Liloan, officially the Municipality of Liloan (Cebuano: Lungsod sa Liloan; Tagalog: Bayan ng Liloan), is a heavily urbanized municipality in the province of Cebu, Philippines. According to the 2024 census, it has a population of 158,387 people.[5] Making it the most populated municipality in Cebu and the whole Visayas.
Along its coastline, there is a spot called Silot, where a whirlpool is created by the ebbs and flows of the waters from the bay. This phenomenon is called lilo in Cebuano. Because of this, the town was known as Liloan, meaning "a place where there is a lilo".
Sometime in the 1970s, a newspaper article stated that the "pueblo de Lilo‑an" was separated from the municipality of Mandaue (now Mandaue City), and was created a new municipality in 1840. However, in his "Breve reseña de lo que fue y de lo que es la Diócesis de Cebú en las Islas Filipinas," Redondo (1886) states that Lilo‑ a was created as a parish in 1845 (in 1995, Lilo‑ a celebrated its sesquicentennial - 150th – anniversary.)
The creation of the municipality of Lilo‑an could have been at the same time the parish was established, but not earlier than its being a parish. As recorded, the first priest of Lilo‑ served in 1845. The term of the first mayor was from 1845 to 1846.
During the war years (World War II), Lilo‑an had three mayors at one time.
One of the best known landmarks in Lilo‑an is its historic lighthouse at Bagacay Point. The original lighthouse was built in 1857 by the Spanish. The current tower was constructed in 1904 by order of William Howard Taft,[21] the first Governor-General of the Philippines and later the President of the United States. The tower is 22 metres (72 ft) tall and remains in active use today, using solar energy.[22] The lighthouse was declared a National Historical Landmark in 2004 by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines (formerly known as National Historical Institute).[23]
Liloan Church (San Fernando Rey Parish Church)
The San Fernando Rey Parish Church
The designer of the church in Liloan is viewed by some as visionary. Despite Liloan having only 5,000 citizens, when the church was constructed in 1847, this local church was even larger than that of Mandaue, Cebu's second largest city.
Pier 88
Pier 88 with moored passenger ferries. Waiting room in the background, facility managed by Topline company. Photo: Bart Sakwerda/Budots Media
Pier 88 is a noteworthy maritime terminal situated in the coastal town of Liloan, in the province of Cebu, Philippines. As a gateway connecting the islands of the Central Visayas region: Camotes, LapuLapu city, Cebu City, it plays a vital role in facilitating transport, commerce, and tourism. The Pier was officially inaugurated and opened to the public on May 27, 2023, by Bongbong Marcos.[24]
3d scan of the site was made by private company Data Ops Philippines on May 28, 2023.[25]
The making of these little ringlet cookies dates back to 1907, when 21-year-old Margarita Corazon "Titay" Frasco (single, unmarried) was tinkering in her kitchen with her baking ingredients and made her new culinary creation. Kneading the dough manually and using a wooden eggbeater, some baking tins and a clay oven, she started a product that would put her little town in the national and international map of gastronomic delight. Corazon “Mama Azon” Frasco took over in 1999, succeeded by Gerardo and Panfil Frasco, the third generation.
The market for her unnamed cookie started with her neighbors and passers-by who were offered the snack with a bottle of soda. It was Sergio Osmeña (then Cebu governor, who later became Philippine president), who gave it the name "Rosquillo" after the Spanish word rosca.
The “premium heritage brand” biscuits have been a regular stopover of tourists and locals travelling north of Cebu. The company has withstood the taste of time. It started with just rosquillos and tablea making.[a] It later expanded to an array of homemade delicacies including torta, mamon, monay, otap, CPA (chicken pork adobo), bao-bao, galletas (Bato), galletas (Carmen) and hojaldres.
In 2012, its two-hectare plant in Liloan produces about 3,000 packs of 180 grams Rosquillos daily by 118 workers.[26][27]
In 2013, the flagship store which produces 360,000 rosquillos a day was transformed into a café for 45 customers serving penato (peanuts), banana chips and binangkal, among others.[28]
Celebrated every last week of May in honor of the town's patron saint, St. Ferdinand III. It celebrates the Rosquillos as the delicacy of Liloan and of Cebu. The 12th Rosquillos festival was held in May 26, 2019. The 13th returned from May 20–30, 2023, coinciding with the 176th annual foundation fiesta celebration.[30][31][32]
Rosquillos Festival dancers as they perform their street dance in Pasigarbo sa Sugbo 2019.
List of heads of local government
Basilio Bantilan (1845–1846)
Hipolito Pepito (1846–1847)
Francisco Cabahug (1847–1848 and 1859–1860)
Esteban Cañete (1848–1849, 1850–1851 and 1852–1853)
Juan Delgado (1849–1850)
Juan Cabatingan (1851–1852 and 1861–1862)
Cruz Medoza (1853–1855 and 1860–1861)
Alberto Yungco (1855–1857)
Victor Pepito (1857–1858, 1863–1865 and 1875–1879)
Pedro Pepito (1858–1859 and 1862–1863)
Felix Cabatingan (1865–1867)
Jacinto Cañete (1867–1869)
Apolonio Pilapil (1869–1871)
Custodio Mendoza (1871–1873, 1883–1885 and 1899–1900)
Guillermo Pepito (1873–1875)
Ambrosio Pepito (1879–1881)
Eugenio Pilapil (1881–1883 and 1889–1891)
Mamerto Cabatingan (1883–1887 and 1891–1893)
Sotero Cabatingan (1887–1889, 1900–1902 and 1905–1909)
Antonio Villamor (1893–1896)
Simeon Pilapil (1896–1898)
Mariano Pilapil (1898–1899)
Blas Cabatingan (1902–1904)
Marcelo Pilapil (1909–1911)
Francisco Ramas (1911–1912)
Jose Cabatingan (1912–1916)
Cirilo Ramas (1916–1919)
Cipiriano Jumapao (1919–1922)
Florintino Pilapil (1922–1925)
Santiago Noval (1925–1928)
Lazaro Ramas (1928–1937, 1937–1938, 1959–1963 and 1963–1965)
Catalino Noval (1941–1945, 1945–1946 and 1965–1967)
Jorge Pitogo (1946–1947 and 1947–1951)
Fabian Cañete (1951–1955)
Teofilo Ponce (1967–1971)
Cesar Bugtai (1971–1986)
Achilles Cañete (1986–1988 and 1988–1992)
Panphil Frasco (1992–1995, 1995–1998 and 1998–2001)
Sendino y Redondo, Felipe (1886). Breve reseña de lo que fue y de lo que es la Diócesis de Cebú en las Islas Filipinas (in Spanish). Manila: Colegio de Santo Tomas.
(Administratively independent from the province but grouped under Cebu by the Philippine Statistics Authority. However, qualified voters in Mandaue are allowed to vote in elections for Cebu provincial officials by virtue of Republic Act No. 6641, in accordance with Section 452-c of the Local Government Code of 1991.)