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The nature of religion in the pre-colonial Philippines is often unclear. Religions present include animism, indigenous religious beliefs and mythologies such as Anito and influences from Hinduism and Buddhism. The earliest pieces of evidence that exist are archaeological finds including Hindu–Buddhist gold statues. The earliest written evidence comes from the Laguna Copperplate Inscription, dated to around 900 CE, which uses the Buddhist–Hindu lunar calendar. With the arrival of Islam in the 14th century, the older religions gradually disappeared, and after the arrival of Ferdinand Magellan in 1521 Christianity, specifically Roman Catholicism, became the dominant religion. However, some of the indigenous peoples of the Philippines continue to practice animism today, and many of the traditi

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  • Las religiones de la Filipinas precolonial fueron principalmente creencias animistas autóctonas como el culto a los anitos con ciertas influencias del hinduismo y el budismo. Las evidencias arqueológicas más antiguas que han llegado hasta nuestros días son varias estatuas de oro de estilo claramente hindú o budista, y el registro escrito más antiguo es la Inscripción sobre cobre de Laguna, datada del año 900 ec., el cual esta fechado en shaka, un antiguo calendario de origen hindú. Pocas décadas antes a la colonización española, el islam también se extendió por las islas (especialmente en el sur) durante el siglo XIV, quedando relegadas las religiones nativas en esas áreas. Con la conquista española de Filipinas se implanta el catolicismo y se prohíben las religiones animistas por considerarse «brujería». Aun así, a día de hoy las tradiciones y mitología precoloniales se siguen practicando de manera marginal en zonas rurales en una forma sincretizada de catolicismo popular. (es)
  • The nature of religion in the pre-colonial Philippines is often unclear. Religions present include animism, indigenous religious beliefs and mythologies such as Anito and influences from Hinduism and Buddhism. The earliest pieces of evidence that exist are archaeological finds including Hindu–Buddhist gold statues. The earliest written evidence comes from the Laguna Copperplate Inscription, dated to around 900 CE, which uses the Buddhist–Hindu lunar calendar. With the arrival of Islam in the 14th century, the older religions gradually disappeared, and after the arrival of Ferdinand Magellan in 1521 Christianity, specifically Roman Catholicism, became the dominant religion. However, some of the indigenous peoples of the Philippines continue to practice animism today, and many of the traditions in Anito have survived in the form of Folk Catholicism. (en)
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  • 諸番志 (en)
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  • "Account of the Various Barbarians" (en)
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  • Las religiones de la Filipinas precolonial fueron principalmente creencias animistas autóctonas como el culto a los anitos con ciertas influencias del hinduismo y el budismo. Las evidencias arqueológicas más antiguas que han llegado hasta nuestros días son varias estatuas de oro de estilo claramente hindú o budista, y el registro escrito más antiguo es la Inscripción sobre cobre de Laguna, datada del año 900 ec., el cual esta fechado en shaka, un antiguo calendario de origen hindú. (es)
  • The nature of religion in the pre-colonial Philippines is often unclear. Religions present include animism, indigenous religious beliefs and mythologies such as Anito and influences from Hinduism and Buddhism. The earliest pieces of evidence that exist are archaeological finds including Hindu–Buddhist gold statues. The earliest written evidence comes from the Laguna Copperplate Inscription, dated to around 900 CE, which uses the Buddhist–Hindu lunar calendar. With the arrival of Islam in the 14th century, the older religions gradually disappeared, and after the arrival of Ferdinand Magellan in 1521 Christianity, specifically Roman Catholicism, became the dominant religion. However, some of the indigenous peoples of the Philippines continue to practice animism today, and many of the traditi (en)
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  • Religión en la Filipinas prehispánica (es)
  • Religion in pre-colonial Philippines (en)
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