Lamitan


Lamitan, officially the City of Lamitan, is a component city and de jure capital of the province of Basilan, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 100,150 people.
The city is bounded on the east by the municipality of Tuburan, on the south by Tipo-Tipo, on the west by Isabela and on the north by Basilan Strait.

Etymology

Lamitan is derived from the word Lami-Lamihan, which signifies a combination of Merrymaking and Conference. The town was named after the first Spaniards from Isabela who blew up the area. When the Spaniards arrived, the Yakans were celebrating their national holiday. The explorers asked for the name of the place; the Yakans assumed they were asking about the merrymaking and explained that it was the Lami-Lamihan celebration; the Spaniards misunderstood their response and later referred to the location as Lamitan.

History

Early history

According to royal genealogical records, colonial accounts, and modern historical scholarship, Basilan, historically known as Taguima, developed as an important regional trade center in the precolonial period. Its strategic position between the Sulu Archipelago, northern Borneo, and mainland Southeast Asia placed Taguima at the intersection of major maritime trade and migration routes. The authority of Datu Taguima reflects the island’s early political importance and active participation in regional commerce.
The inhabitants of Taguima, known as the Tagimaha, formed a coastal and inland farming community engaged in seafaring, trade, agriculture, and regional diplomacy. Unlike societies divided between separate maritime and inland peoples, the Tagimaha exercised authority across both coastal and interior zones of Basilan. The absence of a strong pre-existing hill population comparable to the Buranun of Jolo allowed Tagimaha settlement and control to extend across the island without sustained internal resistance. This unified control established Taguima as a center of economic exchange, cultural interaction, and early political organization within the Sulu region.
By the 7th to 8th centuries, Champa traders from mainland Southeast Asia maintained sustained commercial and social contact with Taguima through established maritime trade networks. These Cham merchants formed settlements, intermarried with Tagimaha communities, and introduced advanced maritime knowledge, boat-building techniques, textile production, decorative weaving styles, and social practices. This long-term interaction produced a culturally integrated Tagimaha society that combined indigenous Basilan traditions with Cham maritime and artistic influences, reinforcing Basilan’s role as a regional trade hub.
Between the 9th and 12th centuries, violent conflict erupted in Sulu between the indigenous Buranun and Champa merchants over control of trade and economic power. Historical accounts and Sulu oral traditions record a massacre in which many Orang Dampuan traders were killed. Survivors fled Sulu, with a significant number resettling in Taguima among the Tagimaha. This migration strengthened demographic ties, reinforced existing trade networks, and deepened Cham cultural influence in Basilan.
By the 10th to 13th centuries, Islam expanded in Basilan and the wider Sulu region through Muslim merchants and missionaries, including scholars associated with Champa. These figures reinforced Islamic beliefs, legal concepts, and communal practices among both coastal and inland Tagimaha communities. Islam in Basilan developed through trade and missionary activity prior to and independent of the formal establishment of the Sulu Sultanate, making the Tagimaha among the earliest Muslim communities in the southern Philippines.
As Tagimaha political and commercial influence expanded, segments of the population moved from Basilan into Buansa . There, Tagimaha leaders functioned as the principal local political authority. They provided protection, territorial access, and legitimacy to Muslim teachers such as Karimul Makdum, enabling the open establishment of Islamic instruction and early mosques. They later supported Tuan Masha’ikha, integrating Islamic practices into elite governance. When Raja Baguinda arrived in Buansa, he initially faced resistance from the Tagimaha. This resistance ended when Tagimaha leaders recognized that he spoke a closely related West Malay language, reflecting shared cultural and political traditions. The Tagimaha accepted him, granted political legitimacy, and strengthened his position through marriage into a ruling family linked to Tagimaha lineage. With their backing, Raja Baguinda consolidated leadership in Buansa.
Within the political structure of the Sulu Sultanate, Tagimaha elites became the Mantin, serving as chief ministers and principal advisers to the Sultan. Through control of administration, diplomacy, and elite alliances, they formed a central pillar of early Sulu governance and laid the institutional foundations that later evolved into the Sulu Sultanate.
As the Sulu Sultanate consolidated power, regional trade and political authority became increasingly centered in Buansa, reducing Basilan’s earlier prominence as a major maritime trading hub. Basilan’s economy shifted toward inland agriculture, localized production, and resource-based livelihoods. This transition marked a shift from long-distance trade participation to a more locally oriented economic landscape.
Historical records indicate that Sultanate authority remained concentrated in coastal political centers, while inland communities in Taguima retained substantial autonomy. These communities maintained their own systems of leadership, communal governance, and customary law, continuing earlier Basilan social organization without close integration into Sultanate administration.
The Tagimaha thus followed two historical paths. One group settled in Buansa, where they became integrated into elite political lineages as Mantin and ruling advisers within the Sulu Sultanate. The other group remained in Taguima, where they continued as a distinct people and did not follow the political fortunes of the Sultanate as closely as their brothers in Buansa. Preserving older West Malay linguistic, cultural, and social characteristics, these Basilan Tagimaha gradually became known as the Yakan population.
Today, anthropological and historical studies consistently recognize Yakan culture as a continuation of earlier Tagimaha society, shaped by long-term Cham contact and indigenous Basilan heritage. This continuity is evident in weaving traditions, settlement patterns, social organization, and oral histories linked to precolonial trade networks.
Yakan's home base was in the area that would become known as Lamitan.

Colonization era

During the Spanish colonial period, The name was locally pronounced as Tagimaha. Spanish listeners recorded it as Tagihamas, likely through intermediaries during trade and military encounters, and later copying and misspelling produced forms such as Sameacas. These repeated changes indicate that Spanish authorities never had consistent knowledge or firm control over the area, which remained contested by multiple Moro polities that resisted Spanish incursions and limited sustained colonial presence.
During the American colonial period, Americans inherited distorted Spanish spellings such as "Sameacas". Upon hearing the local pronunciation "ya/ya-can", they re-spelled the name using English phonetics as "Yacanes" retaining the Spanish plural ending "-es" common in ethnic group designations of the era. This form was later standardized into the singular endonym "Yakan".
During the Spanish, American, and Japanese occupations, the town was designated as one of Basilan's municipal districts, which were then part of Zamboanga.
Pedro "Datu Kalun" Javier Cuevas is regarded as the founding father of Lamitan. His parents, Sebastian Cuevas and Gregoria Javier, gave birth to him on May 6, 1845, in Bacoor, Cavite. Pedro was a passionate young man who cherished his hometown and was pious. He was sentenced to death at the age of 27 for his anti-Spanish efforts during the Cavite Uprising of 1872, along with two other comrades. They were accused of causing the death of a Spanish Guardia Civil officer. His sentence was reduced to life in prison due to his indirect involvement in the killing.
In June 1886, a man named Pedro Javier Cuevas, also known as Datu Kalun in Basilan history, took over leadership from the native chieftains and founded the settlement of Lamitan. The settlement grew into a town with political boundaries that included the Guiong River in the southeast and the Balagtasan River in the northwest. With the passage of time, an influx of Christian settlers arrived, who, along with their Muslim neighbors, paved the path for agricultural development in the region.
In 1937, Lamitan became part of Zamboanga City. Basilan became a chartered city on July 1, 1948, as a result of Republic Act No. 288, which was sponsored by Congressman Juan S. Alano.

Establishment

On December 27, 1973, His Excellency President Ferdinand E. Marcos signed Presidential Decree No. 356, which established Basilan Province out of Basilan City and included three municipalities: Lamitan, Isabela and Maluso. The decree reduced Basilan City's territory to less than a square kilometer. On December 2, 1974, Presidential No. 593 revised 356 to increase the territory of Basilan City to nearly three square kilometers and divide the province into ten municipalities: Lamitan, Isabela, Maluso, Sumisip, Lantawan, Tuburan, Tipo-Tipo, Tapiantana, Malamawi, and Pilas.
Col. Tomas G. Naquil, commander of the 2/1 Brigade stationed in Basilan at the time, was named the first Military Governor. After nearly two years, Rear Admiral Romulo Espaldon, commander of the South West Command, took over as Military Governor, but the affairs of government were managed by a military caretaker, Col. Florencio E. Magsino, who was succeeded by Col. Alfeo Rillera, all Brigade Commanders. This was the situation before His Excellency President Marcos appointed Hon. Asan Camlian, the then-vice governor, was appointed Governor of Basilan Province.
Basilan City was disbanded on December 11, 1975, by virtue of the Presidential Decree No. 840 reduced the number of municipalities of Basilan Province from ten to seven, removing Tapiantana, Pilas, and Malamawi. Pedro C. Pamaran, a member of the provincial board was appointed in 1975, as Municipal Mayor of Lamitan. Furigay succeeded Pamaran in 1980. Wilfredo C. Furigay was considered the first elected mayor of the municipality of Lamitan.
In 1986, during the EDSA Revolution, Ramon F. Garcia Jr. was appointed as Mayor during the interim government. By 1988, Wilfredo C. Furigay had taken the position of mayor by way of election and was succeeded by Inocente J. Ramos in 1995 for three consecutive terms.