Eastern Samar

Eastern Samar
Province
Province of Eastern Samar

Flag

Seal

Location in the Philippines
Coordinates: 11°40′N 125°30′E / 11.67°N 125.5°E / 11.67; 125.5Coordinates: 11°40′N 125°30′E / 11.67°N 125.5°E / 11.67; 125.5
Country Philippines
Region Eastern Visayas (Region VIII)
Founded June 19, 1965
Capital Borongan
Government
  Type Sangguniang Panlalawigan
  Governor Conrado B. Nicart, Jr. (Liberal)
  Vice Governor Marcelo Picardal (LDP)
Area[1]
  Total 4,660.47 km2 (1,799.42 sq mi)
Area rank 24th out of 81
Population (2015 census)[2]
  Total 467,160
  Rank 58th out of 81
  Density 100/km2 (260/sq mi)
  Density rank 69th out of 81
Divisions
  Independent cities 0
  Component cities
  Municipalities
  Barangays 597
  Districts Lone district of Eastern Samar
Time zone PHT (UTC+8)
ZIP code 6800–6822
IDD:area code +63(0)55
ISO 3166 code PH-EAS
Spoken languages
Website www.easternsamar.gov.ph

Eastern Samar (Waray-Waray: Sidlangan nga Samar; Tagalog: Silangang Samar) is a province in the Philippines located in the Eastern Visayas region. Its capital is the city of Borongan. Eastern Samar occupies the eastern portion of the island of Samar. Bordering the province to the north is the province of Northern Samar and to the west is Samar province. To the east lies the Philippine Sea, part of the vast Pacific Ocean, while to the south lies the Leyte Gulf.

History

Colonial period

During his circumnavigation of the globe, Ferdinand Magellan had set foot on the tiny island of Homonhon in the southern part of the province. On March 16, 1521, the area of what is now Eastern Samar is said to be the first Philippine landmass spotted by Magellan and his crew.[3][4][5]

On September 28, 1901 during the Philippine-American War, Filipino guerrillas in Balangiga ambushed American troops, killing 48 members of the US 9th Infantry. The incident triggered the infamous American retaliation against the Samar populace and guerrillas.[5]

Further information: Balangiga massacre

During the Second World War in 1944, Americans involved in the liberation of the Philippines from Japan built in the town of Guiuan the largest military base in the Pacific. In the same town in 1949, approximately 5,000 Russian refugees escaping from communist China temporarily settled on Tubabao Island until 1951, when they were transferred to Australia and the United States.[4]

Independent province

Eastern Samar, as a province, was created from Samar province through Republic Act No. 4221 on June 19, 1965.[6] Congressmen Eladio T. Balite (1st Dist. Samar), Fernando R. Veloso (2nd Dist. Samar), and Felipe J. Abrigo (3rd Dist. Samar), authored Republic Act 4221 which was approved by Congress in 1963. The law, ratified in a plebiscite on June 19, 1965, divided Samar into three: Northern Samar, Eastern Samar and (Western) Samar.

Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda), one of the strongest typhoons ever recorded, made its first landfall in the coastal town of Guiuan on November 2013.[7]

Geography

Eastern Samar covers a total area of 4,660.47 square kilometres (1,799.42 sq mi)[8] occupying the eastern section of Samar island in the Eastern Visayas region. The province is bordered to the north by Northern Samar and to the west by Samar. To the east lies the Philippine Sea, part of the vast Pacific Ocean, while to the south lies the Leyte Gulf.

Because it faces the Philippine Sea of the Pacific Ocean, Eastern Samar suffers heavily from powerful typhoons.[3]

Administrative divisions

Eastern Samar comprises 22 municipalities and one city, all encompassed by a single legislative district.

City or municipality[lower-roman 1] Population ±% p.a. Area[8] Density Brgy.
(2015)[2] (2010)[9] km2 sqmi /km2 /sqmi
12°16′09″N 125°22′16″E / 12.2693°N 125.3712°E / 12.2693; 125.3712 (Arteche) Arteche 3.4% 16,026 15,164 +1.06% 169.82 65.57 94 240 20
11°06′27″N 125°23′15″E / 11.1074°N 125.3874°E / 11.1074; 125.3874 (Balangiga) Balangiga 3.0% 14,085 12,756 +1.90% 190.05 73.38 74 190 13
11°28′22″N 125°30′37″E / 11.4727°N 125.5104°E / 11.4727; 125.5104 (Balangkayan) Balangkayan 2.2% 10,125 9,046 +2.17% 207.05 79.94 49 130 15
11°36′41″N 125°25′59″E / 11.6115°N 125.4331°E / 11.6115; 125.4331 (Borongan) Borongan 14.8% 69,297 64,457 +1.39% 475.00 183.40 150 390 61
11°59′48″N 125°26′55″E / 11.9968°N 125.4485°E / 11.9968; 125.4485 (Can-avid) Can-avid 4.5% 21,015 19,785 +1.15% 288.70 111.47 73 190 28
12°02′15″N 125°28′57″E / 12.0374°N 125.4825°E / 12.0374; 125.4825 (Dolores) Dolores 9.2% 42,866 37,912 +2.37% 308.58 119.14 140 360 46
11°14′42″N 125°32′21″E / 11.2450°N 125.5393°E / 11.2450; 125.5393 (General MacArthur) General MacArthur 3.1% 14,550 12,214 +3.39% 117.29 45.29 120 310 30
11°07′16″N 125°26′56″E / 11.1210°N 125.4489°E / 11.1210; 125.4489 (Giporlos) Giporlos 2.8% 13,308 12,040 +1.92% 97.51 37.65 140 360 18
11°01′56″N 125°43′28″E / 11.0323°N 125.7245°E / 11.0323; 125.7245 (Guiuan) Guiuan 11.3% 52,991 47,037 +2.30% 175.49 67.76 300 780 60
11°19′24″N 125°37′09″E / 11.3233°N 125.6192°E / 11.3233; 125.6192 (Hernani) Hernani 1.8% 8,573 8,070 +1.16% 49.42 19.08 170 440 13
12°17′10″N 125°14′07″E / 12.2860°N 125.2352°E / 12.2860; 125.2352 (Jipapad) Jipapad 1.7% 7,885 7,397 +1.22% 234.80 90.66 34 88 13
11°08′25″N 125°18′03″E / 11.1403°N 125.3009°E / 11.1403; 125.3009 (Lawaan) Lawaan 2.7% 12,742 11,612 +1.78% 162.56 62.76 78 200 16
11°24′41″N 125°32′45″E / 11.4114°N 125.5459°E / 11.4114; 125.5459 (Llorente) Llorente 4.3% 20,149 19,101 +1.02% 496.07 191.53 41 110 33
12°09′28″N 125°14′50″E / 12.1578°N 125.2471°E / 12.1578; 125.2471 (Maslog) Maslog 1.2% 5,407 4,781 +2.37% 249.80 96.45 22 57 12
11°30′04″N 125°30′07″E / 11.5010°N 125.5019°E / 11.5010; 125.5019 (Maydolong) Maydolong 3.2% 14,743 13,614 +1.53% 399.63 154.30 37 96 20
11°05′55″N 125°42′37″E / 11.0986°N 125.7103°E / 11.0986; 125.7103 (Mercedes) Mercedes 1.3% 6,070 5,369 +2.36% 23.32 9.00 260 670 16
12°08′28″N 125°26′27″E / 12.1410°N 125.4408°E / 12.1410; 125.4408 (Oras) Oras 7.8% 36,540 34,760 +0.96% 188.70 72.86 190 490 42
11°09′27″N 125°31′15″E / 11.1574°N 125.5209°E / 11.1574; 125.5209 (Quinapondan) Quinapondan 3.2% 14,779 13,841 +1.26% 83.24 32.14 180 470 25
11°08′56″N 125°39′45″E / 11.1488°N 125.6626°E / 11.1488; 125.6626 (Salcedo) Salcedo 4.8% 22,532 19,970 +2.32% 113.80 43.94 200 520 41
11°45′15″N 125°27′16″E / 11.7542°N 125.4544°E / 11.7542; 125.4544 (San Julian) San Julian 3.1% 14,498 13,748 +1.02% 150.62 58.15 96 250 16
12°10′46″N 125°30′31″E / 12.1795°N 125.5087°E / 12.1795; 125.5087 (San Policarpo) San Policarpo 3.1% 14,687 13,836 +1.14% 78.00 30.12 190 490 17
11°48′44″N 125°27′08″E / 11.8122°N 125.4522°E / 11.8122; 125.4522 (Sulat) Sulat 3.3% 15,377 15,184 +0.24% 169.75 65.54 91 240 18
11°54′18″N 125°24′59″E / 11.9049°N 125.4164°E / 11.9049; 125.4164 (Taft) Taft 4.0% 18,915 17,183 +1.85% 231.27 89.29 82 210 24
Total 467,160 428,877 +1.64% 4,660.47 1,799.42 100 260 597
  Provincial capital and component city     Municipality
  1. The globe 
    icon marks the city/town center.

Political divisions of Eastern Samar

Demographics

Population census of
Eastern Samar
YearPop.±% p.a.
1990 329,335    
1995 362,324+1.80%
2000 375,822+0.79%
2007 405,114+1.04%
2010 428,877+2.10%
2015 467,160+1.64%
Source: National Statistics Office[2][9][9]

The population of Eastern Samar in the 2015 census was 467,160 people,[2] with a density of 100 inhabitants per square kilometre or 260 inhabitants per square mile. The predominant language is Waray.[5]

In the 2000 Census, Warays comprised 97.78% (366,787) of the total provincial population of 375,124 at that time. Kapampangan came second at 0.55% (2,067), Bisaya/Binisaya 0.43% (1,613), Cebuano at 0.18% (680), and Tagalog at 0.17% (621).[10]

Population by ethnicity (2000)[10]
Ethnicity Number
Waray
 
366,787 (97.78%)
Kapampangan
 
2,067 (0.55%)
Bisaya/Binisaya
 
1,613 (0.43%)
Cebuano
 
680 (0.18%)
Tagalog
 
621 (0.17%)

Others
 
2,510 (0.67%)
Not Reported
 
846 (0.23%)

Religion

The people of the province are devoted Christians where a majority adhere to Roman Catholicism.[5] The dominant Catholic faith influences the events of the provincial education, politics and social functions of the people. Other Christians usually form the remaining groups of believers such as the Born-again Christians, Protestants, Jehovah's Witnesses, Iglesia Ni Cristo, Baptists, Methodists, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and Seventh-day Adventists. Non Christians (mostly Muslims) are also found.

Transportation

The province has one operational airport; Borongan Airport located in the capital city. Currently, only SkyJet Airlines operates out of Borongan Airport with flights weekly to serve locals and tourists to and from Manila.

Borongan City's Wilsam Uptown Mall, the largest shopping mall in the province

By land, mini buses and vans ply from the regional center in Tacloban City to some towns in Eastern Samar. From Borongan City, buses ply to Manila. Motorized boats plies through the Leyte Gulf ferrying passengers going to Tacloban City seaport.

Economy

Commercial activities in the province are centered on the provincial capital of Borongan City while tourism activities are centered in Guiuan town where Calicoan Island and the historical Homonhon Island are located.[5] Generally, the province's major economic resource is fishery and agriculture which include production of coconut, copra, corn, rice, sugar, and vegetables.[5] Tourism potential is untapped on the northern part of the province.

References

  1. "List of Provinces". PSGC Interactive. Makati City, Philippines: National Statistical Coordination Board. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Region VIII (EASTERN VISAYAS)". Census of Population (2015): Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay (Report). PSA. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  3. 1 2 Lancion, Jr., Conrado M.; cartography by de Guzman, Rey (1995). "The Provinces; Eastern Samar". Fast Facts about Philippine Provinces (The 2000 Millenium ed.). Makati, Metro Manila, Philippines: Tahanan Books. p. 72. ISBN 971-630-037-9. Retrieved 4 December 2015.
  4. 1 2 Labro, Vicente S. (11 June 2011). "Guiuan's treasure chest of history, natural wonders". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 24 April 2016.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "The Province of Eastern Samar". National Statistical Coordination Board. Retrieved 24 April 2016.
  6. "Republic Act No. 4221 - An Act Creating the Provinces of Northern Samar, Eastern Samar and Western Samar". Chan Robles Virtual Law Library. Retrieved 19 December 2015.
  7. Baylis, Paul; Te-Ping Chen (22 November 2013). "How One Philippine Town Avoided Calamity". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
  8. 1 2 "Province: Eastern Samar". PSA. Philippines: National Statistical Coordination Board. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  9. 1 2 3 "Region VIII (EASTERN VISAYAS)". Census of Population and Housing (2010): Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay (Report). NSO. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  10. 1 2 "Eastern Samar: Home of the Warays; Table 4. Household Population by Ethnicity and Sex: Eastern Samar, 2000". National Statistics Office. 7 June 2002. Archived from the original on 16 November 2013. Retrieved 25 July 2016.

External links

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