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Dapitan

Dapitan
Component City
Dapitan City Government Center (City Hall of Dapitan)
Dapitan City Government Center (City Hall of Dapitan)
Official seal of Dapitan
Seal
Nickname(s): Shrine City of the Philippines; Historic City of the South; Amusement Capital of the South; Rizal City of the South
Motto: Abante Kaayo Dapitanon (Forward More Dapitanon)
Map of Zamboanga del Norte with Dapitan highlighted
Map of Zamboanga del Norte with Dapitan highlighted
Dapitan is located in Philippines
Dapitan
Dapitan
Location within the Philippines
Coordinates: 08°39′N 123°25′E / 8.650°N 123.417°E / 8.650; 123.417Coordinates: 08°39′N 123°25′E / 8.650°N 123.417°E / 8.650; 123.417
Country Philippines
Region Zamboanga Peninsula (Region IX)
Province Zamboanga del Norte
District 1st District, Zamboanga del Norte
Founded 1629
Barangays 50
Government
 • Mayor Rosalina G. Jalosjos (NP)
 • Vice Mayor Ruben E. Cad (NP)
Area
 • Total 390.53 km2 (150.78 sq mi)
Population (2015 census)
 • Total 82,418
 • Density 210/km2 (550/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Dapitanon
Time zone PST (UTC+8)
ZIP code 7101
IDD:area code +63 (0)65
Income class 3rd city income class
097201000
Electorate 49,177 voters as of 2016
Website www.dapitancity.gov.ph

Dapitan, officially the City of Dapitan (Subanon: Gembagel G'benwa Dapitan/Bagbenwa Dapitan; Cebuano: Dakbayan sa Dapitan; Filipino: Lungsod ng Dapitan; Chavacano: Ciudad de Dapitan), is a third class city in the province of Zamboanga del Norte, Philippines on the island of Mindanao. According to the 2015 census, it has a population of 82,418 people.

It is historically significant as the place where José Rizal was exiled by the Spaniards for his revolutionary activities. He is considered a national hero, and this is known as the "Shrine City in the Philippines." The city is also home to Gloria's Fantasyland, the first amusement park in Mindanao.

The beginnings of the settlement now known as the city of Dapitan predates the arrival of the Spanish conquistadores on the island of Mindanao. The Subanens, a nomadic tribe of Indo-Malayan stock, were the earliest known settlers who lived along river banks or "suba", from which word they received their present tribal identity as Subanen. However, it is believed that the timid Subanens were forced to move further into the hinterlands of the Zamboanga peninsula out of fear that pirates may seek shelter during foul weather in the natural harbors of Dapitan’s irregular coastlines. They are now mainly found in the mountainous areas of Zamboanga del Sur and Misamis Occidental.

Early cartographers of the Philippines showed Dapitan’s location in their maps of Mindanao using a variety of names by which they had known the settlement, such as “Dapito” in Kaerius’ map of 1598, “Dapite” in Dudley’s map of 1646, “Dapyto” in Sanson’s map of 1652, and “Dapitan” in Moll’s map of the East Indies of 1729 and in Murillo Velarde’s map of 1734.

There are two versions of how Dapitan got its name. The first, from an account attributed to Fr. Urdaneta, infers that the name evolved from the original reference to it as "Daquepitan", which later became "Dacpitan" and finally "Dapitan" to make it easier to pronounce.

The second version, which is more widely accepted according to folklore, says that the name derives from the Cebuano word “Dapit”, which means “to invite”. Local tradition tells of the early settlers from Panglao in Bohol who were invited over by Datu Pagbuaya, the acknowledged founder of Dapitan, to join him in "Dakung Yuta", or literally the big land that is Mindanao. The invitation or pag-dapit that he extended to Boholanos is said to be how Dapitan got its name.


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