Bulalacao
Bulalacao, officially the Municipality of Bulalacao, is a municipality in the province of Oriental Mindoro, Philippines. According to the, it has a population of people.
It is formerly known as San Pedro.
History
Precolonial period
was a medieval state first recorded in Chinese documents, such as the History of Song and the Zhu Fan Zhi by Zhao Rukuo. Ma-i was described to be located north of Borneo, and were highly competitive in the trade with China. While the exact location of Ma-i remains disputed, most historians agree that it was located in Mindoro, specifically at the Mauhaw River around Bulalacao according to William Henry Scott. This is corroborated by Spanish records, such as the account of Juan Francisco de San Antonio, called the Chronicas de N.S.P. Francisco en las Islas Filipinas, China y Japón 1738, where Chapter 36 of the book is called De la Provincia y Isla de Mait o Mindoro, showing that the term Mait and Mindoro were once interchangeable.Historical records in the National Archives of the Philippines have shown Bulalacao engaging in barangay network trade alliance with neighboring polities. Colonial documents point to this fact. Evidence shows that Nicolás Contreras, the ruler of Bulalacao, along with his vassal maginoó, entered into alliances with the ruler of Mansalay and their subject maginoó, in trade agreements with the Spanish colonial government in Manila.
Since at least the 1700s, Bulalacao has been ruled by the Contreras clan as the Panginoón Basal. The clan is one of a few Filipino families with clear descent from ancient maginoó lineage.
Spanish to early American period
In the early 19th century, Datu Calido of Panay was in control of Bulalacao. Following the expansion of the settlement, it was ruled by the capitanes. They were Gabriel Contreras as Gobernadorcillo, with vassal datu: Paigao, Jacinto Pajado and Narciso Pandino. They ruled the area until the arrival of Lieutenant Morris in 1903. In 1906, the settlement became a township which included Paclasan, Mansalay, Mangaring, and the islands of Caluya, Sibay and Semirara.Modern period
On May 7, 1995, re-electionist Mayor Guillermo Salas was assassinated a day before the midterm elections by Rodel Gonzáles of the Mangyan tribe; Gonzáles eventually surrendered to authorities five days later and confessed to the crime.Geography
Bulalacao is located at the southernmost tip of the province and is from the provincial capital Calapan and from Roxas.Climate
Barangays
Bulalacao is politically subdivided into 16 barangays. Each barangay consists of puroks and some have sitios.- Bagong Sikat
- Balatasan
- Benli
- Cabugao
- Cambunang
- Campaasan
- Liwagao
- Maasin
- Maujao
- Milagrosa
- Nasukob
- Poblacion
- San Francisco
- San Isidro
- San Juan
- San Roque
Demographics
Economy
Transportation
Bulalacao has a port that serves as a gateway from Mindoro to Caticlan in Malay, Aklan. FastCat operates in the port.Education
The Bulalacao Schools District Office governs all educational institutions within the municipality. It oversees the management and operations of all private and public, from primary to secondary schools.Primary and elementary schools
- Abintang Elementary School
- Agong Elementary School
- Alimawan Elementary School
- Bagong Sikat Elementary School
- Bailan Elementary School
- Balang Elementary School
- Balatasan Elementary School
- Balditan Primary School
- Bangkal Elementary School
- Bating Elementary School
- Benli Elementary School
- Bulalacao Central School
- Cabugao Elementary School
- Cambunang Elementary School
- Campaasan Elementary School
- Dangkalan Elementary School
- Lambok Elementary School
- Libtong Elementary School
- Lower Yunot Elementary School
- Maasin Elementary School
- Maujao Elementary School
- Milagrosa Elementary School
- Nasucob Elementary School
- Pawikan Elementary School
- San Isidro Elementary School
- San Juan Elementary School
- San Miguel Elementary School
- San Roque Elementary School
- San Vicente Elementary School
- SCLC Adventist School
- Tambangan Elementary School
- Ugyong Katutubong Mangyan Elementary School
- Umabang Elementary School
- Upper Yunot Elementary School
- Waring Elementary School
Secondary schools
- Balatasan National High School
- Benli National High School
- Bulalacao National High School
- Cabugao National High School
- Gatol Mangyan High School
- Maasin High School
- Maujao National High School
- Milagrosa National High School
- San Roque National High School
- San Roque National High School