This
was the village of Gibalong, the very first Christian settlement in
the island of Luzon. It was here where the first mass in Luzon was celebrated
by the Augustinian friar, Fray Alonso Jimenez.
Thus,
the name Ibalong, to refer to the whole of Bikol Region, really came
from this small fishing village, Gibalong, which is now a mere sitio
of Barangay Siuton, in Magallanes town, where the local parish constructed
sometime in the 1970s a small wooden chapel and a concrete historical
marker on the site. In some old Spanish maps, the Spanish cartographers
even retained the original spelling by identifying, either the whole
Bikol Region or parts of it ? Tierra de Gibalong. In his book, From
Ibalon to Sorsogon: A Historical Survey of Sorsogon Province to 1905
(New Day Pub. QC, Philippines, 1991), Dr. Luis C. Dery writes, ?Historical
records showed that the Spaniards started using the name Ibalon as early
as 1567 to refer variously to a pre-Spanish native settlement in Sorsogon
Gulf, to the entire Bicol Region, and sometimes to the entire island
of Luzon. The Spaniards? indiscriminate use of this name was due to
their inadequate knowledge of Bicol geography at the outset of their
exploration and conquest of the region. Gradually, they were able to
delimit Ibalon and the rest of Kabikolan?s territory.?
Sorsogon
became a province, separate from the Province of Albay to which it was
formerly attached, in 1894. This is the reason why, in 1994 the centennial
foundation anniversary of the Province started to be commemorated and
celebrated with a festival ? the Kasanggayahan Festival ? every October
of each year.
How Sorsogon got to be Sorsogon . . .
As the old folks story goes, after establishing a settlement in Gibalong,
in what is now the town of Magallanes, the Spaniards fanned out to explore
the area and one group soon came upon a small river emptying itself
into what is now Sorsogon Bay. Tired and lost and not knowing where
they were, the Spaniards asked a native about the name of the place.
Ignorant of the Iberian tongue, and fearful of the white men with the
funny hats and bushy countenances, the native, thinking that the strangers
were asking for directions, simply pointed at the river and said, ?Solsogon?,
meaning, trace the river upstream to a native village beyond. And the
name stuck.
From Solsogon to Sorsogon. The people of Sorsogon invites everyone,
from whichever corner of the world they are, to trace the path towards
the beautiful and most hospitable Province of Sorsogon