Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Malasiqui, Pangasinan

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Country
  
Philippines

Founded
  
January 22, 1671

Time zone
  
PST (UTC+8)

Local time
  
Sunday 9:11 AM

Region
  
Ilocos (Region I)

Barangays
  
73

Area
  
131.4 km²

Province
  
Pangasinan

Malasiqui, Pangasinan uploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons002Malasi

District
  
3rd district of Pangasinan

Weather
  
28°C, Wind S at 3 km/h, 55% Humidity

University
  
University of Perpetual Help System JONELTA – Pangasinan Campus

Malasiqui (Pangasinan: Baley na Malasiqui; Ilocano: Ili ti Malasiqui) is a 1st class municipality in the province of Pangasinan, Philippines. According to the 2015 census, it has a population of 130,275 people.

Contents

Map of Malasiqui, Pangasinan, Philippines

It is mainly an agricultural municipality with rice, corn and tropical lowland vegetables as main crops. It is also famous for its mango fruits having one of the largest concentration of mango tree population in the Philippines.

Etymology

The word Malasiqui originates from the Pangasinan root word lasi meaning lightning. With prefix ma indicating high degree and suffix qui indicating place - Malasiqui means "place full of lightning".

History

The municipality traces its origins during the middle of the 17th century when Spanish friars opened a mission intended to convert the native population to Catholicism. The most probable founding year was 1671 when Spanish civil authorities in Manila gave the license for the creation of the town. There were no organized communities in the area before the Spaniards arrived. Attempts to group families into a settlement may have started as early as 1665. The present site was then heavily forested with small family groups scattered along banks of small rivers and creeks. The socio-political history of the municipality parallels that of the Pangasinan province and the country in general. Its history is punctuated by periods of foreign domination first by the Spanish, then by the United States and briefly by the Japanese during the 2nd World War. The population participated heavily in some of the bloodiest rebellions during the Spanish period. Catholicism and other Christian sects dominate the religious life of the people. Ethnically, it is one of the few places in the province of Pangasinan which did not experience in-migration from other regions of the country. Consequently, Pangasinanse is the dominant ethnic group with almost no other ethnic groups mixing into the locality.

The poblacion or town center, is recently experiencing high commercial growth spurred mainly by high consumer spending generated by increase in family incomes attributable to earnings of OFWs (Overseas Filipino Workers). The estimate of OFW population as a percentage of adult labor force is as much as 22% - one of the highest rates in the Philippines. The OFW phenomenon is so significant that almost all households have at least one member working outside of the country.

Barangays

Malasiqui is politically subdivided into 73 barangays.

Tourism

The Town Fiesta is celebrated January 17 thru 22 every year. Points of interests include:

  • Malasiqui Agno Valley College
  • Perpetual Help College of Pangasinan
  • Harvest Festival
  • Assembly of God
  • Rep. Rachel "Baby" Arenas farm
  • Monastery of the Poor Clares of St. James the Apostle
  • Archdiocese of Lingayen-Dagupan's first cloistered monastery
  • Malasiqui Central School
  • Centeno Farm Resort and Ecohills Resort
  • Barangay Lareg-Lareg and the Arenas Civic Center
  • Magic Mall
  • St. Ildephonse of Seville Parish Church (Malasiqui)
  • References

    Malasiqui, Pangasinan Wikipedia