Recent from talks
Knowledge base stats:
Talk channels stats:
Members stats:
Rizal, Laguna
Rizal, officially the Municipality of Rizal (Tagalog: Bayan ng Rizal), is a municipality in the province of Laguna, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 18,332 people.
This town is the birthplace of the milky mixed vegetable dish called "amenudong gulay".
The municipality, named after the country's national hero José Rizal, is one of the youngest municipalities in Laguna.
The kaingineros were among the first reported settlers in this part of Laguna around the 17th century. Around mid-1800, this area was called barrio "Pauli" and was part of the town of Nagcarlan.
Residents from this place used to say that the barrio "Pauli" got its name from the way that its brook flows at the edge of the settlement, whose stream flows back and forth. “Pauli,” must have come from the Tagalog word “Pauli-uli,” which means coming back and forth.
Ever since, villagers earn their living by farming. The soil in this barrio is rich and is abundant of water for there were numerous natural springs around the settlement, making the settlers enjoy bountiful harvests of coconuts, root crops, vegetables, and rice. Locales also thrive by fishing from the Mayton and Mayit brooks and Calibato Lake, which the village share with the town of Sampalok, which is now San Pablo.
When the Spanish rule ended and the Philippines became a commonwealth state of the United States, Pauli became independent from the town of Nagcarlan and became a new township. The American Government appointed Pedro Urrea the Municipal President. Nevertheless, Pauli's township lasted only for two years. Its inability to support its administrative expenses caused Pauli to affiliate once more with its mother town.
However, between 1912 and 1915, residents led by Fortunato Urrea Arban, Agustin Vista, and Felix Isleta, former municipal councilors campaigned to regain their municipal status. The petition included the inclusion of barrios Antipolo, Entablado, Laguan, Pook, Mayton, Pauli, Talaga and Tuy. On December 18, 1918, Governor-General Francis Burton Harrison issued Executive Order No. 56 creating the Municipality of Rizal, naming the town after the foremost national hero and Laguna native José Rizal.
Hub AI
Rizal, Laguna AI simulator
(@Rizal, Laguna_simulator)
Rizal, Laguna
Rizal, officially the Municipality of Rizal (Tagalog: Bayan ng Rizal), is a municipality in the province of Laguna, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 18,332 people.
This town is the birthplace of the milky mixed vegetable dish called "amenudong gulay".
The municipality, named after the country's national hero José Rizal, is one of the youngest municipalities in Laguna.
The kaingineros were among the first reported settlers in this part of Laguna around the 17th century. Around mid-1800, this area was called barrio "Pauli" and was part of the town of Nagcarlan.
Residents from this place used to say that the barrio "Pauli" got its name from the way that its brook flows at the edge of the settlement, whose stream flows back and forth. “Pauli,” must have come from the Tagalog word “Pauli-uli,” which means coming back and forth.
Ever since, villagers earn their living by farming. The soil in this barrio is rich and is abundant of water for there were numerous natural springs around the settlement, making the settlers enjoy bountiful harvests of coconuts, root crops, vegetables, and rice. Locales also thrive by fishing from the Mayton and Mayit brooks and Calibato Lake, which the village share with the town of Sampalok, which is now San Pablo.
When the Spanish rule ended and the Philippines became a commonwealth state of the United States, Pauli became independent from the town of Nagcarlan and became a new township. The American Government appointed Pedro Urrea the Municipal President. Nevertheless, Pauli's township lasted only for two years. Its inability to support its administrative expenses caused Pauli to affiliate once more with its mother town.
However, between 1912 and 1915, residents led by Fortunato Urrea Arban, Agustin Vista, and Felix Isleta, former municipal councilors campaigned to regain their municipal status. The petition included the inclusion of barrios Antipolo, Entablado, Laguan, Pook, Mayton, Pauli, Talaga and Tuy. On December 18, 1918, Governor-General Francis Burton Harrison issued Executive Order No. 56 creating the Municipality of Rizal, naming the town after the foremost national hero and Laguna native José Rizal.