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Santo Tomas, Batangas
Component city in Batangas, Philippines
Component city in Batangas, Philippines
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | ||
| image_skyline | {{multiple image | |
| border | infobox | |
| total_width | 250 | |
| image_style | border:1; | |
| perrow | 2/2 | |
| image1 | National Shrine of St. Padre Pio, Sto. Tomas, Batangas.jpg | |
| image2 | 9171Santo Tomas Batangas Calamba City Roads Barangays Landmarks 24.jpg | |
| image3 | SantoTomas,Batangasjf0589 05.JPG | |
| image4 | Sto. Tomas City Hall, Batangas, Apr 2024.jpg | |
| image_caption | Clockwise from top: Padre Pio Shrine, First Philippine Industrial Park, Santo Tomas City Hall, A. Bonifacio Street, The Lifestyle Strip, Malvar Shrine | |
| image_flag | Santo_Tomas_City_flag.jpg | |
| flag_size | 100px | |
| image_seal | City_seal_of_Santo_Tomas,_Batangas_(2023).jpg | |
| seal_size | 100x80px | |
| image_map | ||
| map_caption | ||
| mapframe | yes | |
| pushpin_map | Philippines | |
| pushpin_label_position | left | |
| pushpin_map_caption | Location within the | |
| coordinates | ||
| settlement_type | ||
| subdivision_type | Country | |
| subdivision_name | Philippines | |
| subdivision_type1 | Region | |
| subdivision_name1 | ||
| subdivision_type2 | Province | |
| subdivision_name2 | ||
| official_name | ||
| etymology | ||
| named_for | St. Thomas Aquinas | |
| nickname | Gateway to Batangas | |
| motto | Magandang Bukas, Santo Tomas | |
| anthem | Ako ay Tomasino (I am a Tomasino) | |
| subdivision_type3 | District | |
| subdivision_name3 | ||
| established_title | Founded | |
| established_date | ||
| established_title2 | Cityhood | |
| established_date2 | September 7, 2019 | |
| parts_type | Barangays | |
| parts_style | para | |
| p1 | (see Barangays) | |
| leader_title | Mayor | |
| leader_name | Arth Jhun A. Marasigan | |
| leader_title1 | Vice Mayor | |
| leader_name1 | Catherine J. Perez | |
| leader_title2 | Representative | |
| leader_name2 | King George Leandro Antonio V. Collantes | |
| leader_title3 | City Council | |
| leader_name3 | {{PH Town Council | |
| 1 | ||
| 2 | Ross Allan D. Maligaya | |
| 3 | Victor O. Bathan | |
| 4 | Leovino M. Villegas | |
| 5 | Adrian C. Carpio | |
| 6 | Arturo U. Pecaña | |
| 7 | Helengrace P. Navarro | |
| 8 | Danilo P. Mabilangan | |
| 9 | Wilfredo P. Maliksi | |
| 10 | Raquel M. Maloles-Salazar | |
| 11 | Proceso C. Mendoza | |
| leader_title4 | Electorate | |
| leader_name4 | voters (electorate_point_in_time}} | ) |
| government_type | ||
| government_footnotes | ||
| elevation_m | ||
| elevation_max_m | 1094 | |
| elevation_min_m | 5 | |
| area_footnotes | ||
| area_total_km2 | ||
| population_footnotes | ||
| population_total | ||
| population_as_of | ||
| population_density_km2 | auto | |
| population_blank1_title | Households | |
| population_blank1 | ||
| timezone | PST | |
| utc_offset | +8 | |
| postal_code_type | ZIP code | |
| postal_code | ||
| postal2_code_type | ||
| postal2_code | ||
| area_code_type | ||
| area_code | ||
| website | https://cityofstotomas.gov.ph/ | |
| demographics_type1 | Economy | |
| demographics1_title1 | ||
| demographics1_info1 | 1st city income class | |
| demographics1_title2 | Poverty incidence | |
| demographics1_info2 | % () | |
| demographics1_title3 | Revenue | |
| demographics1_info3 | ||
| demographics1_title4 | Revenue rank | |
| demographics1_title5 | Assets | |
| demographics1_info5 | ||
| demographics1_title6 | Assets rank | |
| demographics1_title7 | IRA | |
| demographics1_title8 | IRA rank | |
| demographics1_title9 | Expenditure | |
| demographics1_info9 | ||
| demographics1_title10 | Liabilities | |
| demographics1_info10 | ||
| demographics_type2 | Service provider | |
| demographics2_title1 | Electricity | |
| demographics2_info1 | ||
| demographics2_title2 | Water | |
| demographics2_title3 | Telecommunications | |
| demographics2_title4 | Cable TV | |
| blank_name_sec1 | ||
| blank_info_sec1 | ||
| blank1_name_sec1 | Native languages | |
| blank1_info_sec1 | ||
| blank2_name_sec1 | Crime index | |
| blank1_name_sec2 | Major religions | |
| blank2_name_sec2 | Feast date | |
| blank3_name_sec2 | Catholic diocese | |
| blank4_name_sec2 | Patron saint | |
| blank4_info_sec2 | St. Thomas Aquinas |
The Lifestyle Strip, Sto. Tomas, Batangas, Apr 2024.jpg A. Bonifacio St., Sto. Tomas, Batangas, Apr 2024.jpg
Santo Tomas, officially the City of Santo Tomas (**), is a component city in the province of Batangas, Philippines. According to the , it has a population of people.
Santo Tomas got its name from Spanish for Saint Thomas Aquinas, a Catholic saint whose patronal feast day is celebrated every March 7. It is also the hometown of Philippine Revolution and Philippine–American War hero Miguel Malvar, the last Filipino general to surrender to the Americans.
History

Santo Tomas was founded in 1666, with Manuel Melo as its first head. Originally, it was composed of a large poblacion. When the Spanish friars arrived, their first and foremost objective was to construct a church near the river to satisfy their inclination for water. Thus, the present site of a Roman Catholic church was chosen near the San Juan River. As years went by, more houses were built around the church. This became the center of the poblacion.
Other groups of houses were scattered all over the area. They were given such odd names as "Kabaong", because of coffin-shaped stones along the road; "Putol" because the trail was cut short by Mount Makiling; "Aptayin", because "apta" or fine shrimps were found in the brook; "Biga", because biga trees abounded there; and "Camballao", as in "kambal" (twin) because twin rivers divided the place. These different unit groups comprised the barrios of the town.
The natives were by nature God-fearing, peaceful and obedient. Colonial officials did not much have difficulty enforcing decrees and orders. One such irrevocable decree was to change the original names of the barrios to the names of saints in the Catholic calendar and to place each them under its patrotonio; the former "Pook" and "Aptayin" were joined and called San Bartolome, "Kabaong" was changed to San Vicente, "Biga" to Santa Anastacia, and "Camballao" to San Isidro Sur and San Isidro Norte. The whole town was given the name of Santo Tomas de Aquino, after a saint of the Dominican Order to where most of the first friars belonged. As time went by, more barrios were added to the list each with an assumed name of a saint.
From the year 1666, the head of the town had different titles, variously known as captain from 1666 to 1782, alcalde from 1783 to 1788, gobernadorcillo from 1789 to 1821, presidente local from 1822 to 1899, presidente municipal from 1900 to 1930, and mayor from 1931 to present.
Cityhood
Main article: Cities of the Philippines
In 2016, Nelson P. Collantes, the then-representative of Batangas's 3rd District, filed a House bill to convert Santo Tomas into a component city. After few years, with a unanimous vote of 19–0, the Senate approved a bill for the municipality's conversion into a city on March 19, 2018. On October 5, 2018, President Rodrigo Duterte signed Republic Act No. 11086, making Santo Tomas the first municipality to be converted into a city under his administration. It was effectively ratified on September 7, 2019 through a plebiscite wherein majority of residents who voted approved the cityhood.
Geography
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Santo Tomas is located at . It is situated at the foot of Mount Makiling and is 61 km south of Manila and 44 km from Batangas City. The city is part of Mega Manila resulting from the continuous expansion of Metro Manila. It borders the cities of Calamba to the north, Los Baños to the north-east, Alaminos to the east, Tanauan and Malvar to the west, and Lipa to the south.
According to the Philippine Statistics Authority, the component city has a land area of 95.41 km2 constituting of the 3,119.75 km2 total area of Batangas.
Barangays
Santo Tomas is politically subdivided into 30 barangays, as indicated in the matrix below. Each barangay consists of puroks and some have sitios.
Climate
| access-date = May 5, 2020 }}
Demographics
In the 2024 census, Santo Tomas had a population of 226,772 people. The population density was {{sigfig|226,772/95.41|2}} PD/km2.
Economy

The First Philippine Industrial Park which is owned by the Lopez Group of Companies is located in the city.
Most of the city is residential with a lot of farmlands. There are also some developed subdivisions along the city like the San Antonio Heights in Barangay San Antonio which was developed by Avida Land, a division of Ayala Land, Camella Homes, and Terrazza de Santo Tomas in Barangay San Roque which was developed by Ovialand. The city is well known for an entire strip of bulalo (bone marrow soup) restaurants and to a hospital named Saint Cabrini Medical Center which is located inside the city center.
Aside from various real estate development in the city, Santo Tomas also has a popular lifestyle and commercial complex in the locality. The Lifestyle Strip, AllHome Santo Tomas, Liana's Junction Santo Tomas, S&R Membership Shopping Santo Tomas, and SM City Santo Tomas are known shopping destinations that operate in the city.
Transportation
Roads
The Pan-Philippine Highway or Maharlika Highway connects the city with Calamba, the rest of Laguna, with the highway reaching as far as Bicol Region. Since 2009, the Southern Tagalog Arterial Road (STAR Tollway) and South Luzon Expressway start at the city and connects with Batangas City and Metro Manila, respectively. The Jose P. Laurel Highway connects the city with Tanauan City, Lipa and Batangas City.
Public transport
Jeepneys (Filipino: "dyip") connect the city with Calamba to the north, Tanauan to the south, and San Pablo to the east. Buses from Manila to Batangas City, Lucena, or Bicol serve the city. UV Express service also connects Santo Tomas with San Pablo, Santa Rosa, Lipa, and Dasmariñas. Tricycles provide transportation within the barangays.
Bus lines
- Alps The Bus
- JAC Liner
- Lucena Lines
- Dela Rosa Transit
- JAM Liner
- DLTBCo
- Philtranco
Government
Local government
Main article: Sangguniang Bayan
- **Mayor: ** Arth Jhun A. Marasigan
- **Vice Mayor: ** Catherine J. Perez
- Councilors:
- Ross Allan D. Maligaya
- Victor O. Bathan
- Leovino M. Villegas
- Adrian C. Carpio
- Arturo U. Pecaña
- Helengrace P. Navarro
- Danilo P. Mabilangan
- Wilfredo P. Maliksi
- Raquel M. Maloles-Salazar
- Proceso C. Mendoza
- ABC President: Ladislao M. Malijan
- SK Federation President: Angel Faye Parra
Education
There are two schools district offices which govern all educational institutions within the municipality. They oversee the management and operations of all private and public, from primary to secondary schools. These are the Santo Tomas North Schools District Office, and Santo Tomas South Schools District Office.
Public elementary schools

There are 27 public elementary schools within Santo Tomas, all overseen by the SDO of Sto. Tomas City.
Santo Tomas North District
A. Zone 1
- Santo Tomas North Central School
- San Roque Elementary School
- Santa Cruz Elementary School B. Zone 2
- San Antonio Elementary School
- Santiago Elementary School
- Santa Anastacia Elementary School C. Zone 3
- Doña Tiburcia Carpio Malvar Elementary School
- San Bartolome Elementary School
- San Vicente Elementary School
Santo Tomas South District
A. Zone 4
- Santo Tomas South Central School (formerly San Pedro Elementary School)
- San Francisco Elementary School
- San Isidro Elementary School
- Santa Elena Elementary School
- Santa Maria Elementary School
- Gerardo A. Masarap Elementary School B. Zone 5
- San Agustin Elementary School
- San Felix Elementary School
- San Jose Elementary School
- San Juan Elementary School
- San Pablo Elementary School
- Santa Ana Elementary School C. Zone 6
- San Fernando Elementary School
- San Joaquin Elementary School
- San Luis Elementary School
- Santa Clara Elementary School
- Santa Teresita Elementary School
Private schools
There are 18 private schools within the Santo Tomas.
- Almond Academy Foundation Inc.
- AMS Learning School
- Blue Isle Integrated School
- Clareville School
- Elyon Academia Foundation, Inc.
- Greenville Academy of Santa Clara
- His Care Learning Center of Santa Maria
- Hope Christian Academy of Santo Tomas
- Kids for Jesus Academy Inc.
- Maranatha Christian Academy of Santo Tomas
- Maranatha Christian Academy of Blue Isle
- Mother Barbara Micarelli School
- Nikiesha's Interactive Camp Child Development Center Inc.
- Pedagogia Children's School (Santo Tomas)
- San Bartolome Adventist Elementary School
- Saint Thomas Academy
- Saint Thomas Montessori Learning Center
- The Golden Child Literacy Place
Secondary schools
The city has 5 public high schools, all overseen by the Schools Division Office (SDO) of Sto. Tomas City.
- San Jose National High School
- San Pedro National High School
- Santa Clara Integrated National High School (JHS and SHS)
- Santa Anastacia-San Rafael National High School
- Sto. Tomas City National High School
- Santo Tomas Senior High School (SHS only)
Higher educational institution
The Polytechnic University of the Philippines has one Polytechnic University of the Philippines Santo Tomas Batangas campus in Santo Tomas. It is a constituent branch of the PUP System and the only institution of higher learning in Santo Tomas that serves the city and neighboring cities.
Mythology
In Philippine mythology, the homeland of the anggitays is believed to be somewhere in Santo Tomas, Batangas. The anggitays are creatures resembling centaurs but have a single horn on the forehead and are generally female.
Notable people
- Miguel Malvar, Filipino revolutionary general
- Mark Leviste, former politician
Other notable
- Fernando Abrigo Tolentino, WW2 Veteran
References
References
- {{DILG detail
- (April 29, 2013). "History | Santo Tomas Batangas".
- (February 3, 2016). "An Act Converting the Municipality of Sto. Tomas in the Province of Batangas Into a Component City to Be Known as the City of Sto. Tomas". [[Senate of the Philippines]] Legislative Digital Resources.
- (March 21, 2018). "Senate approves cityhood of Santo Tomas town in Batangas". Rappler.
- (October 22, 2018). "Charter of the City of Sto. Tomas". [[Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines]].
- Solmerin, Florante. (June 26, 2018). "Santo Tomas, first Batangas city under Duterte administration". BusinessMirror.
- Cinco, Maricar. (September 8, 2019). "Santo Tomas is Batangas' newest city". Philippine Daily Inquirer.
- "Home | First Philippine Industrial Park".
- "Avida Land".
- (April 28, 2021). "Villar Rallying Private Sector, LGUs to Improve Waste Management via Composting - BusinessWorld".
- (July 22, 2021). "AllHome opens 55th branch in Sto. Tomas, Batangas".
- de Castro, Isagani Jr.. (October 26, 2023). "SM Prime to open first 'Singapore-style' mall in Philippines". Rappler.
- (January 15, 2021). "Masterlist of Schools".
- "Batangas Province Masterlist of Government Elementary Schools".
- "Batangas Province Masterlist of Government Private Elementary Schools".
- "Batangas Province Masterlist of Secondary Schools".
- "Batangas Province Masterlist of Government Secondary Schools".
- (February 22, 2016). "A Compendium of Creatures from Philippine Folklore & Mythology • THE ASWANG PROJECT".
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