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Latest revision Your text
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===King Charles III in Pangil===

===King Charles III in Pangil===

[[File:IJVPangilChurch1.jpg|thumb|280px|The Nuestra Señora de la Natividad Parish Church with the statue of King Charles III]]

[[File:IJVPangilChurch1.jpg|thumb|280px|The Nuestra Señora de la Natividad Parish Church with the statue of King Charles III]]

One of the revered myths in the town of Pangil is the belief that in the year 1724, Prince Carlos, the son of [[Philip V of Spain|King Philip V]] of Spain, was banished from his country and was sent to the Philippines. The young prince stayed in the town for three years and resided with the Franciscans in the adjoining convent of the Paroquia del Nuestra Señora de la Natividad Church considered then as the biggest in Laguna. The prince was a known hunter and he enjoyed his stay in the Sierra Madre mountain range that was known as a good hunting ground for wild animals and fowls. He was also very fond of the creek that branched out from the Pangil River and now called as the Bambang Hari or King's Canal.

One of the revered myths in the town of Pangil is the belief that in the year 1724, Prince Carlos, the son of [[King Philip V]] of Spain, was banished from his country and was sent to the Philippines. The young prince stayed in the town for three years and resided with the Franciscans in the adjoining convent of the Paroquia del Nuestra Señora de la Natividad Church considered then as the biggest in Laguna. The prince was a known hunter and he enjoyed his stay in the Sierra Madre mountain range that was known as a good hunting ground for wild animals and fowls. He was also very fond of the creek that branched out from the Pangil River and now called as the Bambang Hari or King's Canal.



By the year 1728, the King lifted the ban on the Prince and ordered the latter to return to their kingdom. With his ascension to the throne of Spain as King [[Charles III of Spain|Charles III]] , he ordered his emissaries to send the statue of Nuestra Seńora de la O (Our Lady of Expectation) and the statue of Santo Nińo de la O (Holy Child of Expectation) as a sign of gratitude and appreciation to the Pangilenians for the hospitality and kindness that was accorded to him. Although this story is a source of pride among the Pangilenos, there is nothing in the historical records of the archives of the Franciscan Province in the Philippines or the Archdiocese of Manila, or the Ministerio del Ultramar in Madrid that could corroborate this folk history.<ref>Pajarillo, Fr. Cesar (2001). "Rural Devotions in Laguna." Four Hundred Years of Christianity in Pangil. Emmitsburg, MD. MSMS Publications as quoted in Balasi, T. (2003). "Pangil Devotions" (Parish Souvenir Program). Pangil, Laguna. </ref>

By the year 1728, the King lifted the ban on the Prince and ordered the latter to return to their kingdom. With his ascension to the throne of Spain as King [[Charles III of Spain|Charles III]] , he ordered his emissaries to send the statue of Nuestra Seńora de la O (Our Lady of Expectation) and the statue of Santo Nińo de la O (Holy Child of Expectation) as a sign of gratitude and appreciation to the Pangilenians for the hospitality and kindness that was accorded to him. Although this story is a source of pride among the Pangilenos, there is nothing in the historical records of the archives of the Franciscan Province in the Philippines or the Archdiocese of Manila, or the Ministerio del Ultramar in Madrid that could corroborate this folk history.<ref>Pajarillo, Fr. Cesar (2001). "Rural Devotions in Laguna." Four Hundred Years of Christianity in Pangil. Emmitsburg, MD. MSMS Publications as quoted in Balasi, T. (2003). "Pangil Devotions" (Parish Souvenir Program). Pangil, Laguna. </ref>

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