Prenza is a small
barangay located not very far from the town with a total land area of 409
hectares. It is bounded by Cambuhawe, Cansomoroy, Vito, Cantuod, and Baliwagan.1
NAME-ORIGIN
OF THE BARANGAY
There
are numerous barangays within the country having the name of Prenza. “Prenza” was a frequent stylized spelling
of the Spanish word “prensa” which
means “press”. Dr. Jose Rizal’s El
Filibusterismo had mentioned La
Prenza Filipina in Chapter 17 which depicted an obsolete practice of the
Philippine press in his time.2 Probably most of the barangays in the
country that were named Prenza were actually sites for old printing presses or
for news-stands.
Since
most of the men of the barangay raised cocks for cockfight or cock derby and
due to the lack of knowledge in Spanish language and the lack of historical
records, the local people of the barangay tend to believe that the name of the
barangay was derived from the Cebuanized “pinsa”
of the Spanish word “fenza” which
means fence. The Cebuano “pinsa” is
often referred to a fence for chickens. During the Spanish period most of the
couches in elite houses served as chicken fences for the usual chicken gifts by
the visitors. At present there are two types of typical Cebuano fences still
used which are the “kurong” and the “panggal”. There is also other group who
believes that the word comes from “depensa”
and even creates a story that when the Spaniards came to the barangay the local
men were making wooden sticks and poles and when asked what they were doing
they answered the Spaniards that they were making “depensa” (defenses) against the aggressors, ignoramous that the
word itself is not Cebuano original but loaned from the Spanish word “defensa”.
LIST
OF POLITICAL LEADERS
It
is believed that the barangay was established in 1930 during the American
period with Constancio Dumdum as its first teniente
del barrio. Constancio Dumdum was followed by Adriano “Nanong” Suico; then
by Alejo Luste; then by Arsenio Panulde who served for 20 years during the
Marcos regime; then by Emiliano Dumdum who served until his death in 2002; and
then by Francisco Dumdum who is still the incumbent barangay captain until the
present. It was during the term of Emiliano Dumdum as barangay captain when the
Don Bosco Technological Center -- which offers different skilled courses
related to the need in the shipyards like welding, fabrication, fitting,
electricity, and more -- was built on a hill within the barangay.1
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