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introduced by: HAZEL P. MARUCOT
BORACAY | PAGUDPOD | MACTAN ISLAND | PANGLAO | CAMIGUIN | DAKAK | HONDA BAY | EL NIDO | PEARL FARM | SIARGAO
| TUBBATAHA REEF MARINE PARK | IFUGAO RICE TERRACES | THE IFUGAO EPIC "HUDHUD" | VIGAN HERITAGE VILLAGE | ST.PAUL SUBTERRANEAN NATIONAL PARK |
| PHILIPPINE BAROQUE CHURCHES | STO.TOMAS DE VILLANUEVA CHURCH | NUESTRA SEÑORA DE LA ASUNCION | SAN AGUSTIN CHURCH |


STO. TOMAS DE VILLANUEVA CHURCH (Miag-ao, Iloilo)

In Central Philippines, on the island of Panay, is the Vicarate of Miag-ao in Iloilo Province. Its Church of Santo Tomas de Villanueva is an Augustinian mission station built as a squat, massive fortress to protect townsfolk from Muslim invasion. Made of a distinct local yellow-orange sandstone, the fortress-church took ten years to build, beginning in 1797. Miag-ao's church is ""the most outstanding example of the peripheral baroque style blended with embellishment [from] naïf folk motifs found in the Philippines,"" according to the 1992 report of Jorge Gazano, an architectural expert of ICOMOS, the United Nations' International Committee for Monuments and Sites. Any visitor will be able to translate the jargon into layman's language just by looking at the profusely ornamented church-front. Reigning over its fully hand-sculptured pediment is St. Christopher, dressed Filipino-farmer style with his pants rolled up, and carrying the Christ Child on his back. The holy figures stand beside coconut, papaya and guava trees ready for harvest. They were rendered by folk artisans working from their imagination and whatever guidance the priest, who had no architectural training, could offer. No similar tropical-Asian composition exists.