| About Tarlac
Tarlac is a landlocked province of the Philippines
located in the Central Luzon region. Its capital is Tarlac City.
Tarlac borders Pampanga to the south, Nueva Ecija to the east, Pangasinan
to the north, and Zambales to the west.
The province is situated at
the center of the central plains of Luzon,
landlocked by four provinces: Pampanga on the south,
Nueva Ecija on the east, Pangasinan on the north, and
Zambales on the west. Approximately 75% of the province
is plain while the rest is hilly to mountainous.
Like the rest of Central Luzon, the
province has two distinct seasons: dry from November to April
and wet for the rest of the year.
Tarlac's name is a Hispanized derivation from
a talahib weed called "Malatarlak". Tarlac was originally a part
of the provinces of Pampanga and Pangasinan. It was the last
Central Luzon province to be organized under the Spanish
administration in 1874.
During the Philippine Revolution of 1896, Tarlac
was one of the first eight provinces to rise in arms against Spain.
It became the new seat of the first Philippine Republic in March
1899 when Emilio Aguinaldo abandoned the former capital, Malolos,
Bulacan. This lasted only for a month, as the seat was moved to
Nueva Ecija in Aguinaldo's attempt to elude the pursuing Americans.
On October 23, 1899, Gregorio Aglipay, military vicar
general of the revolutionary forces, called the Filipino clergy to a
conference in Paniqui. There, they drafted the constitution of the
Philippine Independent Church. They called for the Filipinization of
the clergy, which eventually led to a schism in the Roman Catholic
Church in the Philippines.
Tarlac was captured by American forces in November
1899. A civil government was established in the province in 1901.
During the World War II, Camp O'Donnell in Capas became
the terminal point of the infamous "Bataan Death March", involving Filipino
and American soldiers who surrendered in Bataan on April 9, 1942. The camp
was so overcrowded that many allied prisoners who survived the grueling
march died here of hunger and disease.
In the early 1950s, Tarlac was the hotbed of the Huks, a
local communist movement. It was suppressed at first but had resurgence in 1965.
Tarlac is the home province of former Philippine President
Corazon Aquino and her husband, Benigno Aquino, Jr., whose assassination at
the Manila International Airport in 1983 started the protest movement against
the Marcos dictatorship, which culminated in the EDSA Revolution of 1986.
Tarlac is also the home province of General Carlos P. Romulo
(from the town of Camiling), who served as president of the University of the
Philippines, Philippine ambassador to the United Nations, president of the General
Assembly and chairman of the Security Council. Tarlac is also the home province of
Onofre D. Corpuz, also from the town of Camiling, who served as president of the
University of the Philippines and secretary of education. Tarlac City is the
hometown of musical producer Thorvictor.
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