Early history The Negritos are the descendants of the same early East Eurasian meta-population, which also gave rise to modern East Asians and Australasians, among other populations of the Asia-Pacific region. The earliest
modern human migrations into the Philippine archipelago were during the
Paleolithic, around 40,000 years ago, followed by two other migration waves between 25,000 and 12,000 years ago, through the
Sundaland land bridges that linked the islands with the Asian mainland. The latest migration wave is associated with the
Austronesian peoples (c. 7,000 years ago) from
Taiwan. The Philippine Negritos display relatively closer genetic affinity towards different
Eastern Asian populations, prehistoric
Hoabinhian samples, as well as to the
Indigenous people of New Guinea and
Aboriginal Australians, from which they diverged around c. 40,000 years ago, and also display genetic substructure along a North to South cline, suggesting their ancestral population diverged into two subgroups after the initial peopling of the Philippines. Furthermore, they display high percentages of
Denisovan gene flow. Legends, such as those involving the
Ten Bornean Datus and the
Binirayan Festival, tell tales about how, at the beginning of the 12th century when Indonesia and the Philippines were under the rule of
Indianized native kingdoms, the ancestors of the Bisaya escaped from
Borneo and from the persecution of
Rajah Makatunaw. Led by Datu Puti and Datu Sumakwel and sailing with boats called
balangays, they landed near a river called Suaragan, on the southwest coast of Panay, (the place then known as Aninipay), and bartered the land from an Ati headman named Polpolan and his son Marikudo for the price of a necklace and one golden salakot. The hills were left to the Atis while the plains and rivers to the Malays. This meeting is commemorated through the
Ati-atihan festival. This legend, though, is challenged by some historians.
Colonial era history During
Spanish colonization, the tribe made contact with the
conquistador Miguel Lopez de Legazpi and were exploited in his colonization of Panay. A 1905 report documented a significant population on
Boracay island and the western part of
Panay island.
During the Marcos dictatorship On Nov. 10, 1978, six years after the declaration of
Martial Law under Ferdinand Marcos, 65 Philippine islands including Boracay was declared "tourist zones and marine reserves" without any mention of the status of the Ati who were the original residents of the island. This de facto dispossession of Ati lands on Boracay by Marcos placed the islands under the control of the Philippine Tourism Authority, and marked the beginning of rapid development on the island, which resulted in the further marginalization of the Boracay Ati for decades. ==Demographics==