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Tugaya, Lanao del Sur

Tugaya
Municipality
Map of Lanao del Sur with Tugaya highlighted
Map of Lanao del Sur with Tugaya highlighted
Tugaya is located in Philippines
Tugaya
Tugaya
Location within the Philippines
Coordinates: 07°53′N 124°10′E / 7.883°N 124.167°E / 7.883; 124.167Coordinates: 07°53′N 124°10′E / 7.883°N 124.167°E / 7.883; 124.167
Country Philippines
Region Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (ARMM)
Province Lanao del Sur
Barangays 23
Government
 • Mayor Alber Norol-Pacalna Balindong
Area
 • Total 155.10 km2 (59.88 sq mi)
Population (2015 census)
 • Total 23,814
 • Density 150/km2 (400/sq mi)
Time zone PST (UTC+8)
ZIP code 9317
IDD:area code +63 (0)63
Income class 5th municipal income class
153629000
Electorate 11,306 voters as of 2016
Website www.tugaya-lds.gov.ph

Tugaya (alternate spelling: Togaya) is a fifth class municipality in the province of Lanao del Sur, Philippines. According to the 2015 census, it has a population of 23,814 people. The town is known as the Industrial Capital of Lanao del Sur due to its Maranao crafts which includes gongs, drums, musical instruments, weaves, baskets, and metalwares, among others. It is also distinguished as a 'UNESCO Home for Culture and Heritage'.

Tugaya has a land area of 4028 hectares, equal to 40.28 square kilometers. Tugaya is located on the shores of the largest lake on Mindanao Island: Lake Lanao.

Tugaya is politically subdivided into 23 barangays.

Tugaya is unique in that the town is inhabited almost entirely by craftsmen and artisans of various pursuits. Each household specializes in some form of art or craft that is part of traditional Maranao culture: back-strap loom weaving, tapestry weaving, and other kinds of handmade textile manufacture; foundry casting of various forms of brass or bronze vessels, instruments, and decorative items; wood-carving and mother-of-pearl inlay work; metalwork and silver- and gold-smithing—all of which utilize the traditional Maranao form of decoration, okir. From this community come the artisans called upon to decorate major forms of architecture in the traditional manner, e.g., the Maranao "torogan" or royal houses. Performance arts are also unique among the residents of Tugaya, where the penchant for the artistic spills out into everyday games and mundane articles of domestic use.

Textile weaving in Tugaya includes traditional Southeast Asian back-strap loom weaving, utilizing indigenous okir decorative motifs. Laborious, expert needle-weaving produces the complex "langkit" panels which are incorporated into the traditional Maranao garment, the "malong landap". Foundries employ the cire perdue or "lost wax" method to produce various types of bronze or brass products which follow traditional forms, such as the "gador" (a pair of ornate brass urns). Metal forging uses the traditional Southeast Asian double-bellows forge, and employs traditional tools. Other forms of metalwork include hand shaping and pounding of metal sheets, a laborious method which transforms flat metal sheets into sturdy, solid metal Maranao kulintang ensemble gong instruments, including "gandingan" and "agong". Woodworking includes manufacture of decorative objects, ornate furniture such as the traditional storage chest "baul", musical instruments such as the large drum "dadabuan", and ceremonial 12-foot-tall Maranao drums (such as were used for the adhan in the 1800s). Carved and painted wood products also feature the distinctive okir decorative motifs.


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