Philippine Trivia
Excerpted from the Philippine Department of Tourism website: http://www.tourism.gov.ph/SitePages/Trivia.aspx
- The exotic jeepney is a post-war
creation inspired by the GI jeeps that the American soldiers brought to the
country in the 1940s. Enterprising Filipinos salvaged the surplus engines and
came out unique vehicles of art.
- Short distance and feeder trips
could not be more exciting than via Philippine quick transports – the tricycle,
a motorcycle with a sidecar, and the pedicab, a bicycle with a sidecar.
- The world’s longest underground
river system accessible to man can be found at the St. Paul National Park in
the province of Palawan.
- The largest Philippine wild
animal, the tamaraw, is a species of the buffalo that is similar to the
carabao. It is found only in the island of Mindoro.
- The highest mountain in the
Philippines is Mt. Apo, a dormant volcano found in Mindanao, at 2,954 meters
(9,689 feet). Mt. Pulog in Luzon is the second highest at 2,928 meters (9604
feet).
- Filipino bowler Rafael
"Paeng" Nepomuceno was the first bowler to be elevated to the
International Bowling Hall of Fame based in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. The
Philippine Congress has named him “Greatest Filipino Athlete of All Time.”
- Philippine National Hero and
writer Jose Rizal could read and write at age 2. He grew up to speak more than
20 languages, including Latin, Greek, German, French, and Chinese. What were
his last words? "Consummatum est!" ("It is done!")
- The largest city in the
Philippines is Davao City. With an area of 2,211 sq. km., it is about three
times the size of the national capital, Metro Manila.
- Cebu is the oldest Philippine city.
- Negros Occidental has the most
cities among Philippine provinces.
- Filipinos celebrate the world’s
longest religious holiday. The Christmas season begins on September 1st, as
chillier winds and Christmas carols start filling the air, and ends on the first
week of January, during the Feast of the Three Kings.
- Paskuhan Village in the province
of Pampanga is Asia’s only Christmas theme park and the third of its kind in
the world.
- The great Christmas lanterns of
San Fernando, Pampanga can reach as big as 40 feet in diameter, using as many
as 16,000 glowing bulbs.
- The exotic jeepney is the
Filipino version of the jitney, the taxi/minibus that travels along a fixed
route, found in many countries.
- The popular toy, the yoyo, was
invented by 16th century hunters in the Philippines.
- The word "boondocks,"
which is now a part of the English language, dictionary, and vocabulary, comes
from the Tagalog word "bundok," meaning "mountain."
- The Philippines became the first
Asian country to win FIVE major international beauty pageant crowns — two for
Miss Universe, in 1969 and 1973, and three for Miss International, in 1965,
1970, and 1979.
- Diving paradise Anilao, in the
province of Batangas, is the theme of a picture book that bagged the
International Prize for Underwater Images at the 27th World Festival of
Underwater Images in France in November 2000. “Anilao" book creators and
Filipino scuba divers Scott Tuason and Eduardo Cu Unjieng defeated big names in
underwater photography such as Jacques Mayol, Pascal Kobeh, Monique Walker, and
Alessandro Tommasi.
- The biggest game preserve and
wildlife sanctuary in the Philippines is located on Calauit Island in Palawan,
which has the largest land area among the Philippine provinces.
- The antibiotic erythromycin —
used to treat a wide variety of bacterial infections, such as respiratory tract
infections, middle ear infections, and skin infections — was created by
Filipino scientist Abelardo Aguilar, and has earned American drug giant Eli
Lilly billions of dollars. Neither Aguilar nor the Philippine government
received royalties.
- Fernando Amorsolo was officially
the first National Artist of the Philippines. He was given the distinction of
National Artist for Painting in 1972.
- Philippines Herald war journalist
Carlos P. Romulo was the first Asian to win a Pulitzer Prize in Journalism in
1942. He was also aide-de-camp to General Douglas MacArthur in World War II;
Philippine resident commissioner in the U.S. Congress from 1944-46; and the
first Asian to become UN President in 1949
- The largest fish in the world,
the Whale Shark, locally known as Butanding, regularly swims to the Philippine
waters.
- The world’s shortest and lightest
freshwater fish is the dwarf pygmy goby (Pandaka Pygmaea), a colorless and
nearly transparent species found in the streams and lakes of Luzon. Males have
an average length of 8.7 mm. and weigh 4-5 mg.
- On January 18, 1995, Pope John
Paul II offered mass to an estimated 4 to 5 million people at Luneta Park,
Manila, Philippines, making it to the Guiness Book of World Records for the
Biggest Papal Crowd.
- The Philippine Madrigal Singers
bagged the 1997 European Choral Grand Prix, the choral olympics of the world’s
best choirs. The group, being the only Asian choir, bested five regional
champions from all over Europe, earning them the title as the "world’s
best choir."
- There are 12,000 or so species of
seashells in the Philippines. The Conus Gloriamaris or "Glory of the
Sea" is the rarest and most expensive in the world.
- Of the 500 known coral species in
the world, 488 are found in the Philippines.
- Of the eight species of marine
turtles worldwide, five are reported to be found in the Philippines: the Green
Turtle, Hawkbill, Leatherback, Olive Ridley, and Loggerhead.
- Of the eight known species of
giant clams in the world, seven are found in the Philippines.
- The Basilica of San Sebastian is
the only steel church in Asia and was the second building to be made out of
steel, next to the Eiffel Tower in Paris.
- The largest bell in Asia hangs at
the belfry of the 221-year old Panay Church. It is 7 feet in diameter and 7
feet in height, and weighs 10.4 tons. Its tolling can be heard as far as 8 km.
away. It was casted from 70 sacks of coins donated by the townspeople as a
manifestation of faith and thanksgiving.
- The World Cup, which was instituted
in 1965, is contested annually by the national champions of the Federation
Internationale des Quilleurs (FIQ). The highest number of wins is 4, by
Filipino bowler Rafael “Paeng” Nepomuceno: 1976, 1980, 1992, and 1996.
- Filipino Eriberto N. Gonzales Jr.
consumed 350 chilis in 3 minutes at the annual Magayon Festival chili-eating
contest held at Penaranda Park, Legazpi, Albay on May 27, 1999, making it to
the Guiness Book of World Records for the most chilis eaten.
- The longest possible eclipse of
the Sun is 7 min. 31 sec. The longest eclipse in recent times took place west
of the Philippines on June 20, 1995, lasting for 7 min. 8 sec.
- Camiguin province holds the
distinction of having the most number of volcanoes per square kilometer than
any other island on earth. It is also the only place in the Philippines which
has more volcanoes (7) than towns (5).
- The 900 sq m Relief Map of
Mindanao in Dapitan City was personally done by Dr. Jose Rizal. It was used as
a device for teaching history and geography to townsfolk.
- The Zamboanga Golf Course and
Beach Park was founded in 1910 by Gov. John Pershing. It is one of the oldest
golf courses in the Philippines.
- Isabela City is the youngest city
in the region. It was only on March 5, 2001 that the Municipality of Isabela,
Province of Basilan was converted into a component city Through RA 9023. On
April 25, 2001, IsabeleƱos ratified the new status of Isabela.
- The Kinabayo is an exotic and
colorful pageant re-enacting the Spanish-Moorish Wars, particularly the Battle
of Covadonga where the Spanish forces under General Pelagio took their last
stand against the Saracens. They were able to reverse the tide of war with the
miraculous apparition of St. James, the Apostle. A Kinabayo Festival is
celebrated every July in Dapitan City, attracting thousands of tourists to the
city.
- The altar at the Holy Rosary
Cathedral in Dipolog City was designed by Dr. Jose Rizal. The Cathedral was
erected by the Spanish friars sometime in 1895, before Dipolog City became a
municipality.
- The Rizal Shrine in Dapitan City
is the original estate of Dr. Jose Rizal which he acquired by purchase during
his exile in Dapitan from 1892 to 1896.
- RA 8973 signed by then President
Joseph E. Estrada in February 2001 created the province of Zamboanga Sibugay. A
total of sixteen municipalities compose this newest province in the Zamboanga
Peninsula.
- Magat Dam is Asia’s biggest dam
project at the time of its construction. It serves the primary function of
power generation and irrigation.
- The Cagayan River or Rio Grande
de Cagayan is the Philippines’ mightiest watercourse – the longest and widest
river in the country. Small streams originating form Balete Pass, Cordillera,
Caraballo and Sierra Madre Mountains meet other streams and rivers and flow to
the Cagayan River.
- Magapit Suspension Bridge is the
first of its kind in Asia. It spans the Cagayan River at Lallo and is 0.76
kilometers long. The hanging bridge links the first and second districts of
Cagayan going towards the Ilocos Region via the scenic Patapat Road on the
Ilocos Norte-Cagayan Inter-Provincial national highway.
- Angono Petroglyphs – This
cultural heritage site dates back to circa 3000 B.C. and is the most ancient
Filipino, or more aptly, prehistoric Filipino work of art. Besides being the
country’s oldest “work of art” it also offers us an evocative glimpse into the
life of our ancestors. The site has been included in the World Inventory of
Rock Art under the auspices of UNESCO, ICCROM and ICOMOS and nominated as one
of the “100 Most Endangered Sites of the World."
- PANCIT HABHAB (Lucban)-Made from
rice flour, these local noodles acquired its name and developed its unique
attraction by the way it is eaten. Otherwise known as Pancit Lucban, these
noodles are hawked in the streets and served on a piece of banana leaf, sans
fork or any other utensils. Thus, it is eaten straight from the leaf, licking
permitted... "habhab"-style.
- Tagala - the Philippines first
Filipino-Spanish dictionary which was printed in 1613, 25 years older than the
first book printed in the United States.
- Mayon is the most beautiful
mountain I have ever seen, the world-renowned Fujiyama (Mt. Fuji) of Japan
sinking into perfect insignificance by comparison. British traveler-writer A.
Henry Savage Landor
- Ilo-Ilo golf and country club is
the oldest golf club in the Philippines. It was built in 1908 by Irish
Engineers.
- Limasawa Island – where Ferdinand
Magellan first landed in the Philippines which give way to the discovery of the
Philippines and where the first mass was celebrated.
- San Juanico Strait - said to be
the narrowest yet the most navigable strait in the world.
- Calbiga Cave – The Philippines’
biggest karst formations and one of the largest in Asia, the 2,968-hectare cave
system is composed of 12 caves with wide underground spaces, unique rock
formations and sub-terranean watercourse.
- At the Immaculate Conception
Cathedral can be found the only existing pipe organ in Mindanao. The 2nd
largest pipe organ in the Philippines. The huge instrument took 2 years to built
and was brought over by sea from Germany in 23 crates.
- Cagayan de Oro City - “The City
of Golden Friendship,” known for its warm people and old-fashioned hospitality.
- Mt. Apo, the Philippines highest
mountain at 10,311 feet above sea level, and considered as the “Grand-father of
all Philippine Mountains.”
- Lake Lanao is the second largest
lake in the Philippines, probably the deepest in the country and is considered
one of the major tropical lakes in Southeastern Asia. The lake is home of
endemic cryprinids, the species found only in the lake and nowhere else in the
world.
- Halo-Halo! Halo-halo literally
means, "mix-mix". And its is just that: a mixture of sweetened fruits
and beans, lavished with pinipig (crisp flattened rice flakes), sugar and milk,
topped by crushed ice and ice cream. You know its summertime when halo-halo
stand start sprouting by the roadside and by the beach, all whipping up their
heavenly concoctions of such a refreshingly divine dessert. You can make your
own by selecting and mixing your ingredients to make a perfect Halo-Halo.
Halo-Halo is uniquely, unforgettably Filipino!
- KALESA - The kalesa or karitela
is a horse-driven carriage that was introduced during the 18th century. It was
used by Spanish officials and the nobles as a means of transportation. The
Ilustrados, the rich Filipinos who had their own businesses, used the kalesa
not only for traveling but as a means a means of transporting their goods as
well.
- BAKYA-Made primarily of lightwood
(laniti and santol trees), it is sculpted with a slope and shaved to a smooth
finish, then painted with floral designs or varnished to a high sheen. The
upper portions, which are made of rubber or transparent plastic, are fastened
to the sides by thumb nails called "clavitos". The bakya industry
prospered during the 1930s when the Filipinos began exporting these to the
other countries.
- SORBETES-This sweet treat was
concocted in the early 1920's, a time where a single centavo could buy you
almost anything. The process of this ice cream making and selling it in carts
with colorful designs is still the same. Back in the old days, these ice cream
dealers bred their own cows and milked them with their own hands to ensure the
freshness and sanitation of the milk needed to make the "dirty ice cream."
- Waling Waling Orchids - With some
800 to 1,000 species of orchids, the Philippines has one of the richest orchid
floras in the world. Philippine orchids come in an amazing array of shapes,
sizes and colors. Most grow only in old-growth forest, often on branches of
huge trees dozens of meters above the forest floor.
- Maria Teresa Calderon – A
Filipina World champion speed reader as listed in the Guinness Book of World
Records.
- In the Philippines, Filipinos
were introduced to the English language in 1762 by British invaders, not
Americans. Philippines is the world's 3rd largest English-speaking nation, next
to the USA and the UK.
- The Philippine Basketball
Association is Asia's premier and the world's second oldest professional
league.
- Philippine Airlines took to the
skies on March 15, 1941, using a Beech Model 18 aircraft amid the specter of a
global war. It became Asia's first airline.
- The world's largest pearl was
discovered by a Filipino diver in a giant Tridacna (mollusk) under the Palawan
Sea in 1934. Known as the "Pearl of Lao-Tzu", the gem weighs 14
pounds and measures 9 1/2 inches long and 5 1/2 inches in diameter. As of May
1984, it was valued at US$42 million. It is believed to be 600 years old.
- Alto Broadcasting System (ABS)
Channel 3, the first television station in the country, went on the air in
1953.
- The world's second deepest spot
underwater is in the Philippines. This spot, about 34,440 feet (10,497 meters)
below the sea level, is known as the Philippine Deep or the Mindanao Trench.
The Philippine Deep is in the floor of the Philippine Sea. The German ship
Emden first plumbed the trench in 1927.
- The symbolic name for the
Philippines, Juan dela Cruz, is not a Filipino invention. It was coined by R.
McCulloch-Dick, a Scottish-born journalist working for the Manila Times in the
early 1900s, after discovering it was the most common name in blotters.
- Lipa City in Batangas is dubbed
as the “Rome of the Philippines” because of the number of seminaries, convents,
monasteries, retreat houses, and a famous cathedral located in it.
- Compostela Valley is known to be
laden with gold, thus earning the monicker “Golden Valley of Mindanao.”
- Basilica of St. Martin de Tours
in Taal, Batangas built by Augustinian Missionaries in 1572, is reputed to be
the biggest catholic church in East Asia. It is so huge that it can house
another big church.
- Kibungan is known as the
“Switzerland of Bengued” because of the frost during the cold months.
- The Delmonte Pineapple Plantation
in Bukidnon is considered to be the biggest in the far east.
- Both Tridacna gigas, one of the
world's largest shells, and Pisidum, the world's tiniest shell, can be found
under Philippine waters. Tridacna gigas grows as large as one meter in length
and weighs 600 pounds while Pisidum is less than 1 millimeter long. A shell
called glory of the sea (Connus gloriamaris) is also found in the Philippines
and considered as one of the most expensive shells in the world.
- Seahorses are small saltwater
fish belonging to the Syngnathidae family (order Gasterosteiformes), which also
includes pipefish and sea dragons. Most seahorse species, probably the most
peculiar creatures in the water, live in the Coral Triangle. There are at least
50 known seahorse species in the world. They inhabit temperate and tropical waters
but most of them are concentrated in the warm coastal waters of the
Philippines.
- Donsol, a fishing town in
Sorsogon province, serves as a sanctuary to a group of 40 whale sharks
(Rhincodon typus), which are considered as the largest fish in the world. Locally
known as "butanding", whale sharks visit the waters of Donsol from
November to May. They travel across the oceans but nowhere else have they been
sighted in a larger group than in the waters of Sorsogon. They measure between
18 to 35 feet in length and weigh about 20 tons.
- The Philippines is home to some
of the world's most exotic birds.
- One of the most endangered
species is the exotic Kalangay or the Philippine cockatoo (Cacatua
haematuropygia), which belongs to Psittacidae or the family of parrots. Some
cockatoos can live up to 50 years. They are known for mimicking human voices.
Most of them measure 33 centimeters in length and weigh 0.29 kilogram.
- Palawan bearcat is neither a bear
nor a cat. Known in Southeast Asia as binturong, the bearcat is a species of
its own, with population in the forests of Palawan, Borneo, Burma and Vietnam.
It belongs to the family of Viverridae (civets). The Palawan bearcat has a long
body and a pointed face leading to the nose. Its head and body measure 61 to 96
centimeters in combined length while its tail is almost as long. It weighs 9 to
14 kilograms and lives up to 20 years.
- Calamian Deer - Calamian Islands,
north of Palawan province, keep a species of deer that cannot be found
elsewhere. Scientists referred to the hog deer in the islands as Calamian deer
in order to distinguish them from other hog deer in the world. An ordinary
Calamian deer measures 105 to 115 centimeters in length and 60 to 65
centimeters high at the shoulder and weighs about 36 to 50 kilograms. It is
said to have longer and darker legs, compared with other hog deer.
- World's Smallest Hoofed Mammal -
South of Palawan, lies the Balabac Island, home of the world's smallest hoofed
mammal - the Philippine mouse deer. Locally known as Pilandok (Tragalus
nigricans), this ruminant stands only about 40 centimeters at the shoulder
level.
- Flying Lemur - One of the most
distinct creatures on Earth lives in the Philippines. It doesn't have wings but
it can glide across 100 meters of space in a single leap. Like the lemurs of
Asia, it moves around at night. Its head resembles that of a dog while its body
has similarities with the flying squirrel of Canada.
- In Mindanao, people call it
"kagwang". Around the world, it is known as colugo or the flying
lemur.
- The first four
cities of Metropolitan Manila are: Manila, Quezon, Pasay and Caloocan
- The flagpole located in Rizal
Park, is where the starts of 0 kilometer reading in measuring all distances
from Manila.
- Quezon City is the second biggest
city in the Philippines.
- The Bonifacio Monument in
Monumento, Caloocan City was designed by a noted Filipino sculptor Guillermo
Tolentino.
- In 1916, in the Philippines, an
offensive style of passing the ball in a high trajectory to be struck by
another player (the set and spike) were introduced. The Filipinos developed the
"bomba" or kill, and called the hitter a "bomberino".
(source: http://volleyball.org/history.html)
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