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  1. Origins and etymology. Description. Smaller barangay settlements. Barangays as apex city states. Titles of rulers. Alliance groups among paramount rulers. Social organization and stratification. Variation in social stratification. Barangays in the Visayas. Barangays in the Tagalog Region. Hispanization. Difference from the modern barangay.

  2. Barangay (pre-colonial) Baybayin; Boxer Codex; Butuan (historical polity) Cainta (historical polity) Caboloan; Dambana; Datu; Enrique of Malacca; Ferdinand Magellan; First Mass in the Philippines; Tondo (historical polity) Lacandola Documents; Lakan; Lapulapu; List of sovereign state leaders in the Philippines; Luzones; Ma-i; Madja-as; Maginoo ...

  3. Barangay states, historical city-states of the pre-colonial Philippines. Pages in category "Precolonial barangays" The following 12 pages are in this category, out of 12 total.

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  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BarangayBarangay - Wikipedia

    A barangay ( / bɑːrɑːŋˈɡaɪ /; abbreviated as Brgy. or Bgy. ), historically referred to as a barrio ( abbr. Bo. ), is the smallest administrative division in the Philippines and is the native Filipino term for a village, district, or ward.

  6. Cultural achievements of pre-colonial Philippines; Shell tools in the Philippines; Stegodon; Barangay (pre-colonial) Prehistoric Asia; Prehistory of Marinduque; Prehistory of Pampanga; Prehistory of Sarangani; Dambana; Suyat; History of the Philippines; History of the Philippines (Pre-Colonial Era 900–1565) History of the Philippines (Spanish ...

  7. Summary of achievements. The following are the notable achievements of the natives of the pre-colonial archipelago between the 16th century to the 9th century, and most likely even farther. Many of the achievements have been lost or retrofitted due to more than three centuries of colonial rule beginning in the middle of the 16th century and ...

  8. Philippines - Local Govt, Provinces, Municipalities: Before the arrival of the Spanish in the 16th century, most people lived in small independent villages called barangays, each ruled by a local paramount ruler called a datu. The Spanish later founded many small towns, which they called poblaciones, and from those centres roads or trails were built in four to six directions, like the spokes ...

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