JoannaRhiannaMarquez
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Nov 02, 2025
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About This Presentation
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Size: 8.7 MB
Language: en
Added: Nov 02, 2025
Slides: 16 pages
Slide Content
HISPANIC PERIOD Many things changed upon the coming of the colonizers. The culture and traditions of the ancient Filipinos were modified to suit the taste and teachings of the Christian invaders.
1. Bahay Na Bato This was the type of house developed during the Philippines’ Spanish Colonial Period. It was an upgraded version of the conventional bahay kubo . Its design and construction still retained the bahay kubo's architectural basis because of the tropical climate, stormy season, and earthquake-prone environment of the Philippines.
2. Baroque Churches The UNESCO World Heritage List in 1993 included the four Spanish Colonial period churches in the Philippines. All four churches are designed and known to be of the Baroque style. As part of the country’s material inheritance from Spain, all of the said four churches are now classified as national treasures of the country. The four churches that were built by the Spaniards are located in Manila; Santa Maria Ilocos Sur; Paoay , Ilocos Norte; and Miagao , Ilo-ilo .
3. Painting during the Spanish Period Western painting was introduced by the Spanish friars in the Philippines to artisans who learned to copy on two-dimensional form the religious icons that the friars brought from Spain. In the first centuries of Spanish colonization, painting was only for the creation of religious icons.
4. Sculpture Christian-themed art in the Philippines was common during the 178 to the 19th centuries when parts of the country were under the Spanish colonial rule. Many of these religious images were of carved wooden santos (saints) created by unknown artists, as well as reliefs and paintings of the Virgin Mary and Jesus Christ.
5. Graphic Arts Spanish colonizers introduced engraving in the 1590's. The Dominicans published the La Doctrina Christiana en la Lengua Espanola y Tagala in the 1590's. It was the first book printed in the country. On the cover was a woodcut engraving of St. Dominic by Juan de Veyra , a Chinese convert.
6. Philippine Dance in the Spanish Period For the past 300 years, Spain Shaped the lives of Filipinos in terms of politics, economics, religion, and culture. The hispanization infiltrated even the musical and choreographic practices of the people. Even Native dances took on the tempo
7. Fiesta Fiesta , the Spanish word for party or festivity, turned pista in the local dialect. It is an acknowledged national traditional occasion. It is a momentous occasion. When communities come. Together in gratitude for another passing year. The word fiesta in the minds of Filipinos creates images of banderitas .