Tuesday, September 6, 2011

UNESCO's Underwater Cultural Heritage Training in Chanthaburi, Thailand

UNESCO’s Third Foundation Course on Underwater Cultural Heritage (UCH) was successfully conducted last February 14 to March 26, 2011 in its Regional Training Center in Chanthaburi, Thailand.


Within the context of the 2001 UNESCO Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage, the Foundation Course specifically aimed to:
-build regional capacity in the protection and management of UCH through professional training;
-provide an effective networking and regional cooperation among partner Member States;
-and prepare Member States in the ratification and implementation of the 2001 Convention and its Annex.

Regional trainees for the Third Foundation Course on UCH consisted of representatives from Bangladesh, Cambodia, Fiji, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Lao PDR, Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Thailand.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Re: The Role of Giant Clams in the Development of Baybayin

Lecture conducted by Mr. Bonifacio Comandante, Jr.
Tambunting Hall, Museum of the Filipino People
National Museum of the Philippines
3 March, 2010

Baybayin was the alphabet of the early settlers of the Philippine archipelago. It belongs to the Malayo-Polynesian / Austronesian group of languages. Records and documents written in baybayin were almost completely obliterated and destroyed during Spanish colonial rule which explains why there are only very few artifacts in the country exhibiting the old system of writing. Among these are the writings found in Angono caves, the Laguna Copper Plate, Calatagan Pot, Butuan Silver, Paris Codex, Doctrina Christiana, Vienna Codex, artifacts from the Tagbanua and Mangyan, and artifacts used in rituals by the people in Banahaw.

Mr. Comandante's study about the baybayin focuses on its origin. He postulated a theory that the forms of the bayabayin alphabet came from giant clams. He said the baybayin characters are based on the forms or shapes that Filipino ancestors found on giant clams. He further discussed the relation of the distribution of giant clams and global extent of betel nut chewing with the extent of Austronesian/ Malayo-polynesian speaking cultures. He argued that there is a relation since the three factors' extent of distribution seem to coincide.