The magazine had its beginning back in 1922 when Ramon Roces, the eldest son of Alejandro Roces, introduced it after the ill-fated
Photo News had declined in the market. Roces, a prominent man in the publishing business, first conceived
Photo News. It was a magazine with its own style, carrying eleven languages including (
Spanish,
Tagalog and
English). The idea to have three languages in one magazine was to allow it to cater to all types of readers (Spanish and Spanish-speaking readers, English, American, and English-speaking readers, and Tagalog language and Filipino readers). Unfortunately, the trilingual magazine was not well-received because some readers did not want to waste their money reading something they did not understand. The sales of the magazine gradually declined and this emotionally affected Roces, but he did not give up. When he returned to Manila from Mindanao, he introduced another magazine patterned after
Photo News. Unlike
Photo News, the magazine concentrated, however, on making Tagalog (now Filipino) its medium, and outpouring support from the reading public was felt when its maiden issue was finally launched in the market. The magazine was named
Liwayway, meaning dawn. It made significant contribution to the field of literature when it introduced the popular masterpieces of great Filipino poets and writers like
Jose Corazon de Jesus,
Florentino Collantes,
Julian Cruz Balmaceda, Cecilio Apostol Borromeo,
Lope K. Santos, Inigo Ed Regalado, Romualdo Ramos, Francisco Lacsamana, Fausto Galauran and
Pedrito Reyes, the son of
Severino Reyes who later succeeded him as the editor of
Liwayway.
Liwayway became even more popular in the following years and Roces decided to launch sister magazines. This gave birth to other vernacular magazines like
Bisaya in 1932,
Hiligaynon, a
Hiligaynon language-magazine for the Ilonggos and people of Western Visayas in 1934,
Bikolano in 1935, and the Ilocano
Bannawag in 1940.
Liwayway Extra was also launched in 1936, a thicker monthly supplement of
Liwayway. In 1945 during the Liberation of Manila, the combined U.S. and Philippine Commonwealth ground troops to fought by the Japanese forces around the battles in the city, the Japanese Imperial Army took over the supervision of
Liwayway and named it
Manila Simbunsiya. The Japanese military had hidden agenda: to use the magazine in their military campaign after occupying the Philippines. Later following that period, the
Liwayway publication and its management was returned to
Don Ramos Roces. The publication was later sold to Hanz Menzi when Roces retired from publishing business in 1965, but the sudden change in the management of the magazine had a severe impact on the magazine. Its sales declined until Menzi decided to sell the magazine to
Manila Bulletin Publishing Corporation. The management of the
Manila Bulletin aimed to preserve the legacy of
Liwayway while reformatting the magazine with its modern digital technology.
Liwayway was relaunched in 2022. ==Impact==