The Archdiocese of Manila (Latin: Archidioecesis Manilensis; Filipino: Arkidiyosesis ng Maynilà; Spanish: Arquidiócesis de Manila) is a Latin Church archdiocese of the Catholic Church in Metro Manila, Philippines. Its territory covers the cities of Manila, Makati, Mandaluyong, Pasay, and San Juan; the Embo barangays of Taguig that were formerly part of Makati; and the EDSA Shrine in Quezon City. Its episcopal see is the Minor Basilica and Metropolitan Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception, also known as the Manila Cathedral, located in Intramuros, the old colonial city of Manila. The Blessed Virgin Mary, under the title of the Immaculate Conception, is principal patroness of the archdiocese as well as the country.

The Archdiocese of Manila is the oldest in the Philippines, created in 1579 as a diocese and elevated to the rank of metropolitan archdiocese in 1595. Since its last territorial changes in 2003, the Archdiocese of Manila is the metropolitan see of the ecclesiastical province of the same name, which includes seven dioceses in other parts of the National Capital Region such as Antipolo (Marikina), Cubao, Kalookan, Novaliches, Parañaque, Malolos (Valenzuela), and Pasig, as well as four dioceses in the surrounding provinces of Cavite (Diocese of Imus), Rizal (Diocese of Antipolo), Bulacan (Diocese of Malolos), and Laguna (Diocese of San Pablo).

The archdiocese is also de facto overseer of the Military Ordinariate of the Philippines, as well as the apostolic vicariates of Puerto Princesa and Taytay in Palawan, alongside all exempt dioceses of the Holy See (with the vicariates under the jurisdiction of the Dicastery for Evangelization).

The archdiocese also owns, operates, and manages various extraterritorial assets and temporalities, such as the radio station DZRV Radio Veritas 846 kHz along with Our Lady of Veritas Chapel (both in Quezon City) and its transmitter (Taliptip, Bulakan); the Mount Peace and Saint Michael retreat houses (Baguio City and Antipolo City); and Redemptoris Mater Archdiocesan Seminary of the Neocatechumenal Way (Parañaque City) located at the dioceses of Cubao, Malolos, Baguio, Antipolo, and Parañaque, respectively. Additionally, the archdiocese is among the top 100 shareholders of the Bank of the Philippine Islands.

Since June 24, 2021, José Cardinal Advíncula has been the 33rd archbishop of Manila.

History

Interior of the Throne Room of the Archbishop's Palace during the Spanish colonial period.

Per the efforts of conquistador Martín de Goiti – who founded the City of Manila by uniting the dominions of Sulayman III of Namayan, Sabag, Rajah Ache Matanda of Maynila who was a vassal to the Sultan of Brunei, and Lakan Dula of Tondo who was a tributary to Ming dynasty China – the Diocese of Manila was established on February 6, 1579, through the papal bull Illius Fulti Præsidio by Pope Gregory XIII, encompassing all Spanish colonies in Asia as a suffragan of the Archdiocese of Mexico. Fray Domingo de Salazar, a Dominican from the Convent of San Sebastian in Salamanca, Spain, was selected by King Philip II of Spain to be bishop of the new diocese and was presented to the pope.

Over the course of history and growth of Catholicism in the Philippines, the diocese was elevated in rank and new dioceses had been carved from its territory. On August 14, 1595, Pope Clement VIII raised the diocese to the status of an archdiocese with Bishop Ignacio Santibáñez its first archbishop. Three new dioceses were created as suffragans to Manila: Nueva Cáceres, Nueva Segovia, and Cebu. With the creation of these new dioceses, the territory of the archdiocese was reduced to the city of Manila and the adjoining civil provinces in proximity including Mindoro Island. It was bounded to the north by the Diocese of Nueva Segovia, to the south by the Diocese of Cebu, and to the southeast by the Diocese of Nueva Cáceres.

During the Spanish period, the archdiocese was ruled by a succession of Spanish and Latino archbishops. In the 1600s, Fr. Joaquín Martínez de Zúñiga conducted a census of the Archdiocese of Manila, which encompassed most of Luzon, and he reported 90,243 native Filipino tributes; 10,512 Chinese (Sangley) and mixed Chinese Filipino mestizo tributes; and 10,517 mixed Spanish Filipino mestizo tributes. Pure Spaniards were excluded as they were exempt from tribute, with each tribute representing an average family of 6. Out of these, Martínez extrapolated a total population count exceeding half a million souls.

The 1762 British occupation of Manila during the Seven Years' War saw the temporary conversion of Sultan Azim ud-Din I of Sulu to Catholicism, the massive looting and destruction of ecclesiastical treasures, as well as the burning of churches by British soldiers, Sepoy mercenaries, and rebellious Chinese residents in Binondo. This episode was particularly damaging to Philippine scholarship as the monasteries holding archives and artefacts on the pre-colonial Philippine Rajahnates, Kedatuans, Sultanates, Lakanates, and Wangdoms and their conversion to Catholicism were either burnt, lost, or looted. An example would be the Boxer Codex, whose earliest owner Lord Giles of Ilchester had inherited it from an ancestor who stole it during the British Occupation.

Nevertheless, peace was subsequently restored after, Catholic religious orders became the powerful driving force in the Archdiocese of Manila (with the exception of the Jesuits who were temporarily suppressed in Spanish lands due to their role in anti-imperialist movements in Latin America like the Paraguayan Reductions). Local Filipino secular clergy resented the foreign religious orders due to their near-monopoly of ecclesiastical positions, which violated the declarations of the Council of Trent, stating that once an place is no longer a missionary area but a regular diocese, friars are to surrender parishes to secular priests. However, upon the suppression of the Jesuits, the Recollect Order took over the former’s parishes and surrendered their parishes to local secular clergy, temporarily assuaging Filipino yearnings. However upon the restoration of the Jesuits, the Recollects were forced to retake their parishes from the secular priests. The opposition of the religious orders against an autonomous diocesan clergy independent of them lead to the martyrdom of Filipino diocesan priests Mariano Gómez, José Burgos, Jacinto Zamora – collectively known as Gomburza –who were wrongly implicated in the Cavite Mutiny. This stemmed from fears that, because the priest Miguel Hidalgo lead the Mexican war of independence against Spain, the same could happen in the Philippines. Furthermore, Governor-General Rafael Izquierdo y Gutiérrez, who was a Freemason, upheld the vow to protect his Masonic brothers upon discovering the Mutiny was led by some of them (Máximo Innocencio, Crisanto de los Reyes, and Enrique Paraíso), and so shifted the blame to the Gomburza since they had inspired ethnic pride among Filipinos with their clerical campaign. Izquierdo asked the Catholic hierarchy in the person of Archbishop of Manila Gregorio Melitón Martínez to have them declared heretics and defrocked, but the latter he refused as he believed in the trio’s innocence. As the colonial government executed the Gomburza, church bells across the colony were rung in mourning. This inspired the Jesuit-educated nationalist José Rizal to form La Liga Filipina, to seek reforms from Spain and recognition of local clergy.

Rizal himself was executed in 1896 and La Liga Filipina dissolved. As cries for reform were ignored, formerly loyal Filipinos were radicalized and the 1896 Philippine revolution was triggered when the Spanish discovered the anti-colonial secret organisation Katipunan (formed with Masonic rites in mind despite Catholic opposition to Freemasonry, yet were dedicated to the martyred Catholic priests as "Gomburza" was a password in the Katipunan). The United States took the Philippines from Spain following the 1898 Spanish–American War; this turned the fighting into the 1899–1902 Philippine–American War, with many Katipuneros devastated their fellow American Masons killed the Katipunan, as American lodges dismissed the Revolutionary Masonic lodges as "irregular" and illegitimate, and Philippine Freemasonry placed under control of the Grand Lodge of California. Under American colonial control, the Catholic Church was disestablished as the state church of the Philippines, with the postwar period seeing some churches restored in the Art-Deco style. There was a looming threat of apostasy and schism with the rise of anti-clerical Philippine Freemasonry and the establishment of the Philippine Independent Church due to Filipino anger against Spanish ecclesiastical corruption. In response, Pope Leo XIII in 1902 excommunicated all adherents of the Philippine Independent Church, yet supported Philippine political independence with a policy of reinforcing orthodoxy and reconciliation. This resulted in a majority of Filipinos remaining in full communion with the Holy See, and a good number of those who had left the Church returning.

Old Ecclesiastical Seal of the Archdiocese of Manila, used until 1949

On April 10, 1910, Pope Pius X carved out from Manila the Diocese of Lipa, with jurisdiction over the provinces of Batangas, Tayabas, Marinduque, Laguna and Mindoro, and some parts of Masbate. In May 1928, Pope Pius XI established the Diocese of Lingayen, using territory from Manila and Nueva Segovia. In this creation, twenty-six parishes were separated from Manila.

December 8, 1941, marked the beginning of the Japanese occupation of the Philippines. World War II marked a period of irreplaceable loss to the Archdiocese of Manila. The combination of violent theft and arson done by the Japanese and indiscriminate carpet bombing by the Americans during the Battle of Manila (1945) led to the permanent loss of many Gothic, Art-Deco, and Earthquake Baroque churches. Interestingly, then-Father Rufino Jiao Santos (a future Archbishop of Manila) was taken captive by the Japanese, but was saved by combined Filipino and American forces.

The Virgin Mary as the Immaculate Conception, patroness of the archdiocese

In the aftermath of the war, in September 1942, Pope Pius XII declared Our Lady of Immaculate Conception as the Principal Patroness of the Philippines by virtue of the papal bull, Impositi Nobis, along with Pudentiana and Rose of Lima as secondary patrons.

Due to the heavy damages resulting from World War II, the Manila Cathedral underwent major rebuilding from 1946 to 1958. The Parish of San Miguel served as temporary pro-cathedral until the Manila Cathedral was reopened and consecrated in 1958.

On December 11, 1948, the Apostolic Constitution Probe Noscitur further divided the Archdiocese of Manila by placing the northern part of the local church in the new Diocese of San Fernando. On November 25, 1961, the Archdiocese of Manila was again partitioned with the creation of the Diocese of Malolos for the province of Bulacan in the north and the Diocese of Imus for the province of Cavite to the south.

Pope John Paul II declared the Manila Cathedral a minor basilica in 1981 through the motu proprio Quod ipsum, issued as a papal bull. In 1983, the province of Rizal, the city of Marikina, and northeastern portions of Pasig, were placed under the new Diocese of Antipolo.

The archdiocese witnessed many grace-filled church events such as the Second Synod of Manila (1911), the Third Synod of Manila (1925), the 33rd International Eucharistic Congress (1937), the First Plenary Council of the Philippines (1953), the papal visit of Pope Paul VI (1970), the Fourth Synod of Manila (1979), the papal visits of Pope John Paul II (the first in 1981 and the second in 1995), the National Marian Year (1985), the National Eucharistic Year (1987), the Second Plenary Council of the Philippines (1991), the Second Provincial Council of Manila (1996), the Fourth World Meeting of Families (2003), and the papal visit of Pope Francis (2015).

With the increasing population of the metropolis, Cardinal Jaime Sin, its thirtieth archbishop, requested Pope John Paul II to divide the Archdiocese since according to him, the "ecclesiastical area was too big, too extensive, too populous, and too complex for one archbishop to handle properly". In response, the Vatican carved out two more dioceses from the Archdiocese in 2002: the Diocese of Novaliches and the Diocese of Parañaque. In 2003, three more dioceses were erected: Cubao, Kalookan, and Pasig.

Coat of arms

The arms of the metropolitan see of Manila is an adaptation of the arms granted by Philip II of Spain to the insigne y siempre leal ("distinguished and ever loyal") city of Manila in 1596. The silver crescent represents the Immaculate Conception, patroness of the Manila Cathedral and of the entire Philippines. The tower represents God as described in Psalm 60: turris fortis contra inimicum (turris fortitudinis a facie inimici in the Galician psalter), and its three windows represent the Blessed Trinity: Father, Son and Holy Ghost. The sea lion represents the Philippines, then an ultramar (overseas) territory of Spain, and the pilgrim's cross which may be easily fixed on the ground symbolizes both the faith of the Filipino people and their missionary role in spreading the faith.

Ordinaries

The marble cathedra of the Archbishop of Manila inside Manila Cathedral

Archbishops

The seat of the archbishop is at Manila Cathedral. The Archbishop of Manila is widely regarded (de facto) as the primate of the Catholic Church in the Philippines. The archdiocese has held the title "Metropolitan of the Philippines" (Spanish: Metropolitano de las Islas Filipinas) since its elevation in 1595.

After the first Bishop of Manila Domingo de Salazar, the diocese became an archdiocese and there have been nineteen archbishops of Spanish origin. In 1903, the archdiocese received its first American archbishop, Jeremiah James Harty from St. Louis, Missouri. After him, the lone Irishman Michael J. O'Doherty was appointed in 1916, leading the church as Filipinos petitioned for sovereignty from the United States, and through the Japanese occupation during World War II.

When O'Doherty died after Philippine independence in July 1946, coadjutor archbishop Gabriel Reyes became the first native Filipino in the position. Reyes' successor, Archbishop Rufino Jiao Santos, became the first Filipino cardinal in 1960. Since him, all archbishops have been of Filipino origin and are customarily made cardinals.

After the departure of Cardinal-Archbishop Luis Antonio Tagle to become prefect of Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples on February 9, 2020, Auxiliary Bishop Broderick Pabillo was apostolic administrator for 17 months during the COVID-19 pandemic. Tagle's successor, then-Archbishop of Capiz José Fuerte Advíncula, was enthroned on June 24, 2021.

No.PortraitNamePeriod in officeNotesCoat of arms
Bishops of Manila (February 6, 1579 – August 14, 1595)
1Domingo de Salazar, O.P.February 6, 1579 – December 4, 1594 (15 years, 301 days)Died in office
Metropolitan Archbishops of Manila (August 14, 1595 – present)
2Ignacio Santibáñez, O.F.M.August 30, 1595 – August 14, 1598 (2 years, 349 days)First archbishop, died in office
3Miguel de Benavides, O.P.October 7, 1602 – July 26, 1605 (2 years, 292 days)Died in office
4Diego Vázquez de MercadoMay 28, 1608 – June 12, 1616 (8 years, 15 days)Died in office
5Miguel García Serrano, O.E.S.A.February 12, 1618 – June 14, 1629 (11 years, 122 days)Died in office
6Hernando Guerrero, O.E.S.A.January 9, 1634 – July 1, 1641 (7 years, 173 days)Died in office
7Fernando Montero EspinosaFebruary 5, 1646 – 1648 (approximately 2 years)Died in office
8Miguel de Poblete CasasolaJune 21, 1649 – December 8, 1667 (18 years, 170 days)Died in office
9Juan López Galván, O.P.November 14, 1672 – February 12, 1674 (1 year, 90 days)Died in office
10Felipe Fernandez de Pardo, O.P.January 8, 1680 – December 31, 1689 (9 years, 357 days)Died in office
11Diego Camacho y ÁvilaNovember 28, 1695 – January 14, 1704 (8 years, 47 days)Appointed Archbishop (in personam)-Bishop of Guadalajara
12Francisco de la Cuesta, O.S.H.April 28, 1704 – September 23, 1723 (19 years, 148 days)Appointed Archbishop (in personam)-Bishop of Michoacán
13Carlos Bermudez de CastroNovember 20, 1724 – November 13, 1729 (4 years, 358 days)Died in office
14Juan Angel Rodríguez, O.SS.T.December 17, 1731 – June 24, 1742 (10 years, 189 days)Died in office
15Pedro José Manuel Martínez de Arizala, O.F.M.February 3, 1744 – May 28, 1755 (11 years, 114 days)Died in office
16Manuel Antonio Rojo del Río VeraDecember 19, 1757 – January 30, 1764 (6 years, 42 days)Died in office
17Basilio Tomás Sancho Hernando, Sch. P.April 14, 1766 – December 15, 1787 (21 years, 245 days)Died in office
18Juan Antonio Gallego Orbigo, O.F.M. Disc.December 15, 1788 – May 17, 1797 (8 years, 153 days)Died in office
19Juan Antonio Zulaibar, O.P.March 26, 1804 – March 4, 1824 (19 years, 344 days)Died in office
20Hilarión Díez, O.E.S.A.July 3, 1826 – May 7, 1829 (2 years, 308 days)Died in office
21José Seguí, O.E.S.A.July 5, 1830 – July 4, 1845 (14 years, 364 days)Died in office
22José Julián de Aranguren, O.A.R.January 19, 1846 – April 18, 1861 (15 years, 89 days)Died in office
23Gregorio Melitón Martínez Santa CruzJanuary 28, 1876 – January 1, 1889 (12 years, 339 days)Died in office
25Bernardino Nozaleda y Villa, O.P.May 27, 1889 – February 4, 1902 (12 years, 253 days)Resigned; subsequently appointed Arcbishop of Valencia
26Jeremiah James HartyJune 6, 1903 – May 16, 1916 (12 years, 345 days)Appointed Bishop of Omaha
27Michael J. O'DohertySeptember 6, 1916 – October 13, 1949 (33 years, 37 days)Longest-serving archbishop; died in office
28Gabriel M. ReyesOctober 13, 1949 – October 10, 1952 (2 years, 363 days)Died in office
29Rufino J. Cardinal SantosMarch 25, 1953 – September 3, 1973 (20 years, 162 days)First Filipino cardinal, died in office
30Jaime L. Cardinal Sin, O.F.S.March 19, 1974 – November 21, 2003 (29 years, 247 days)Retired
31Gaudencio B. Cardinal RosalesNovember 21, 2003 – December 12, 2011 (8 years, 21 days)Retired
32Luis Antonio G. Cardinal TagleDecember 12, 2011 – February 9, 2020 (8 years, 59 days)Appointed Prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples
33Jose F. Cardinal Advíncula, O.P.June 24, 2021 – (4 years, 297 days)

Timeline

Coadjutor archbishops

No.PortraitPeriod in officeUntilNotes
1Romualdo J. Ballesteros, O.P.June 20, 1845 – January 19, 1846 (213 days)Did not succeed to see; subsequently appointed Bishop of Cebu.
2Gabriel M. ReyesAugust 25, 1949 – October 13, 1949 (49 days)Succeeded Archbishop Michael O'Doherty

Auxiliary bishops

No.PictureNamePeriod in officeTitular seeNotesCoat of arms
1Ginés Barrientos, O.P.April 9, 1680 – November 13, 1698 (18 years, 218 days)TroasFirst known auxiliary bishop
2William Finnemann, S.V.D.May 21, 1929 – December 4, 1936 (7 years, 197 days)SoraAppointed Prefect of Mindoro
3Cesare Maria GuerreroDecember 16, 1937 – May 14, 1949 (11 years, 149 days)LimisaAppointed Bishop of San Fernando.
4Rufino J. SantosOctober 24, 1947 – February 10, 1953 (5 years, 109 days)BarcaAppointed Military Vicar of the Philippines, and later, Manila's 26th Archbishop.
5Vicente P. ReyesAugust 24, 1950 – January 19, 1961 (10 years, 148 days)AsponaAppointed Bishop of Borongan
6Hernando AntipordaOctober 28, 1954 – December 13, 1975 (21 years, 46 days)Edessa in MacedoniaDied in office
7Pedro Bantigue y NatividadJuly 25, 1961 – January 26, 1967 (5 years, 185 days)CatulaAppointed Bishop of San Pablo.
8Bienvenido M. LopezJanuary 22, 1967 – April 27, 1995 (28 years, 95 days)MuteciLongest-serving auxiliary bishop of Manila.
9Artemio G. CasasSeptember 4, 1968 – May 11, 1974 (5 years, 249 days)Macriana MinorAppointed Bishop of Imus.
10Amado Paulino y HernandezMay 27, 1969 – March 9, 1985 (15 years, 286 days)CarinolaDied in office
11Gaudencio B. RosalesOctober 28, 1974 – June 9, 1982 (7 years, 224 days)OescusAppointed Coadjutor of Malaybalay, later returned as archbishop
12Oscar V. CruzMay 3, 1976 – May 22, 1978 (2 years, 19 days)MartiranoAppointed Archbishop of San Fernando
13Leonardo Z. Legaspi, O.P.August 8, 1977 – October 20, 1983 (6 years, 73 days)Elephantaria in MauretaniaAppointed Archbishop of Caceres.
14Protacio G. GungonAugust 24, 1977 – January 24, 1983 (5 years, 153 days)ObbaAppointed Bishop of Antipolo
15Manuel C. SobreviñasMay 25, 1979 – February 25, 1993 (13 years, 276 days)TulanaAppointed Bishop of Imus.
16Gabriel V. ReyesApril 3, 1981 – November 21, 1992 (11 years, 232 days)SelseaAppointed Bishop of Kalibo.
17Teodoro J. Buhain Jr.February 21, 1983 – September 23, 2003 (20 years, 214 days)BacanariaRetired from office
18Juan B. Velasco Díaz, O.P.May 1983 – July 9, 1984 (approximately 1 year)—N/aAppointed Bishop of Xiamen.
19Teodoro C. Bacani, O.P.April 12, 1984 – December 7, 2002 (18 years, 239 days)GaurianaAppointed Bishop of Novaliches
20Leoncio L. Lat1985 – December 12, 1992 (approximately 6 years)GaurianaRetired from office
21Ramon C. ArgüellesJanuary 6, 1994 – August 25, 1995 (1 year, 231 days)Ros CréAppointed Bishop of the Military Ordinariate of the Philippines.
22Crisostomo A. YalungMay 31, 1994 – October 18, 2001 (7 years, 140 days)FicusAppointed Bishop of Antipolo.
23Rolando Joven T. Tirona, O.C.D.December 29, 1994 – December 14, 1996 (1 year, 351 days)VulturariaAppointed Bishop of Malolos.
24Jesse E. MercadoMarch 31, 1997 – December 7, 2002 (5 years, 251 days)TalaptulaAppointed Bishop of Parañaque.
25Socrates B. Villegas, O.P.August 31, 2001 – July 3, 2004 (2 years, 307 days)NonaAppointed Bishop of Balanga.
26Bernardino C. CortezAugust 20, 2004 – October 27, 2014 (10 years, 68 days)BladiaAppointed Prelate of Infanta.
27Broderick S. Pabillo, S.D.B.August 19, 2006 – June 29, 2021 (14 years, 314 days)SitifisAppointed Vicar Apostolic of Taytay

Priests of this diocese who became bishops

Suffragan dioceses and bishops

DioceseImageBishopPeriod in OfficeCoat of Arms
Antipolo (Rizal and Marikina City)Ruperto C. SantosJuly 22, 2023 – present (2 years, 269 days)
Cubao (Quezon City)Elias L. Ayuban, C.M.F.December 3, 2024 – present (1 year, 135 days)
Imus (Cavite)Reynaldo G. Evangelista, O.F.S.June 5, 2013 – present (12 years, 316 days)
Kalookan (South Caloocan, Malabon City, Navotas City)Pablo Virgilio S. Cardinal DavidJanuary 2, 2016 –present (10 years, 105 days)
Malolos (Bulacan, Valenzuela City)Dennis C. VillarojoAugust 21, 2019 – present (6 years, 239 days)
Novaliches (Quezon City, North Caloocan)Roberto O. GaaAugust 24, 2019 – present (6 years, 236 days)
Parañaque (Parañaque City, Las Piñas City, Muntinlupa City)Jesse E. MercadoJanuary 28, 2003 – present (23 years, 79 days)
Pasig (Pasig City, Pateros, Taguig City)Mylo Hubert C. VergaraJune 23, 2011 – present (14 years, 298 days)
San Pablo (Laguna)Marcelino Antonio M. MaralitNovember 21, 2024 – present (1 year, 147 days)

Formation of priests

The archdiocese administers San Carlos Seminary, the archdiocesan major seminary which caters to the formation of future priests for the archdiocese and for its suffragan dioceses. Located in Guadalupe Viejo, Makati, it has a pre-college program (senior high school and formation year), a college program (A.B., philosophy), and a graduate school (master's program in theology or pastoral ministry), as well as a formation houses for future priests committed to serve the Filipino-Chinese communities in the country (Lorenzo Ruiz Mission Society) and a center for adult vocations (Holy Apostles Senior Seminary). The archdiocese also operates Our Lady of Guadalupe Minor Seminary for young men at the secondary school level. It is located a few blocks from San Carlos Seminary.

Schools

The Roman Catholic Archbishop of Manila Educational System (RCAMES) comprises 27 archdiocesan and parochial schools. The archbishop of Manila exercises authority in each member school and appoints a superintendent for the entire system to implement decisions and resolve issues. The member schools are:

See also

Sources

  • Population of the Archdiocese of Manila
  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Archdiocese of Manila". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • Gregory XIII, Pope, 1502–1585. In The Philippine Islands, 1493–1898. Cleveland, Ohio: A.H. Clark Company, 1903–9. Vol. 4, 1576–82. pp. 119–124.
  • 5 Seminaries under the Archdiocese of Manila

External links

14°35′29″N 120°58′25″E/14.59139°N 120.97361°E/ 14.59139; 120.97361