The Manobo (sometimes also spelled Manuvu, Menuvu, or Minuvu)[1] are an indigenous people group from
Mindanao in the Philippines, whose core lands cover most of the Mindanao island group,[2] from
Sarangani island into the Mindanao mainland in the regions of
Agusan, Davao, Bukidnon, Surigao, Misamis, and
Cotabato.[1][3] The Manobo are considered the most diverse among the many
indigenous peoples of the Philippines, with the largest number of subgroups within its family of languages.[1] The Philippine Statistics Authority listed 644,904 persons as Manobo in its 2020 Census of Population and Housing.[4]
Subgroups
The Manobo are considered the most diverse among the many
indigenous peoples of the Philippines, with the largest number of subgroups within its family of languages.[1] The Philippines' National Commission on Culture and the Arts has been able to develop a tentative classification of Manobo subgroups, but notes that "the various subgroupings are not sufficiently defined" as of the time the classification was developed.[1] The classification divides the Manobo into several major groups[1]:
(1) The Ata subgroup: Dugbatang, Talaingod, and Tagauanum;
(2) The Bagobo subgroup: Attaw (Jangan, Klata, Obo, Giangan, Guiangan), Eto (Ata), Kailawan (Kaylawan), Langilan, Manuvu/Obo, Matigsalug, (Matigsaug, Matig Salug), Tagaluro, and Tigdapaya;
(3) The Higaonon subgroup: Agusan, Lanao, and Misamis;
(4) North Cotabato: Ilianen, Livunganen, and Pulenyan;
(5) South Cotabato: Cotabato (with subgroup Tasaday and Blit), Sarangani, Tagabawa;
(6) Western Bukidnon: Kiriyeteka, Ilentungen, and Pulangiyen;
(7) Agusan del Sur;
(8) Banwaon; and
(9) Bukidnon; and others.
The Philippine Statistics Authority listed 644,904 persons as Manobo in its 2020 Census of Population and Housing.[4] A study by the
National Council of Churches in the Philippines had put their population at around 250,000 in 1988, and an earlier NCCA estimate had out their population at about 749,042 in 1994.Part of what makes the classification more difficult is that a dialectical subgroup's membership within a supergroup can shift depending on specific points of view regarding lingusitics.[3][2] The geographical distribution of the subgroups is so great that some of the local groups have been noted to "assumed the character of distinctiveness as a separate ethnic grouping," as in the case of the Bagobo or the Higaonon.[1]
Etymology
Manobo is the
hispanicized spelling of the
endonym Manuvu (also spelled Menuvu or Minuvu). Its etymology is unclear; in its current form, it means "person" or "people." It is believed that it is derived from the rootword tuvu, which means "to grow"/"growth" (thus Man[t]uvu would be "[native]-grown" or "aboriginal").[5]