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Paete

Municipality in Laguna, Philippines

Paete

Municipality in Laguna, Philippines

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image_flagFlag_of_Paete,_Laguna.png
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nicknameWoodcarving Capital of the Philippines
subdivision_type3District
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established_titleFounded
established_dateJuly 25, 1580
parts_typeBarangays
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p1(see Barangays)
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameRonald B. Cosico
leader_title1Vice Mayor
leader_name1Virgilio L. Madridejos Jr.
leader_title2Representative
leader_name2Benjamin C. Agarao Jr.
leader_title3Municipal Council
leader_name3{{PH Town Council
1
2Florence Jude V. Cadawas
3Lorena B. Velasco
4Carmen E. Valdellon
5Roman Pedro M. Baldemor
6Anna Patricia A. Adao
7Joshua Ryan I. Alvarez
8Marcelino H. Baisas
9Mark Anthony B. Bagamano
leader_title4Electorate
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Paete Church with hills at background.jpg Paete Church Katipunan Monument, Paete, Laguna.jpg Ibaba del Norte, Paete, Laguna.jpg

Paete, officially the Municipality of Paete (), is a municipality in the province of Laguna, Philippines. According to the , it has a population of people.

Along the shores of picturesque Laguna de Bay. It was founded in 1580 by Spanish friars Juan de Plasencia and Diego de Oropesa of the Franciscan Order. It is believed that the earliest inhabitants were of Malay lineage, coming all the way from Borneo in their swift and sturdy boats called "Balangay".

Etymology

The name of Paete is derived from the Tagalog word paet, which means chisel. The proper pronunciation of the town's name is Pī-té, long i, short guttural ê, sound at the end. The town was referred to as "Piety" by the American Maryknoll Missioners when they came to the town in the late 1950s.

History

Precolonial era

The Spanish friars had a tradition of naming towns they built in honor of saints. Paete was an exception. Legend has it that there was once a young Franciscan priest who was tasked by his superior to visit their newly founded settlements alongside Laguna de Bay. The priest knew little about the terrain so he asked a native the name of the place. The latter misinterpreted the young friar, thinking that the former wanted to know the name of the tool he was using. He answered, Paét (chisel), thus, the name Paete.

Sargento Mayor Juan de Salcedo was the first Spaniard to set foot in Paete. He was on his way to explore the gold-rich region of Paracale in Bicol. His men first encountered some resistance from the settlers of what is now Cainta in Rizal Province, but defeated the lightly armed natives. Then he ventured to the lakeside barangays of Laguna de Bay on his way to Bicol.

Spanish colonial era

Around 1580, Paete was established as a pueblo by the Friars. Juan de Plasencia and Diego Oropesa. Due to a death of the prior of Paete at that time, Paete was annexed to the Convent of Lumban. Then in 1600, Paete became a barrio of Pangil. In 1602, Paete became independent town having its own convent and was christened Pueblo de San Lorenzo in honor of the town's first patron saint. The pueblo consisted not only of Paete, but included the neighboring towns of Pakil, San Antonio, Longos and Kalayaan. In 1671, Fray Francisco Soller reenacted the Via Crucis to resuscitate the people's waning faith. He carried a cross from the town proper up to Mt. Ping-as in Pakil. In 1676, when Pakil became a separate pueblo, the townspeople of Paete wanted crosses of their own, so they built and located them in sitio Santa Ana, and named the site Tatlong Krus (Three Crosses). Paete regained its full township status only in 1850.

American colonial era

In 1899, American forces launched the Laguna campaign to subjugate the whole province and squelch insurrection. On the last leg of the campaign on April 12, an American battalion of 200 men invaded Paete but met strong resistance from an inexperienced force of less than 50 men. The town was subdued but it proved to be a costly battle for the Americans.

World War II and Japanese occupation

In 1942, Japanese troops occupied Paete, local recognized guerrillas and ongoing troops under the Philippine Commonwealth Army units were sieges and conflicts in Paete was fought against the Imperial Japanese military and local collaborators from 1942 to 1944 until retreat by local guerrillas from the Japanese hands. In 1945, combined Filipino and American soldiers and guerrillas liberated Paete and defeated the Japanese.

Geography

Paete is located at the north-eastern part of Laguna. From Manila, Paete can be reached passing through Rizal Province via Manila East Road or via South Luzon Expressway. It is 15 km from Santa Cruz, 102 km from Manila, and 63 km from Lucena.

Barangays

Paete is politically subdivided into 9 barangays, as indicated in the matrix below. Each barangay consists of puroks and some have sitios.

Brgy. Map Arrange Many of Sitio and purok in the low land and Sierra Madre

Climate

| access-date = 11 May 2020 }}

Demographics

In the 2024 census, the population of Paete was 25,254 people, with a density of {{sigfig|25,254/55.02|2}} PD/km2.

Religion

The only Catholic Church in the town is the Saint James the Apostle Parish Church which was first built in 1646.

Paete is also a pilgrimage site. One of the primary products of the town's woodcarving industry are carving of pu-on or images of saints. The town's patron saint is St. James the Apostle, also known as St. James the Great. Residents celebrate his feastday every 25 July. The 1st Patron Saint of Paete is St. Lawrence, the deacon.

St. Anthony the Abbot is a secondary patron of the town and his feast is celebrated by the townsfolk every January 17. The patron has a stone chapel locally known as Ermita as a shrine dedicated to him. There is a town legend related to the saint where a town native sneaked in the chapel during a conflagration and took a statue the St. Anthony to bathe it in the river. Following this, it began to rain and the fire was extinguished, an event considered as a miracle by the townsfolk.

Economy

Wood carving shop in Paete

The town has had a long reputation for its craftsmen highly skilled in wood carving and its embellishment. In 1887, José Rizal described Paete as a town where "carpenter shops" were issuing images "even those more rudely carved" (chapter VI, Noli Me Tangere). Even now, its inhabitants (called Paeteños or Paetenians) continue with their centuries-old tradition in carving and painting. Its statues, pulpits, murals and bas relief are found in churches, palaces and museums all over the world, including the St. Peter's Basilica in Rome, St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York, the Mission Dolorosa in San Francisco, the San Cayetano Church in Mexico, the St. Joseph's shrine in Santa Cruz, California, various churches in the Philippines and the Ayala Museum in Makati, Philippines. The official town hero is not a statesman nor a soldier but a woodcarver, the master artisan Mariano Madriñan, whose obra maestra, the lifelike Mater Dolorosa, was honored by the King of Spain with a prestigious award in Amsterdam in 1882. The town was proclaimed "the Carving Capital of the Philippines" on March 15, 2005, by Philippine President Arroyo.

DIY taka workshop kit created by the Adao Family from Paete, Laguna

Taka, papier maché made using carved wooden sculpture used as a mold, also originated from Paete. It is also believed that the modern yo-yo, which originated in the Philippines, was invented in Paete.http://www.paete.org/abtpaete/

Many descendants of these artisans have found a niche in the culinary world. Ice sculptures and fruit and vegetable carvings done by Paeteños abound on buffet tables of cruise ships and world-class hotels and restaurants. Today the town thrives mainly on the sale and export of woodcarvings and taka, tourism, poultry industry, farming and fishing.

Education

The Paete Schools District Office governs all educational institutions within the municipality. It oversees the management and operations of all private and public, from primary to secondary schools.

Primary and elementary schools

  • Ibaba Elementary School
  • Paete Christian Academy
  • Paete Elementary School
  • Paete Nativity Montessori School
  • Papatahan Elementary School
  • Quinale Elementary School
  • San Antonio Abad School
  • Tubog Elementary School

Secondary schools

  • Liceo de Paete
  • Luis C. Obial Senior High School
  • Poten & Eliseo M. Quesada Memorial National High School
  • Poten & Eliseo M. Quesada Memorial National High School (Papatahan Annex)
  • Stand Alone Senior High School No. 21 (Papatahan)

Higher educational institution

  • Paete Science and Business College (Eastern Laguna Colleges)

References

References

  1. [http://www.visitmyphilippines.com/index.php?title=ArtsandCraftsTour(Overnight)&func=all&pid=1612&tbl=0 Department of Tourism - The Philippine's Ultimate Travel Guide for Tourist]
  2. (21 July 2014). "Nana Nena ng Kawit".
  3. {{DILG detail
  4. (April 1999). "Origin of "Paete"". About Paete.
  5. "Historical Background". Paete Municipal Government.
  6. (April 1999). "Religious Art in Paete". About Paete.
  7. (April 1999). "Feast of San Antonio Abad". About Paete.
  8. "Proclamation No. 809, s. 2005".
  9. Pruden, Marie Cagahastian Castillo. ''About Paete'': April 1999
  10. (January 15, 2021). "Masterlist of Schools".
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