₱ 31.33 million (2012), 34.77 million (2013), 38.72 million (2014), 44.07 million (2015), 48.32 million (2016), 54.07 million (2017), 60.81 million (2018), 62.69 million (2019), 95.16 million (2021), 103.1 million (2022)
₱ 47.31 million (2012), 53.3 million (2013), 63.74 million (2014), 80 million (2015), 84.18 million (2016), 91.48 million (2017), 150.7 million (2018), 209.4 million (2019), 323.6 million (2021), 355.3 million (2022)
₱ 24.88 million (2012), 27.09 million (2013), 28.16 million (2014), 36.61 million (2015), 40.67 million (2016), 39.29 million (2017), 47.07 million (2018), 55.75 million (2019), 65.25 million (2021), 83.46 million (2022)
₱ 11.6 million (2012), 11.36 million (2013), 12.3 million (2014), 21.09 million (2015), 23.08 million (2016), 15.47 million (2017), 58.38 million (2018), 58.14 million (2019), 113.8 million (2021), 149.5 million (2022)
Belison (/bɛˈlison/), officially the Municipality of Belison (Kinaray-a: Banwa kang Bilisong, [bɪˈlisʊŋ]; Hiligaynon: Banwa sang Belison; Tagalog: Bayan ng Belison), is a municipality in the province of Antique, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 14,129 people.[3]
Belison is the smallest (in area and population)[5] and the youngest municipality in the province of Antique.[6]
History
Belison (Kinaray-a: Bilisong) was merely a barangay in the larger municipality of Patnongon, adjacent to the north. Belison barangay leaders and Manila-based Bilisongnuns ([bɪlɪsʊŋˈnən]; ‘Belison residents’) mapped out a petition requesting the national government to make Belison an independent town. The petition was brought to Malacañan Palace on March 10, 1961, and through Presidential Executive Order No. 421 signed by President Carlos P. Garcia,[6] Belison was declared a municipality - the smallest and the youngest in the Province of Antique.
During World War II, Japanese war submarines and other marine craft found the shores of Belison easy entry points to Panay, and invaded the Western Visayas in that location. People still tell of the fear created by these foreign intruders, and also of the bravery of those who decided to resist, creating rebel strongholds in the mountainous areas above the municipality.
When the Japanese air raids would bomb Belison and the nearby communities, families from all around fled to Guinobatan Cave, high in the hills of barangay Buenavista. And when the American forces came, they too used the smooth sea landing in Belison, bringing relief food supplies to Bilisongnuns, and troops to attack the Japanese occupying forces. They often used local homes in the area to hide in while planning their strategies for assault against the enemy, and enlisted the help of brave men and women to carry out their plans.
According to the Philippine Statistics Authority, the municipality has a land area of 19.78 square kilometres (7.64 sq mi)[7] constituting 0.72% of the 2,729.17-square-kilometre- (1,053.74 sq mi) total area of Antique.
In the 2020 census, Belison had a population of 14,129.[3] The population density was 710 inhabitants per square kilometre (1,800/sq mi).
Religion
Nine (9) of the leading Christian religious dominations[citation needed] in the Philippines established their presence in the town. Most Bilisongnuns are of Aglipayan ancestry.
Agriculture continues to be the heartbeat[weasel words] of the town. More than half of its land is riceland, while the rest are planted to corn, coconut, sugar cane and other production like vegetables and peanuts[citation needed].
Government
Municipal seal
The Belison municipal seal was created to commemorate the agricultural heritage of the town, in order to preserve the legacy of the original settlers in the region. It depicts three mainstay agricultural activities:
The top image represents fishing and the bounties of the neighboring sea.
The lower left portion is the harvesting of sugar cane, its processing muscovado sugar.
The lower right depicts tilling of the lowlands for the planting of rice and other grains and vegetables.
Surrounding the great triangle are eleven stars – one representing each barangay in the town. The largest star at the bottom is for the Poblacion. Their strength lies in their connectivity to one another, and in their closeness to the traditions of the past.
^"Province: Antique". PSGC Interactive. Makati, Philippines: National Statistical Coordination Board. Archived from the original on 14 November 2012. Retrieved 11 February 2013.