Precolonial era Negros was originally called
Buglas, an old
Hiligaynon word thought to mean "cut off", as the island was thought to have been separated from a larger landmass. It was also known as
Mamaylan and
Panilougon among
Cebuano-speaking
Visayans. Among its earliest inhabitants were the aboriginal
Ata, one of several
Negrito Indigenous Peoples dispersed throughout
Southeast Asia that possesses a unique culture. The westernmost portions of the island soon fell under the nominal rule of the
Kedatuan of Madja-as based on the neighboring islands of
Panay and
Guimaras, while the eastern coasts were influenced by the
Rajahnate of Cebu from the adjacent island of
Cebu.
Spanish colonization '' (1734) Upon arriving on the island in April 1565, the
Spanish colonizers called the land
Negros, after the dark-skinned natives they had observed. Two of the earliest native settlements,
Binalbagan and
Ilog, became towns in 1573 and 1584, respectively, while other settlements of the period included
Hinigaran,
Bago, Marayo (now
Pontevedra), Mamalan (now
Himamaylan), and Candaguit (now a
sitio of
San Enrique). After appointing
encomenderos for the island,
Miguel López de Legazpi placed Negros under the jurisdiction of the governor of
Oton in
Panay. In 1734, however, the island became a
military district with Ilog as its first capital. The seat of government was later transferred to Himamaylan until
Bacolod became the capital in 1849. In 1865, Negros and its outlying minor islands along with
Siquijor was converted into
a politico-military province. By the end of the 1700s, Negros Island had 5,741 native families. By 1818, Negros Island had 200 Spanish-Filipino and Spanish-Filipino Mestizo tributes-families. Of which,
Dumaguete had 25 Spanish-Filipino families; General Miller appointed Aniceto as Governor of the Island in March 1899.
Negros Revolution and formation of Republic of Negros President of the Republic of Negros a
canton of the
First Philippine Republic.|left , vice president of the Republic of Negros From November 3 – 6, 1898, the Negrense peoples
rose in revolt against the local Spanish colonial government headed by politico-military governor Colonel Isidro de Castro. The Spaniards decided to surrender upon seeing armed troops marching in a
pincer movement towards Bacolod. The revolutionaries, led by General
Juan Araneta from
Bago and General
Aniceto Lacson from
Talisay, bore fake arms consisting of
rifles carved out of palm fronds and
cannons of rolled bamboo mats painted black. By the afternoon of November 6, Col. de Castro signed the Act of Capitulation, thus ending centuries of Spanish colonial rule in Negros Occidental. , the 2nd
Governor of Negros Occidental In memory of this event, every November 5 is observed as a
special non-working holiday in the province through
Republic Act No. 6709, signed by
President Corazon Aquino on February 10, 1989. On November 27, 1898, the
Cantonal Republic of Negros unilaterally proclaimed independence, but this was short-lived as the territory became a
protectorate of the United States on April 30, 1899. The state was renamed the
Republic of Negros () on July 22, 1899, and eventually
dissolved by the United States and annexed by the
U.S. Military Government of the Philippine Islands on April 30, 1901. The leaders of the short-lived republic were: •
Aniceto Lacson, November 5, 1898 – July 22, 1899 (to November 27, 1898, in Negros Occidental) •
Demetrio Larena, November 24, 1898 – November 27, 1898 (in Negros Oriental) • President of the
Constituent Assembly José Luzuriaga, July 22, 1899 – November 6, 1899 • Secretary of War
Juan Araneta • Civil Governor
Melecio Severino, November 6, 1899 – April 30, 1901 • Secretary of Justice
Antonio Ledesma Jayme, November 5, 1898 – July 22, 1899
Commonwealth period From 1914 to 1927, parts of Western Negros hosted several newly established settlements which became cities connected by railroads constructed to flow towards several "sugar centrals" which were processing the extremely sweet raw sugar canes grown in Negros' volcanic soil and farmed by several "Haciendas". These haciendas littered the countryside as the central sugar mills eventually grew to become full pledged towns and cities: chief among which were Ilog, Hinigaran, La Carlota,
Silay, Pulupandan,
Bacolod,
San Carlos and Bais. Western Negros also saw massive immigration from
Panay as the Spanish, Chinese, and French mestizos, plus others, who were serving in the Haciendas imported laborers from Panay island to foster the farming of Negros' sugar plantations and thereby displacing the Cebuano speaking natives. Soon, vast numbers of immigrants from Spain, most of them Basques, became Negros' plantation owners. The east side of Negros was not as thickly settled but became a center of education as
Post-Commonwealth era Regions were first formed on September 24, 1972 when the provinces of the Philippines were organized into different 11 regions by Presidential Decree No. 1 as part of the
Integrated Reorganization Plan of President
Ferdinand Marcos. Negros Occidental was assigned to
Western Visayas (Region VI) and Negros Oriental was assigned to
Central Visayas (Region VII).
Negros famine By the time Ferdinand Marcos' second term began, sugar had become a critical Philippine export, responsible for 27% of the county's total foreign exchange earnings. With international sugar prices rising rapidly through the early 1970s, Marcos decided to put domestic and international sugar trading under government control, first through the Philippine Exchange Co. (Philex), and later through the
Philippine Sugar Commission (Philsucom) and its trading arm, the
National Sugar Trading Corporation (NASUTRA), which were both controlled by
Marcos crony Roberto Benedicto. However, the international price of sugar eventually crashed, dramatically hurting the livelihoods of poor farmers. The NASUTRA monopoly forced many sugar planters into bankruptcy or deep in debt. In 1984, over 190,000 sugar workers lost their livelihood, Author John Silva, who was working with Oxfam at the time, visited Negros and later described the living conditions of thousands of starving and malnourished children:I drove past the provincial hospital where I first saw hundreds of malnourished children on mats on the floors tended by their mothers, and later, we were in the country through cane fields and small towns remembering the skeletal children being weighed and assessed by our medical team.... There were over 100,000 children in various degree of malnutrition and we started a feeding program for 90,000 of them, hoping to save the worst cases. This was the situation on September 20, 1985, which marked the date of the
Escalante massacre, in which
paramilitary forces under the command of Marcos-allied Negros Occidental Governor Armando Gustilo gunned down farmers protesting social conditions on the 13th anniversary of the declaration of
Martial Law. Between twenty and thirty farmers were estimated to be killed, and thirty more were wounded.
Negros Island Region The movement for a single-island region started in the 1980s when officials of both provinces proposed a one-island, one-region unit. Negros Occidental and Negros Oriental are the only provinces in the Philippines situated in the same island but belonging to two different administrative regions with regional offices located in neighboring
Panay and
Cebu. The movement to unite the two provinces in Negros island was sustained in the 1990s and 2010s. The campaign for the creation of a region in Negros had gains when President
Benigno Aquino III directed the
Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) to study the establishment of a new region. with the government agency later endorsing the move. NEDA affirmed by saying that its studies show that the proposed region is economically viable. On May 29, 2015, President Aquino signed
Executive Order 183, which created the Negros Island Region. It separated Negros Occidental and its capital Bacolod from Western Visayas (Region VI) and Negros Oriental from Central Visayas (Region VII) to form the island region, which made the total number of regions of the Philippines into 18. On June 13, 2024, Negros island together with neighboring
Siquijor were grouped together under the reestablished Negros Island Region with the signing of Republic Act No. 12000 by President
Bongbong Marcos. ==Demographics==