Manila South Cemetery
An Manila South Cemetery sarong sementeryo sa Metro Manila. Saro ining exclave kan San Andres, Manila na napapalibutan nin daga sa irarom kan sakop kan siyudad nin Makati. [1]
Kasaysayan
[baguhon | baguhon an source]-
An pagheling kan gamgam sa sementeryo
An daga na sakop kan sementeryo dati parte kan Hacienda San Pedro de Macati na pagsasadiri kan pamilya Ayala-Roxas-Zóbel. [2][3] Nasa irarom kaidto kan probinsiya nin Rizal an daga. An South Cemetery legal na nakua kan Ordinance 726 asin iba pang mga gibo na ginibo kan Jacobo Zobel et al. vs. Ciudad nin Manila (1925).[4][5]
An sementeryo, na may hiwas na 25 ektarya (62 ektarya), may hiwas na 371,490 lulubngan. 1.25 hectares (62 ektarya)[6] Kan Hunyo 30, 2007. sarong rekord nin 266,170 na lubongan an ginibo sa sementeryo. Igwang pigtatantyang total na 753,186 na mga lubungan kadtong Hulyo 2018.[7]
Sa bilog na Aldaw nin Santos 2015, may rekord na 32,000 katawo an nagbisita sa sementeryo. [8]
An Gobyerno kan Manila City sa irarom kan Mayor Isko Moreno kan 2020 nag-agi sa Ordinance No. 8608 na naglinambitan nin 2,400 metro kwadrado (26,000 sq ft) sa laog kan Manila South Cemetery para sa pagpatindog kan Manila Muslim Cemetery. [9] An seremonyang pangpugol para sa sementeryong Muslim ginibo kan Hulyo 22, 2020.[10] An sementeryo pinag'inaguraran bilang Manila Islamic Cemetery kan Hunyo 7, 2021.[11]
Risang - risa na mga paglobong
[baguhon | baguhon an source]- Ramon Bagatsing (1916–2006), longest serving Mayor of Manila, survivor of the Plaza Miranda bombing
- Leon Guinto (1886–1962), Mayor of Manila during World War II, Governor of Quezon
- Augusto S. Francisco (1911–1961), former Congressman of Manila's 4th district
- Jose Vicente D. Abad Santos (1903–1965), nephew of Jose Abad Santos, the Fifth Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines and served as Acting President of the Philippines during World War II, which was executed by Japanese soldier in Cebu with his son Pepito
- Elpidio Quirino (1890–1956), former 6th president of the Philippines (reinterred at the Libingan ng mga Bayani on February 29, 2016)[12]
- Espiridiona Bonifacio (1875–1956), nationalist and revolutionary, and sister of Andrés Bonifacio
- Cornelia "Angge" Lee (1946–2017), talent manager, coordinator and actress
- Lucrecia Roces Kasilag (1918–2008), composer, music educator, and National Artist for Music
- Lope K. Santos (1879–1963), novelist, linguist, and grammarian of the Filipino language
- Paraluman (1923–2009), actress of the 1950s, her remains were later exhumed and moved to undisclosed location
- Jose "Joey" D. Hizon, Jr. (1954–2016), former congressman of Manila's 5th District
- Rafaelita Soriano (1915–2007), former ambassador, educator, scholar, researcher, historian, and Kapampangan cultural advocate
- Roberto "Betong" Gonzales (1942–2009), actor and the king of karate
- Rolando Gonzales (1939–2003), actor and martial artist
- Gerard Fainsan (1974–1997), former member of the Universal Motion Dancers
- OG Kaybee (1988–2022), rapper
- Pstr. Roy Q. Pineda (1964–2021), emmanuelians pastor and school service driver of Emmanuel Christian School, Santa Rosa City, Laguna
- ↑ "In the Know: Manila South Cemetery". Philippine Daily Inquirer. November 2, 2016. http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/838775/in-the-know-manila-south-cemetery.
- ↑ "The man who saved Makati in 1943". February 10, 2016. http://news.abs-cbn.com/blogs/opinions/02/10/16/the-man-who-saved-makati-in-1943.
- ↑ "Cemetery trivia: How well do you know our burial grounds?". November 1, 2013. https://www.rappler.com/newsbreak/iq/42702-cemeteries-trivia.
- ↑ G.R. L-22201 - Jacobo Zobel, et al. vs. City of Manila (Supreme Court of the Philippines January 12, 1925).Text
- ↑ Empty citation (help)
- ↑ "In the Know: Manila South Cemetery". Philippine Daily Inquirer. November 2, 2016. http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/838775/in-the-know-manila-south-cemetery.
- ↑ Empty citation (help)
- ↑ "In the Know: Manila South Cemetery". Philippine Daily Inquirer. November 2, 2016. http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/838775/in-the-know-manila-south-cemetery.
- ↑ "Manila approves construction of Muslim cemetery". CNN Philippines. 3 March 2020. https://www.cnnphilippines.com/news/2020/3/3/filipino-muslim-cemetery-in-manila-.html.[permanent dead link]
- ↑ "Manila breaks ground for first Muslim cemetery". Philippine Daily Inquirer. July 22, 2020. https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1310630/manila-breaks-ground-for-first-muslim-cemetery.
- ↑ "Manila opens Islamic cemetery, cultural hall inside public cemetery". Philippine Daily Inquirer. June 7, 2021. https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1442561/manila-opens-islamic-cemetery-cultural-hall-inside-public-cemetery.
- ↑ "After 60 years, President Quirino gets burial he deserves". Philippine Daily Inquirer. February 28, 2016. http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/769165/after-60-years-president-quirino-gets-burial-he-deserves.