Clue on the location of the first Catholic Mass in the Philippines from the pigafetta and albo accounts PDF

Title Clue on the location of the first Catholic Mass in the Philippines from the pigafetta and albo accounts
Course BS Accountancy
Institution Saint Louis University Philippines
Pages 1
File Size 35.5 KB
File Type PDF
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Summary

clues on the location of the first catholic mass in the ph...


Description

Clue on the location of the first Catholic Mass in the Philippines from the pigafetta and albo accounts     

There are trees called betre or betel in which they cut its fruit into four parts and wrap it in the leaves. The leaves resemble the leaves of mulberry. You can find dogs, cats, swine, fowls, goats, rice, ginger, coconuts, figs, oranges, lemons, millet, panicum, sorgo, wax, and quantity of gold in the island. It lies in a latitude of nine and two-thirds degrees toward Arctic Pole and in a Longitude of onehundred and sixty-two degrees from the line of demarcation. It is twenty-five leagues from the Acquada. It is called Mazaua.

Outline the major points he made to uphold the Butuan claom as the site of the first catholic mass in the ph. I.

II.

Discovery A. Group of local experts testified that Pinamanculan Hills were an island between 500 years AD until the 18th century. B. National Museum archeologist Mary Jane A. Bolunia stated that the said hills cannot be taken for granted. C. Jesuit superior Fr. Francisco Collin wrote in his “Labor Evangelica” that the First Mass was offered in the Territory of Butuan. D. “Anales Ecclesiasticos de Philipinas 1574-1683” stated that he Easter Sunday Mass in 1521 was celebrated by the Chaplain of Magellan in Butuan. E. Amalla claimed that the two kings Pigafetta mentioned were the Butuanon brotherkings. Trading harbor, gold A. Prominent Butuan historian Greg Hontiveros in his book “Butuan of a Thousand Years” claimed that the Masao estuary in today’s Butuan was once the site of the ancient trading harbor and well-respected kingdom of Butuan. B. Gold was once the currency of Butuan kingdom. C. The paper issued by the Butuan City Heritage Society debunked the Limasawa claim. D. Amalla claimed that Limasawa has no gold mines, no kingdoms, no oral tradition documenting such an encounter.

Write the law recognizes the island of Limasawa...


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