Early history is the oldest historical record in the Philippines. It has the first historical reference to
Tondo and dates back to
Saka 822 (c. 900). The earliest evidence of human life around present-day Manila is the nearby
Angono Petroglyphs, which are dated to around 3000 BC.
Negritos, the aboriginal inhabitants of the Philippines, lived across the island of
Luzon, where Manila is located, before
Malayo-Polynesians arrived and
assimilated them.
Maynila, along with
Tondo, were active trade partners with the
Song and
Yuan dynasties of China and flourished during the mid to later period of the
Ming dynasty. According to a Japanese encyclopedia
Wakan Sansai Zue, Luzon or Lusong (Maynila) was referred to as a "kingdom" south of
Taiwan. During the 12th century, then-Hindu Brunei called "Pon-i", as reported in the Chinese annals
Nanhai zhi, invaded Malilu 麻裏蘆 (claimed by various scholars to be the present-day Manila) as it also administered
Sarawak and
Sabah, as well as the Philippine kingdoms of:
Butuan,
Sulu,
Ma-i (Mindoro or Laguna),
Shahuchong 沙胡重 (present-day
Zamboanga), Yachen 啞陳 (
Oton), and 文杜陵 Wenduling (present-day
Mindanao,
Bintulu or
Mindoro). In the 13th century, Manila consisted of a fortified settlement and trading quarter on the shore of the Pasig River. Upon the conversion of
Brunei from Hinduism to Islam, Manila also followed, as the Bruneian royal family also intermarried with Manila's royal family, as can be gleaned by the personage of
Rajah Matanda who was simultaneously king of Manila while being a great-grandson of
Sultan Bolkiah of Brunei.
Spanish era . The city was planned according to the
Laws of the Indies. served as the City Hall during the Spanish Colonial Period. On June 24, 1571,
conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi arrived in Manila and declared it a territory of
New Spain, establishing a city council in what is now
Intramuros district. Inspired by the
Reconquista, he took advantage of a territorial conflict between Hindu Tondo and Islamic Manila to justify expelling or converting Bruneian Muslim colonists who supported Manila while his Mexican grandson
Juan de Salcedo had a romantic relationship with
Kandarapa, a princess of Tondo. López de Legazpi had the local royalty executed or exiled after the failure of the
Conspiracy of the Maharlikas, a plot in which an alliance of
datus,
rajahs, Japanese merchants, and the
Sultanate of Brunei would band together to execute the Spaniards, along with their
Latin American recruits and Visayan allies. The victorious Spaniards made Manila the capital of the
Spanish East Indies and of the Philippines, which their empire would control for the next three centuries. The city was founded by several European Spaniards and Mestizo Mexicans and even was garrisoned by 400 Native American
Tlaxcalans who accompanied Salcedo from Cebu and were given pensions. In 1574, Manila was besieged by the Chinese pirate
Lim Hong, who was thwarted by local inhabitants. Upon Spanish settlement, Manila was immediately made, by papal decree,
a suffragan of the
Archdiocese of Mexico. By royal decree of
Philip II of Spain, Manila was put under the spiritual patronage of Saint
Pudentiana and
Our Lady of Guidance. Manila became famous for its role in the
Manila–Acapulco galleon trade, which lasted for more than two centuries and brought goods from Europe, Africa, and Hispanic America across the
Pacific Islands to Southeast Asia, and
vice versa.
Silver that was mined in Mexico and Peru was exchanged for Chinese silk, Indian gems, and spices from Indonesia and Malaysia. Wine and olives grown in Europe and North Africa were shipped via Mexico to Manila. Because of the
Ming ban on trade leveled against the
Ashikaga shogunate in 1549, this resulted in the ban of all Japanese people from entering China and of Chinese ships from sailing to Japan. Manila became the only place where the Japanese and Chinese could openly trade. In 1606, upon the Spanish conquest of the
Sultanate of Ternate, one of monopolizers of the growing of spice, the Spanish deported the ruler Sultan Said Din Burkat of Ternate, along with his clan and his entourage to Manila, where they were initially enslaved and eventually converted to Christianity. About 200 families of mixed Spanish-Mexican-Filipino and Moluccan-Indonesian-Portuguese descent from Ternate and Tidor followed him there at a later date. The city attained great wealth due to its location at the confluence of the
Silk Road, the
Spice Route, and the
Silver Way. Significant is the role of
Armenians, who acted as merchant intermediaries that made trade between Europe and Asia possible in this area. France was the first nation to try financing its Asian trade with a partnership in Manila through Armenian khojas. The largest trade volume was in iron, and 1,000 iron bars were traded in 1721. In 1762,
the city was captured by
Great Britain as part of the
Seven Years' War, in which Spain had recently become involved. The
British occupied the city for twenty months from 1762 to 1764 in their attempt to capture the
Spanish East Indies but they were unable to extend their occupation past Manila proper. Frustrated by their inability to take the rest of the archipelago, the British withdrew in accordance with the
Treaty of Paris signed in 1763, which brought an end to the war. An unknown number of
Indian soldiers known as
sepoys, who came with the British, deserted and settled in nearby
Cainta, Rizal. , or
Parián de Arroceros was an area outside of
Intramuros built to house
Sangley (
Chinese) merchants during the
Spanish rule. The Chinese minority were punished for supporting the British, and the fortress city Intramuros, which was initially populated by 1,200 pure Spanish families and garrisoned by 400 Spanish troops, kept its cannons pointed at
Binondo, the world's oldest
Chinatown. The population of native Spaniards was concentrated in the southern part of Manila and in 1787, La Pérouse recorded one regiment of 1,300 Mexicans garrisoned at Manila, and they were also at
Cavite, where ships from Spain's American colonies docked at, and at
Ermita, which was thus-named because of a Mexican hermit who lived there. The Hermit-Priest's name was Juan Fernandez de Leon who was a Hermit in Mexico before relocating to Manila. Priests weren't usually alone too since they often brought along
Lay Brothers and Sisters. The years: 1603, 1636, 1644, 1654, 1655, 1670, and 1672; saw the deployment of 900, 446, 407, 821, 799, 708, and 667 Latin American soldiers from
Mexico at Manila. The Philippines hosts the only Latin American established districts in Asia, with the
Malate district hosting
buildings mixing Mexican Baroque and Filipino Muslim
Mudejar styles. The Spanish evacuated Ternate and settled
Papuan refugees in
Ternate, Cavite, which was named after their former homeland. In 1603, Manila was also home to 25,000 Chinese and housed 14,437 native (Malay-Filipino) families, as well as 3,528 mixed Spanish-Filipino families. A Spanish Jesuit priest commented due to the confluence of many foreign languages in Manila, the confessional in Manila was "the most difficult in the world". Juan de Cobo, another Spanish missionary of the 1600s, was so astonished by the commerce, cultural complexity, and ethnic diversity in Manila he wrote to his brethren in Mexico: by
Fernando Brambila, a member of the
Malaspina Expedition during their stop in Manila in 1792. After
Mexico gained independence from Spain in 1821, the Spanish crown began to directly govern Manila. Under direct Spanish rule, banking, industry, and education flourished more than they had in the previous two centuries. The opening of the
Suez Canal in 1869 facilitated direct trade and communications with Spain. The city's growing wealth and education attracted indigenous peoples, Negritos, Malays, Africans, Chinese, Indians, Arabs, Europeans, Latinos and Papuans from the surrounding provinces, and facilitated the rise of an
ilustrado class who espoused
liberal ideas, which became the ideological foundations of the
Philippine Revolution, which sought independence from Spain. A revolt by
Andres Novales was inspired by the
Latin American wars of independence but the revolt itself was led by demoted Latin-American military officers stationed in the city from the newly independent nations of Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, Peru, Chile, Argentina, and Costa Rica. Following the
Cavite Mutiny and the
Propaganda Movement, the Philippine revolution began; Manila was among the first eight provinces to rebel and their role was commemorated on the
Philippine Flag, on which Manila was represented by one of the eight rays of the symbolic sun.
American era After the
1898 Battle of Manila, Spain ceded the city to the United States. The
First Philippine Republic based in nearby
Bulacan fought against the Americans for control of the city. The Americans defeated the First Philippine Republic and captured its president
Emilio Aguinaldo, who pledged allegiance to the U.S. on April 1, 1901. Upon drafting a new charter for Manila in June 1901, the U.S. officially recognized that the city of Manila consisted of Intramuros and the surrounding areas. The new charter proclaimed Manila was composed of eleven municipal districts: Binondo,
Ermita, Intramuros,
Malate,
Paco,
Pandacan,
Sampaloc,
San Miguel,
Santa Ana,
Santa Cruz, and
Tondo. The
Catholic Church recognized five parishes as parts of Manila; Gagalangin, Trozo, Balic-Balic,
Santa Mesa, and Singalong; and Balut and
San Andres were later added. in the 1930s Under U.S. control, a new, civilian-oriented
Insular Government headed by
Governor-General William Howard Taft invited city planner
Daniel Burnham (Founder of the "
City Beautiful Movement") to adapt Manila to modern needs. The 1905
Burnham Plan of Manila recommended improving the city's transit systems by creating diagonal arteries radiating from the new central civic district into areas at the outskirts of the city. It included the development of a road system, the use of waterways for transportation, and the beautification of Manila with waterfront improvements and construction of parks, parkways, and buildings. The planned buildings included a government center occupying all of Wallace Field, which extends from
Rizal Park to the present
Taft Avenue. The Philippine capitol was to rise at the Taft Avenue end of the field, facing the sea. Along with buildings for government bureaus and departments, it would form a quadrangle with a central lagoon and a monument to
José Rizal at the other end of the field. Of Burnham's proposed government centers in
Luneta, only three units—the Legislative Building, and the buildings of the Finance and Agricultural Departments—were completed before
World War II began, with the war's onset, also destroying the former gracefulness that was the fruit of the City Beautiful Movement. File:Plaza Moraga Manila Philippines.jpg|
Plaza Moraga in the early 1900s File:Central facade of the Legislative Building.jpg|The
Old Legislative Building featuring a
Neoclassical style architecture. File:Manilastreetcar.jpg|The
tranvía running along
Escolta Street during the
American period File:Philippine Island - Manila - NARA - 68156635.jpg|Aerial view of Manila, 1936
Japanese occupation from
USS Essex dropping a bomb over the Pasig River in Manila, targeting the dockyard, November 14, 1944 of the
Americans and
Japanese during
World War II. During the
Japanese occupation of the Philippines, American soldiers were ordered to withdraw from Manila and all military installations were removed by December 24, 1941. Two days later, General
Douglas MacArthur declared Manila an
open city to prevent further death and destruction but Japanese warplanes continued bombing the city. Japanese forces occupied Manila on January 2, 1942. From February 3 to March 3, 1945, Manila was the site of
one of the bloodiest battles in the
Pacific theater of World War II. Under orders of Japanese Rear Admiral
Sanji Iwabuchi, retreating Japanese forces
killed about 100,000 Filipino civilians and perpetrated the mass rape of women in February. At the end of the war, Manila had suffered from heavy bombardment and became the second-most-destroyed city of World War II. Manila was recaptured by American and Philippine troops. The destruction the war wrought against Manila, made National Artist, Nick Joaquin Lament:
The postwar and independence era After the war, reconstruction efforts started. Buildings like
Manila City Hall, the Legislative Building (now the
National Museum of Fine Arts), and
Manila Post Office were rebuilt, and roads and other infrastructures were repaired. In 1948, President
Elpidio Quirino moved the seat of government of the Philippines to
Quezon City, a new capital in the suburbs and fields northeast of Manila, which was created in 1939 during the administration of President
Manuel L. Quezon. The move ended any implementation of the Burnham Plan's intent for the government center to be at Luneta. When
Arsenio Lacson became the first elected
Mayor of Manila in 1952, before which all mayors were appointed, Manila underwent a "Golden Age", regaining its pre-war moniker "Pearl of the Orient". After Lacson's term in the 1950s, Manila was led by
Antonio Villegas for most of the 1960s.
Ramon Bagatsing was mayor from 1972 until the 1986
People Power Revolution. During the administration of
Ferdinand Marcos, Metro Manila was created as an integrated unit with the enactment of Presidential Decree No. 824 on November 7, 1975. The area encompassed four cities and thirteen adjoining towns as a separate regional unit of government. On June 24, 1976, the 405th anniversary of the city's founding, President Marcos reinstated Manila as the capital of the Philippines for its historical significance as the seat of government since the Spanish Period. At the same time, Marcos designated his wife
Imelda Marcos as the first governor of Metro Manila. She started the rejuvenation of the city and re-branded Manila the "
City of Man".
The Martial Law era Many of the key events of the historical period from the first major protests against the administration of
Ferdinand Marcos in January 1970 until his ouster in February 1986 took place within the city of Manila. The first, the January 26, 1970, State of the Nation Address Protest which kicked off the "
First Quarter Storm", took place at the Legislative Building (now the
National Museum of Fine Arts) on
Padre Burgos Avenue, and the very last saw the
Marcos family flee
Malacañang Palace into exile in the United States. The beginning weeks of Ferdinand Marcos' second term as president was marked by the
1969 balance of payments crisis, which economists trace to his first term tactic of using foreign loans to fund massive government projects in an effort to curry votes. In protest, protest groups led mostly by students decided to picket Marcos' 1970 State of the Nation Address at the legislative building on January 26. The protesters were initially bickering amongst themselves because both moderate reformist and radical activist groups were present and fighting to gain control of the stage. But all of them, regardless of advocacy, were violently dispersed by the
Philippine Constabulary. This was followed by six more major protests which were violently dispersed, from the end of January until March 17, 1970. Marcos' declaration of
martial law in September 1972 saw the immediate shutdown of all media not approved by Marcos, including Quezon City media outlets, including the Manila-based
Manila Times,
Philippines Free Press, The Manila Tribune and the
Philippines Herald. At the same time, it saw the arrest of many students, journalists, academics, and politicians who were considered political threats to Marcos, many of them residents of the City of Manila. The first one was
Ninoy Aquino who was arrested just before midnight on September 22 while at a hotel on UN Avenue preparing for a senate committee session the following morning. At least 11,103 of them have since been officially recognized by the Philippine government as having been
extensively tortured and
abused. and in April 1973
Pamantasan ng Lungsod ng Maynila student journalist
Liliosa Hilao became the first of these detainees to be killed while in prison - one of 3,257 known
extrajudicial killings during the last 14 years of Marcos' presidency. In 1975, Marcos formalized the creation of a region called Metropolitan Manila, incorporating the four cities of Manila,
Quezon City,
Caloocan,
Pasay, and the thirteen municipalities of
Las Piñas,
Makati,
Malabon,
Mandaluyong,
Marikina,
Muntinlupa,
Navotas,
Parañaque,
Pasig,
Pateros,
San Juan,
Taguig, and
Valenzuela. And then he appointed his wife
Imelda Marcos, who had been angered by the revelation of his dalliances during the
Dovie Beams scandal,
Governor of Metro Manila. Despite Marcos' declaration of martial law, poverty and other social issues persisted, so even with the military in his control, Marcos could not hold back the unrest. A major turning point was reached in Tondo in the form of the
1975 La Tondeña Distillery strike which was one of the first major open acts of resistance against the Marcos dictatorship which paved the way for similar protest actions elsewhere in the country. From then, Manila continued to be a center of resistance activity; youth and student demonstrators repeatedly clashed with the police and military. Another major protest was the
September 1984 Welcome Rotonda protest dispersal at the border of Manila and Quezon City, which came in the wake of the
Aquino assassination the year before in 1983. International pressure had forced Marcos to give the press more freedom, so coverage exposed Filipinos to how opposition figures including 80-year-old former Senator
Lorenzo Tañada and 71-year-old Manila Times founder
Chino Roces were waterhosed despite their frailty and how student leader
Fidel Nemenzo (later Chancellor of the University of the Philippines Diliman) was shot nearly to death.
The People Power revolution In late 1985, in the face of escalating public discontent and under pressure from foreign allies, Marcos called a
snap election with more than a year left in his term, selecting
Arturo Tolentino as his running mate. The opposition to Marcos united behind Ninoy's widow
Corazon Aquino and her running mate,
Salvador Laurel. The elections were held on February 7, 1986, an exercise marred by widespread reports of violence and tampering of election results. On February 16, 1986, Corazon Aquino held the "Tagumpay ng Bayan" (People's Victory) rally at
Luneta Park, announcing a civil disobedience campaign and calling for her supporters to boycott publications and companies which were associated with Marcos or any of his cronies. The event was attended by a crowd of about two million people. Aquino's camp began making preparations for more rallies, and Aquino herself went to
Cebu to rally more people to their cause. In the aftermath of the election and the revelations of irregularities,
Juan Ponce Enrile and the
Reform the Armed Forces Movement (RAM) - a cabal of disgruntled officers of the
Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) - set into motion
a coup attempt against Ferdinand and Imelda Marcos. Enrile and RAM's coup was quickly uncovered, which prompted Enrile to ask for the support of Philippine Constabulary chief
Fidel Ramos. Ramos agreed to join Enrile but even so, their combined forces were trapped in
Camp Crame and
Camp Aguinaldo, and were about to be overrun by Marcos loyalist forces. Discovering what was happening, the forces which had been organizing Aquino's civil disobedience campaign went to the stretch of
Efipanio De Los Santos Avenue (EDSA) between the two camps, beginning to form a human barricade to keep Marcos loyalist forces from attacking. The crowd grew even larger when Ramos telephoned Manila Cardinal
Jaime Sin for help, and Sin went on Radyo Veritas to invite Catholics to join in protecting Enrile and Ramos. Seeing what was happening, multiple units of the Armed Forces of the Philippines defected Marcos, with air units under the command of General Antonio Sotelo and Colonel Charles Hotchkiss, even performed calculated operations which included strafing the grounds of Malacañang palace with bullets and disabling gunships at nearby
Villamor Airbase. Because the victory had been won by the civilians on the streets rather than the military, the event was dubbed the
People Power revolution. Ferdinand Marcos' 21 years as President - and his 14 years as authoritarian leader - of the Philippines was over. In 1992,
Alfredo Lim was elected mayor, the first
Chinese-Filipino to hold the office. He was known for his anti-crime crusades. Lim was succeeded by
Lito Atienza, who served as his vice mayor, and was known for his campaign and slogan "Buhayin ang Maynila" (Revive Manila), which saw the establishment of several parks, and the repair and rehabilitation of the city's deteriorating facilities. He was the city's mayor for nine years before being termed out of office. Lim once again ran for mayor and defeated Atienza's son Ali in the 2007 city election, and immediately reversed all of Atienza's projects, which he said made little contribution to the improvements of the city. The relationship of both parties turned bitter, with them both contesting the
2010 city elections, which Lim won. Lim was sued by councilor Dennis Alcoreza on 2008 over
human rights, he was charged with
graft over the rehabilitation of public schools. In 2012,
DMCI Homes began constructing
Torre de Manila, which became controversial for
ruining the sight line of Rizal Park. The tower became known as "Terror de Manila" and the "national photobomber", and
became a sensationalized heritage issue. In 2017, the
National Historical Commission of the Philippines erected a "
comfort woman" statue on
Roxas Boulevard, causing Japan to express regret about the statue's erection despite the healthy relationship between Japan and the Philippines. In the
2013 election, former President
Joseph Estrada succeeded Lim as the city's mayor. During his term, Estrada allegedly paid in city debts and increased the city's revenues. In 2015, in line with President
Noynoy Aquino's administration progress, the city became the most-competitive city in the Philippines. In the
2016 elections, Estrada narrowly won over Lim. Throughout Estrada's term, numerous Filipino heritage sites were demolished, gutted, or approved for demolition; these include the post-war Santa Cruz Building,
Capitol Theater, El Hogar, Magnolia Ice Cream Plant, and
Rizal Memorial Stadium. Some of these sites were saved after the intervention of governmental cultural agencies and heritage advocate groups. In May 2019, Estrada said Manila was debt-free; two months later, however, the Commission on Audit said Manila was in debt. Estrada, who was seeking for re-election for his third and final term, lost to
Isko Moreno in the
2019 local elections. Moreno has served as the vice mayor under both Lim and Estrada. Estrada's defeat was seen as the end of their reign as a political clan, whose other family members run for national and local positions. After assuming office, Moreno initiated a city-wide cleanup of illegal vendors, signed an executive order promoting open governance, and vowed to stop bribery and corruption in the city. Under his administration, several ordinances were signed, giving additional perks and privileges to Manila's elderly people, and monthly allowances for Grade 12 Manileño students in all public schools in the city, including students of
Universidad de Manila and the
University of the City of Manila. In 2022,
Time Out ranked Manila in 34th position in its list of the 53 best cities in the world, citing it as "an underrated hub for art and culture, with unique customs and cuisine to boot". Manila was also voted the third-most-resilient and least-rude city for the year's index. In 2023, the search site Crossword Solm utilizing internet geotagging, showed that Manila is the world's most loving capital city. in 2023In August 2023, President
Bongbong Marcos suspended all
reclamation projects in
Manila Bay, including those in the City of Manila. However, the city has no objections and is willing to pursue the suspended reclamation projects. In 2024, Manila, as the nation's seat of government, witnessed the launch of the Fourth Philippine Human Rights Plan, aimed at advancing social justice, inclusivity, and human rights protection in line with international standards. ==Geography==