San Miguel Arcangel Church (Masantol)

Coordinates: 14°53′36″N 120°42′21″E / 14.893288°N 120.705774°E / 14.893288; 120.705774
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Masantol Church
San Miguel Arcangel Parish Church
Style
Baroque, Renaissance
Completed1923
Specifications
MaterialsCement, Steel
Administration
ProvinceEcclesiastical Province of San Fernando
ArchdioceseRoman Catholic Archdiocese of San Fernando

The San Miguel Arcangel Parish Church, also known as Masantol Church, is an early 20th-century Renaissance-style

Masantol, Pampanga, Philippines. The parish church, under the patronage of Saint Michael the Archangel, is under the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Fernando
.

History

The parish of Masantol was the last parish founded by the Augustinian Friars in Pampanga. With the move for secession of barrios Bebe, Caingin, Nuigin and Bulacus from the town of

Macabebe to form Masantol in 1877 and its official inauguration in 1878, the parishioners of Masantol soon felt the need to separate from Macabebe's parish of Saint Nicholas. The parishioners’ demand for a separate parish began in 1884, shortly after the lobbying of its prominent citizens for the establishment of a new, independent town. Later, on January 13, 1894, the parish of San Miguel de Masantol was erected. The parish priests of Macabebe started the parochial structures for Masantol. The construction that started during the last years of the 19th-century was completed in 1901, under the term of Archbishop Bernardino Nozaleda, with Father Jose Mariano as first parish priest. A parish house was erected in 1927 during the time of Father Teodoro Tantengco. During the stay of Monsignor Bartolome Zabala in 1932, the entire church complex, including the patio, was renovated. In the 1980s, the church was repaired using steel and cement.[1][2][3]

Architecture

Church interior in 2022

The

balustraded second level. The façade expands horizontally, with bare walls punctured by rose windows and semicircular arch windows, and ends with huge rectangular buttresses topped with religious images cased inside urnas or canopied niches. The year 1923 is inscribed in the façade, referring to the repairs made during the time of Monsignor Zabala.[1][2]

References

  1. ^ .
  2. ^ a b Castro, Alex. "Pampanga's Churches: San Miguel de Masantol". viewsfromthepampang.blogspot.com. Retrieved 22 November 2014.
  3. ^ Camiling, Alejandro. "The Town of Masantol, Pampanga". andropampanga.com. Retrieved 22 November 2014.

External links