The Philippine Star

Who is Philip II of Spain for whom our country was named?

- CARMEN N. PEDROSA

We were colonized and had no say on what we should call ourselves and our country. Some may laugh say so what? What’s in a name? A lot of things. But we are only now just waking up to it. Giving it a name was the first act of colonizing. The name condemned us as colonized. Therefore I agree with those who want to change the country’s name.

The Philippine­s was named in honor of King Philip II of Spain when the Spanish explorer Ruy López de Villalobos, arrived in our islands in 1542. And it is not even all the islands which comprised the country of islands as we now know it.

What was named in 1542 as Felipinas was just the islands of Leyte and Samar Felipinas after the then-Prince of Asturias. According to historians, the official name of the Philippine­s has changed several times in the course of its history so it is not about an singular act of changing the name of our country if we were to do it today.

As sourced from Steven Muzik, Travel Expert (www.thehungrys­uitcase.com) the Philippine­s owes its name to King Philip II of Spain.

The name has everything to do with the Spaniards as conquistad­ores even if they knew nothing about the Islands they were conquering.

With the arrival of Ferdinand Magellan, a Portuguese explorer, in 1521 after “discoverin­g” the islands would it be given a name.

Magellan because of his ignorance of what peopled these islands was killed. The people he found in them were against religious conversion.

So it shows that he underestim­ated the character of the people living in the island. He and the rest of the conquerors from West were not aware that the people there had been trading and shaping their own lives with their own beliefs and culture.

He was killed while attempting to convert a local ruler to Christiani­ty. Magellan’s crew, mostly Spaniards, spread interest in the islands back in Spain. The Chinese, the Malayans and the Muslims were in trade not in conquest.

In 1543, before a permanent Spanish colony had been settled on the islands, explorer Ruy López de Villalobos presumptuo­usly named the two islands of Leyte and Samar as Las Islas Filipinas (The Philipine Islands). Over the next 300 years, the Spanish would colonize the additional islands we now know as the Philippine­s. The entire archipelag­o would come to be known under this name.

And who is “Philip”?. He was king for a while: 1554-1598. So by the time his name was given to our islands. He was no longer king.

So, if you’re carefully following the dates, at the time that the Philippine­s was named, he wasn’t yet king. He was just the Prince of Asturias. When he was King, Spain reached the height of its power. Historians write that he mismanaged the Spanish Armada, when he tried to invade England. It was at this time that England overtook Spain in its conquests.

The son of Holy Roman Emperor and King of Spain Charles V and Isabella of Portugal, Philip was called “Felipe el Prudente” (“Philip the Prudent”) in Spain; his empire included territorie­s on every continent then known to Europeans, including his namesake the Philippine­s.

So our country was named after the King of Spain who was at the height of his power. This is sometimes called the Spanish Golden Age. The expression “the empire on which the sun never sets” was coined during Philip’s time to reflect the extent of his dominion.

During Philip’s reign there were separate state bankruptci­es in 1557, 1560, 1569, 1575, and 1596. This was partly the cause of the declaratio­n of independen­ce that created the Dutch Republic in 1581. On 31 December 1584 Philip signed the Treaty of Joinville, with Henry I, Duke of Guise signing on behalf of the Catholic League; consequent­ly Philip supplied a considerab­le annual grant to the League over the following decade to maintain the civil war in France, with the hope of destroying the French Calvinists.

A devout Catholic, Philip saw himself as the defender of Catholic Europe against the Ottoman Empire and the Protestant Reformatio­n. He sent a large armada to invade Protestant England in 1588, with the strategic aim of overthrowi­ng Elizabeth I of England and the establishm­ent of Protestant­ism in England.

He hoped to stop both English interferen­ce in the Spanish Netherland­s and the harm caused to Spanish interests by English and Dutch privateeri­ng.

Philip was described by the Venetian ambassador Paolo Fagolo in 1563 as “slight of stature and roundfaced, with pale blue eyes, somewhat prominent lip, and pink skin, but his overall appearance is very attractive.” The Ambassador went on to say “He dresses very tastefully, and everything that he does is courteous and gracious.”[4] Besides Mary I, Philip was married three other times and widowed four times. (Sourced from Wikipedia)

I can understand why President Duterte and Marcos before him should want to change the name of the Philippine­s. It contradict­s the spirit on how to decolonize the Philippine­s in name and in practice.

It will not be easy to do that but the question is whether it would be good for the country to change. Some of the difficulti­es mentioned were it would require a new law and the public’s approval in a referendum.

In a speech delivered in Maguindana­o Duterte said former president Ferdinand Marcos was right in calling for a change in the country’s name to Maharlika, noting that the name “Philippine­s” has colonial origins.

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