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Balamban, Cebu, Philippines
It was written in the unfinished diary of the late Dr. Jose Rizal that a man of strength and wisdom from a royal lineage in Visayas would rise in the future to liberate the Philippines from the bondage of poverty and foreign domination. His name would be known as... Bernardo Carpio!

Thursday, March 28, 2013

MATUN-OG



Matun-og is a mountainous barangay with a total land area of 1,453 hectares. It is bounded by Bayong, Lamesa, Luca, Ginatilan, Cabasiangan, and Sunog.
It is politically subdivided into five (5) sitios, namely: Lantawan, Tubli, Hunop, Gapo, and Matun-og Proper.

NAME-ORIGIN & BRIEF HISTORY

The name is derived from the Cebuano word “matun-og” which literally means “cold” or “it can become cold”; that is, from the prefix ma- (to make into) and the root word tun-og (cold). Tun-og is also sometimes used interchangeably with “yamog” to denote the dew. In the said barangay, the local people also sometimes used the word tun-og to refer the fog. Yet the real Cebuano word for fog is “gabon”.

According to oral history, in 1934, people from Luca began their kaingin activities in Matun-og. During World War II, escaping from the Japanese, they began to settle the area. After World War II, a certain Pedro Limbag together with his wife named Isabel came to the place during rainy season. The place was foggy and cold, hence Pedro Limbag called the place as “Matun-og”. In 1955, the first school building of Matun-og, which was only made of wood and cogon, was built. Accordingly, that was the time that Matun-og separated from Luca and was established as a barrio.

LIST OF POLITICAL LEADERS

  1. Seviro Noya              (1955-1958)
  2. Bartlome Pacquiao  (1958-1961)
  3. Sixto Matugas           (1961-1986)
  4. Teofanes Pacquiao (1986-1989 & 1997-2007)
  5. Vicente Gabini         (1989-1997)
  6. Trinidad Barnayja    (2007-Present)1

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