines and Eastern Indonesia.
Zabag was based in what would later become the kingdom of Lusung. In this
sense, the Philippines fits the bill as a gold-rich realm. The country has
consistently ranked second in the world behind only South Africa in gold
deposits per land area. The Philippines has historically been the largest
producer of gold in Asia despite its relatively small size and the fact that
until 1980 most gold was obtained only through small alluvial deposits.
Although some ancient gold artifacts have been found in this region, they don't match the age suggested by linguistic reconstruction. Gold may have been mostly handed down from generation to generation rather than being used as a burial good item.
In about the second century CE, there arose a practice of using gold eye covers, and then, gold facial orifice covers to adorn the dead resulting in an increase of ancient gold finds. More than a millennium later, the popularity of dental gold to decorate the teeth significantly increased the amount of gold found at archaeological sites.
When the Spanishcame they discovered an abundance of gold used among the
people of the Philippine islands. Here are some relevant quotes:
Pieces of gold, the size of walnuts and eggs are found by sifting the earth in the island of that king who came to our ships. All the dishes of thatking are
of gold and also some portion of his house as we were told by that king himself... He
had a covering of silk on his head, and wore two large golden earrings fastened
in his ears... At his side hung a dagger, the haft of which was somewhat long
and all of gold, and its scabbard of carved wood. He had three spots of gold on
every tooth, and his teeth appeared as if bound with gold.
---Pigafetta on Raja Siaui of Butuan during Magellan's voyage
For brass, iron and other weighty articles, they gave us gold in exchange... For
14 pounds of iron we received 10 pieces of gold, of the value of a ducat and a
half. The Captain General forbade too great an anxiety for receiving gold,
without which order every sailor would have parted with all he had to obtain
this metal, which would have ruined our commerce forever.
---Pigafetta on gold trade in Cebu
Sailing in this manner, for some time, in 16° of north latitude, they were obliged by continual contrary winds, to bear up again for the Philippine islands, andin their way back, had sight of six or seven additional islands,
but did not anchor at any of them. They found also an archipelago, or numerous
cluster of islands, in 15 or 16 degrees of north latitude, well inhabited by a
white people , with beautiful well -proportioned women, and much better clothed
than in any other of the islands of these parts; and they had many golden
ornaments, which was a sure sign that there was some of that metal in their
country.
--- Antonio Galvão in 1555 describing the journey of Bartholomew de la Torre in 1548
"... the ore is so rich that I will not write any more about it, as I might
possibly come under a suspicion of exaggerating; but I swear by Christ that
there is more gold on this island than there is iron in all Biscay."
--- Hernando Riquel et al., 1574
In this island, there are many gold mines, some of which have been inspected by
the Spaniards, who say that the natives work them as is done in Nueva Espana
with the mines of silver; and, as in these mines, the vein of ore here is
continuous. Assays have been made, yielding so great wealth that I shall not
endeavor to describe them, lest I be suspected of lying. Time will prove the
truth.
--- Hernando Riquel et al.on island of Luzon, 1574
There are some chiefs in this island who have on their persons ten or twelve thousand ducats' worth of gold in jewels--to say nothing of the lands, slaves, and mines that they own. There are so many of these chiefs that they are innumerable. Likewise the individual subjects of these chiefs have a great quantity of the said jewels of gold, which they wear on their persons--bracelets, chains, and earrings of solid gold, daggers of gold, and other very rich trinkets. These are generally seen among them, and not only the chiefs and freemen have plenty of these jewels, but even slaves possess and wear golden trinkets upon their persons, openly and freely.
--- Guidode Lavezaris at al ., 1574
About theirnecks they wear gold necklaces, wrought like spun wax, and with
links in our fashion, some larger than others. On their arms they wear armlets
of wrought gold, which they call calombigas , and which are very large and made
in different patterns. Some wear strings of precious stones--cornelians and
agates; and other blue and white stones, which they esteem highly. They wear
around the legs some strings of these stones, and certain cords , covered with
black pitch in many foldings, as garters.
-- Antonio de Morga, 1609
"...the natives proceed more slowly in this, and content themselves with
what they already possess in jewels and gold ingots handed down from antiquity
and inherited from their ancestors. This is considerable, for he must be poor
and wrethced who has no gold chains, calombigas , and earrings."
-- Antonio de Morga, 1609
The Portugese explorer Pedro Fidalgo in 1545 found gold so abundant on Luzon the inhabitants were willing to trade twopezoes of gold for one pezo of
silver.
When the Portuguese first arrived, most of the gold tradedinto Brunei came
from Luzon. That island was known as Lusung Dao or "Golden Luzon" to
the Chinese who also traded for gold in this region.
References:
Legeza , Laszlo. "Tantric Elements in pre-Hispanic Philippines Gold
Art," Arts of Asia, July-Aug. 1988, pp. 129-136. (Mentions gold jewelry of
Philippine origin in first century CE Egypt)
Peralta, J.T. "Prehistoric gold ornaments from the Central Bank of the Philippines," Arts of Asia 1981, no. 4, p. 54. Villegas, Ramon N. Ginto:
History Wrought in Gold, Manila: Bangko Central ng Pilipinas, 2004.
Mines Dating Back to at Least 1,000 B.C. Have Been Found in the Philippines
According to De Morga: (1,000 B.C.is when King Solomon's navy of ships going
to Ophir for gold)
Mines dating back to at least 1,000 B.C.have been found in the Philippines.
When the Spanish arrived the Filipinos worked various mines of gold, silver,
copper and iron. They also seemed to have worked in brass using tin that was
likely imported from the Malay Peninsula. The iron work in particular was said
to be of very high quality in some cases, and occasionally in some areas, even
better than that found in Europe.
When the Spanish arrived, the Philippineswas so gilded with gold that most of
the gold mines had been neglected. "... the natives proceed more slowly in
this, and content themselves with what they already possess in jewels and gold
ingots handed down from antiquity and inherited from their ancestors. This is
considerable, for he must be poor and wrethced who has no gold chains,
calombigas , and earrings."
As the missionary Francisco ColÃn wrote in 1663:
In the punishment of crimes of violence the social rank of the slayer andslain
made a great deal of difference. If the slain was a chief, all his kinsfolk
took the warpath against the slayer and his kinfolk, and this state of war
continued until arbiters were able to determine the amount of gold which had to
be paid for the killing… The death penalty was not imposed by public authority
save in cases where both the slayer and slain were commoners, and the slayer
could not pay the blood price.
Blair and Robertson, Vol. II, p. 116.
Legazpi describes one of the "Moro" pilots captured from
Butuan:
"... a most experienced man who had much knowledge, not only of matters
concerning these Filipinas Islands, but those of Maluco , Borney, Malaca, Jaba,
India, and China, where he had had much experience in navigation and
trade."
According to Pigafetta:
However, things seem to already diminished from Pigafetta's time:
"On the island [Butuan] where the king came to the ship, pieces of gold as large as walnuts or eggs are to be found, by sifting the earth. All the dishes of the king are of gold, and his whole house is very well set up."
Pigafetta goes on to describe the huge gold ornaments, gold dagger handles,
tooth plating and even gold that was used to decorate the outside of houses! On
the gold work of the Filipinos is this description of the people of Mindoro: (
copied by Israel recorded in 1Chronicles 29:4 Even three thousand talents of
gold, of the gold of Ophir, and seven thousand talents of refined silver, to
overlay the walls of the houses withal)
"... they possess great skill in mixing it [gold] with other metals. They
give it an outside appearance so natural and perfect, and so fine a ring, that
unless it is melted they can deceive all men, even the best of
silversmiths."
Arts of Asia, Jul-Aug 1988, p. 131
Arts of Asia 1981, no. 4, p. 54
Apparently, even foreigners desired Filipino gold products. Recent discoveries show that gold jewelry of Philippine origin was found in Egypt near the beginning of the era. These finds are mentioned in Laszlo Legeza's "Tantric elements in pre-Hispanic Philippines Gold Art," (Arts of Asia, Jul-Aug 1988, p. 131) along a discussion of Philippine Tantric art. Some outstanding examples of Philippine jewelry, which included necklaces, belts, armlets and rings placed around the waist, are showcased in J. T. Peralta's "Prehistoric gold ornaments from the Central Bank of the Philippines," Arts of Asia 1981, no. 4, p.54.
Luzon Empire
LUCOES or LEQUIOS ISLANDS
LuzonEmpire according to Chinese historians
Luzon Empire (1279-1571 AD) was an ancient empire once located around Manila bay region of the Philippines. Its capital wasTondo , its territories covered
most of what is now Central Luzon, extending from delta region that surrounds
Manila Bay, all the way into the interior along head waters of the surrounding
rivers in the province of Pampanga, Bulakan (covered part now Rizal).
The history ofSong Dynasty was compiled under Mongol Prime Minister Toktoghan
in 1345 AD. In it the Mongols recount tha final and complete destruction of Nan
song (southern song Empire) (1127-1279 AD), where in 1279 AD the Mongol Fleet
crushed the Nan Song Navy at the Naval battle of Yamen . The loyal Minister of
the Left Liu Xiufu committed suicide with last Na Song Emperor , the children
Songdi Bing rather than be captured by the Mongols.
The Grand Admiral Zhang Shijie escaped with his grand armada but were later annihilated by a typhoon while crossing the seas.
Alternative sourcerefute the accounts of the destruction of Zhang Shijie's
grand armada as nothing more than Mongol propaganda since there were no
eyewitness accounts of its destruction nor were there traces left of its
remains. For most historians, the fate of Zhang shijie and his grand armada
remains a mystery.
Contemporary Chinese historians in Guangdong are now even questioning the Mongolian accounts regarding Emperor Bing's death. Even though Mongol sources claimed that the corpse of the last emperor has been found washed ashore along the coast of Shenzen, his actual grave is yet to be found. Cantonese folklore expressed in thettraditional Cantonese opera narrates an alternative account
where the loyal Minister Liu Xiufu tricked the Mongols by committing suicide
with his own son disguised as the young emperor. The real emperor was said to have
been smuggled out of the scene of battle by Grand Admiral Zhang Shijie, who
will eventually return to redeem the empire from the invaders. The Travel of
Marco Polo also recounts the escape of the last song emperor across the ocean.
Zhang Shijie's fleet and the last song emperor may have escaped to pre-colonial
Philippines and established the Luzon Empire or the 'Lesser Song
Empire".
Despite the conjectures regarding its origins, the Ming Annals are clear on the actual existence of the Luzon Empire. It records that in 1373 AD, the Luzon Empire sent its first among the many succeeding diplomatmission to the Great
Ming Empire (1368-1644 AD), accompanied by the embassies of India's Chola
Empire.
The Ming chroniclers added the character for "kingdom"of "empire" (pinyin : GuU) after Luzon (Lusong), indicating that it was once an independent
and sovereign kingdom. Her rulers were acknowledged as king and not mere
chieftains. The Ming empire treated the Luzon Empire more favorably than Japan
by allowing it to trade with china once verey two years, while Japan was only
allowed to trade once every 11 years.
Luzonempire flourished during the latter half of the Ming Dynasty when China
closed its doors to foreign trade. Foreigners were forbidden to send trade
missions to China. Chinese merchants were likewise forbidden to trade beyond
the borders of the Ming Empire. Yet clandestinely, merchants from Guangzhou and
Quanzhou regularly delivered trade goods to Tondo. Luzon merchants then traded
them all across Southeast Asia and were considered "Chinese" by the
people they encountered.
The Portuguese who came to Asia much earlier than the Spaniards recorded their encounter with the inhabitants of the Luzon empire and called them 'Lucoes '.
The Portuguese records that the Luzon Empire played an active role in the
politics and economy of the 16th century Southeast Asia, especially in
controlling the trade traffic at the Straits of Malacca.
The Luzon Empire's powerful presence in the trade of Chinese goods in 16th century East Asia was felt strongly by Japan, whose merchants had to resort to piracy in order to obtainmuch sought after Chinese products such as silk and
porcelain. Famous 16th century Japanese merchants and tea connoisseurs like
Shimai Soushitsu and Kamiya Soutan established their branches here. One famous
Japanese merchant, Luzon Sukezaemon, went as far as to change his name from
Naya to Luzon.
Tondo (Tungdu in Cantonese) or the 'Eastern Capital' has always been the
traditional capital of the Luzon Empire. Its traditional rulers were the
lakandula (Kapampangan: 'Lord of the Palace'). During the reign of Paduka Sri
Baginda Rajah dan yang di Pertuan Bulkiah (1485-1521) the Kingdom of Brunai
decided to break the Luzon Empire's monolpoly in the China trade by attacking
Tondo and establishing the city state of Mainl'l, as a Burneian satellite. Anew
dynasty under tha Salalila was established in Manila to challenge the House of
Lakand'l, in Tondo.
When the Spaniards arrived in 1571 AD, the unity of the Luzon Empire was already threatened by the uneasy alliance of the Three Kings of Luzon: the Rajahmatanda of Sapa, the Lakandula of Tondo and Rajah Suliman III, the 'rajah
muda ' or "crown prince" of Mainl'l and 'laxamana ' or "grand
admiral" of the Macabebe Armada. Powerful states like Lubao, Betis and
Macabebe become bold enough to challenge the traditional leadership of Tondo
and Mainl'l. the Spaniards took advantage of the chaos, played favourites with
one ruler and pitted them against the other.
Rumor has it that the Spaniards had poisoned the Rajah Matanda of Mainl'l, so as to win the support of Lakandula of Tondo. Disregarding the legitimacy of Rajah Suliman III as 'rajahmuda ', the Spaniards installed the child Rajah Bago
as the new king of Mainl'l.
In 1571, Rajah Suliman III, the 'rajahmuda ' of mainl'l and laxamana of the
Macabebe armada, challenged the Spaniards to a naval battle at the estuary of
bangkusay . The Spaniards were able to crush Rajah Suliman III and his Macabebe
armada due to the lack of support from the other rulers of the empire. The
Luzon Empire was quickly overtaken by the Spaniards. Its territories were
carved out and distributed as spoils among themselves. The province of Pampanga
was the first Spanish colonial province carved out of the Luzon Empire and the
people who spoke one language from Tondo to the rest of Pampanga are now called
Kapampangan.
After the collapse of the Luzon empire, the Spaniards were finally able to create their first colony in Asia, the Philippines, named in honor of Spanish King Philip II of Spain. The name Luzon was given to the entire northern Philippine island, in memory of the former Luzon empire.
The Luzon Empire was said to have finally ended in 1571 AD according to Spanish records. Yet the fortified cities of Lubao and Betis continued to thrive as
independent principalities of the Luzon Empire till 1572 AD.
In 1575 AD, the Spaniards executed the child king Rajah Bago and his cousin
Lumanlan. The Lakandula of Tondo also died in the same year.
In 1586 AD, the Spaniards crushed the revolt of former nobles of the Luzon Empire, in the province of Pampanga. The revolt was based in Candaba under the leadership of Don Nicolas Mananquete and Don Juande Manila.
In 1588 AD, the Spaniards crushed the revolt of the nobles of the Luzon Empire in Tondo. It was led by the descendants of the Lakandula and their kinsmen with the assistance of Japanese merchants. Many of them executed or exiled and their properties confiscated.
In 1590 AD, the King Sattha of Cambodia sent two elephants to the "King of Luzon" through his Portuguese ambassador and requested the Luzon Empire's assistance in their battle against Siam. In the same year the "lords" of the Luzon Empire were said to have been corresponding withtheTaikou -sama of
Japan, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, begging for assistance to help liberate the Luzon
Empire from Spaniards. Hideyoshi responded by sending a letter to the Spanish
Governor of Manila, demanding that the Spaniards leave Luzon quietly or else
face a full scale invasion that would force them out. I'll prepared for a
Japanese invasion, the Spanish Governor of Manila decided to appease Hideyoshi
by sending gift from the Americas, including the two elephants sent by the King
of Cambodia. The rulers of the old Luzon Empire who cooperated with the Spanish
overlords became the principalia of the new Spanish colony. To this day, their
descendants still play an influential role in Philippine society.
The study of Philippine history has for many years been Eurocentric, most Philippine historians have gone as far back at the earliest Spanishrecords but
have failed to look into the archives of neighboring countries, such as Brunei,
Indonesia, Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, Japan and China. Their dependence on
the English language limits the majority of Philippine historians from
accessing volumes of materials written in Chinese and other Asian languages. As
a result, the history of the Luzon empire remains mythical in their scholastic
psyche and still virtually non-existent in mainstream Philippine History.
Reference:
(History of the Song) original Chinese
text:http://www.yifan.net/yihe/novels/history/songshiytt/sshi.HTML
(Ming Annals) original Chinese
text:http://www.yifan.net/yihe/novels/history/msqztyz/ms.HTML
(Shinsho Taiko-ki) by (Yoshikawa Eiji)
Giles, Herbert Allen, A Chinese Biographical Dictionary (1898). Reprinted by Cheng wen Publishing,Taipe , 1975
Henson, Mariano A. 1965. The Province of Pampanga and its Towns: A.D. 1300-1965, 4thedition revised . Angeles City
Licunan , Virginia Benitez & Jose Llavador Mira, The Philippines Under
Spain: Book IV (1583-1590), The National Trust for Historical and Cultural
Preservation of the Philippines, Quezon City, 1993.
Loarca, Miguel de, Relacion de las Yslas Filipinas, Blair and Robertson vol.5 p.34-187.
Morga, Antonio de, Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas, obra publicada en Mejico el aOo de 1609 nuevamente sacada a Luz y anotado por Jose Rizal y precedida de un prologo del Prof. Fernando Blumentritt, Impresion al offset de la Edicion Anatada por Rizal, Paris 1890. Manila: Historico Nacional, 1991.
Miyamoto, Kazuo, Vikings of the Far East,new York: Vantage Press,
1975, p. 88-89. See also:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luzon_Sukezaemon
San Agustin, Gasparde , Conquistas de las Islas Philipinas 1565-1615,
Translated by Luis Antonio MaOeru, published by Pedro Galende, OSA: Intramurus,
Manila, 1998.
Santiago, Luciano P.R., The House of Lakandula, Matanda ang Soliman
(1571-1898)" Genealogy and Group Identity, Philippine Quarterly of Culture
and Society 18 (1990).
Scott, William Henry, Barangay: Sixteenth-Century Philippine Culture and Society, Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1994.
Tolentino, Aurelio. 1914. Kasulatang Ginto, Manila: Imprenta y Litografia de Juan Fajardo.
Yule, Henry (ed ), The Travel of Marco Polo, Dover Publications, New York,
1983.
Siuala ding Meangubie/Mike Pangilinan/Shugyousha-Bushido, Aikido, Iaido
Kapampangan National Liberation Advocate 10 ICAL Paper on Kapampangan
Orthography Essays on Kapampangan Nationalism Essays on Kapampangan
Spirituality Essays on Kapampangan Philosophy and Culture Lusung Empire:
Kapampangan & China.
During the early period of European colonization, the Biblical lands of Tarshish and Ophir,
In Samuel Purchas's well-known travel compendium Purchas His Pilgrim, he devotes the entire first chapter to a discussion of Tarshish and Ophir. In particular, he argues
In modern times, scholars have attempted to relate Tarshish and
But what, one may ask, has this to do with the Philippines? The truth is that the search for Tarsis and Ofir was directly related to the "discovery" of these islands by Magellan!
Magellan and the Search for Ophir
Magellan's contemporary, Duarte Barbosa, wrote that the people of Malacca (in modern Malaysia) had described to him an island group known as the Lequios whose people were as "rich and more eminent than the Chins (Chinese)," and that traded "much gold, and
However, Barbosa was not the only one to mention the Lequios during Magellan's time. About a decade after Magellan's voyage, Ferdinand Pinto
Now, in Magellan's time
Although these lands are not mentioned in
Even after their discovery, many still regarded the Philippines, rich in gold and silver, to be the same as ancient Tarsis and Ofir. Father Colin, referred to them as such in the early 1600's and even at the turn of the century, the Philippine historian Pedro Paterno, still claimed that the Philippines were really Tarshish and Ophir! Whatever one thinks of these
In addition to gold,
Chin-
In ancient Chinese literature, a mysterious region beyond their southern border in Annam was known as Chin-
When China invaded Annam (northern Vietnam) in the first century BCE, the kingdom of Champa fortified villages along the old caravan trail. This path became Route Colonial 9 during the French colonial period, and it was used by the Americans to build the McNamara Line of fortified bases during the Vietnam War.
With this fortified line, the rugged Central Highlands and a policy of constant piracy, the Champa kingdom held the Chinese at bay for a thousand years. After the fall of the Chin dynasty in the 5th century, Cham raids on Tongking became so frequent that the governor appealed to the emperor for assistance. A war of attrition between China and Champa began that lasted until the rise of the T'ang dynasty
The kingdoms of Zabag and Wakwak, famed among the medieval Muslims as rich in gold, referred to the eastern islands of the Malay archipelago i.e.
Although some ancient gold artifacts have been found in this region, they don't match the age suggested by linguistic reconstruction. Gold may have been mostly handed down from generation to generation rather than being used as a burial good item.
In about the second century CE, there arose a practice of using gold eye covers, and then, gold facial orifice covers to adorn the dead resulting in an increase of ancient gold finds. More than a millennium later, the popularity of dental gold to decorate the teeth significantly increased the amount of gold found at archaeological sites.
When the Spanish
Pieces of gold, the size of walnuts and eggs are found by sifting the earth in the island of that king who came to our ships. All the dishes of that
---
For brass, iron and other weighty articles, they gave us gold in exchange
---
Sailing in this manner, for some time, in 16° of north latitude, they were obliged by continual contrary winds, to bear up again for the Philippine islands, and
--- Antonio Galvão in 1555 describing the journey of Bartholomew de la Torre in 1548
"
--- Hernando Riquel et al., 1574
--- Hernando Riquel et al.
There are some chiefs in this island who have on their persons ten or twelve thousand ducats' worth of gold in jewels--to say nothing of the lands, slaves, and mines that they own. There are so many of these chiefs that they are innumerable. Likewise the individual subjects of these chiefs have a great quantity of the said jewels of gold, which they wear on their persons--bracelets, chains, and earrings of solid gold, daggers of gold, and other very rich trinkets. These are generally seen among them, and not only the chiefs and freemen have plenty of these jewels, but even slaves possess and wear golden trinkets upon their persons, openly and freely.
--- Guido
About their
-- Antonio de Morga, 1609
"...
-- Antonio de Morga, 1609
The Portugese explorer Pedro Fidalgo in 1545 found gold so abundant on Luzon the inhabitants were willing to trade two
When the Portuguese first arrived, most of the gold traded
References:
Peralta, J.T. "Prehistoric gold ornaments from the Central Bank of the Philippines," Arts of Asia 1981, no
Mines Dating Back to at Least 1,000 B.C. Have Been Found in the Philippines
According to De Morga: (1,000 B.C.
Mines dating back to at least 1,000 B.C.
When the Spanish arrived, the Philippines
As the missionary Francisco ColÃn wrote in 1663:
In the punishment of crimes of violence the social rank of the slayer and
Blair and Robertson, Vol. II, p. 116.
"
According to Pigafetta:
However, things seem to already diminished from Pigafetta's time:
"On the island [Butuan] where the king came to the ship, pieces of gold as large as walnuts or eggs are to be found, by sifting the earth. All the dishes of the king are of gold, and his whole house is very well set up."
"
Arts of Asia, Jul-Aug 1988, p. 131
Arts of Asia 1981, no
Apparently, even foreigners desired Filipino gold products. Recent discoveries show that gold jewelry of Philippine origin was found in Egypt near the beginning of the era. These finds are mentioned in Laszlo Legeza's "Tantric elements in pre-Hispanic Philippines Gold Art," (Arts of Asia, Jul-Aug 1988, p. 131) along a discussion of Philippine Tantric art. Some outstanding examples of Philippine jewelry, which included necklaces, belts, armlets and rings placed around the waist, are showcased in J. T. Peralta's "Prehistoric gold ornaments from the Central Bank of the Philippines," Arts of Asia 1981, no
Luzon Empire
LUCOES or LEQUIOS ISLANDS
Luzon
Luzon Empire (1279-1571 AD) was an ancient empire once located around Manila bay region of the Philippines. Its capital was
The history of
The Grand Admiral Zhang Shijie escaped with his grand armada but were later annihilated by a typhoon while crossing the seas.
Alternative source
Contemporary Chinese historians in Guangdong are now even questioning the Mongolian accounts regarding Emperor Bing's death. Even though Mongol sources claimed that the corpse of the last emperor has been found washed ashore along the coast of Shenzen, his actual grave is yet to be found. Cantonese folklore expressed in the
Despite the conjectures regarding its origins, the Ming Annals are clear on the actual existence of the Luzon Empire. It records that in 1373 AD, the Luzon Empire sent its first among the many succeeding diplomat
The Ming chroniclers added the character for "kingdom"of "empire" (
Luzon
The Portuguese who came to Asia much earlier than the Spaniards recorded their encounter with the inhabitants of the Luzon empire and called them '
The Luzon Empire's powerful presence in the trade of Chinese goods in 16th century East Asia was felt strongly by Japan, whose merchants had to resort to piracy in order to obtain
When the Spaniards arrived in 1571 AD, the unity of the Luzon Empire was already threatened by the uneasy alliance of the Three Kings of Luzon: the Rajah
Rumor has it that the Spaniards had poisoned the Rajah Matanda of Mainl'l, so as to win the support of Lakandula of Tondo. Disregarding the legitimacy of Rajah Suliman III as 'rajah
In 1571, Rajah Suliman III, the 'rajah
After the collapse of the Luzon empire, the Spaniards were finally able to create their first colony in Asia, the Philippines, named in honor of Spanish King Philip II of Spain. The name Luzon was given to the entire northern Philippine island, in memory of the former Luzon empire.
The Luzon Empire was said to have finally ended in 1571 AD according to Spanish records
In 1575 AD
In 1586 AD, the Spaniards crushed the revolt of former nobles of the Luzon Empire, in the province of Pampanga. The revolt was based in Candaba under the leadership of Don Nicolas Mananquete and Don Juan
In 1588 AD, the Spaniards crushed the revolt of the nobles of the Luzon Empire in Tondo. It was led by the descendants of the Lakandula and their kinsmen with the assistance of Japanese merchants. Many of them executed or exiled and their properties confiscated.
In 1590 AD, the King Sattha of Cambodia sent two elephants to the "King of Luzon" through his Portuguese ambassador and requested the Luzon Empire's assistance in their battle against Siam. In the same year the "lords" of the Luzon Empire were said to have been corresponding with
The study of Philippine history has for many years been Eurocentric, most Philippine historians have gone as far back at the earliest Spanish
Reference:
(History of the Song) original Chinese
text:http://www.yifan.net/yihe/novels/history/songshiytt/sshi.HTML
(Ming Annals) original Chinese
text:http://www.yifan.net/yihe/novels/history/msqztyz/ms.HTML
(
Giles, Herbert Allen, A Chinese Biographical Dictionary (1898). Reprinted by Cheng wen Publishing,
Henson, Mariano A. 1965. The Province of Pampanga and its Towns: A.D. 1300-1965, 4th
Loarca, Miguel de, Relacion de las Yslas Filipinas, Blair and Robertson vol.5 p.34-187.
Morga, Antonio de, Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas, obra publicada en Mejico el aOo de 1609 nuevamente sacada a Luz y anotado por Jose Rizal y precedida de un prologo del Prof. Fernando Blumentritt, Impresion al offset de la Edicion Anatada por Rizal, Paris 1890. Manila: Historico Nacional, 1991.
Miyamoto, Kazuo, Vikings of the Far East,
San Agustin, Gaspar
Santiago, Luciano P.R.
Scott, William Henry, Barangay: Sixteenth-Century Philippine Culture and Society, Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1994.
Tolentino, Aurelio. 1914. Kasulatang Ginto, Manila: Imprenta y Litografia de Juan Fajardo.
Yule, Henry (
Conclusive evidence as per collective research based on the facts and findings of the historians as:
Where to find ophir
In a book
found in Spain entitled Colección General de Documentos Relativos a las
Islas Filipinas (General Collection of Philippine Islands related
Documents), the author has described how to locate Ophir. According to the
section "Document No. 98", dated 1519-1522, Ophir can be found by
travelling from the Cape of Good Hope in Africa, to India, to Burma, to
Sumatra, to Moluccas, to Borneo, to Sulu, to China, then finally Ophir. Ophir
was said to be "[...] in front of China towards the sea, of many islands
where the Moluccans, Chinese, and Lequios met to trade..." Jes Tirol
asserts that this group of islands could not be Japan because the Moluccans did
not get there, nor Taiwan, since it is not composed of "many
islands." Only the present-day Philippines, he says, could fit the description.
Spanish records also mention the presence of Lequious (big, bearded white men,
probably descendants of the Phoenicians, whose ships were always laden with
gold and silver) in the Islands to gather gold and silver. Other evidence
has also been pointed out suggesting that the Philippines was the biblical
Ophir.
FURTHER CONCLUSIONS:
When the
Spanish came they discovered an abundance of gold used among the people of the
Philippine islands. Here are some relevant quotes:
Pieces of gold, the size of walnuts and eggs are found by sifting the earth in the island of that king who came to our ships. All the dishes of thatking are
of gold and also some portion of his house as we were told by that king
himself... He had a covering of silk on his head, and wore two large golden
earrings fastened in his ears... At his side hung a dagger, the haft of which
was somewhat long and all of gold, and its scabbard of carved wood. He had
three spots of gold on every tooth, and his teeth appeared as if bound with
gold. --- Pigafetta on Raja Siaui of Butuan during Magellan's voyage
For brass, iron and other weighty articles, they gave us gold in exchange... For
14 pounds of iron we received 10 pieces of gold, of the value of a ducat and a
half. The Captain General forbade too great an anxiety for receiving gold, without
which order every sailor would have parted with all he had to obtain this
metal, which would have ruined our commerce forever. --- Pigafetta on
gold trade in Cebu
Sailing in this manner, for some time, in 16° of north latitude, they were obliged by continual contrary winds, to bear up again for the Philippine islands, andin their way back, had sight of six or seven additional islands,
but did not anchor at any of them. They found also an archipelago, or numerous
cluster of islands, in 15 or 16 degrees of north latitude, well inhabited by a
white people , with beautiful well -proportioned women, and much better clothed
than in any other of the islands of these parts; and they had many golden
ornaments, which was a sure sign that there was some of that metal in their
country. --- Antonio Galvão in 1555 describing the journey of
Bartholomew de la Torre in 1548
Pieces of gold, the size of walnuts and eggs are found by sifting the earth in the island of that king who came to our ships. All the dishes of that
For brass, iron and other weighty articles, they gave us gold in exchange
Sailing in this manner, for some time, in 16° of north latitude, they were obliged by continual contrary winds, to bear up again for the Philippine islands, and
"... the
ore is so rich that I will not write any more about it, as I might possibly
come under a suspicion of exaggerating; but I swear by Christ that there is
more gold on this island than there is iron in all Biscay." ---
Hernando Riquel et al., 1574
There are some chiefs in this island who have on their persons ten or twelve thousand ducats' worth of gold in jewels--to say nothing of the lands, slaves, and mines that they own. There are so many of these chiefs that they are innumerable. Likewise the individual subjects of these chiefs have a great quantity of the said jewels of gold, which they wear on their persons--bracelets, chains, and earrings of solid gold, daggers of gold, and other very rich trinkets. These are generally seen among them, and not only the chiefs and freemen have plenty of these jewels, but even slaves possess and wear golden trinkets upon their persons, openly and freely. --- Guido
About their
"...
Great to Know we are the descendants of ISRAEL! YAHUWAH BLESS AND PROTECT MY HOMELAND OPHIR!
WE ARE THE LOST TRIBE OF ISRAEL.
EXPLORERE MORE ON MY BLOG HERE
You can watch the unique video relating the basis how they found the land of OPHIR By, GOD CULTURE.
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