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ANG ILALAGAY SA PPT NG KADA LUGAR AY MGA PCITURES NA LAMANG TAPOS EEXPLAIN NALANG NG

KONTING BRIEF KUNG ANO ANG KASUOOTAN NG TAO SA KADA KUGAR AT BRIEF DESCRIPTION ABOUT
SA LUGAR TAPOS KUNG ANO ANG PINUPUNTAHAN NG MGA MANGANGALAKAL SA KADA LUGAR
KUNWARE PORCELAIN MGA GANON.

Panahon ito na tinatawag na Ma-I, Ba-I, Lucoes, Palauye, Tundun, Pailah, Binwangan,
Pishoye, Mintolang ang mga pamayanang napupuntahan ng mga mangangalakal at
manlalakbay hanggang pagdating ng mga mananakop na Espanyol
SCRIPT ON RPH FINAL

MA’I

- The Sung Chinese called the Philippines Ma-i. (brief description about sung Chinese/
song dynasty)
- Early Chinese traders who visited Mindoro called our nation ma’i.
- Mindoro had been known to the ancients as Ma-i, and was formally called Mait. Its
existence was written in the Chinese chronicles in 1225 (775 A.D.). The province was
well-known to the Chinese traders as a major anchorage in the Southeast Asia trade
route before the pre-Philippines period when Chinese, Arab, and merchants traded with
the natives. 
- The following discussion is the description of the island that’s comes from the book of
Chau Ju Kua, written about 1225 but probably based on information collected in the
previous century:
- The island of Ma-i is in the north of Borneo. It has high mountains and flat land,
intersected by small rivers. A portion of the island is flat and broad and is watered by a
double branched stream. The soil is rich, and the climate is rather hot. The fields are
very fertile and produce more than in any other country. (explanation)
- The people live together in villages. Both men and women do up their hair in a knot
behind, and they wear long dresses and sarongs of different colors. (Explanation and
picture)
- There are bronze images of gods, of unknown origin, scattered about in the grassy
jungle.
- Pirates seldom come to this country. When trading ships enter the anchorage, they
stop in front of the officials' place [or place of the mandarins], for that is the bartering-
place of the country. There is a great market there. After a ship has been boarded, the
natives mix freely with the ship's folk. The chiefs are in the habit of using white
umbrellas, for which reason the traders offer them as gifts. “The custom of the trade is
for the barbarian traders to assemble in crowds and carry the goods away with them in
baskets; and, even if one cannot at first know them and can but slowly distinguish the
men who remove the goods, yet there will be no loss. The barbarian traders will after
this carry these goods on to other islands for barter, and, as a rule, it takes them as
much as eight or nine months till they return, when they repay the traders on
shipboard with what they have obtained for the goods. Some, however, do not return
within the proper term, for which reason vessels trading with Ma-i are the latest in
reaching home. ( Summary of this )
- The products of the country consist of yellow wax [beeswax], cotton, pearls, tortoise-
shell, medicinal betelnuts and Yuta fiber cloth [probably einamay]. The goods used in
trading are porcelain, trade-gold, iron caldrons, » lead, colored glass beads, iron
needles, pieces of iron, colored cotton stuffs, red taffetas, ivory, silks of different colors,
copper pots, sycee shoes and the like. (see pictures)

TUNDUN
- Ang Tondo ay nagkaroon ng iba’t ibang pangalan katulad ng tundo, tundun, tundok,
lusung, tunglio, ar Imperyong Luson ang mga ibinigay na pangalan sa Tondo noong
unang panahon.
- Marinig pa lamang ang tondo mababati d na marami ng kwento ang pwedeng
makuhadito. Kilalang lugar kung saan talamak ang kahirapan, karahasan at kahirapan. Ang lugar
na ito’ynaging batayan na rin ng mga salitang matapang at walang hiya na siya ring bayan ng isa
sa mgainituing nating bayani na si Andres Bonifacio. (Hinamer, 2012)

PISHOYE
- The language of P'i-sho-ye cannot be understood, and traders do not 5 resort to the
country. The people go naked and are in a state of primitive savagerj' like beasts.
- They were fond of iron vessels, spoons, and chopsticks; one could get rid 20 of them by
closing the entrance door, from which they would only wrench the iron knocker and go
away. By throwing away spoons or chopsticks they could be got to stoop down to pick
them up, and thus fall behind some paces.
- Terrien de Lacouperie, China before the Chinese, 127, was the first to identify the P'i-
sho-ye with the Visaya or Bisaya of the Philippines.

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