The Ifugao are Known worldwide
for the stunning rice terraces they have carved out of the mountainsides,
modifications of the earth beside which, declared anthropolgist Franklin Barton,
“the Suez and Panama Canals are quantitatively insignificant.” They are also
among the most imaginative and prolific Fililpino craftspeople in a more general
sense, especially with respect to woodworking, weaving, and basketry. Besides
wet rice cultivation in their enormous terraces, the Ifugao practice dry cultivation
of sweet potatoes and other crops, and rotate vegetables in the terraces during
the off season. Some hunting and gathering also takes place, although the
surrounding forest is growing quite sparse. The application of their extraordinary
imaginations to the realm of the supernatural has resulted in a fantastically
complex religion, with many hundreds of deities, and elaborate personal and
social rituals marking every sort of event. They also possess a highly developed
oral literature, including such epics as the “hudhods” and the “alims.”
AKA:
Ifugaw, Ipugao, Ypugao, Hilpan, Quiangan
Location:
N. Luzon; Ifugao Province
Languages:
Supergroup:
Subgroups:
Subsistence:
Terraced wet rice, root crops, vegetables,
hunting & gathering
Population:
167369 (1990)
The
Ifugao in the Museum: The museum contains examples of Ifugao Bulols,
Basketry, and miscellaneous woodwork.