TOUR INSIDE MALACAÑANG PALACE MUSEUM & LIBRARY 2011
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaca%C3%B1ang_Palace
The
Malacañan Palace, commonly known simply as
Malacañang, is the official residence and principal workplace of the
President of the Philippines. Located at
1000 J. P. Laurel Street,
San Miguel, Manila, the house was built in 1750 in
Spanish Colonial style. It has been the residence of every
Philippine head since
Rafael de
Echague y Berminghan. During the
American period, Governors-General
Francis Burton Harrison and
Dwight F. Davis built an executive building, the Kalayaan
Hall, which was later transformed into a museum.
Originally a summer house by
Spanish aristocrat
Don Luis Rocha, the house was sold to
Colonel Jose Miguel Formente, and was later purchased by the state in 1825. Since 1825, Malacañan Palace became the temporary residence of every Governor-General. During the Spanish--American War, Malacañan Palace became the residence of the American Civil Governors, with
William Howard Taft being the first American
Governor resident. During the American period, many administrative buildings were constructed and Malacañan Palace was refurbished.
Emilio Aguinaldo, the first
Philippine President, was the only head of the state who did not reside in Malacañan Palace, instead residing in his own home, the
Aguinaldo Shrine, located in
Kawit, Cavite. The palace was seized by rebels several times, starting from the
People Power Revolution, the
1989 coup attempt, where the palace was bombed by
T-28 Trojans, the
2001 Manila riots,
EDSA II and the
May 1 riots.
The palace has been the residence of eighteen Spanish Governors-General, fourteen American Civil Governors and later all the President of the Philippines after independence, with the exception of Emilio Aguinaldo.
Etymology
View of the
Palace from
Saint Jude Catholic School, situated east of the Palace and north of the
Pasig RiverThe official etymology from the
1930s says that the name comes from a
Tagalog phrase "May lakan diyan", which means "There is a nobleman there", as it was the home of a wealthy Spanish merchant before it hosted the
Nation's chief executive.
The Spanish themselves, on the other hand, say that the name came from the term "Mamalakaya," referring to the fishermen who once laid out their catch on the river bend where the Palace now stands.[
1][2] A more mundane claim is that the Palace actually got its name from the street where it was located, the Calzada de
Malacañan.[2]
The word also seems definitely Spanish, having its origin in both: As a proper noun, it refers to the small town of "Malascañas",
Spain (
South of Spain, also beside a river and with "wet" bamboo), and as a common noun, "Malas
Cañas" literally means "Bad
Bamboo" (
... the bamboo which grow alongside riverbanks are generally "bad bamboo", in the sense that it has lost its natural strength ... it is so inflated by water and with such high degree of humidity that it does not serve for anything (construction, furniture-making, boat-building, weapon, etc
.)). Throughout the ages, it has been "Filipinized", i.e. the conversion of the suffix to the Tagalog (
Filipino) "-ng".
Whatever its origin, the word Malacañang is indisputably Tagalog. Because the
Spanish language avoids using "-ng" as the final sound of a word, the word Malacañang was Hispanicized into Malacañan. The Spanish version of the name was maintained during the
American occupation of the Philippines from 1898 until 1946, despite the fact that "-ng" as a final sound is very familiar in the
English language.[2] "Malacañan" remains to this day an official
English name for the Palace.[1] However, during the presidency of
Ramon Magsaysay in
1953, the
Philippine government changed the name to Malacañang: Residence of the President of the Philippines in honour of Palace's historical roots.[2]
Starting in
1986, during the presidency of
Corazon Aquino, the distinction was made between Malacañan Palace as the designation for the official residence of the
President, and Malacañang as
shorthand for the
Office of the President of the
Philippines.
The restoration of the designation Malacañan Palace was reflected in official stationery, and signage, including the backdrop for press briefings and conferences featuring the
Pasig River façade of the Palace.[3] In practice, official documents personally signed by the President of the Philippines bear the heading Malacañan Palace, while those delegated to subordinates and signed by them bear the heading Malacañang.
Video courtesy of Pulsong
Pinoy