Philippine Daily Inquirer

NHCP opens undergroun­d cemetery museum in Nagcarlan, Laguna

- By Edgar Allan M. Sembrano @Inq_Lifestyle

Breaking its tradition of historythe­med museums, the National Historical Commission of the Philippine­s recently opened the Museo ng Libingan sa Ilalim ng Lupa in Nagcarlan town, Laguna, the agency’s first heritage-centered museum.

The museum located at a building in front of the octagonal-shaped cemetery features artifacts associated with the 19th-century burial ground and the techniques used by NHCP in conserving the chapel and perimeter walls as well as the properties of the materials utilized in its constructi­on.

It also tells the history of the cemetery through audio-visual presentati­on and infographi­cs.

In the opening ceremony, church art and architectu­re historian Regalado José underscore­d the site’s significan­ce, saying it is the only cemetery in the country to have an undergroun­d crypt—from which it got its name— during the Spanish colonial period.

José, University of Santo Tomas archivist, explained the cemetery’s octagon shape, saying the shape means it has eight sides with eight being the number of eternity.

Former NHCP chair Ma. Serena Diokno who attended the event and conceptual­ized the museum’s theme, said the museum veered away from their usual historical narratives addressing the gap between that and the concepts on heritage and conservati­on.

Educationa­l

Bryan Paraiso of the NHCP commemorat­ion and museum division explained the heritage-

themed museum was made to educate the people on the difficulti­es in preserving and restoring heritage edifices using scientific methods.

Paraiso said Diokno wanted to present the conservati­on of materials as an important step in understand­ing the nature and techniques used during the Spanish period in constructi­ng heritage structures.

The cemetery built of bricks, adobe and river stone, and located about two kilometers from the town center was built by Franciscan friar Fr. Vicente Belloc in 1845 who also made renovation­s on the town’s church on the same year.

While its chapel of neoclassic facade has a crypt 15 feet be- low the ground containing 36 niches where priests and the town’s prominent residents were interred, more than 200 niches are above ground and had been incorporat­ed into the perimeter walls.

The chapel’s interior was previously painted with dry fresco and the traces are still visible at present.

The crypt served as a meeting place of the Laguna leaders of the revolution in 1896 and of Filipino guerilla during World War II.

Prior to the cemetery’s recent conservati­on, past conservati­on works were undertaken in 1983 and 1996 also by the then National Historical Institute, which declared the crypt a National Historical Landmark in 1981.

 ?? —EDGARALLAN­M. SEMBRANO ?? Crypt of undergroun­d cemetery
—EDGARALLAN­M. SEMBRANO Crypt of undergroun­d cemetery
 ?? —PHOTOS BY EDGARALLAN­M. SEMBRANO ?? Cemetery gate
—PHOTOS BY EDGARALLAN­M. SEMBRANO Cemetery gate
 ??  ?? Inside the museum
Inside the museum
 ??  ?? NHCP director Luduvico Badoy, Nagcarlan Mayor Nelson Osuna, NHCP acting chair Rene Escalante, historian Regalado Trota José, former NHCP head Ma. Serena Diokno
NHCP director Luduvico Badoy, Nagcarlan Mayor Nelson Osuna, NHCP acting chair Rene Escalante, historian Regalado Trota José, former NHCP head Ma. Serena Diokno
 ??  ?? Chapel and niches
Chapel and niches

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