Chapter 2 of the Dagami Coffeetable book

Page 1

Chapter 2

T

The coming of

the Jesuits

he year was 1600. The previous year, the moros sailed on the Quilot river after pillaging Tanauan settlements. One documented source said the attackers were numerous. Fortunately, Dagamin-ons were forewarned and so prepared themselves on the riverbank with pointed sticks, bamboo lances and arrows about 100 meters downstream from their settlement. When the moros came, arrows and bamboo lances from Dagamin-ons at the riverbank rained on them. This was unexpected by the moros and so they were not adequately prepared. They retreated back to Tanauan to the sea, never to return.

An American historian who had been researching from Chinese archival sources said these raids were retaliatory attacks of the moros who, in pre-Spanish times, had been targets of attacks by warriors from Leyte and Samar. The latter traded their captives to China. Years later, their erstwhile victims, the moros, exacted their revenge on the flourishing coastal settlements of Leyte in the western coast, trading their captives from Leyte and Samar to Borneo.

Jesuit Founder St. Ignatius Loyola

Jesuit missionary St. Francis Javier

that was known to have abundant rice and safe from moro depredations would make for an excellent mission. And so in 1600, a team of missionaries from the Dulag mission, which was established four years earlier, visited Dagami and found the place an excellent site for a mission. The people were already known to be hospitable although in the early years of the encomienda,

galang, Palo, Dulag and Ormoc in its first three years. Carigara served as the residencia for a time, the mission that was in charge of creating other missions. Eventually, it became Leyte’s cabecera or capital town, the seat of the alcalde mayor and the provincial government. Moros also tried to take Carigara by storm but they were repulsed. As stories go, Carigara

...And so in 1600, a team of missionaries from the Dulag mission, which was established four years earlier, visited Dagami and found the place an excellent site for a mission. the natives had executed abusive soldiers.

The battle of Quilot story must have inspired the Jesuit in Dulag The Jesuits arrived five years which was vulnerable to these earlier in Carigara, their first misattacks from the sea. A settlement sion in Leyte, expanding to Alan-

was saved by a miraculous intervention of the Holy Cross. The Jesuits had negotiated for Leyte, Panay, Samar, Bohol and some parts of Mindanao for


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Chapter 2 of the Dagami Coffeetable book by Emil Justimbaste - Issuu