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Philippines Naming Customs: Difference between revisions

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Because surnames were all assigned over a relatively short period of time and were taken from a single source, it is not uncommon to find that all the surnames from an area begin with the same letter of the alphabet or that all the people of a ''barangay'' have the same surname. A ''barangay'' was a basic unit of local administration used during Spanish occupation from 1565 to 1898. Today a ''barangay'' refers to communities of 1,000 inhabitants within a city or municipality that is administrated by a group of elected officals. A number of ''barangay'' could have made up a municipality.  
Because surnames were all assigned over a relatively short period of time and were taken from a single source, it is not uncommon to find that all the surnames from an area begin with the same letter of the alphabet or that all the people of a ''barangay'' have the same surname. A ''barangay'' was a basic unit of local administration used during Spanish occupation from 1565 to 1898. Today a ''barangay'' refers to communities of 1,000 inhabitants within a city or municipality that is administrated by a group of elected officals. A number of ''barangay'' could have made up a municipality.  
More information on Philippine surname customs and the Claveria decree:
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat%C3%A1logo_alfab%C3%A9tico_de_apellidos Alphabetical Catalogue of Surnames; Tagalog: Alpabetikong Katalogo ng mga apelyido]
Also see: [http://www.zahlerweb.info/pm/claveria.htm Decree of 21 November 1849]


=== Given Names  ===
=== Given Names  ===
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