Tondo is a district located in Manila, Philippines. It is the largest, in terms of area and population, of Manila's sixteen districts, with a census-estimated 637,942 people in 2024. It consists of two congressional districts. It is also the second most densely populated district in the city.

Etymology

The name Tondo can be derived from its Old Tagalog name, Tundun as inscribed in the Laguna Copperplate Inscription of 900 AD, the earliest native document found within the Philippines. Dutch anthropologist Antoon Postma, the first to translate the copperplate, believes the term tundun originated from Sanskrit, which was used alongside Malay as a language of politics and religion in the area at the time.

Before this landmark discovery, several theories (however incorrect now) existed. Philippine National Artist Nick Joaquin once suggested that it might be a reference to a high ground ("tundok"). On the other hand, French linguist Jean-Paul Potet, supposed that the Aegiceras corniculatum, which at the time was called "tundok" ("tinduk-tindukan" today), was the most likely origin of the name.

According to Kapampangan studies professor Robby Tantingco, the Old Tagalog name was derived from tundun, Kapampangan term of "nape."

History

Early Philippine history

right|thumb|250px|Laguna Copperplate Inscription (900)

The region of Tondo has been settled by humans for over 1,100 years. Historically, Tondo already existed in the year 900 AD according to the Laguna Copperplate Inscription, a legal document that is the earliest document in the Philippines, written in Kawi script now housed in the National Museum of Anthropology.

According to this document, Tondo was ruled by an unnamed person who held the Sanskrit title of senapati or the equivalent of an admiral. Tondo was ruled by a lakan until the Spanish conquest.

Colonial period

left|thumb|Plaza Liga Filipina

After the Spaniards conquered Tondo in June 1571 they established the Province of Tondo which covered many territories in Northern Luzon particularly Pampanga, Bulacan and Rizal (formerly called Morong), with the city of Manila as its center.

In a census conducted by Miguel de Loarca in 1583, Tondo was reported to have spoken the same language as the natives of the province of Pampanga.

Institute of National Language commissioner Jose Villa Panganiban also wrote that the dividing line between Kapampangan and Tagalog was the Pasig River, and that Tondo therefore originally spoke Kapampangan. However, Fray Isacio Rodriquez's Historia dela Provincia del Santisimo Nombre de Jesus de Filipinas stated that Provincia de Tagalos which is Tondo covers all the territories of the future Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Manila.

Prior to the establishment of Bulacan in 1578, Malolos and Calumpit were also included in the territory of Tondo as its visitas. By the end of the 1700s, Tondo was a populous province of 14,437 native families and 3,528 Spanish Filipino families. In 1800, the Province of Tondo was renamed to Province of Manila.

Tondo was one of the first provinces to declare rebellion against Spain in the year 1896. In 1901, under the American colonial regime, there was a major reorganization of political divisions, and the province of Tondo was dissolved, with its towns given to the provinces of Rizal and Bulacan. Today, Tondo just exists as a district in the City of Manila.

Contemporary Period

thumb|Aerial view of Tondo district after fire, 1941

Slums developed in Tondo along the Pasig River. Authorities sought to improve housing conditions on these areas without condoning the squatting committed by the slums' residents. In the 1970s, the World Bank provided funds to improve conditions in Tondo which led the increase of rent prices and a property boom in the area. This led to gentrification. The slums that were upgraded were legalized but these areas remain vastly different from other parts of Manila with higher population density, more irregular road and plot patterns, and uncontrolled housing.

In the 1987 constitution, Tondo was split into two congressional districts of Manila making the first district to the west while the second district in the east.

Economy

thumb|left|Manila North Harbor with Tondo skyline at the background

Tondo hosts the Manila North Harbor Port, the northern half of the Port of Manila, the primary seaport serving Metro Manila and surrounding areas.

The area also hosted Smokey Mountain, a landfill which served Metro Manila and employed thousands of people from around the 1960s until its closure in the late 1990s. The dumpsite served as a symbol of poverty even at least two decades after its closure.

thumb|A busy street in Tondo

Demographics

Urbanization as well as the Lina Law which favors squatting over land owners has resulted in Tondo being one of the most densely populated areas in the world at .

Crime

Tondo has developed a reputation for criminality and poverty. In 2010, Manila records state that Tondo has the highest criminal rate in the whole city with the most common crime being pickpocketing.

Culture

thumb|The [[Iglesia ni Cristo (INC) Lokal ng Tondo, established on November 6, 1915, is one of the earliest congregations of the church. The current structure was completed in 1967.]]

The district celebrates the feast of the Tondo Church annually in January, which is dedicated to the image of the Santo Niño housed within the 16th-century Augustinian Tondo Church. The Lakbayaw Street Dance Festival, a competition among Ati-Atihan groups and school, local and religious groups, served as the climax of the feast.

Education

<!---WP:NOTDIRECTORY, This section is a summary of education in the area and not a directory of every schools in Tondo. Someone can however create List of schools in Tondo, Manila (like List of schools in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham)--->

The Department of Education – Schools Division Office of Manila lists 26 public elementary schools and 11 public high schools in Tondo.

The Tondo Campus is a P400-million extension with 48 classrooms, 15 multifunction rooms and a gymnasium. In October 2024, Mayor Honey Lacuna and Felma Carlos-Tria led the time capsule lowering and groundbreaking of Universidad de Manilas's 10-storey school building in a 1,500-square-meter lot at Vitas Skate Park.

Barangays

Tondo encompasses 267 barangays which can be grouped in districts and zones.

{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"

|+List of barangays in Tondo

! colspan="3" |First District

|-

!Barangay

!Land area (km²)

!Population (2020 census)

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 1

|-

|Barangay 1

|0.04953&nbsp;km²

|2,995

|-

|Barangay 2

|0.03787&nbsp;km²

|1,887

|-

|Barangay 3

|0.03893&nbsp;km²

|1,341

|-

|Barangay 4

|0.04018&nbsp;km²

|1,691

|-

|Barangay 5

|0.02473&nbsp;km²

|1,288

|-

|Barangay 6

|0.04150&nbsp;km²

|771

|-

|Barangay 7

|0.04402&nbsp;km²

|1,560

|-

|Barangay 8

|0.03638&nbsp;km²

|147

|-

|Barangay 9

|0.01276&nbsp;km²

|447

|-

|Barangay 10

|0.006060&nbsp;km²

|160

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 2

|-

|Barangay 11

|0.01336&nbsp;km²

|2,758

|-

|Barangay 12

|0.02056&nbsp;km²

|2,137

|-

|Barangay 13

|0.01241&nbsp;km²

|2,371

|-

|Barangay 14

|0.01447&nbsp;km²

|2,070

|-

|Barangay 15

|0.006980&nbsp;km²

|1,119

|-

|Barangay 16

|0.01059&nbsp;km²

|1,477

|-

|Barangay 17

|0.009080&nbsp;km²

|1,176

|-

|Barangay 18

|0.02325&nbsp;km²

|1,982

|-

|Barangay 19

|0.01878&nbsp;km²

|2,272

|-

|Barangay 20

|1.372&nbsp;km²

|45,772

|-

|Barangay 25

|0.02200&nbsp;km²

|2,545

|-

|Barangay 26

|0.01961&nbsp;km²

|2,555

|-

|Barangay 28

|0.02258&nbsp;km²

|2,787

|-

|Barangay 29

|0.07244&nbsp;km²

|4,406

|-

|Barangay 30

|0.01179&nbsp;km²

|166

|-

|Barangay 31

|0.01750&nbsp;km²

|2,881

|-

|Barangay 32

|0.01606&nbsp;km²

|2,219

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 3

|-

|Barangay 33

|0.02387&nbsp;km²

|4,082

|-

|Barangay 34

|0.01156&nbsp;km²

|1,854

|-

|Barangay 35

|0.01531&nbsp;km²

|2,265

|-

|Barangay 36

|0.01173&nbsp;km²

|2,231

|-

|Barangay 37

|0.009990&nbsp;km²

|2,057

|-

|Barangay 38

|0.01394&nbsp;km²

|2,870

|-

|Barangay 39

|0.1038&nbsp;km²

|2,324

|-

|Barangay 41

|0.02111&nbsp;km²

|3,825

|-

|Barangay 42

|0.01759&nbsp;km²

|2,142

|-

|Barangay 43

|0.01292&nbsp;km²

|3,362

|-

|Barangay 44

|0.05213&nbsp;km²

|800

|-

|Barangay 45

|0.01765&nbsp;km²

|2,264

|-

|Barangay 46

|0.01634&nbsp;km²

|2,088

|-

|Barangay 47

|0.03325&nbsp;km²

|1,123

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 4

|-

|Barangay 48

|0.01689&nbsp;km²

|4,070

|-

|Barangay 49

|0.01984&nbsp;km²

|2,119

|-

|Barangay 50

|0.03537&nbsp;km²

|4,217

|-

|Barangay 51

|0.04022&nbsp;km²

|2,580

|-

|Barangay 52

|0.02638&nbsp;km²

|2,732

|-

|Barangay 53

|0.02453&nbsp;km²

|2,916

|-

|Barangay 54

|0.02705&nbsp;km²

|1,648

|-

|Barangay 55

|0.03648&nbsp;km²

|2,492

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 5

|-

|Barangay 56

|0.05299&nbsp;km²

|3,457

|-

|Barangay 57

|0.02752&nbsp;km²

|882

|-

|Barangay 58

|0.02985&nbsp;km²

|3,719

|-

|Barangay 59

|0.02256&nbsp;km²

|1,112

|-

|Barangay 60

|0.01361&nbsp;km²

|4,503

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 6

|-

|Barangay 61

|0.04362&nbsp;km²

|1,022

|-

|Barangay 62

|0.02066&nbsp;km²

|1,967

|-

|Barangay 63

|0.01866&nbsp;km²

|1,448

|-

|Barangay 64

|0.01542&nbsp;km²

|495

|-

|Barangay 65

|0.01938&nbsp;km²

|1,631

|-

|Barangay 66

|0.02644&nbsp;km²

|2,956

|-

|Barangay 67

|0.02007&nbsp;km²

|4,083

|-

|Barangay 68

|0.007310&nbsp;km²

|1,115

|-

|Barangay 69

|0.02362&nbsp;km²

|1,968

|-

|Barangay 70

|0.01273&nbsp;km²

|2,344

|-

|Barangay 71

|0.03982&nbsp;km²

|3,417

|-

|Barangay 72

|0.02674&nbsp;km²

|3,233

|-

|Barangay 73

|0.01038&nbsp;km²

|2,478

|-

|Barangay 74

|0.02003&nbsp;km²

|1,039

|-

|Barangay 75

|0.02651&nbsp;km²

|1,350

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 7

|-

|Barangay 76

|0.01828&nbsp;km²

|1,844

|-

|Barangay 77

|0.01281&nbsp;km²

|1,372

|-

|Barangay 78

|0.01471&nbsp;km²

|1,221

|-

|Barangay 79

|0.007830&nbsp;km²

|1,520

|-

|Barangay 80

|0.01168&nbsp;km²

|2,553

|-

|Barangay 81

|0.01771&nbsp;km²

|1,815

|-

|Barangay 82

|0.02250&nbsp;km²

|2,642

|-

|Barangay 83

|0.01402&nbsp;km²

|1,473

|-

|Barangay 84

|0.01456&nbsp;km²

|1,141

|-

|Barangay 85

|0.02539&nbsp;km²

|4,032

|-

|Barangay 86

|0.02075&nbsp;km²

|1,415

|-

|Barangay 87

|0.02072&nbsp;km²

|1,633

|-

|Barangay 88

|0.009840&nbsp;km²

|1,096

|-

|Barangay 89

|0.01241&nbsp;km²

|720

|-

|Barangay 90

|0.009980&nbsp;km²

|630

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 8

|-

|Barangay 91

|0.05655&nbsp;km²

|4,552

|-

|Barangay 92

|0.02656&nbsp;km²

|2,639

|-

|Barangay 93

|0.04385&nbsp;km²

|3,960

|-

|Barangay 94

|0.09789&nbsp;km²

|2,178

|-

|Barangay 95

|0.03333&nbsp;km²

|5,543

|-

|Barangay 96

|0.08864&nbsp;km²

|2,100

|-

|Barangay 97

|0.03041&nbsp;km²

|3,634

|-

|Barangay 98

|0.01408&nbsp;km²

|1,899

|-

|Barangay 99

|0.01293&nbsp;km²

|6,310

|-

|Barangay 100

|0.02934&nbsp;km²

|2,222

|-

|Barangay 101

|0.1038&nbsp;km²

|15,358

|-

|Barangay 102

|0.02389&nbsp;km²

|4,157

|-

|Barangay 103

|0.03294&nbsp;km²

|4,772

|-

|Barangay 104

|0.03892&nbsp;km²

|5,741

|-

|Barangay 105

|0.5062&nbsp;km²

|24,971

|-

|Barangay 106

|0.07641&nbsp;km²

|2,513

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 9

|-

|Barangay 107

|0.1578&nbsp;km²

|7,003

|-

|Barangay 108

|0.03204&nbsp;km²

|5,391

|-

|Barangay 109

|0.02678&nbsp;km²

|3,254

|-

|Barangay 110

|0.1781&nbsp;km²

|2,677

|-

|Barangay 111

|0.01452&nbsp;km²

|2,661

|-

|Barangay 112

|0.02743&nbsp;km²

|5,593

|-

|Barangay 116

|0.04229&nbsp;km²

|5,943

|-

|Barangay 117

|0.02099&nbsp;km²

|4,160

|-

|Barangay 118

|0.1419&nbsp;km²

|10,840

|-

|Barangay 119

|0.01863&nbsp;km²

|2,345

|-

|Barangay 120

|0.01699&nbsp;km²

|3,873

|-

|Barangay 121

|0.02799&nbsp;km²

|4,511

|-

|Barangay 122

|0.02322&nbsp;km²

|3,824

|-

|Barangay 123

|0.09875&nbsp;km²

|8,660

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 10

|-

|Barangay 124

|0.03070&nbsp;km²

|159

|-

|Barangay 125

|0.01540&nbsp;km²

|4,510

|-

|Barangay 126

|0.1365&nbsp;km²

|1,162

|-

|Barangay 127

|0.04520&nbsp;km²

|565

|-

|Barangay 128

|1.067&nbsp;km²

|23,702

|-

|Barangay 129

|0.04715&nbsp;km²

|5,716

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 11

|-

|Barangay 130

|0.03322&nbsp;km²

|1,758

|-

|Barangay 131

|0.02571&nbsp;km²

|1,621

|-

|Barangay 132

|0.04207&nbsp;km²

|925

|-

|Barangay 133

|0.07548&nbsp;km²

|2,115

|-

|Barangay 134

|0.03383&nbsp;km²

|1,058

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 12

|-

|Barangay 135

|0.03240&nbsp;km²

|1,935

|-

|Barangay 136

|0.02872&nbsp;km²

|1,197

|-

|Barangay 137

|0.03017&nbsp;km²

|911

|-

|Barangay 138

|0.02568&nbsp;km²

|2,939

|-

|Barangay 139

|0.007160&nbsp;km²

|371

|-

|Barangay 140

|0.03246&nbsp;km²

|543

|-

|Barangay 141

|0.006960&nbsp;km²

|529

|-

|Barangay 142

|0.01676&nbsp;km²

|1,710

|-

|Barangay 143

|0.01029&nbsp;km²

|1,401

|-

|Barangay 144

|0.03131&nbsp;km²

|880

|-

|Barangay 145

|0.01763&nbsp;km²

|1,029

|-

|Barangay 146

|0.03743&nbsp;km²

|2,895

|-

! colspan="3" |Second District

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 13

|-

|Barangay 147

|0.1300&nbsp;km²

|2,275

|-

|Barangay 148

|0.1047&nbsp;km²

|2,333

|-

|Barangay 149

|0.02148&nbsp;km²

|1,554

|-

|Barangay 150

|0.04766&nbsp;km²

|2,277

|-

|Barangay 151

|0.05243&nbsp;km²

|1,639

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 14

|-

|Barangay 152

|0.02517&nbsp;km²

|6,218

|-

|Barangay 153

|0.02093&nbsp;km²

|2,051

|-

|Barangay 154

|0.02421&nbsp;km²

|948

|-

|Barangay 155

|0.01807&nbsp;km²

|3,257

|-

|Barangay 156

|0.04336&nbsp;km²

|1,615

|-

|Barangay 157

|0.01802&nbsp;km²

|1,505

|-

|Barangay 158

|0.02412&nbsp;km²

|1,934

|-

|Barangay 159

|0.01371&nbsp;km²

|1,558

|-

|Barangay 160

|0.01494&nbsp;km²

|1,256

|-

|Barangay 161

|0.03005&nbsp;km²

|1,004

|-

|Barangay 162

|0.02344&nbsp;km²

|556

|-

|Barangay 163

|0.04533&nbsp;km²

|3,840

|-

|Barangay 164

|0.02660&nbsp;km²

|1,807

|-

|Barangay 165

|0.02269&nbsp;km²

|1,014

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 15

|-

|Barangay 166

|0.03358&nbsp;km²

|882

|-

|Barangay 167

|0.02876&nbsp;km²

|926

|-

|Barangay 168

|0.03009&nbsp;km²

|1,387

|-

|Barangay 169

|0.02741&nbsp;km²

|914

|-

|Barangay 170

|0.01939&nbsp;km²

|1,378

|-

|Barangay 171

|0.02704&nbsp;km²

|1,124

|-

|Barangay 172

|0.04526&nbsp;km²

|1,210

|-

|Barangay 173

|0.03045&nbsp;km²

|1,616

|-

|Barangay 174

|0.02559&nbsp;km²

|715

|-

|Barangay 175

|0.03679&nbsp;km²

|988

|-

|Barangay 176

|0.04428&nbsp;km²

|1,278

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 16

|-

|Barangay 177

|0.1371&nbsp;km²

|3,308

|-

|Barangay 178

|0.02283&nbsp;km²

|1,519

|-

|Barangay 179

|0.03228&nbsp;km²

|1,021

|-

|Barangay 180

|0.03520&nbsp;km²

|2,145

|-

|Barangay 181

|0.01847&nbsp;km²

|2,773

|-

|Barangay 182

|0.05269&nbsp;km²

|3,936

|-

|Barangay 183

|0.04116&nbsp;km²

|8,424

|-

|Barangay 184

|0.04504&nbsp;km²

|3,311

|-

|Barangay 185

|0.03429&nbsp;km²

|3,532

|-

|Barangay 186

|0.04620&nbsp;km²

|1,678

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 17

|-

|Barangay 187

|0.01100&nbsp;km²

|886

|-

|Barangay 188

|0.01397&nbsp;km²

|865

|-

|Barangay 189

|0.02422&nbsp;km²

|1,481

|-

|Barangay 190

|0.01556&nbsp;km²

|1,232

|-

|Barangay 191

|0.01048&nbsp;km²

|703

|-

|Barangay 192

|0.03407&nbsp;km²

|1,878

|-

|Barangay 193

|0.01132&nbsp;km²

|979

|-

|Barangay 194

|0.01699&nbsp;km²

|775

|-

|Barangay 195

|0.01056&nbsp;km²

|1,401

|-

|Barangay 196

|0.02015&nbsp;km²

|1,631

|-

|Barangay 197

|0.01453&nbsp;km²

|523

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 18

|-

|Barangay 198

|0.04329&nbsp;km²

|5,032

|-

|Barangay 199

|0.03578&nbsp;km²

|3,471

|-

|Barangay 200

|0.01520&nbsp;km²

|1,666

|-

|Barangay 201

|0.05224&nbsp;km²

|1,152

|-

|Barangay 202

|0.03268&nbsp;km²

|1,420

|-

|Barangay 202-A

|0.01950&nbsp;km²

|1,213

|-

|Barangay 203

|0.06060&nbsp;km²

|2,462

|-

|Barangay 204

|0.05164&nbsp;km²

|2,684

|-

|Barangay 205

|0.04640&nbsp;km²

|1,760

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 19

|-

|Barangay 206

|0.04145&nbsp;km²

|2,433

|-

|Barangay 207

|0.04955&nbsp;km²

|1,541

|-

|Barangay 208

|0.03002&nbsp;km²

|635

|-

|Barangay 209

|0.06273&nbsp;km²

|5,075

|-

|Barangay 210

|0.03629&nbsp;km²

|3,212

|-

|Barangay 211

|0.03119&nbsp;km²

|2,007

|-

|Barangay 212

|0.02913&nbsp;km²

|2,675

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 20

|-

|Barangay 213

|0.03187&nbsp;km²

|3,231

|-

|Barangay 214

|0.01596&nbsp;km²

|1,577

|-

|Barangay 215

|0.01780&nbsp;km²

|3,106

|-

|Barangay 216

|0.03176&nbsp;km²

|2,431

|-

|Barangay 217

|0.02803&nbsp;km²

|1,263

|-

|Barangay 218

|0.02250&nbsp;km²

|321

|-

|Barangay 219

|0.03687&nbsp;km²

|1,080

|-

|Barangay 220

|0.05358&nbsp;km²

|1,270

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 21

|-

|Barangay 221

|0.02506&nbsp;km²

|3,353

|-

|Barangay 222

|0.01733&nbsp;km²

|2,040

|-

|Barangay 223

|0.01887&nbsp;km²

|1,629

|-

|Barangay 224

|0.03784&nbsp;km²

|1,069

|-

|Barangay 225

|0.01565&nbsp;km²

|2,419

|-

|Barangay 226

|0.02445&nbsp;km²

|1,562

|-

|Barangay 227

|0.04637&nbsp;km²

|1,836

|-

|Barangay 228

|0.01517&nbsp;km²

|3,010

|-

|Barangay 229

|0.01879&nbsp;km²

|1,545

|-

|Barangay 230

|0.01091&nbsp;km²

|2,364

|-

|Barangay 231

|0.02429&nbsp;km²

|1,888

|-

|Barangay 232

|0.03739&nbsp;km²

|1,778

|-

|Barangay 233

|0.02135&nbsp;km²

|735

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 22

|-

|Barangay 234

|0.04128&nbsp;km²

|1,945

|-

|Barangay 235

|0.02426&nbsp;km²

|1,557

|-

|Barangay 236

|0.02861&nbsp;km²

|801

|-

|Barangay 237

|0.02222&nbsp;km²

|452

|-

|Barangay 238

|0.01655&nbsp;km²

|364

|-

|Barangay 239

|0.02265&nbsp;km²

|1,785

|-

|Barangay 240

|0.01350&nbsp;km²

|56

|-

|Barangay 241

|0.08630&nbsp;km²

|447

|-

|Barangay 242

|0.02383&nbsp;km²

|448

|-

|Barangay 243

|0.01484&nbsp;km²

|436

|-

|Barangay 244

|0.01323&nbsp;km²

|640

|-

|Barangay 245

|0.01004&nbsp;km²

|281

|-

|Barangay 246

|0.01857&nbsp;km²

|1,254

|-

|Barangay 247

|0.01411&nbsp;km²

|737

|-

|Barangay 248

|0.008640&nbsp;km²

|503

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 23

|-

|Barangay 249

|0.01475&nbsp;km²

|1,610

|-

|Barangay 250

|0.03508&nbsp;km²

|1,182

|-

|Barangay 251

|0.009610&nbsp;km²

|1,181

|-

|Barangay 252

|0.008880&nbsp;km²

|910

|-

|Barangay 253

|0.02374&nbsp;km²

|1,329

|-

|Barangay 254

|0.04850&nbsp;km²

|3,713

|-

|Barangay 255

|0.02253&nbsp;km²

|1,086

|-

|Barangay 256

|0.02140&nbsp;km²

|1,030

|-

|Barangay 257

|0.01151&nbsp;km²

|1,308

|-

|Barangay 258

|0.02197&nbsp;km²

|1,181

|-

|Barangay 259

|0.06758&nbsp;km²

|2,090

|-

! colspan="3" | Zone 24

|-

|Barangay 260

|0.03956&nbsp;km²

|1,641

|-

|Barangay 261

|0.01545&nbsp;km²

|735

|-

|Barangay 262

|0.04478&nbsp;km²

|1,736

|-

|Barangay 263

|0.01511&nbsp;km²

|1,306

|-

|Barangay 264

|0.02586&nbsp;km²

|2,443

|-

|Barangay 265

|0.01479&nbsp;km²

|125

|-

|Barangay 266

|0.02719&nbsp;km²

|1,665

|-

|Barangay 267

|0.01300&nbsp;km²

|1,952

|}

Notable people

Historical figures

  • Andrés Bonifacio, Filipino revolutionary leader
  • Emilio Jacinto, Filipino revolutionary leader
  • Lakandula or Lakan Dula (1503–1575), the last ruler of pre-colonial Tondo when the Spaniards first conquered the lands of the Pasig River delta in the Philippines in the 1570s

Business

  • Ramon Ang, businessman, chairman and CEO of San Miguel Corporation
  • Manuel Villar, businessman, chairman and CEO of Vista Land, Vista Mall and Villar Group of Companies, Former senate president, senator, congressman

Crime

  • Asiong Salonga, gangster known as the "King of Tondo"

Arts, Literature, media and journalism

  • Damián Domingo, was a father of Philippine painter
  • José Palma, playwright
  • Lualhati Bautista, novelist
  • Amado V. Hernandez, National Artist for Literature
  • Levi Celerio, National Artist for Music and Literature
  • Arnold Clavio, journalist and television news anchor

Entertainment

  • Ate Gay, comedian
  • Irma Adlawan, actress
  • Jose Manalo, comedian, actor
  • Francine Diaz, actress and model
  • McCoy de Leon, actor and dancer
  • Valerie Concepcion, actress
  • Gina Alajar, actress and director
  • Wendell Ramos, actor
  • Geneva Cruz, actress, singer, and composer
  • Rene Requiestas, comedian
  • Dolphy, comedian
  • RK Bagatsing, actor
  • Vice Ganda, comedian
  • Raymond Bagatsing, actor
  • Jerald Napoles, actor
  • Joyce Pring, actress
  • Mila del Sol, actress
  • Esang de Torres, singer
  • Mona Lisa, actress
  • Chichay, comedian
  • Amy Austria, actress
  • Ricky Belmonte, actor
  • Charito Solis, actress
  • Tito Arevalo, actor
  • Rudy Fernandez, actor and producer
  • Dely Atay-Atayan, comedian
  • Arnel Pineda, singer and the current vocalist of American rock band Journey
  • Regine Velasquez-Alcasid, singer and songwriter
  • Jay Manalo, actor and model
  • Kyla, singer

Medical

  • Willie Ong, cardiologist

Politics

  • Antonio Villegas, served as Mayor of Manila from 1962 to 1971
  • Arturo M. Tolentino, diplomat
  • Alfredo Lim, served as Mayor of Manila from 1992 to 1998 and 2007 to 2013
  • Carmen Planas, politician, became the first woman elected to any public office in the Philippines in 1934
  • Florin Hilbay, lawyer
  • Isko Moreno, incumbent Mayor of Manila
  • Ramon Bagatsing, Mayor of Manila from 1972 to 1986
  • Joseph Estrada, President of the Philippines from 1998 to 2001, Mayor of Manila from 2013 to 2019
  • Narciso G. Reyes, former ambassador, diplomat, former Chairman of UNICEF, and 4th Secretary General of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
  • Sonia Roco, chairwoman of the political party Aksyon Demokratiko

Sports

  • Carlos Badion, basketball player
  • Ernest Obiena, pole vaulter
  • Lanie Ortillo, football player

References

Further reading

  • Gaspar de San Agustin, Conquistas de las Islas Filipinas 1565-1615, Translated by Luis Antonio Mañeru, 1st bilingual ed [Spanish and English], published by Pedro Galende, OSA: Intramuros, Manila, 1998
  • Henson, Mariano A. 1965. The Province of Pampanga and Its Towns: A.D. 1300-1965. 4th ed. revised. Angeles City: By the author.
  • Loarca, Miguel de. 1582. Relacion de las Yslas Filipinas. Blair and Robertson vol. 5 page 87:
  • Panganiban, J.V. 1972. Diksyunaryo-Tesauro Pilipino-Ingles. Quezon City: Manlapaz Publishing Co.
  • Mallat, Jean, Les Philippines: Histoire, Géographie, Moeurs, Agriculture, Industrie Et Commerce des Colonies Espagnoles dans l'Océanie, Paris: Arthus Bertrand, Libraire de la Societé de Géographie, 1846
  • Santiago, Luciano P.R., The Houses of Lakandula, Matanda, and Soliman [1571-1898]: Genealogy and Group Identity, Philippine Quarterly of Culture and Society 18 [1990]
  • Scott, William Henry, Barangay: Sixteenth-Century Philippine Culture and Society, Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1994
  • Scott, William Henry, Prehispanic Source Materials for the Study of Philippine History, Quezon City: New Day Publishers, 1984
  • After Fishing in Tondo, Manila, oil on canvas by Fernando Amorsolo, 1927. 58.4 x 96.5&nbsp;cm.
  • Casas de Pescadores en Tondo ("Fishermen's Houses, Tondo"), oil on canvas by Fabian de la Rosa, 1928. 50 x 70&nbsp;cm.