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Camarines Sur
CAMARINES SUR
Capital: Pili
No. of Towns: 35
Land Area: 5,267 sq. km.
Telephone Area Code: 054
Camarines Sur, dubbed as the rice granary (Sp. caramines) of
the south (Sp. sur), has been taken for granted as a largely
agricultural province. The fertile soil of its planes, however, is
but one of this province's riches. She is also blessed with
breathtaking sceneries and lush landscapes. The province is home to
two extinct volcanoes, Mts. Isarog and Iriga, which offer prime
opportunities for nature lovers and adventurers alike. In addition,
being partially bounded on three sides by gulfs and the Pacific
Ocean on the north, she boasts of stretches of pristine beaches like
Gota in the Caramoan Peninsula and those in the Atulayan Islands in
Sagnay.
BRIEF HISTORY
The province of Camarines Sur actually first came into
existence only in 1829. Prior to the edict, which brought this
about, the province was part of the region Tierra de Ibalon, later
named Los Camarines, which was "discovered" in 1569 by the Spanish
expedition led by Capt. Luis de Guzman and Augustinian Friar Alonso
Jimenez. Said Spanish expedition was merely exploratory, thus, the
serious work of evangelizing the natives became the responsibility
of the Franciscan missionaries whose efforts were capped by the
founding of the Diocese of Caceres in 1595.
The centuries of Spanish occupation in the region was relatively
uneventful. Events worth noting are the establishment of the
devotion to the Virgin of Peāšafrancia by the Spanish secular priest
Miguel Robles de Cubarrubias in 1710; and the development of the
abaca export industry in 1818 when the Bikol mainland saw the last
of the Muslim raiders who had been looting the area for over two
centuries.
September 17, 1898 saw the end of Spanish rule in Bikol region. This
one-day revolt was staged in Nueva Caceres under the leadership of
Elias Angeles and Felix Plazo. Within a year and a half, Camarines
Sur, then joined with Camarines Norte under the name Ambos (both)
Camarines, was once again made subject of foreign rule - this time
American - despite the resistance led by Gen. Ludovico Arejola. In
this period of forty years, Fr. Jorge Barlin of Baao served as the
first Filipino bishop (1905-1909); Ambos Camarines was finally
divided into Norte and Sur (1919); agricultural productivity
surpassed records under the Spanish regime; and local culture was
enriched with the establishment of the public school system, the
propagation of the English language, and the thriving of "indigenous
and locally adapted foreign arts, music, literature and sciences."
This progress was cut off shortly by the Japanese invasion from 1941
to 1945 when engagements between guerillas and the invading army
were frequent. Shortly after the liberation of Camarines Sur from
the Japanese, Philippine independence from the Americans was
declared.
GEOGRAPHY
Camarines Sur is one of the six provinces comprising the Bicol
Region. She lies in the center of the Bicol Peninsula bounded by the
province of Albay and Ragay Gulf on the south; Camarines Norte, San
Miguel Bay and the Pacific Ocean on the north; Lagonoy Gulf on the
east; and the province of Quezon and Ragay Gulf on the west.