{{Short description|City in Camarines Sur, Philippines}} {{About|the city in Camarines Sur|the city in Cebu|Naga, Cebu|other uses|Naga (disambiguation)}} {{Use Philippine English|date=August 2022}} {{Use mdy dates|date=July 2022}} {{Infobox settlement | name = {{PH wikidata|name}} | native_name = | other_name = | image_skyline = {{Multiple image | perrow = 2/3/3/2 | caption_align = center | total_width = 300 | border = infobox | image1 = San Francisco Church, Quince Martires Plaza (Peñafrancia Avenue, Naga, Camarines Sur; 04-15-2023).jpg | caption1 = San Francisco Church and Quince Martires Plaza | alt1 = Quince Martires Plaza | image2 = Our Lady of Peñafrancia Shrine (Peñafrancia Avenue, Naga, Camarines Sur; 04-15-2023).jpg | caption2 = Peñafrancia Shrine | alt2 = Façade of Peñafrancia Shrine | image3 = Original Image-N.S.Penafrancia-2013.jpg | caption3 = Our Lady of Peñafrancia | alt3 = The icon of Our Lady of Peñafrancia in 2013 | image4 = Naga Metropolitan Cathedral (Elias Angeles, Naga, Camarines Sur; 04-15-2023).jpg | caption4 = Naga Metropolitan Cathedral | alt4 = Naga Metropolitan Cathedral in 2023 | image5 = WTNaga EURO A1e.JPG | caption5 = Ateneo de Naga | alt5 = Ateneo de Naga Four Pillars building in 2012 | image6 = An City Hall kan Siyudad nin Naga, Camarines Sur.jpg | caption6 = Naga City Hall | alt6 = The newly-renovated city hall in 2023 | image7 = Refreshing cold water in Malabsay Falls, Panicuason, Camarines Sur, Philippines.jpg | caption7 = Malabsay Falls | alt7 = Malabsay Falls in 2018 | image8 = Peñafrancia Fluvial Parade Naga City.jpg | caption8 = Peñafrancia Festival | alt8 = Peñafrancia Festival | image9 = Penafrancia Basilica Minore, Naga City.jpg | caption9 = Peñafrancia Basilica Minore | alt9 = Peñafrancia Basilica Minore | image10 = Holy Rosary Minor Seminary Naga (Elias Angeles, Naga, Camarines Sur; 04-15-2023).jpg | caption10 = Holy Rosary Minor Seminary | alt10 = Holy Rosary Minor Seminary in 2023 }} | image_caption = <!--use only if photomontage template was used--> | image_flag = Flag_of_Naga,_Camarines_Sur.png | flag_size = 120x80px | image_seal = Naga City CamSur Seal.svg | seal_size = 100x80px | image_map = {{PH wikidata|image_map}} | map_caption = {{PH wikidata|map_caption}} | mapframe = yes | pushpin_map = Luzon#Philippines | pushpin_label_position = top | pushpin_map_caption = Location within the {{PH wikidata|country}} | coordinates = {{PH wikidata|coordinates}} | settlement_type = Independent component city | subdivision_type = Country | subdivision_name = Philippines | subdivision_type1 = Region | subdivision_name1 = {{PH wikidata|region}} | subdivision_type2 = Province | subdivision_name2 = Camarines Sur {{small|(geographically only)}} | nickname = {{ubl|Queen City of Bicol|The Heart of Bicol|''An Maogmang Lugar'' (The Happy Place)|Pilgrim City of Naga|One of the Seven Golden Cities of the Sun}} | motto = {{force singular}} ''Ika, Ako, Kita an Naga'' (You, Me, We are Naga) | anthem = Heart of Bicol March | subdivision_type3 = District | subdivision_name3 = {{PH legislative district}} | established_title = Founded | established_date = 1573 (Spanish settlement)<ref>{{cite web|title=Naga, Philippines also known as Nueva Caceres|url= https://www.britannica.com/place/Naga-Philippines|publisher=Britannica.com|author=Gloria Lotha|date=May 14, 2013}}</ref> | established_title1 = Township | established_date1 = 1575 (as Nueva Caceres) | established_title2 = Royal City-Charter | established_date2 = 1595 (as Ciudad de Nueva Caceres) | established_title3 = Renamed as Naga | established_date3 = 1919 (as a municipality) | established_title4 = Cityhood | established_date4 = June 18, 1948 (R.A. 305) | founder = Capt. Pedro de Chavez | parts_type = Barangays | parts_style = para | p1 = {{PH barangay count | {{wikidata|label|raw}} }} (see Barangays) | leader_title = Mayor | leader_name = Leni Robredo<ref name="NagaWelcome">{{cite web |title=City of Naga |url=https://www2.naga.gov.ph/may-12-2025-polls-winners-proclaimed-in-city-of-naga-and-third-district/ |website=Naga City |access-date=May 14, 2025}}</ref> | leader_title1 = Vice Mayor | leader_name1 = Gabriel Bordado<ref name="NagaWelcome" /> | leader_title2 = Representative <!--congressman or congresswoman --> | leader_name2 = Nelson S. Legacion | leader_title3 = City Council | leader_name3 = {{PH Town Council | 1 = <div style="border-style:solid none;border-width:thin;border-color:Gainsboro;background-color:#e6e6e6;text-align:center;width:95%;font-variant:small-caps;"></div> | 2 = Elmer S. Baldemoro | 3 = Jessie R. Albeus | 4 = Ghiel G. Rosales | 5 = Vito C. Borja, II | 6 = Gilda Gayle A. Gomez | 7 = Melvin Ramon G. Buenafe | 8 = Wilfredo Jude A. Diokno | 9 = Francisco M. Mendoza | 10 = Atty. Allan Reiz C. Macaraig | 11 = David Casper Nathan A. Sergio | 12 = Ma. Corazon M. Peñaflor (ex officio) | 13 = Jefson Romeo B. Felix (ex officio) }} | leader_title4 = Electorate | leader_name4 = {{PH wikidata|electorate}} voters (electorate_point_in_time}}|{{PH wikidata|electorate_point_in_time}}) | government_type = {{PH wikidata|government_type}} | government_footnotes = <ref>{{DILG detail}}</ref> | elevation_m = {{PH wikidata|elevation_m}} | elevation_max_m = 1864 | elevation_min_m = -1 | elevation_max_rank = | elevation_min_rank = | elevation_footnotes = {{PH wikidata|elevation_footnotes}} | elevation_max_footnotes = | elevation_min_footnotes = | area_footnotes = {{PH area}} | area_total_km2 = {{PH wikidata|area}} | area_metro_km2 = 1,342 | area_urban_km2 = 225.79 | population_footnotes = {{PH wikidata|population_reference}} | population_total = {{PH wikidata|population_total}} | population_as_of = {{PH wikidata|population_as_of}} | population_urban = 342,769 | population_metro = 858,414 | population_density_metro_km2 = auto | population_density_urban_km2 = auto | population_density_km2 = auto | population_blank1_title = Households | population_blank1 = {{PH wikidata|household}} | population_blank2_title = | population_blank2 = | population_demonym = Nagueño (masculine) <br /> Nagueña (feminine) <br /> Nagueñians (English, unofficial) | population_rank = | population_note = | timezone = PST | utc_offset = +8 | postal_code_type = ZIP code | postal_code = {{PH wikidata|postal_code}} | postal2_code_type = {{PSGCstyle}} | postal2_code = {{PSGC detail}} | area_code_type = {{areacodestyle}} | area_code = {{PH wikidata|area_code}} | website = {{PH wikidata|website}} | demographics_type1 = Economy | demographics1_title1 = {{PH wikidata|income_class_title}} | demographics1_info1 = 1st city income class (R.A. 11964) | demographics1_title2 = Poverty incidence | demographics1_info2 = {{PH wikidata|poverty_incidence}}% ({{PH wikidata|poverty_incidence_point_in_time}}){{PH wikidata|poverty_incidence_footnotes}} | demographics1_title3 = HDI | demographics1_info3 = {{increase}} 0.767 ({{fontcolor|Green|High}}) | demographics1_title4 = Revenue | demographics1_info4 = {{PH wikidata|revenue}} {{PH wikidata|revenue_point_in_time}} | demographics1_title5 = Revenue rank | demographics1_info5 = | demographics1_title6 = Assets | demographics1_info6 = {{PH wikidata|assets}} {{PH wikidata|assets_point_in_time}} | demographics1_title7 = IRA | demographics1_info7 = | demographics1_title8 = IRA rank | demographics1_info8 = | demographics1_title9 = Expenditure | demographics1_info9 = {{PH wikidata|expenditure}} {{PH wikidata|expenditure_point_in_time}} | demographics1_title10 = Liabilities | demographics1_info10 = {{PH wikidata|liabilities}} {{PH wikidata|liabilities_point_in_time}} | demographics_type2 = Service provider | demographics2_title1 = Electricity | demographics2_info1 = {{PH electricity distribution | {{wikidata|label|raw}} }} | demographics2_title2 = Water | demographics2_info2 = | demographics2_title3 = Telecommunications | demographics2_info3 = | demographics2_title4 = Cable TV | demographics2_info4 = | demographics2_title5 = | demographics2_info5 = | demographics2_title6 = | demographics2_info6 = | demographics2_title7 = | demographics2_info7 = | demographics2_title8 = | demographics2_info8 = | demographics2_title9 = | demographics2_info9 = | demographics2_title10 = | demographics2_info10 = | blank_name_sec1 = {{PH wikidata|climate_title}} | blank_info_sec1 = {{PH wikidata|climate_type}} | blank1_name_sec1 = Native languages | blank1_info_sec1 = Central Bikol | blank2_name_sec1 = Crime index | blank2_info_sec1 = | blank3_name_sec1 = | blank3_info_sec1 = | blank4_name_sec1 = | blank4_info_sec1 = | blank5_name_sec1 = | blank5_info_sec1 = | blank6_name_sec1 = | blank6_info_sec1 = | blank7_name_sec1 = | blank7_info_sec1 = | blank1_name_sec2 = Major religions | blank1_info_sec2 = | blank2_name_sec2 = Feast date | blank2_info_sec2 = Third Saturday and Third Sunday of September | blank3_name_sec2 = Catholic diocese | blank3_info_sec2 = Archdiocese of Caceres | blank4_name_sec2 = Patron saint | blank4_info_sec2 = Our Lady of Peñafrancia | blank5_name_sec2 = | blank5_info_sec2 = | blank6_name_sec2 = | blank6_info_sec2 = | blank7_name_sec2 = | blank7_info_sec2 = | short_description = | footnotes = }}
'''Naga''' (officially the '''City of Naga;''' Central Bikol: ''Ciudad nin Naga''; Rinconada Bikol: ''Ciudad ka Naga''; {{langx|tl|Lungsod ng Naga}}; {{Langx|es|Ciudad de Naga}}; or the '''Pilgrim City of Naga)''' is an independent component city in the Bicol Region of the Philippines. According to the {{PH wikidata|population_as_of}}, it has a population of {{PH wikidata|population_total}} people.{{PH wikidata|population_reference}} It is the most populous city in Camarines Sur and the smallest city in Bicol by land area.
The town was established in 1575 by order of Spanish Governor-General Francisco de Sande. The city, then named Nueva Cáceres (New Cáceres), was one of the Spanish royal cities in the Spanish East Indies, along with Manila, Cebu City, and Iloilo City, historically, the third oldest.<ref>{{Cite web|title=The oldest royal city in the Philippines|url=https://naga.gov.ph/|website=City Government of Naga Official Website|access-date=May 19, 2020}}</ref>
Geographically and statistically classified, as well as legislatively represented within Camarines Sur, but administratively independent of the provincial government, Naga is considered to be the Bicol Region's trade,<ref name="BicolMailPerez20150227">{{cite news |last=Perez |first=Jose B. |title=Bicol's Boom Town: Bongat sees bullish Naga |url=http://www.bicolmail.com/2012/?p=19936 |date=February 27, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402132222/http://www.bicolmail.com/2012/?p=19936 |archive-date=April 2, 2015 |newspaper=Bicol Mail |url-status=usurped |access-date=February 13, 2019}}</ref><ref name="The Philippine Island World">{{Google books |plainurl= |id=6Pn0Pfh1Cl0C |page=415 |title=The Philippine Island World: A Physical, Cultural, and Regional Geography }}</ref> business,<ref name="The Philippine Island World" /> religious, cultural, industrial, commercial,<ref name="philstar.com">{{cite news |last=Orbita |first=Erlinda Hospicia V. |title=Naga City, the Heart of Bicol: 'An Maogmang Lugar [The Happy Place]' |url=http://www.philstar.com/sunday-life/569060/naga-city-heart-bicol-maogmang-lugar |date=April 25, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140413123255/http://www.philstar.com/sunday-life/569060/naga-city-heart-bicol-maogmang-lugar |archive-date=April 13, 2014 |work=The Philippine Star|access-date=February 24, 2019}}</ref> medical,<ref>{{cite web |title=Home |url=http://bmc.doh.gov.ph |website=Bicol Medical Center |access-date=February 24, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Bicol Medical Center Modernization |url=https://www.nagacitydeck.com/2013/05/bicol-medical-center-modernization.html |website=Naga City Deck |access-date=February 24, 2019}}</ref> educational,<ref name="philstar.com"/><ref name="NagaEducation">{{cite web |title=Education |url=https://naga.gov.ph/ecological-profile/education/ |website=Naga City |access-date=February 25, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title = Number of Schools in Naga City| publisher= Naga City Government | date = 28 February 2023 | url = https://www2.naga.gov.ph/student-3/educational-institutions-in-naga/ | access-date = 28 February 2023}}</ref> and financial center.<ref>{{cite web|title=Bicol Peninsula, Luzon, Philippines|url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Bicol-Peninsula|publisher=Britannica.com|date=November 13, 2024|author=Ethan Teekah, Grace Young}}</ref> On 27 May 2026, Naga was declared a highly urbanized city by President Marcos Jr. pending a plebiscite per the Local Government Code of 1991.<ref name="inquirer-huc">{{cite news|title=Marcos declares Naga as highly urbanized city |url=https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/2235369/marcos-declares-naga-as-highly-urbanized-city |last1=Jaucian |first1=Michael B. |publisher=Inquirer.net |date=27 May 2026}}</ref><ref name="balita-huc">{{cite news |last1=De Leon |first1=Richard |title=Proklamado ni PBBM: Naga City, isa nang Highly Urbanized City! |url=https://balita.mb.com.ph/2026/05/27/proklamado-ni-pbbm-naga-city-isa-nang-highly-urbanized-city/ |access-date=27 May 2026 |work=Balita |date=27 May 2026}}</ref>
Naga is known as the "Queen City of Bicol" due to the historical significance of Naga in the Bicol Region;<ref>{{cite news |last=Hermoso |first=Christina I. |title=Naga City set for traslacion |url=http://www.mb.com.ph/naga-city-set-for-traslacion/ |date=September 13, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140429051004/http://www.mb.com.ph/naga-city-set-for-traslacion/ |archive-date=April 29, 2014 |work=Manila Bulletin|access-date=February 26, 2019}}</ref> as the "Heart of Bicol",<ref>{{cite news |last=Llorin |first=Jean N. |title=Learning from 'The Heart of Bicol' |url=http://opinion.inquirer.net/inquireropinion/columns/view/20100627-277925/Learning-from-The-Heart-of-Bicol |date=June 27, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100630030827/http://opinion.inquirer.net/inquireropinion/columns/view/20100627-277925/Learning-from-The-Heart-of-Bicol |archive-date=June 30, 2010 |newspaper=Philippine Daily Inquirer|access-date=February 27, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Naga City: Where Bicol's heart is |url=https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/274735/newstv/weekendgetaway/naga-city-where-bicol-s-heart-is |date=September 19, 2012 |work=GMA News|access-date=February 27, 2019}}</ref> due to its central geographical location on the Bicol Peninsula; and as "Pilgrim City," since Naga is also home to one of the largest Marian pilgrimages in Asia to the shrine of Our Lady of Peñafrancia, an image that is one of the country's most popular objects of devotion.<ref name=abella>Abella, D. ''The Bikol Annals''. Manila</ref> Naga is described as "One of the Seven Golden Cities of the Sun" by Nick Joaquín.<ref>{{cite web |title=''The Naga We Know'' to be launched Aug. 31 |url=http://www.panitikan.com.ph/content/naga-we-know-be-launched-aug-31 |date=August 26, 2018 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140413155143/http://www.panitikan.com.ph/content/naga-we-know-be-launched-aug-31 |archive-date=April 13, 2014 |website=Likhaan: The UP Institute of Creative Writing |access-date=April 4, 2019}}</ref>
It is one of the two cities in the Philippines named Naga, the other being in Cebu.
==Etymology== [[File:Lignum nephriticum - cup of Philippine lignum nephriticum, Pterocarpus indicus, and flask containing its fluorescent solution Hi.jpg|thumb|upright|left|''Lignum nephriticum'' cup made of narra wood (the namesake of the province) produced opalescent colors when water is poured into it. These wooden cups were a major pre-colonial and colonial industry of Naga.]] Naga is the native pre-colonial name of the city. It is named after the narra tree (''Pterocarpus indicus''), which is known as ''naga'' in the Bicol language. It was abundant in the region and was part of a pre-colonial industry of wooden cups and bowls made from narra that produced distinctive blue and yellow opalescent colors when water is poured into them (later known to Europeans as ''lignum nephriticum''). During the Spanish colonial era, they were exported to Mexico as luxury goods for their purported diuretic properties via the Manila-Acapulco Galleons, and from there, to Europe. They were often presented as gifts to European nobility.<ref name="saff">{{cite book|author= Safford, William Edwin|title =Annual report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution|chapter =''Lignum nephriticum''|location=Washington|publisher =Government Printing Office|year =1916|page=271–298|chapter-url =https://archive.org/download/annualreportofbo1915smitfo/annualreportofbo1915smitfo.pdf|author-link =William Edwin Safford}}</ref><ref name="lignum">{{Cite journal | last1 = Muyskens | first1 = M. | doi = 10.1021/ed083p765 | last2 = Ed Vitz | title = The Fluorescence of ''Lignum nephriticum'': A Flash Back to the Past and a Simple Demonstration of Natural Substance Fluorescence | journal = Journal of Chemical Education | volume = 83 | issue = 5 | pages = 765 | year = 2006 | bibcode = 2006JChEd..83..765M }}</ref>
The Jesuit missionary and historian Juan José Delgado (1697–1755) describes the industry in the following:
{{Blockquote |text=The city called Nueva Caceres by the Spaniards bears among the natives the name Naga, on account of the abundance of this tree throughout those provinces of Camarines and Albay, where they carve very curious cups out of it for drinking water. Those made of female naga (pale white wood) are much the better, for this wood tinges the water very quickly to a celestial color, more quickly than the male (reddish wood). These cups are much esteemed in Europe and are regarded as a gift well worthy of any prince. Out of one of these cups they made me drink when I was a child, in Cadiz (Spain), as a remedy for hydropsy and oppilation, and I think that it might have helped me had I not drunk too much. |author=Juan José Delgado |title = ''Biblioteca Histórica Filipina: Historia general sacro-profana, política y natural de las islas del poniente llamadas Filipinas'' (1751)<ref name="saff"/> }}
==History==
===Precolonial era===
==== Legendary background ==== According to the epic ''Maragtas'', the Bicolandia was closely allied with the Kedatuan of Madja-as Confederation, which was located southeast on Panay Island. Two datus and their followers, who followed Datu Puti, arrived at Taal Lake, with one group later settling around Laguna de Bay, and another group pushing southward into the Bicol Peninsula, placing the Bicolanos between people from Luzon and people from the Visayas. An ancient tomb preserved among the Bicolanos, discovered and examined by anthropologists during the 1920s, refers to some of the same deities and personages mentioned in the ''Maragtas''.<ref name="G. Nye Steiger 1929, p. 122">G. Nye Steiger, H. Otley Beyer, Conrado Benitez, ''A History of the Orient'', Oxford: 1929, Ginn and Company, p. 122.</ref> It is however worth noting that no other material written records remain that can accurately back the epic's narrative.<ref>Almeda, E. M. (1992). Archaeology and Bikol Pre-History. ''The Journal of History, 36-37''(1-2).</ref>
==== Precolonial duluhan of Naga ==== Prior to the arrival of the first Spanish conquistadors in what is now present day Naga City, the pre-colonial settlement of Naga was a regionally hegemonic polity geographically located on a strategic tributary, now known as the Naga River, flowing from Mount Isarog to the Bicol River.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Gerona |first=Danilo Madrid |title=La ciudad de Nueva Caceres: the rise of a sixteenth century Spanish city |date=2014 |publisher=Galleon Publisher |isbn=978-971-95954-0-3 |location=Manila, Philippines |pages= |language=en}}</ref>{{Reference page|page=8}}
According to historians William Henry Scott and Danilo Madrid Gerona, precolonial societies were referred to by the natives as ''duluhan'', a broader socio-political structure than the purported familiality of the natives.<ref name=":6">{{Cite book |last=Gerona |first=Danilo Madrid |title=From Epic to History, A Brief Introduction to Bicol History |publisher=A.M.S. Press, Ateneo de Naga |year=1988}}</ref>{{Reference page|page=17}} In Naga and in the rest of Bicol during that period, the only known tripartite social classes derived from Visayan ''barangays'' were the ''maguino'', the richest noble class addressed as ''Kagoangnan'' ("''elder''" in Bikol) that were only permitted to datoship; ''timagua'', or ''timawa'', the commoners that constituted the general population; and the ''oripon'' ("''alipin''" in Tagalog), a slave class composed of other subclasses, such as the ''guintubo'' (pandoan in plural).<ref>{{Cite book |last=Lawrence |first=John |title=Barangay: sixteenth-century Philippine culture and society |date=1999 |publisher=Ateneo de Manila Univ. Press |isbn=978-971-550-138-5 |edition=4. printing |location=Quezon City}}</ref>{{Reference page|pages=183-184}}<ref name=":6" />{{Reference page|pages=16—17}}
==== Naga river and soil ==== Naga's tributary was highly potable due to the prevalence of cascading springs from Mount Isarog, purifying the mountain's downstream.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=15}} A rich ecosystem of flora and fauna sparsely inhabited within mangrove thickets were largely endemic to this district.<ref name=":2">{{Cite book |last=Gerona |first=Danilo Madrid |title=La ciudad de Nueva Caceres: the illustrious origins of the City of Naga |date=2025 |publisher=Bikol Historical Research Center |isbn=978-621-8270-29-9 |location=Camarines Sur, Philippines |pages=21}}</ref>{{Reference page|page=21}} From the igenous composition of Mount Isarog and within the vicinity of the Bicol River as the peninsular drainage basin, the soil of Naga was highly fertile, attesting to its natural wealth.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=21}}
==== Territorial extent ==== The extent of the settlement of Naga was contained on the tributary's eastern bank, adjacent to a highly dependent barangay that was Tabuc, now present day barangays Tabuco and Abella<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=20}}; the name derived from the Bikol word "taboc", a "cockfighting blade", due to the landform's resemblance.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=15}} The Naga settlement is now roughly within the area where the present-day barangays of Lerma and Tinago are located.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=18}}
Tabuco was highly instrumental in the development of Naga,<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=15}} simultaneously with the other vassal barangays in the riverine district paying tribute to Naga in gold and rice. Coupled with the tributary's choke point, these effectively made Naga a highly influential village in domestic inter-barangic politics.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=12}}
===== Regional trade hegemony ===== The settlement of Naga, attributed to its strategic location, was a major trading outpost, controlling traffic between the gold mining barangays of Paracale and Mambulao (now Jose Panganiban) and the rice cultivating district of Yraya, where pre-Hispanic Bato and Libon were located.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=14}} The settlement's prowess in trading, not limited to domestic ties but to inter-maritime affairs, acquired Naga a comparatively advanced armament consisting of "iron corslets, greaves, wristlets, gauntlets, helmets, arquebuses, and culverins"<ref>{{Cite book |last=de Lavazares |first=Guido |title=BR 3 |year=1573 |pages=273 |language=es-ES}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Blaire |first=Emma Helen |url=https://www.gutenberg.org/files/42884/42884-h/42884-h.htm |title=The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803, Volume 03 of 55 |last2=Bourne |first2=Edward Gaylord |publisher=Arthur H. Clark Company |year=1903 |location=Cleveland, Ohio |pages=273 |language=en-US}}</ref> from foreign Asian traders, evidently Chinese traders of the Ming dynasty from the Silk Road.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=16}}
===== Economic affluence ===== The fertile soil in Naga reflected the "export-scale" rice and abaca production, also harboring an abundance of hardwoods such as narra, yakal (''Shorea astylosa''), guijo (''Shorea guiso''), kamagong (''Diospyros blancoi''), and molave (''Vitex parviflora'').<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=21}} Popular regional livelihoods in the Naga district also included fishing, accompanied by the Bicol River's biodiversity of fish, mollusks, and crustaceans.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=21}} Additionally, Naga once led a major regional metal industry that the Spanish came to soon propose of further territorial ambitions into the purported opulence of Los Camarines.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=15}}
=== Spanish colonial period ===
==== Early discovery of Naga (1573–1579) ====
===== Salcedo's expedition ===== {{main|Nueva Cáceres}}
In July 1573, Governor-General Guido de Lavezaris ordered the first Spanish expedition into Southern Luzon. Led by conquistador Juan de Salcedo, they eventually landed in the settlement of Naga. Augustinian chronicler Fray Gaspar de San Agustin, detailed the amount of the barangay's native buildings to number 3,000, beyond Libon's 800.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=11}}<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=18}} Disputedly, as San Agustin infamously inflated statistics beyond proportion, it was indicated in his report that "in the river of Vicol and Camarines which capital was the village of Naga and had one hundred thousand armed men excluding laborers and merchants."<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=11}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Ortega |first=Francisco |title=Fray Francisco Ortega to the King |date=6 June 1573 |location=Manila |pages=257 |language=es-ES}}</ref> [[File:Juan de Salcedo, Spanish conquistador.png|thumb|Juan de Salcedo (1549–1576) was a Spanish conquistador who led the first voyage into the Bicol peninsula. He was the grandson of famed conquistador Miguel López de Legazpi.]] Reporting Naga's craftsmanship in metallurgy and affluence from maritime trading afforded the establishment of a garrison and Bicol's first Catholic mission base, now the San Francisco Parish Church, formerly made of wood and hay; on the western bank of Naga's river.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=15}} Three months after Salcedo's return to Manila with his 800 taels (400 grams) of gold, his garrison stationed in Naga hoarded a total of 2,800 taels (140 kilograms) of gold from the riverine district.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|pages=17—18}}
===== Conquest of the Naga settlement ===== In 1574, Doctor Francisco de Sande, in continuation of the archipelagic colonization, executed the military campaign to conquer the newly discovered polities in Southern Luzon.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=19}}<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=24}} This military contingent was led by Salcedo's most prominent commanders: Captain Pedro de Chavez, Alferez Cristobal de Saldaña, Francisco Saavedra, and Esteban de Solis.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=19}} Armed with hundreds of soldiers and native allied warriors, the overall contingent departed Manila southbound and initially engaged with the hostile villages of Mambulao and Paracale, then, upon further incursions down south, Baao, Bula, and Naga.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=24}}
thumb|Oragon Monument (Historical Marker)|292x292px
In Naga, the armed residents waged a fierce defensive battle on the settlement's river banks against the Spanish forces.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=19}} Ultimately, despite the stubborn resistance, the natives succumbed to the Spanish; throughout the ordeal, the locals suffered substantial casualties.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=19}} Upholding the warriors of the conquered barangay in profound esteem, Augustinian chronicler Fray Martin de Rada once said,<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=19}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=de Rada |first=Martin |title=Fray Martin de Rada to Viceroy Martin Enriquez |pages=286–288 |language=es-ES}}</ref> {{Blockquote|text="The people there are the most valiant and best armed men of all these islands. Consequently, although they never attacked the Spaniards, they defended themselves in all their villages, and would not surrender unless conquered by force of arms. Consequently, all those villages were entered in the same way, by first summoning them to submit peacefully, and to pay tribute immediately unless they wished war. They replied that they would first prove those to whom they were to pay tribute, and consequently, the Spaniards attacking them, an entrance was made among them by force of arms, and the village was overthrown and whatever was found pillaged."|author=|title=Fray Martin de Rada to Viceroy Martin Enriquez|source=pp. 286-288}}In 1575, Captain Pedro de Chávez, the commander of the garrison left behind by Salcedo, founded on garrison grounds a temporary settlement.<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/in.ernet.dli.2015.530346/2015.530346.jesuits-in_djvu.txt "Jesuits In The Philippines (1581-1768)" Page 59] "These settlements were much smaller than Manila. In 1582 Manila had an adult male population of 300 Spaniards; Vigan, 60; Nueva Caceres, 30; Cebu, 70; Arevalo, 20. In 1586 Manila had 329 Spanish men and youths capable of bearing arms ; the most recently established settlement, Nueva Segovia in Cagayan, had 97; Nueva Caceres, 69; Arevalo, 65; Cavite, 64; Cebu, 63; Villa Fernandina, 19.</ref> He christened the settlement after incumbent Gov.-Gen. Sande's hometown of Cáceres, Spain.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=27}}<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=26}}
===== Naga encomenderos in service of the Crown =====
The Spanish administrative capital settled in Libon was transferred to the area of Naga due to its centrally strategic location administering the other newly erected ''encomiendas'', rapidly populating the riverine district.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=25}} By 1578, Christianization efforts were first spearheaded in the Camarines region by Franciscans Pablo de Jesus and Bartolome Ruiz in collaboration with the encomiendas through the system of ''reducción,''<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|pages=36—37}}''<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=25}}'' embodied in the voluminious compendium of the ''Recopilacion de Leyes de los Reinos de las Indias'' (Laws of the Indies) urging for:<ref name=":5" />
{{Blockquote|text="the natives for their own advantage and comfort should live together in the pueblos, and not scattered around the hills and mountains, deprived of all material and spiritual benefits of the minister and of the natural interaction by law of nature, among men."|title=Recopilación de Leyes de las Indias}}
During the period of protracted pacification, the ''encomienda'' system was officially ratified in the region, supplanting the inter-barangic and hegemonic administrative order with Imperial rule.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=20—21}}<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=24}}
The first wards incorporated in the ''encomienda'' system were Naga and Camaligan, assigned to encomendero Pedro Cid.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=20}} The Crown appropriated the conquered lands to the highly decorated Spanish soldiers who participated in the incursions, enjoining them to a "threefold responsibility" of "(1) to maintain peace among the natives within the ''encomienda'', (2) to support the missionaries, (3) to protect and defend the natives from any hostile elements."<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=20}}<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=24}}
In return, the encomenderos were formally authorized to exact a tribute of eight reales annually upon their male subjects, ranging from ages of nineteen to sixty. The former polities' chieftains had to regularly collect tributes from his residents, then forward the currency or commodity to the encomendero in charge, who typically resided in the administrative capital. A quarter of a ward's tribute was made taxable to royal coffers, simultaneously funding the clergy.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|pages=20—21}}<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=24}}
==== Establishment of the Villa de Nueva Cáceres (1579) ====
===== Founding of Villa de Cáceres ===== left|thumb|210x210px|A facsimile cover of the ''Recopilacion de Leyes de los Reynos de las Indias,'' in its 1681 edition however. The centralized bureaucracy of the Spanish dealt a crucial role in its urban planning thereafter, which in turn, influenced the establishment of Nueva Caceres.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=24}} Imperial legislation, prescribed primarily by the Laws of the Indies'','' tailored the preferable urban settlement to a cosmopolitan congregation of self-sustainable industries, a natural bottle neck of commerce, and the strategic base of both ecclesiastical and military operations.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=24—25}}<ref name=":5">{{Cite book |title=Recopilación de leyes de los Reynos de las Indias |date=1998 |publisher=Centro de los estudios políticos y constitucionales Boletín oficial del Estado |isbn=978-84-340-1040-6 |editor-last=Espagne |edition=Facsímil |location=Madrid}}</ref>
On 27 May 1579, Capt. Juan Arce de Sadornil, the garrison commander in Naga, received instructions from the Imperial administration in Manila pertaining to the appropriate selection of a Spanish settlement in Bicol.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=37}} Capt. Sadornil coordinated with the Franciscan missionaries at the San Francisco de Naga convent to chart their settlement's expanse to observe the logistical, strategical, and technical feasibility of a formal settlement's construction.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=26}}
Sometime in 1579, the departure of the two pioneering missionaries brought about Fray Geronimo Aguilar, who sat at the San Francisco de Naga convent from 1579 until 1586. He was the first missionary to teach the natives Iberian music such as Spanish ''cantos'', including Western notation such as tonic sol-fas that made their way toward the 1700s in Camarines parishes.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=39}} Cáceres, which were mostly wired to missionary operations, had gained the St. John the Evangelist parish church (now the Naga Metropolitan Cathedral) upon Philip II's royal order to construct an explicitly secular parish attending the ecclesiastical needs of the Spanish community of Nueva Cáceres (a division of labor between those of religious orders serving as missionaries and secular priests serving to Cáceres residents only).<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|pages=39-43}} Its first curate, founded in 1579 as evinced by a report he wrote in Nueva España dated 10 May 1580, was Bachiller Balthasar de Miranda.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|pages=39-43}}
The parish priest was allotted stipends of fifty thousand maravedis directly from the royal treasury, converting the balance to three hundred pesos, parallel to the alcalde mayor's which were shouldered by the residents of Nueva Cáceres.
Composed of a couple hundred Spanish colonists at this point, on 16 September 1579, Gov.-Gen. Sande acquired royal recognition decreeing the appellation of "villa" onto the newly dubbed settlement of Cáceres.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=27}}<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=26}} In subsequent documents within the Manila bureaucracy, "nueva," Spanish for "new," was prefixed to "Cáceres," thus "Nueva Cáceres," to distinguish the locality from its namesake in Spain.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=27}} center|thumb|480x480px|A panoramic view of Gov.-Gen. Francisco de Sande's hometown, Cáceres. The prerequisites of being elevated to villa, historically subject by Nueva Cáceres, were the settlement had to have at least a semblance of preliminary urbanization sheltered by a strategic military base with aims for further conquest.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=26}} The Villa de Cáceres had about 24 encomenderos taking quarters in it by 1581 according to a report from Capt. Miguel de Loarca.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=29}}<ref name=":3">{{Cite book |last=Loarca |first=Miguel de |title=Relacion.... |year=1581 |location=Nueva Cáceres |language=es-ES}}</ref>
===== Administrative bureaucracy of the locality ===== From 1580 to 1581, the burgeoning Spanish community in Nueva Cáceres laid the framework for the earliest city-styled local governance in Southern Luzon. Inspired by Latin American municipal bureaucracies, the ''alcaldia'' (the province) Nueva Cáceres had an ''alcalde mayor'' with a salary of three hundred pesos, serving as its ''Capitan de Guerra'' (military commander); counciled by a lower echelon of public officials referred to as the ''cabildo'' (municipal council), which consisted of 2 alcaldes-in-ordinary and 6 regidores, the council of elderlies, appointed by the governor-general.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=29}}<ref name=":3" />
The ''alcaldia's'' (referring to the pacified province) jurisdiction in 1581 extended from Camarines toward Catanduanes, instilling the regidores to "elect" (although it was represented as democratic, elections were merely an elitist selection of whom the governor-general could appoint) among the general populace of the ''vecino'' (colonists), mayors, and the ''alguaciles'' (constables).<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|pages=29—31}}
==== Elevation of Nueva Cáceres to ''cuidad'' status (1586) ====
===== Rapid Christianization of the indigenous ===== On 8 September 1585, Gov.-Gen. Santiago de Vera ordered the municipal government, in collaboration with Fray Juan de Garrovillas of the San Francisco convent, to <ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=|pages=38—39}}
{{Blockquote|text="inspect the poblaciones to be built, the size and form of the churches, you must also consider the work to be carried out by the natives where these poblaciones and churches will be established."|author=Gov.-Gen. Santiago de Vera}}
This eventually culminated to a decree in 1594 formally authorizing the Franciscans at the helm of the San Francisco church to take over all ecclesiastical operations in all of the region.
By the start of 1586, the Franciscans from the San Francisco convent established a nipa-and-wood infirmary dubbed the Hospital de San Diego, referred to more popularly as the Hospital de San Lazaro. This was also granted upon royal degree by Philip II of Spain.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Franciscan Hospitals |url=https://ofmphilarchives.tripod.com/id22.html#:~:text=Franciscan%20Hospitals,653.) |access-date=2025-11-21 |website=ofmphilarchives.tripod.com}}</ref>
===== Request to the King ===== In 1586, recognizing the cruciality of the ''cuidad'' (city) status, a formal letter was sent to Philip II, thereby requesting the King:<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=32}}<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=33}}<ref name=":4">{{Cite book |last=Colín, SJ. |first=Francisco |title=Labor evangelica de los obreros de la compania de Jesus en las islas Filipinas |publisher=Impr. y Litogr, de Hendrich y Comp. |year=1900 |location=Barcelona |pages=Tomo 1, p. 451 |language=es-ES |trans-title=Evangelical Work of the Workers of the Society of Jesus in the Philippine Islands}}</ref> {{Blockquote|text="...(a) to confirm the present status of Caceres as a city created by virtue of the governor-general's will and authority; (b) to allocate a propio of about 1,000 men or more to the city; (c) to preserve the present set-up of the city government; (d) to confirm and honor the appointments to the various offices."|title=Memorial de lo que se ha pedir a su Magestad haga merced a la cuidad de Caceres en la provincia de Bicor y Camarines en las isla de Luzon, en estas islas del poniente}} In this document, the Spanish officials mentioned were Luis Briceño, ''alguacil mayor''; and Juan de Guzman and Sebastian Garcia, ''regidores''.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=32}}<ref name=":4" /> Augmenting the elevation of a ciudad meant a ''propio'' (native settlement providing basic goods to the city) was required to supplement such substantial urbanization of Nueva Cáceres, ultimately to the expense of the natives in the ''alcaldia''.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=|pages=32—33}} The rapid gentrification of Nueva Cáceres prompted the assignment of the "component villages" Naga and Tabuc to ''propio's'' bidding.
By 1588, the population of Nueva Cáceres were numbering the hundreds upon upholding of city status. On the same year, the Calle Real building had finished construction, serving as the alcalde-mayor's residence.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Ateneo De Naga high school 1980: The Historical Sites of Naga City |url=https://adenu1980.blogspot.com/2010/02/historical-sites-of-naga-city.html |access-date=2026-05-08 |language=en}}</ref> The incipient city consisted of 30 citizens, 20 of whom married (some settling after Capt. Juan Maldonado's expedition in 1585) and 6 among them married to native women; 30 soldiers; "a church with a vicar, a Franciscan Monastery with two priests and two brothers besides and one alcalde mayor."<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=33}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Salazar |first=Domingo |title="Report..." |year=1588 |location=Nueva Cáceres |pages=BR 7, pp.40–42 |language=es-ES}}</ref> Encouragement from authorities to interbreed with the native population was decisively a means to maintain the growth of the city, "even blurring the racial gap."<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=33}}
Up toward the 1590s, the honorifics of ''villa'' and ''cuidad'' were often used interchangeably, denoting the blurred distinctions of the locality among its vast residencies, especially among clerical spheres in contrast to the newfound municipal bureaucracy.
==== Establishment of the See of Cáceres (1595) ==== By the 17th century, almost most of the ''propios'' under the Spaniards had been completely converted to Catholicism, abandoning their animistic heritage altogether.
"Nueva Cáceres" was identified in the papal bull of Pope Clement VIII on 14 August 1595, which established the see of Cáceres, together with Ceb�� and Nueva Segovia, and made it the seat of the new bishopric subject to the Archdiocese of Manila. The Diocese's first bishop, Luis Maldonado, O.F.M., died before his assumption, his successor was Francisco Ortega, O.S.A..
Nueva Cáceres was settled by around 100 Spaniards from Europe,<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.gutenberg.org/files/38269/38269-h/38269-h.htm#xd19e3408| title = A History of the Philippines by David P. Barrows| quote = The City of Nueva Caceres, in the Camarines, was founded by Governor La-Sande. It, too, was the seat of a bishopric, and had one hundred Spanish inhabitants.}}</ref> reinforced by migrations from Mexico during Capt. Maldonado's expedition. From a report by Don Antonio Morga of the ''Oidor'' of the ''Royal Audencia'', he characterized the urban life of Nueva Cáceres as:<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=|pages=44-45}} {{Blockquote|text="...well populated since the time of Doctor Sande, Governor of the Philippine Islands. It has approximately one hundred Spaniards, with its city corporations and mayors, aldermen, and officials."|source=Don Antonio Morga's report of the Oidor of the Royal Audiencia}}thumb|left|Visit of Gov.-Gen Narciso Claveria y Zaldua at Nueva Caceres on Feb 16, 1845. Painting by Honorato Lozano
==== Ciudad de Nueva Cáceres in the 17th century ==== {{Further|Archdiocese of Cáceres}}
===== Bishrophic vacuum and widespread poverty ===== At the beginning of the 17th century, there were only five other ''ciudades'' in the Philippines. Despite this, the city was plagued by a bureaucratic clergy. A bishrophic vacuum brought about by the diocese's short-lived episcopasies, an insufficient taxation system, the constancy of hostile Dutch naval incursions, led by two ships from Van Noort's fleet of Lambert Vleisman starting in 1600; and Moro raids resulted in a demented civic development of Nueva Cáceres.
One of the causes of poverty was the inadequent population, both ''indio'' and Spaniard, to sufficiently fund Nueva Cáceres' public systems. Coupled with this is the dependence of Hispanic Naga on the now defunct regional trade among ''duluhans'' in the Vicor riverine district.
Baltazar de Cobarrubias y Múñoz, O.S.A., was officially appointed as successor, taking on the diocese in 1603, but ultimately losing it in 1605.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=51}} The following, Pedro de Godinez, O.F.M., was among one of those who died before seating the diocese; he was however the only one with a preliminary plan such as a document revealed in Seville to construct a concrete cathedral upon immediate arrival.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=51}}
The first to be elected among the ensemble of the former missionaries of the Diocese of Cáceres was Pedro Matía, O.F.M., serving from 1612 then perishing a year later.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=51}} Diego Guevara, O.S.A. followed in 1617 until 1621, then Luis de Cañizares, O.M. dying before being seated in the diocese in 1624. In 1628, Cañizares' successor, Francisco de Zamudio y Avendaño, O.S.A., breathed new hope to the city's ecclesiastical sphere, not succumbing as immediately as many before had.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=51}} His administration also saw the first Moro raid upon Nueva Cáceres in October 1636, where famed Franciscan friar Fray Cervera fought and died in the defense of the San Francisco convent.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=86}}Despite this, Zamudio's episcopate was marred with controversies, ultimately passing in 1639. Nicolás de Zaldívar y Zapata, O.S.A. arrived in 1642, then died in 1646.
In 1653, Antonio de San Gregorio, O.F.M. was the first to serve the post five years onward, dying only eight years later in 1661.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|pages=52-55}} Abhorring the squalor of the city, San Gregorio provided a comment through a letter requesting royal assistance, stating:<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|pages=52-54}} {{Blockquote|text="there is in the city of Nueba Cazeres the following: the cathedral, which is a small chapel of bamboo without bells nor ornaments, burned down by the Dutch enemy years before. After the cathedral is the house of the alcalde mayor, made of good bricks and lime; there are also the houses of the escribano and the alguacil mayor which are of bamboo. Following this is a structure which they call the hospital, also of bamboo and the last is the convent of San Francisco, a very massive structure of lime and bricks."}} San Gregorio also proposed to Philip IV the complete rehaul of the cathedral edifice, which was considered largely decrepit and neglected. On 20 March 1660, the king officially decreed its renovation, but by this point, San Gregorio had already passed a year later, not living to see the completion of the cathedral.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=55}}
Succeeding San Gregorio was Andrés González, O.P., the longest of which ruled the See of Cáceres. Assuming the episcopate in 1661, González ordered further repairs in the cathedral. This backfired however, resulting in a fissured wall "made worse by the earthquakes."<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=55}} In February 1691, a letter co-written by residents Lorenzo Duran Rivera, Jeronimo Silvestre de Grimaldo, Baltasar de Tamayo y Tobar, Luis Jimenez de Rivera y Flores, Juan de la Ostia Coronado and Juan de Aguilera Verastigui was sent to Carlos II, King of Spain, to transfer the cityhood of Nueva Cáceres with all of its statutes and grants to Paracale due to the city's immense strife; this did not materialize.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=65}} After González, Domingo de Valencia seated the diocese in 1718, dying a year later.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=55}} His successor was Felipe de Molina, now appalled at the backward state of Naga. Molina also pointed out the rundown condition of the house of priests turned bishop's residence through his comment, "that there was no place for him to live in."<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=56}}
===== Attempts to resolve Nueva Cáceres' economic malaise ===== In the mid-17th century, attempts toward economic self-sufficiency were made by both residents and of the civil government. On 16 July 1664, Gov.-Gen. Diego Salcedo reported an iron deposit in Mambulao, having sent Capt. Gil Carol to assess the mines. Despite having sent 553 arroba (7,830 kilograms) of iron to the ''Almacenes Reales'' (Royal Warehouses) during this period, no serious industrialization became of the mine due to the crude native metallurgy utilized.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=64}}
===== Galleon trade in the 17th century ===== thumb|306x306px|A present-day view of Pasacao Port {{Circa|2025}} The Manila galleon between Manila and Acapulco of the late 17th century directly attributed to the economic propensity of Bicol and consequently its regional capital, Nueva Cáceres.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=72}} Without a port in Camarines, many ports were opened on its southern coast in the 17th century, such as Cabusao and the province's main seaport of Pasacao. Prominent tradelines were also established in the barrios of Caramoan and Quipayo. The access Nueva Cáceres had to these trading hubs, Pasacao in particular, propelled the domestic abaca trade to an export-scale industry.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=80}} Pasacao had a shipyard where galleons were built such as the ''Angel de la Guardia in'' 1613 and the ''Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe'' in 1703''.'' Pasacao's importance to the globalist trade in Nueva Cáceres aiding this network, as described by Capt. Miguel de Loarca in his report:<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=|pages=73-78}} {{Blockquote|text="Farther along the coast near Pasacao River begin the provinces of Vicor and Camarines, which, as we have said above, are situated on the east side as you enter the Philippine islands. Disembarking at the Pasacao River, which is seventy leagues from the city of Manila by sea, and journeying three leagues by land, one comes to the Vicor River flowing north; its source is in the opposite coasts of the islands."|author=Capt. Miguel Loarca|title=Relaccion de las Islas de Filipinas|source=1582}} Due to the preeminent relation that Nueva Cáceres held over the dominion of Pasacao, propositions were conferred by Gov.-Gen. Juan Niño de Tavora of the construction of a canal from Pasacao connecting to the Naga river to allow smaller vessels into its quay without disembarking in Pasacao. Attested by Fray Antonio de San Gregorio on 13 July 1656 to the King, he wrote in his report:<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=75}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=de San Gregorio |first=Antonio |title=Puntos Tocantes a esta Provincia de Camarines |date={{date|1656-07-13}} |pages=AFIO 92/7 |language=es |trans-title=Points Concerning this Province of Camarines}}</ref> {{Blockquote|text="Gov.-Gen. Tavora ordered the opening of a creek running close to the port of Pasacao to link this river from Naga so that the commodities needed by his Majesty could be easily brought to the port and that Indians may bring theirs."}}These plans however were ultimately scrapped due to the project's logistical complexities.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=75}}
==== New developments and demographics ==== Throughout the 17th century, despite the languishing state of the city, many civic, religious, and infrastructural developments were made during this period. One such example was the evolution of the Hospital de San Diego: in 1623, the building was replaced by a lime and stone structure renamed ''Hospital Real de Cáceres'' (Royal Hospital of Cáceres) on a ranch in the village of Sorral (present-day stretch of Peñafrancia from Colgante Bridge to San Francisco Church) donated on 13 September 1625 by a Spanish couple. A Dutch raid in 1648 reduced the infirmary to bamboo, which was subsequently rebuilt as a sturdier structure in 1650. In 1663, the structure endured damages from a typhoon. Despite the high-maintenance of the hospital, it was preserved administration after administration until 1691 where it was ultimately closed by lay supervisors for the reason thereof.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|pages=66-68}}
Aside from infrastructural growth, the native populations of Naga and Tabuco were generally praised for their cooperation and fealty under Philip IV, evidenced by a memorial of Juan Grau y Monfalcon ''procurador general'' (Procurator General of the Philippines) in 1636. Grau detailed their nonrebellious nature, valiance in fighting alongside the Spaniards, competence in shipbuilding (especially in Pasacao) and as proficient boat rowers; he proposed honoring such individuals with higher ranks in the militia.
==== Ciudad de Nueva Cáceres in the 18th century ==== Nueva Cáceres in the 18th century underwent heavy demographic changes, with migration from the Manila Galleon brought about many Chinese migrants, Spanish ''peninsulares'', and among many Filipino ethnicities across the archipelago, inflating the aggregate population by 1,576 in the years 1738 and 1744 according to a Franciscan census.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=90}}
A 1772 report of Bishop Antonio de Luna established the four ''pueblecillos'' (little town) of Naga, Tabuco, Sta. Cruz, and Camaligan, and a total population of about 1,200 villagers per locality; this was a natural evolution from the ward-oriented propios of the 16th and mid-17th century. In a 1776 census report, Naga then had 964 while Camaligan had 1,666.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=90}} Some of the pueblecillos in the 18th century had attained the zenith of their territorial expanse: Sta. Cruz, by far the largest, had the ''visitas'' "Peña de Francia, Tarosanan, Sungay, Dalipay, or Dominding, and Pasacao." Both Tabuco and Naga only had a single visita each, with Tabuco having Burabod, whereas Naga had Sorral, where present-day Peñafrancia Avenue is located. More visitas were established in the following decades.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=97}}
===== Chinese discrimination ===== thumb|A high-class Sangley woman, usually found selling in the Pariancillo of Nueva Caceres. The first Chinese settlers and eventually merchants of Nueva Cáceres were dated to have arrived around the mid-17th century, with San Gregorio's report reporting "some 10 or 12 houses..." by 1650.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=92}} Known as "Sangley," from "xung-lei" meaning "merchant" in Pinyin, the Chinese were predominantly merchants by trade, with most originating from Molo, Iloilo. These Sangleyes came to form the "Pariáncillo" (small Parián) of Nueva Cáceres. But, in time, they eventually grew to be the victims of the colonists' and natives' racist policies, implemented to deliberately restrict their social mobility in the diocese. In 1725, a bishop forbade "the faithful" to listen to Chinese music or watch any of their stageplays as "they were full of superstition and idolatry." Even Rev. Fr. Isidro Arevalo in 1742 requested Gov.-Gen. Gaspar de la Torre y Ayala to deny immigrant Sangleyes travel permits into the city.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=94}}
In 1741, Arevalo issued the year's ''Arancel Eclesiastico'' (a kind of church tariff), which often stratified demographics by social caste. The mestizo sangleyes were categorized along with indio principales and criollos, racially implied as privileged, whereas full-blooded sangleyes and ''españoles'' were expected to shoulder a greater fee. A prerequisite to be issued a "domestic residential visa" was to be accustomed with the Doctrina Christiana, of which many non-Hispanicized Sangleyes lacked this requirement. Because of such discriminatory stipulations, much of the collective Chinese community left for elsewhere.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=|pages=93-94}}
===== The origins of Our Lady of Peñafrancia (1696−1741) ===== thumb|285x285px|A souvenir maganize for the Our Lady of Peñafrancia Festival {{Circa|1941}} In 1696 or 1697{{Disputed inline|date=May 2026}}, Rev. Fr. Miguel Robles de Covarrubias, O.P. was assigned to a small parish of the Diocese of Cáceres. A seminarian of the University of Sto. Tomas, he carried the Marian devotion of Virgin of Peña de Francia from his hometown in Salamanca where he would often apply the devotion's face card upon his sickly father's body as a "cure"; his father being a Spanish official in the Philippines facilitated his ordainment in the Diocese of Cáceres. For such intent, Covarrubias vowed to enshrine his devotion in Nueva Cáceres.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=68}}<ref>{{Cite web |last=EWTN |date=2024-01-02 |title=The Little-Known Story of Our Lady of Peñafrancia, a Filipino Devotion Known for Its Healing Miracles |url=https://ewtn.no/the-little-known-story-of-our-lady-of-penafrancia-a-filipino-devotion-known-for-its-healing-miracles/ |access-date=2026-05-11 |website=EWTN Norge |language=nb-NO}}</ref>
Throughout the early 1700s, Bishop Fray Andrés González of the diocese had gradually promoted Covarrubias to pastor, vicar general, then provisor of the old cathedral. Under his tutelage, he was given an opportunity to proselytize the Virgin devotion to the upland nomadic tribes from Isarog petitioning to reside in a ''sitio'' within the diocese's jurisdiction. González appointed Covarrubias as their pastor, with him preaching the Virgin of Peña de Francia in a rudimentary structure. In 1709, Covarrubias, with the support from González, ordered the construction of a much sturdier chapel, being finished the following year.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=69}}
In the early 18th century, the Marian devotion fully flourished as a regional symbol of pilgrimage, with people reportedly flocking to the chapel during ''Saturday Novenas'' and masses. Covarrubias was shortly re-appointed to Manila, unknown whether he was dead or alive by 1741, where Most Rev. Ysidro de Arevalo, DD had established the chapel as a stone edifice.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Peñafrancia History |url=https://www.archdioceseofcaceres.org/pe%C3%B1afrancia-history |access-date=2026-05-11 |website=Archdiocese of Cáceres |language=en}}</ref>
===== Galleon monopoly and the effects of ''polo y servicio'' ===== Throughout the 18th century, ''"polo y servicio"'' (forced labor) became increasingly abused by the colonial authorities through the mass conscription of indios of Naga and Tabuco into the ''astilleros'' (shipyard) of porttowns such as Pasacao in the assembly of galleons and in portering maritime trade, primarily employed via the ''repartimiento'' system by the alcaldes-mayores involved in private monopolies. This was attested by Bishop Matos on 13 June 1759:<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=87}} {{Blockquote|text="...the custom of paying not more than a real for the baggage work at Pasacao should be condemned as unjust, exception is made when the work is completed in only two days from the time the indio left his house until his return there."|author=Manuel Matos|title=El Obpo de Nueba Cazeres en phelipinas supl a VM que se digne de mander para alivio de los Yndios de los dos Obpdos Nueba Cazeres y Nueba Segobia vacante}} Notwithstanding the injustices experienced by the indios exploited in the galleon trade, the production of commodities supplementing the shipyards providing indios daily wages, such as the abaca rope industry, also grew increasingly corrupt.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=88}}
===== Continuation of poverty ===== The limited forages of Nueva Cáceres for amassed agrarian reformation, the town's interdependence on the other ''pueblos'' for basic supplies, and the widespread exploitation of the native population by their colonial wards and the royal authorities resulted in immense population and capital flight. As early as 4 May 1703, Rev. Fr. Andrés González described the troubled state of the cathedral of which could only exist through donations, detailed in an excerpt of his report to Philip V of Spain:<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=89}} {{Blockquote|text="...the cathedral...is so poor...it does not even have any amount for its annual expenses for its ornaments...it is so poor that it does not have any income which Your Majesty had appropriated nor from where it may come..."|author=Rev. Fr. Andrés González|source=4 May 1703}}
This cycle of poverty endured throughout the breadth of the century, through 1792 as implied by Bishop Domingo Collantes.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=89}}
===== Beginning of industrialization (1704−1780s) ===== On 23 August 1704, Gov.-Gen. Don Domingo de Zabalburu y Balanchana de Echavarri ratified the creation of the Real Compra de Bandala for Camarines (a system forcing natives to sell rice at low, fixed prices for the Manila government and to supply the Galleon Trade), outlining an initial quota of 4,000 chinantas or 25,000 kilograms of abaca and 2,000 gantas or 6,000 litres of oil.<ref name=":14" />{{Reference page|page=442}} These were received by the alcalde-mayor and juez of Camarines in Nueva Cáceres on 9 November of the same year but were ultimately left unhonored.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Declaring Bandalas – Repatriating a Lost Library of the Spanish Pacific |url=https://1762archive.org/declaring-bandalas/ |access-date=2026-05-11 |language=en}}</ref>
For the span of 50 years, this fundamentally aided the industrialization of Nueva Cáceres in cordage manufacture. According to the Gov.-Gen. Don Francisco José de Ovando's report on 9 August 1752, it was mentioned that the province of Camarines was a major abaca supplier to the Manila-based ''Real Compra de Bandala,'' supplying ''"4,000 chinantas of abaca at two pesos per chinanta...in the cordonerias (cordage factory)."'' Simply put, by the mid-century, supposedly around 1750, according to Jesuit historian Pedro Murrillo Velarde, Nueva Cáceres had already underwent industrialization through its first cordage factory.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|pages=82-83}}
On 10 March 1785, the ''Real Compañia de Filipinas'' (Royal Company of the Philippines) was issued a decree to import Philippine products to Spain and Europe, especially silk and mulberry relative to Camarines. In 1795, the ''pueblos'' of Tabuco, Naga, and Sta. Cruz were notable for their high agricultural yield, being turned into plantations under the authority of alcalde-mayor Carlos Connelly and the locality's ''cabezas''. Tabuco had accumulated 150 mulberry, Naga, 15,127 mulberry and 172 trunks of pepper, and Sta. Cruz with 1,000 plants. Due to the reported productivity, a Chinese silkworm expert was sent and the Royal Company built a short-lived silk factory in Nueva Cáceres.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|pages=84-85}}
In 1785, the presence of the Royal Company in Nueva Cáceres also brought about the introduction of the tobacco monopoly. Two years later, in 1787, a civic-wide incident occurred where the city's residents, especially the rice farmers enduring harsh farming conditions of ''amihan'', succumbed to tobacco addiction. The natives also grew impatient of the colonial government's payment for the indebted tobacco acquired from their plantations, enlargening the social unrest that culminated in a city-wide arson. The intercession of the bishop and the diocesan clergy ultimately killed the tobacco trade in Nueva Cáceres.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=85}}
===== Sole Moro raid in Nueva Cáceres (September 1757) ===== In September 1757, a Moro excursion that destroyed 10 Camarines towns entered Nueva Cáceres under of the cover of night. While the entire city evacuated sporadically, Fr. Manuel Matos remained in the convent where the church and the rest of the city were seemingly spared. On 29 June 1758, Matos recorded in his letter to Charles III of Spain:<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=87}}<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Mallari |first=S.J. |title=Muslim Raids in Bicol, 1580-1792 |url=https://archium.ateneo.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1452&context=phstudies |journal=Philippine Studies: Historical and Ethnographical Viewpoints |volume=34 |issue=3 |pages=21 |via=Archium Ateneo}}</ref> {{Blockquote|text="...undoubtedly greater than at any other time."|source=Domingo Abella, Bikol Annuls (Manila: n.p., 1954), 1:105-06.|author=Matos, 29 June 1758}}
{{Quote box | title = Late 18th century Nueva Caceres | quote = "A street running from south to north. From the Episcopal Palace Garden follows the Royal Warehouse made of stone. From there follows a long line of private houses. At the back of the Episcopal Palace stands a factory building of the garden of some two hundred brazas length, made of bamboo and straw. Retunring to the seminary which is near the river, it is followed by various houses, and fronting the warehouse is the Casa Real made of stone where the alcalde-mayor resides and is also near the river. This is what is known as the city formed by districts of Tabuco, Sta. Cruz, and Naga, administered by the Franciscans and which tend to both sides of the mentioned river of Naga." | author = Most Rev. Fr. Domingo Collantes | source = 1792 | width = 25% }}
===== Outward expansion of infrastructure ===== In 1764, under the guidance of Bishop Manuel Matos along with the local principalía, a road was constructed in Sta. Cruz dubbed later in subsequent decades as ''"Igualdad."'' (present-day Gen. Luna St.), the first significant public infrastructure built in a long time. Despite the swampy trail, this was cleared and from 1783, it began to host processions to and from churches during annual Feasts of the Holy Rosary and Holy Week.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=95}}
By 1791, two bridges made of wood, bamboo, and palm leaves were erected across the Naga river from Nueva Cáceres to both Naga and Tabuco (now the Panganiban and Tabuco Bridge). The construction of these bridges virtually ended centuries of racial segregation between the local indios and the Spaniards; from then on out, the socioeconomic disparities of a cosmopolitan Nueva Cáceres were to be blurred by this act of reconciliation to create a much inclusive society.<ref name=":1" />{{Reference page|page=97}}
==== Ciudad de Nueva Cáceres in the 19th century ==== For hundreds of years during the Spanish colonial era, Naga grew to become the center of trade, education, and culture, and the seat of ecclesiastical jurisdiction in Bicol. The city became large and prosperous as the 1818 Spanish census recorded the area as having 5,739 native families and a large number of Spanish-Filipino families that then ballooned to 301 in number.<ref name="Buzeta">{{cite book |last1=Buzeta |first1=Manuel |last2=Bravo |first2=Felipe |title=Diccionario Geográfico, Estadístico, Histórico, de las Islas Filipinas |date=1850 |publisher=Imp. de D. José C. de la Peña |location=Madrid |language=es |url=https://digilib.ust.edu.ph/digital/collection/section5/id/66220/rec/1 |access-date=March 18, 2026 |via=University of Santo Tomas Digital Library and Archives}}</ref>{{rp|605}}
===Nueva Cáceres during the Philippine Revolution (1896-1899)===
==== The "Fifteen Martyrs of Bicol" ==== {{Main|Fifteen Martyrs of Bicol}} After the discovery of Andrés Bonifacio's Katipunan in 1896, Gov.-Gen. Ramón Blanco's colonial administration escalated crackdown efforts throughout the archipelago on similar large-scale and non-clerical societies such as the Freemasonry.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=113}}<ref name=":8">{{Cite web |title=Naga City's Panoramic Development: From a Glorious Past to a Towering Future – CITY OF NAGA |url=https://www2.naga.gov.ph/naga-citys-panoramic-development-from-a-glorious-past-to-a-towering-future/ |access-date=2026-04-25 |language=en-US}}</ref> From August to December 1896, the civil government of Ambos Camarines under Gov. Ricardo Lacosta had issued several orders of arrest against certain individuals across the province, especially those with ties to fraternal societies modelled similarly to the Katipunan. In protest, an influential native of Nueva Cáceres, Ramon Feced, formed the revolutionary militia unit called the "''Cuerpo de Voluntarios''."<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=113}}<ref name=":9">{{Cite web |last=Ibalon |first=Dateline |date=2025-01-11 |title=The Quince Martires of Bicol: Heroes of the Philippine Revolution {{!}} Raul F. Borjal |url=https://dateline-ibalon.com/2025/01/the-quince-martires-of-bicol-heroes-of-the-philippine-revolution-by-raul-f-borjal/ |access-date=2026-04-25 |website=DATELINE IBALON |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name=":8" />thumb|260x260px|A monument in Naga City built in 1919 to commemorate the Fifteen Martyrs of Bicol during the Philippine Revolution. 11 of the 15 martyrs were sentenced to death by musketry in Bagumbayan, Laguna (now Rizal Park) on 3 January 1897: Tomas Prieto, Mariano Melgarejo, Florencio Lerma, Macario Valentin, Gabriel Prieto, Manuel Abella, Cornelio Mercado, Domingo Abella, Camilo Jacob, Severino Diaz and Inocencio Herrera.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=113}}<ref name=":9" /><ref name=":8" />
The remaining four martyrs were sentenced differently: Leon Hernandez was imprisoned in the Nueva Cáceres Municipal Jail where he was tortured to death; Mariano Ordenaza was sentenced to a 20-year imprisonment in Bilibid by the ''Consejo Real'', later dying behind bars; both Ramon Abella and Mariano Arana were exiled off to Fernando Po Island in Spanish Guinea where Arana succumbed to malaria while Abella was pardoned, later dying in Cartagena, Spain.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=113}}<ref name=":9" /><ref name=":8" />
==== Locally led revolt of Angeles and Plazo (1898) ==== {{Main|Liberation of Nueva Cáceres (1898)}}
On 18 September 1898, Gen. Vicente Lukbán's successful military campaign in Ambos Camarines, and subsequently throughout the peninsula, prompted reactive Spaniard authorities to disarm the local Guardia Civil garrison in Nueva Cáceres, disclosing to them that they were to be in active deployment in Iloilo against the Revolutionary Government.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":7">{{Cite book |last=Ataviado |first=Elias |title=The Philippine Revolution in the Bicol Region |publisher=New Day Publishers |year=1953 |isbn=971-10-1004-6 |edition=2nd |location=Quezon City, Philippines |pages=116–118 |language=en|volume=I (August 1896 to January 1899)}}</ref>
Initial frights of an organized mass execution by Spanish auxiliaries immediately escalated into an internal revolutionary plot in the span of a single day, organized by Corporals Elias Angeles and Felix Plazo with majority support among the units against the Spanish. Their uprising was partly inspired by Ildefonso Moreno's quelled revolt in Daet, being a part of the contingent that quashed the rebellion.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":7" /><ref>{{Cite web |last=Ibalon |first=Dateline |date=2025-01-27 |title=Ildefonso Moreno: Leader of the 1898 Daet Revolt |url=https://dateline-ibalon.com/2025/01/ildefonso-moreno-leader-of-the-1898-daet-revolt/ |access-date=2026-04-27 |website=DATELINE IBALON |language=en-US}}</ref>
During Nueva Cáceres' Peñafrancia Festival on 18 September, the Spanish decided to rearm the Guardia Civil upon considerations of an insufficient Spaniard police force incapable of crowd control. The Guardia Civil rebels utilized the festivities throughout the day as cover to the preparatory prelude of Nueva Cáceres' uprising. At midnight, the revolutionaries caught the civil authorities by surprise in their sleep, forcing a citywide battle throughout the entire night. The rebels executed key Spanish officials such as Capt. Francisco Andreu, Ambos Camarines' Guardia Civil commander, along with his family; and Lt. Miguel Dias de Montiel with his wife sharing a midnight coffee.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":7" />
The remaining Imperial personnel numbering 400 resorted to the besieged San Francisco convent, to which the rebels threatened to burn the church if the defense had not surrendered by 14:00. A Fr. Gonzales of the convent served as an intermediary, establishing contact with the rebels. 25 weapons were surrendered, with the following on the next day. Don Vicente Zaldin expressed the total capitulation of the Spanish defense. The terms of capitulation were formally signed at the women's college Colegio de Sta. Isabel, taking effect at 10:00 on 20 September 1898.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":7" />
From then on, Angeles assumed the position of Gobernador Politico-Militar, with Plazo as the commander of the Guardia Civil. Upon the arrival of Gen. Lukban in October 1898 by the detachment led by Capt. Arcadio Gisala<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=118}}, the Spanish authorities were officially declared as ousted from office upon the constitutional institution of the Philippine Revolutionary Government.<ref name=":7" /> thumb|right| A display at Museo Historico de Universidad de Sta. Isabel depicting Elias Angeles and Felix Plazo, two Bicolano revolutionaries during the Spanish period.
A city ordinance, passed by the Naga City Government, designates September 19 as Liberation Day in the City of Naga. This is ordinance number 2006-050. The ordinance also outlines activities for commemorating Liberation Day and allocates funds to support them.<ref>https://www2.naga.gov.ph/culture-and-heritage-and-naming-of-streets/. Copied 10-06-22.</ref>
=== Invasion of Nueva Cáceres during the Philippine-American War (1899−1900) ===
==== Background ==== The United States' refusal to recognize both the terms of the Filipino delegates enshrined in the Treaty of Paris and the First Philippine Republic's sovereignty and state independence altogether eventually sparked the first engagement of Filipino combatants with American forces in the Battle of Manila on 4 February 1899.
==== Defense of Ambos Camarines ==== Shortly after the battle, President Emilio Aguinaldo relegated Gen. Antonino M. Guevarra under Gen. Lukban's command in the defense of Ambos Camarines and Nueva Cáceres. In early 1899, approximately 1,700 Republican soldiers and additional municipal militias collectively referred to as the ''Sandatahanes'' comprised Guevarra's main fighting force, with a roster of native commanders such as Colonel Bernabe Dimalibot, Col. Ludovico Arejola, Col. Ursua, and Lt.-Col. Elias Angeles.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|pages=120-121}}
In late 1899, the Republican army, with the compounding losses in the northern Tagalog region, commenced with a fallback strategy based on guerilla warfare in desperation. The attritional warfare against a superior force thereby crippled Arejola's numbers to just 500 personnel by the time the Americans arrived in Ambos Camarines in early 1900.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=121}}
==== American landings into Ambos Camarines (February 1900) ==== On the early morning of 20 February 1900, two battalions on the USS Montañez from both the 45th Regiment, led by a Major Cole, and 40th Regiment, led by a Maj. Casey, of Gen. John C. Bates' and James M. Bell's 1st Division, XIII Army Corps, led by a Lieutenant-Colonel Parker, was the first contingent in Ambos Camarines, landing four miles off Calabanga.<ref name=":10">{{Cite book |last=Ataviado |first=Elias |title=The Philippine Revolution in the Bicol Region (Narrative of the Philippine Revolution in the Province of Albay) |publisher=New Day Publisher |year=1941 |isbn=978-971-10-1216-8 |edition=2nd |volume=II (February 1899 to April 1900) |location=Quezon City, Philippines |publication-date=2011 |pages=91–96 |language=en}}</ref>
On the same day, a battalion of the 40th Regiment, led by a Maj. McNamee, landed on a marshy shore three kilometers from Barcelonita, with the regiment commander, Col. Godwin, leading the push inward. This detachment encountered fierce resistance in the town of Libmanan led by Col. Ursua, leading to a notorious two-day skirmish that resulted in the deaths of 64 Filipinos and wounding 21 others in total on both sides.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":10" />
From 8:15 to 16:00, Lt.-Col. Parker's contingent endured heavy attritional warfare waged by Bikolano guerillas from the beachhead to the town of Calabanga. Capt. Cogswell, one of the company commanding officers of Maj. Cole's battalion, managed to successfully capture Calabanga in the late afternoon of the 20th.<ref name=":10" />
==== Inland skirmishes into Ambos Camarines ==== At 7:15 on the following morning, the rest of the Lt.-Col. Parker's companies, excluding Maj. Casey's, marched toward Barrio Carolina. After three hours, they occupied the barrio without resistance, albeit they stumbled upon an abandoned armory, destroying it subsequently. Carolina, the highlands of Nueva Cáceres, was the first district of the city to succumb to the American occupation. At 2:00 PM, this detachment carried their pursuit towards Palestina. During the march, Maj. Cole's battalion found a certain "Rodriguez" for directions, leading his unit into the contigious swamp, whether maliciously or not, then ultimately into the middle of a wide rice paddy. During this period, fleeing revolutionaries on the same road managed to transport all the Spanish prisoners in the adjacent localities further from the front.<ref name=":10" />
Maj. Cole's battalion was forced to retreat for the night. After a lake-crossing on the following morning, the unit made its way into Barrio Concepcion. This detachment witnessed "a considerable number of Filipinos wielding rifles, arrows, and bolos" on the road to Nueva Cáceres from Concepcion, although the expeditionary forces largely held this sight with disregard.<ref name=":10" />
==== Logistical errors ==== In the morning of the 21st, the seven remaining companies directly led by Gen. Bates landed at Barrio Cabusao after some reconfiguration with the watercrafts ''Marietta, Tartar,'' and ''Baltimore'' after ''Montañez'' ran aground on the mouth of the Bicol River. At evening, the USS Paragua arrived at San Miguel Bay to ferry the beached company aboard the Montañez, forming a flotilla after the vessel's reshoring. The entire western detachment converged at Libmanan, crossing the Bicol River at 10:30.<ref name=":10" /> thumb|301x301px|A map of Nueva Cáceres' extent in the province of Ambos Camarines from the late 19th century to the early 20th century.
==== Skirmishes in the outskirts of Nueva Cáceres ==== At noon, the collective expeditionary force under Gen. Bates had marched from Cabusao to Magarao, now bound for Nueva Cáceres. B Company of the 45th Regiment defended the ford while the whole of E Company boarded boats tugged by the ''Paragua'' heading for the capital''.'' The native guerillas committed to a scorched earth policy upon their arrival to Magarao, attested by the immolation of Quipayo Church, Calabanga Town Hall, and eventually the Canaman parish.<ref name=":10" />
==== Capture of Nueva Cáceres ==== Lt.-Col. Parker's contingent in Barrio Concepcion marched toward Nueva Cáceres in the afternoon of the 22nd, suspecting a resistance numbering "50 rifles, two cannons and a group of macheter wielders." Meanwhile, the rest of the battalions towed by the USS Paragua docked at Nueva Cáceres' quay at about 14:00, with the contingent having disembarked completely by 16:30 with Gen. Bates himself and his staff. Lt.-Col. Parker and Gen. Bates bivouacked at the city center, organizing into one unit in the abandoned locality.
Gen. Guevarra demanded the evacuation of the entire city from the advancing American expeditionaries.<ref name=":2" /> The Spanish and Chinese communities were "ordered to leave before the invaders arrived." The retreating revolutionaries dragged Spanish prisoners, dubbed "''cazadores''" (hunters), into the slopes of Mt. Isarog, Pasacao, and southern Libmanan.<ref name=":10" />
==== Subsequent resistance and total capitulation (1901) ==== In spite of the resistance that was continued by self-appointed General and Commander-in-Chief Ludovico Arejola from that year to the following year, Nueva Cáceres became the salient of the American forces into the five military districts of the Bikolano guerillas. Then, on 31 March 1901, Arejola formally ordered the complete capitulation of Bikolano resistance and surrendered unconditionally to Gen. Bates in the provincial capitol of Nueva Cáceres.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|pages=122-123}}
=== American colonial period ===
==== Reduction of Spanish-era cuidad bureaucracy (1900−1909) ==== The American colonial period of Nueva Cáceres begun in 1901 with the encampment of the transitional Third Military District of the Department of South Luzon with the city as its headquarters, first led by Gen. Kobbe then Gen. Bell. On 3 October 1903, the Spanish "Cuidad de Nueva Cáceres" was eventually reduced to an American-styled municipality by virtue of Act No. 959 of the Philippine Commission in furtherance of centralization efforts, thereby annexing the municipalities of Canaman and Camaligan into Nueva Cáceres' recognized territory. An excerpt of the legislature read:<ref>{{Cite web |title=Act No. 959 |url=https://lawphil.net/statutes/acts/act1903/act_959_1903.html |access-date=2026-05-08 |website=lawphil.net}}</ref>
{{Blockquote|text="The municipality of Nueva Caceres shall consist of its present territory and that of the municipalities of Camaligan and Canaman, except the barrios of Talidtid and Fundado in the present municipality of Canaman, with the seat of the municipal government at the present municipality of Nueva Caceres."|author=Philippine Commission|title=Act No. 959, 23 October 1903|source=Section 1.4}}
Notwithstanding this diminution, Nueva Cáceres was still widely recognized as the cultural, religious, and commercial capitol of the Bicol Region, with the incipient porttown of Legazpi serving as the "economic epicenter".<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=129}}
In 1909, Canaman and Camaligan seceded as independent municipalities by efforts of Philippine Legislature 6th Senatorial District Rep. Tomas Arejola from the territorial jurisdiction of Nueva Cáceres, thus the reduction in 4.22% of its population (19,223 to 9,393) from 1903 to 1918.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=128}}<ref name=":14">{{Cite book |last=Sanger |first=Gen. J. P. |title=Census of the Philippine Islands Taken Under the Direction of the Philippine Commission in the Year 1903 |last2=Gannett |first2=Henry |last3=Olmsted |first3=Victor |date={{date|June 1, 1905}} |publisher=United States Bureau of the Census |edition=2nd |volume=II (Population) |location=United States |publication-date={{date|June 1, 1905}} |language=en}}</ref><ref name=":15">{{Cite book |last=Buencamino Sr. |first=Felipe |title=Census of the Philippine Islands Taken Under the Direction of the Philippine Legislation in the Year 1918 |last2=de los Santos |first2=Epifanio |date={{date|1921}} |publisher=Census Office of the Philippine Islands |year=1921 |edition=2nd |location=Philippine Islands |publication-date={{date|1921}} |language=en}}</ref>
==== Nationalism and the renaming of Nueva Cáceres to Naga (1901−1919) ==== In the early decades following the Philippine Revolution, an unprecedented surge in Filipino and Bikolano nationalism, unimpeded by tolerant authorities, formulated a new regional policy to the urbanites of Nueva Cáceres, both through the romanticization of the Filipiniana period with its revolutionary heroes (the late 19th century) and embracing linguistic purism in place and street names.<ref name=":13">{{Cite web |last=Ibalon |first=Dateline |date=2025-07-08 |title=American Colonial Era in the 1900s: with excerpts from Leo Paulo Imperial's Lecture “Naga Under the Stars and Stripes” |url=https://dateline-ibalon.com/2025/07/american-colonial-era-in-the-1900s-with-excerpts-from-leo-paulo-imperials-lecture-naga-under-the-stars-and-stripes/ |access-date=2026-05-07 |website=DATELINE IBALON |language=en-US}}</ref>
===== Namechange to Naga (February 1914) ===== These increased nationalistic sentiments were the main causes of Nueva Cáceres' name-change. Eventually, on 28 February 1914, by virtue of Act No. 2390 along with other different municipalities nationwide, the by-then 335-year old Spanish name of Nueva Cáceres was officially renamed to its native and present-day name ''"Naga,"'' based on the pre-Hispanic settlement on the opposite bank to Nueva Cáceres. Below is a verbatim excerpt of Act 2390 guaranteeing the namechange.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=126}}<ref name=":13" /><ref>{{Cite web |title=Historical Backgound – CITY OF NAGA |url=https://www2.naga.gov.ph/historical-backgound/ |access-date=2026-05-07 |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Act No. 2390 |url=https://lawphil.net/statutes/acts/act1914/act_2390_1914.html |access-date=2026-05-08 |website=lawphil.net}}</ref>*/ {{Blockquote|text=...that of Nueva Caceres, Province of Ambos Camarines, to Naga;...|author=Philippine Legislature|title=Act No. 2390, February 28, 1914|source=Section 1}}
===== Dissolution of Ambos Camarines and Plaza Rizal (March 1919) ===== On 3 March 1919, the dissolution of Ambos Camarines into Camarines Sur and Camarines Norte, by virtue of Act No. 2809,<ref>{{Cite web |date={{date|2019}} |title=Act No. 2809 - AN ACT TO AUTHORIZE THE SEGREGATION OF CAMARINES NORTE FROM THE PROVINCE OF AMBOS CAMARINES AND RE-ESTABLISHMENT OF THE FORMER PROVINCE OF CAMARINES NORTE. AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES. |url=https://elibrary.judiciary.gov.ph/thebookshelf/showdocs/28/34350 |url-status=live |access-date={{date|9 May 2026}} |website=Supreme Court E-Library}}</ref> led to the subsequent replacement of the Alfonso XII monument with the Rizal monument in the newly dubbed "Plaza Rizal" also from the name "Plaza Alfonso XII," sculpted by famed artist Crispulo Zamora.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|pages=126-129}} On the same year, the Quince Martires monument in the present-day Quince Martires Plaza was erected.
==== Thomasite-based curriculum reform in Naga (1901−1940s) ==== On 21 January 1901, Act No. 74 was enacted into law, creating the Department of Public Instruction (DPI). On 21 August of the same year, approximately 500 educators from different institutions across the continental United States arrived in Manila aboard USAT Thomas, whom they came to know themselves as "Thomasites."
In 1902, the Vacation Normal School in Nueva Cáceres was opened to native educators, facilitating the fast growth of primary and secondary education in the municipality.<ref name=":2" />
In 1903, a North American-styled grammar school in Nueva Cáceres was opened by the DPI where it immediately amassed a daily attendance of 39 pupils; many recognized the residents of Nueva Cáceres, especially Americans in particular, to be insatiable for knowledge. By around 1905, according to the annual census, daily primary school attendance defaulted at 951.<ref name=":2" />
On July 15, 1903, the first Thomasite high school in Nueva Cáceres was opened to the public known as the "Provincial High School of Nueva Cáceres," (now Camarines Sur National High School) headed by Principal Frank L. Crone and his female assistant. Erstwhile, this high school reached as far as 185 daily attendees.<ref name=":2" />
==== Logging industry, abaca trade, and electrification (1900s−1916) ====
===== Nueva Cáceres' logging boom (1900s) ===== From the wake of the American administration, their architecture styles, most particularly observed in then-Nueva Cáceres, were oriented more toward frugality and mass-manufacturing with structures ordained to be made primarily of wood,<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=132}} with Art Deco prevailing as a major architectural design.
This led to the lumber business boom in both Camarines Sur and Norte during the early 19th-century fixed in the venture town of Naga, amounting to a ₱7.2 million peso-worth logging industry (hundreds of millions of pesos in 2025 standards). Many domestic hardware firms arose from this period such as the American ''Marsman Development Co.'', ''Villasol Lumber Mill'', one of local politician Mariano Villafuerte's countless ventures, and ''Bicol Lumber Mill''.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=133}}
===== Nueva Cáceres' housing boom (1930s) ===== Lumber aided the proliferation of subdivision housing in Naga, the first of its kind in the late 1930s pre-war. One of these were the Modern Naga Subdivision, in present-day Bagumbayan Sur, which was once a swampy area and had to undergo tenacious terraforming before its parcels could be sold commercially. The subdivision's proprietor was the brother of Bishop Pedro Paulo Santos, the Bishop of Cáceres, and thus encouraged Manila-based Jesuits to erect an Ateneo institution in the municipality of Naga. From the late 1930s, construction firms also organized themselves as a profitable trade in Naga, with a few such as Luis Tayag's San Angelo Construction Co. spearheading the construction of what would become Ateneo de Naga's first main building.
===== Nueva Cáceres' involvement in the abaca trade (1900s) ===== Aside from local logging, the Insular Government also stimulated Nueva Cáceres' historical abaca trade through a concerted allocation for agrarian commerce. According to the 1903 census, approximately 98,259 piculs (an archaic Chinese measurement based on the weight of a carrying pole) or 5.9 gigagrams of manila hemp out of Ambos Camarines' 251,969.<ref name=":14" /> Then, in 1905, Nueva Cáceres yielded about 36,702, indicating a significant decrease in the municipality and divestment to Albay's native plantations.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|pages=134-135}}<ref name=":15" />
===== Electrification in Naga (February 1916) ===== On 24 February 1916, Mariano Abella, an influential magnate, was granted a 50-year electrical franchise to operate exclusively in Naga and in surrounding municipalities by virtue of Act No. 2647. An excerpt of Act 2647 entails:<ref>{{Cite web |date={{date|2019}} |title=Act No. 2647 - AN ACT GRANTING TO MARIANO ABELLA E ISAAC A FRANCHISE TO INSTALL, OPERATE, AND MAINTAIN AN ELECTRIC LIGHT, HEAT, AND POWER SYSTEM IN IHE MUNICIPALITY OF NAGA, PROVINCE OF AMBOS CAMARINES, PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. |url=https://elibrary.judiciary.gov.ph/thebookshelf/showdocs/28/32042 |url-status=live |access-date={{date|9 May 2026}} |website=Supreme Court E-Library}}</ref>
{{Blockquote|text="...there is hereby granted to Mariano Abella y Isaac, his successors or assigns, for a period of fifty years from the passage of this Act, the right, privilege, and authority, to construct, maintain, and operate in all streets, public thoroughfares, and public places within the limits of the municipality of Naga, Province of Ambos Camarines, Philippine Islands, poles, wires, and all necessary apparatus and appurtenances for the transmission and distribution of currents for electric power, heat, and light, and for any other purpose for which electricity may be used, and to furnish electric power, heat, and light..."|author=Philippine Legislature|title=Act No. 2647, 24 February 1916|source=Section 1}}
===== Birth of theatre and American recreation in Naga (1920s) ===== thumb|280x280px|Naga, Camarines Sur (1935)|left The unprecedented investment into franchised electricity ushered in a new era of industry and commerce for Naga and Camarines Sur during the 1920s, especially with the arrival of Western recreation during the early 19th century including organized American sports, such as basketball and baseball, along with silent theatre.
During the 1920s, the historical theatre scene in Naga emerged upon the screening of the first silent motion picture in Naga, with ''Cine Union'' serving as the locality's first moviehouse from 1910 onwards by businessman Bernard McGinley; albeit, the establishment experienced financial difficulties and was thus closed in 1924. ''Cine Cita'' in the 1920s was another moviehouse that suffered the same malaise. In 1923, the first theatre by migrant couples Victor Bichara Sr. and Emily Panayotti, Lebanese and Palestinian, was established from a purchased lot of land by Robert Manley, a famous American lawyer whom resided in Naga.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|pages=129-130}}<ref>{{Cite web |last=Bernadas |first=Keren Anne |date={{date|14 February 2024}} |title=Century-old Bichara Cinema pushed to be declared a heritage site in Naga City |url=https://pia.gov.ph/news/century-old-bichara-cinema-pushed-to-be-declared-a-heritage-site-in-naga-city/ |url-status=live |access-date={{date|8 May 2026}} |website=Philippine Information Agency}}</ref>
==== Foreign investment and rapid urban development in Naga (1920s−1940s) ==== Along with theatre came the introduction of global import investors into the municipality. In the late 1920s, the Manila-based Philippine corporation Erlanger and Galinger, Inc., a well-known importer of office supplies and electrical appliances, set up a regional distribution center in Naga.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=130}}
===== Hotel boom in Naga ===== During the 1930s, domestic commerce exacerbated by the municipality's economic momentum from the 1920s brought many business ventures and trade investments from across the archipelago. Short-term lodgings, such as inns and hotels, thereby became a popular source of income in Naga, as attested by the municipality top three hotels: the ''Libmanan Hotel'', opened in February 1933 by cultural writer Jacinto Ursua, on Balintawak St. and the subsequent ''Bicol Hotel Grocery'' equipped with a restaurant and bakery; the relatively luxurious ''Ritz Hotel'' in the mid-1930s owned by Spanish mogul Jose Centenera, now replaced by the present-day ''Crown Hotel'' on corner Mabini and P. Burgos St.; and the ''Royal Hotel'' of Julio Ortiz.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|pages=130-133}}
{{Gallery|title=Naga hotels during the 1920s to 1930s|align=center}}<gallery mode="packed" widths="240" heights="240" style="text-align: center;"> File:Newspaper advertising of the Bicol Hotel Grocery in Naga, Camarines Sur.jpg|Another advertising for the Bicol Hotel Grocery {{Circa|1939}} File:1930s newspaper advertising of the Ritz Hotel in Naga, Camarines Sur.jpg|An advertising in the newspaper for the Ritz Hotel in Naga {{Circa|1920s}} File:Newspaper advertising of the Libmanan Hotel in Naga, Camarines Sur.jpg|An advertising in the newspaper for the Libmanan Hotel in Naga {{Circa|1920s}} </gallery>
===== Cuisine popularity in Naga ===== Restaurants of various cuisines from gimmick-oriented joints, bakeries, to cafes, predominantly of both Chinese and American origin, boomed along with the commercialism of Naga in the 1920s to 1930s. A key few establishments included the ''Sanitary Bakery and Grocery'', the Chinese pastry joint ''Cu To Cu'', the Chinese-American restaurant ''Naga Rendezvous'' by Chinese national Yen Nuat, and the Antonio family's ''Bicol Café.''<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=131}}
===== Domestic globally-competent industries ===== Despite the apparent Americanization of Naga's industrial complex, Spanish-era handicraft from the 19th century, such as the manufacture of buri fiber-based (''Corypha elata'') hats, cigars, and cigar cases in Camaligan, were still in high demand.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|pages=135-136}}
Chinese-Filipino industrialists in Naga owned two chewing tobacco factories, with exemplary mogul Dy Chiao's own production line proving most popular, ''La Suavidad'', along with other of his nationalistic-branded tobacco "''La Patria"'' and "''Katipunan."'' During this rapid period of civic industrialization, a globally-renowned textile distributor from across Asia, Europe, and America, the ''La Simpatica Fabrica de Moscada,'' which manufactured ''La Simpatica'' cigarettes, opened two exclusive branches in Naga during the 1920s: ''Bazar Elegencia'' and ''La Bella Bicolana'' both on Gen. Luna St and belonging under the Chinese corporation ''Yu So and Company.'' <ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|pages=135-136}}
=== World War II and Japanese occupation === Naga came under Japanese occupation on December 18, 1941, following the Japanese invasion of Legaspi a few days earlier. Naga, among the other localities in Bicol, was liberated two times solely by Filipinos, without direct American intervention.<ref name="Hyper">{{cite web|title=The First Landings|url=http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/USA-P-PI/USA-P-PI-6.html|access-date=March 18, 2014}}</ref>thumb|Bombed out rubble of a building in present-day J. Hernandez Ave. in Naga during the retaliatory aerial bombings of the Japanese in mid-May 1942.|left
On May 1, 1942, the Camp Isarog Guerilllas from Upper Partido, led by Teofila Padua and Faustino Flor, along with other local resistance contingents, stormed the Japanese garrisons in Naga to liberate American and Filipino prisoners from the Naga Provincial Capitol (now the site of Puregold Naga) . After two days of besieging the Naga Provincial Capitol, the guerilla forces liberated Naga from Imperial Japanese forces and released the prisoners. In response, Governor-General Masaharu Homma, on May 5, dispatched 8,000 Japanese soldiers from Manila to relieve the garrison in Naga, prompting the contingents to flee and concede.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Admin |first=Bicolmail Web |date=2022-07-29 |title=Remembering World War II in the Philippines |url=https://www.bicolmail.net/single-post/remembering-world-war-ii-in-the-philippines |access-date=2025-03-08 |website=bicolmail |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Rugeria |first=Javier Leonardo |date=2023-01-01 |title=Evidence of Active Resistance Against the Japanese before the Fall of Corregidor: The Case of Luzon, 1941-1942 |url=https://www.academia.edu/113732645 |journal=The Journal of Philippine Local History and Heritage}}</ref>
In March 1945, heavy Allied firebombing from the United States Army Air Forces’ Fifth Air Force levelled most of Naga's infrastructure, with only the cathedral, Capitol, Seminary, Peñafrancia Shrine, and a house north of Naga being left unscathed. This elicited the Japanese garrisons to resort to more stalwart strongholds and to strengthen their local counter-intelligence capabilities.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.bicolmail.net/single-post/2018/04/05/world-war-ii-the-bombing-and-liberation-of-naga |access-date=2025-03-08 |website=www.bicolmail.net |title=World War II: The bombing and liberation of Naga |date=April 5, 2018 }}</ref>
On April 5, 1945, Allied Intelligence Bureau (AIB) officer Major Russel Barros, in a meeting at Pamukid Central School, San Fernando, organized a local taskforce to liberate Naga. Major Juan Q. Miranda, one of the famed commanders of the Tangcong Vaca Guerilla Unit, was voted as its overall commander. The task force was composed of six other company columns; Capt. Mamerto Sibulo, Lt. Honorato Osio, Lt. Nicolas Penaredondo, all of the Tancong Vaca Guerilla Unit (TVGU); The Blue Eagle under Lt. Felicisimo De Asis; the Philippine Army Air Corps under Lt. Delfin Rosales; and the Blue Eagle under Capt. Serenilla.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Novice |first=Narratives Of A. |date=2010-02-08 |title=Narratives of a Novice: The D-Day of Naga City |url=https://narrativesofanovice.blogspot.com/2010/02/d-day-of-naga-city.html |access-date=2025-03-08 |website=Narratives of a Novice}}</ref>
On April 9, the joint task force recaptured the abandoned garrisons of Ateneo De Naga campus and Naga Provincial Capitol, engaging only then with the encamped Japanese garrison at the Abella residence by the Panganiban Bridge and the MRR-owned Naga Station at Tabuco.<ref name=":0" /> On April 10, the joint task force met heavy resistance at the Manley residence, requisitioned HQ of the Kempeitai in Camarines Sur, by the Colgante Bridge, with the siege lasting all night until the depleted Japanese fortification fled for the Dayangdang Street. On the following day, the guerillas pursued the tactical withdrawal of the Japanese, until the retreat manned the Diaz hardware. A deadlock was then set in place between the guerillas and the Japanese for the entire day.<ref name=":0" />thumb|Temporary 5th Cavalry Regiment encampment at the Naga Metropolitan Cathedral on April 15, 1945.
On the next day of the 12th, with the overwhelming firepower of a 50. caliber machine gun however, the contingents forced the Japanese to retreat the hardware onwards toward Palestina and Cadlan and eventually out of the town's premises. Some straggling Japanese units retreated to Mt. Isarog via Pacol, consigning them to the U.S Army's Fifth Cavalry Regiment commencement of mopping up operations afterward.<ref name=":0" />
On April 13, 1945, Naga was officially liberated from Japanese occupation.
=== Rapid postwar recovery (1945-1948) === After Naga was liberated from the Japanese, Naga began rebuilding. Having suffered only a few casualties, Naga was able to rebuild quickly after the war.
A good percentage of Naga's infrastructure were destroyed by the bombings. Major roads into and outside Naga were left into substantial ruin. During the war, the Hispanic-era Bishop's Palace was engulfed in uncontrollable flames during the Fifth Air Force's firebombing in 1945. In 1946, the present Episcopal Palace modelled in a contemporary post-war style was the resolution arrived by the Municipal Council. The domestic elites residing on the blocks of Elias Angeles, Gen. Luna, and Mabini also had their homes destroyed during the Allied bombings.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":8" />
==== Re-organization of public bureaucracy and administration (1946) ==== On 14 May 1945, a month after the cessation of hostilities in Naga notwithstanding the Isarog district, the Philippine Civil Affairs Unit (PCAU) attached to the occupying Eighth Army re-established the transitional Municipal Council in Naga, installing Municipal Mayor Ramon Imperial as the presider of the council, with his second-in-command Vice Mayor Blas R. David.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":11" /><ref name=":12" />
Imperial commenced the multi-faceted rebuilding of Naga's civic life and welfare, economy, leisure, and infrastructure directly post-war, stepping down in March 1946 to relegate the mayor position to his successor David. With David as mayor, Domingo A. Escalante was elevated to vice-mayor albeit in a short period of time, then subsequently being replaced by Raymundo O. Martinez in June.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":11">{{Cite web |title=City Officials: 1945-2022 – CITY OF NAGA |url=https://www2.naga.gov.ph/city-officials-1945-2022/ |access-date=2026-04-29 |language=en-US}}</ref><ref name=":12">{{Cite web |title=Historical Backgound – CITY OF NAGA |url=https://www2.naga.gov.ph/historical-backgound/ |access-date=2026-04-29 |language=en-US}}</ref>
This governmental flexibility was not without its issues however; the provincial capitol was heavily damaged during the American bombings, with only one section of the edifice viable for administrative purposes. Without any other feasible sailent to relocate the provincial head, the Municipal Council was shoehorned into this small part of the building until further renovations.<ref name=":2" />
==== Restoration of Naga's public utilities, commerce, and industry (1946) ==== In early 1946, the immediate restoration of Camarines Sur's power grid by the Manila Electric Company (Meralco) sped up reconstruction efforts. By late 1946, Meralco announced its intent to decentralize the grid to the businessmen of Naga by privatizing its sector in Camarines Sur as a local firm. Many domestic magnates proposed amounts reaching ₱270,000 (tens of millions of pesos by 2025 standards), but the acquisition was ultimately handed over to former Secretary of Energy Jaime Hernandez, renaming it "Bicol Electric Company" (BEC). The BEC provided electricity on a 24-hour basis to Naga and its contigious municipalities. Plumbing utilities, provided by the local branch of the National Waterworks and Sewerage Authority (NAWASA), operated similarly except for compulsory nighttime shutdowns.<ref name=":2" />
With the restoration of basic public utilities during the swift period of 1946, the resumption of civic life of Naga after the war was already characterized by the resuscitation of its industrial and commercial economy. By 1946, the lumber and hardware trade surged in lucrativity; new and pre-war parlors and restaurants numbering eight re-opened to the public; and hospitals with electric equipment were able to operate uninterrupted. Recreational establishments flourished with the temporary encampment of the 158th Regimental Combat Team "Bushmasters" on the slopes of Barrio San Felipe: these included theatres such as Alex and Bichara Theatres, Cine Citas; nightclubs such as Dreamland Cabaret owned by Adelino Madrid near the 158th RCT's base; the Plaza Bowling Alley just south of Plaza Rizal, as well as many other establishments reliant on electricity.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":8" />
In 1946, the re-establishment of transportation and communication lines were top priority in the provincial capitol. With the reconstruction of the general road network and the post-war repair of the once guerilla-infested Main Line South railway, the Albert Louis Ammen Transportation Company (Alatco) and the Manila Railroad Co. (MRR) were allowed to continue operations to and from Naga by 1946 to 1947.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":8" /> On 2 November 1946, Far Eastern Transport Inc. (FEATI), which was to be integrated into the Philippine Airlines franchise a year after, christened its Douglas DC-3 airliner, serialized as PI-C39, with the title "City of Naga" at Naga Airport, serving as FEATI's inaugural flight to Naga.<ref name=":2" />
==== Postwar educational boom (1946-1948) ==== The 1946 Peñafrancia Parade reinstated the compulsory participation of schools such as Ateneo de Naga, Colegio de Sta. Isabel, Camarines Sur High School, and Camarines Sur Trade School in civic and co-curricular activities directly post-war.<ref name=":2" /> This encapsulated a region-wide educational demand, with primary to collegiate level students all across the Bicol Region flocking to Naga's academic opportunities.
From 1946 to 1947, most of Naga's modern-day colleges started emerging by-and-large with dense student enrollment rates, as evidenced by a couple of former primary and secondary institutions expanding to the collegiate level. In 1946, from being an exclusively all-girl's normal school, Colegio de Sta. Isabel finally opened its College of Education and College of Liberal Arts.<ref name=":2" /><ref>{{Cite web |title=History |url=https://www.usi.edu.ph/history |access-date=2026-04-30 |website=USI |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=History of Universidad de Sta. Isabel|url=https://www.scribd.com/document/522349853/USI-HISTORY |access-date=2026-04-30 |website=www.scribd.com}}</ref> On 3 March 1947, Dr. Melchor Villanueva founded Naga Teacher's College at a certain Villafrancia's mansion by Peñafrancia Ave, offering a 2-year Junior Normal Curriculum to 114 enrollees in the first year alone.<ref name=":2" /><ref>{{Cite web |last=Ibalon |first=Dateline |date=2023-02-03 |title=Dr. Melchor T. Villanueva {{!}} Lasting Legacy of Education and Service in Naga City |url=https://dateline-ibalon.com/2023/02/dr-melchor-t-villanueva-lasting-legacy-of-education-and-service-in-naga-city/ |access-date=2026-04-30 |website=DATELINE IBALON |language=en-US}}</ref> Then, on 5 June, a men's college in Ateneo de Naga opened with 87 students.<ref name=":2" /><ref>{{Cite web |date={{Format date|2024|}} |title=History - Ateneo de Naga University |url=https://www.adnu.edu.ph/history/ |access-date={{Format date|2026|04|30}}}}</ref> On 1 July, Dr. Jaime Hernandez opened the Nueva Caceres Colleges "with initial courses in Liberal Arts, Commerce, Education" and 958 students in the High School Department.<ref name=":2" /><ref>{{Cite web |date=2025-05-27 |title=Explore the Rich History of UNC |url=https://unc.edu.ph/history/ |access-date=2026-04-30 |website=unc.edu.ph/ |language=en-US}}</ref> On the exact same day, Bishop of Caceres, Most Rev. Pedro P. Santos, DD., opened Naga Parochial School, the first all-boys parochial elementary institution in Naga.<ref name=":2" /><ref>{{Cite web |title=Naga Parochial School - Building Character, Inspiring Minds |url=https://www.nps.edu.ph/about |access-date=2026-05-08 |website=www.nps.edu.ph}}</ref>
Vocational and technical courses also arose during this period, with new academic institutions of the Southern Luzon College, Garcia Business Institute, Elegant Fashion Academy, and etc., funded privately by the caste of the town's intellectuals.<ref name=":2" />
=== Chartered cityhood (1948) === {{main|Cities of the Philippines}}
==== Background ==== Before the introduction of Naga's cityhood in Congress, many attempts to stir popular support were made by the Municipal Council. In early 1948, Patricio Amanse, a Naga lawyer, wrote an article for the Bicol Star detailing how the city's revenue would double without tax increases through the elevation to chartered cityhood status, inviting substantial lobby support from many of the city's commercial demographics.<ref name=":2" />
==== Ratification and inauguration of cityhood ==== thumb|278x278px|left|A portrait of Juan Q. Miranda {{Circa|1947}} Juan Q. Miranda, famed guerilla leader of the Tangcong Vaca Guerilla Unit during World War II, served as Camarines Sur's 1st Congressional District Representative from 1946 to 1949; Miranda was the most influential proponent of Naga's cityhood and its subsequent charter. He was the main author of House Bill No. 1255, titled "An Act Creating the City of Naga," passed into Congress as Republic Act No. 305.<ref>{{Cite web |date={{date|10 May 2026}} |title=Republic Act No. 305 |url=https://issuances-library.senate.gov.ph/legislative%2Bissuances/Republic%20Act%20No.%20305 |access-date={{date|10 May 2026}} |website=Senate of the Philippines Legislative Reference Digital Resources}}</ref>
On 18 June 1948, Representatives Juan Q. Miranda, Tomas Clemente, Toribio Perez, and Senator Vicente Madrigal of the 1st Congress, along with Secretary of Agriculture and Natural Resources Mariano Garchitorena witnessed the signing of RA 305, otherwise known as the "Charter of the City of Naga" by then-President Elpidio Quirino.<ref name=":2" /> On 15 December, six months after the promulgation of RA 305, Naga was officially inaugurated as a city with famed guerilla leader Leon SA. Aureus as its first ever City Mayor.<ref>{{cite web |title=R.A. No. 305, Naga City Charter |url=http://lawph.com/statutes/ra305-naga-city-charter.html |date=1948 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120406114354/http://philippinelaw.info/statutes/ra305-naga-city-charter.html |archive-date=April 6, 2012 |website=LawPH.com |access-date=January 10, 2019}}</ref>
=== Naga in the 1950s === thumb|315x315px|A portrait of the first City Mayor of Naga, Leon SA. Aureus.
==== Mayors during the 1950s ==== During the 1950s, the mayoral makeup of the city shifted often considering Naga was still pegged on bureaucratic appointment. From 1948 to August 1953, Leon SA. Aureus presided over the City Council of Naga; around 1953, charges from supposed "irregularities" were filed against Aureus to his detriment for "(1) violation of civil service law and regulations, (2) maintaining a gambling joint and (3) grave dereliction of official duty," quoted from his presidential exoneration. Below is one of the prosecutor's "unfounded" claims against Aureus: {{Blockquote|text="(b) The charge of nepotism for employing close relatives as janitor in his office and as attendant in the social welfare home is likewise unfounded as the record discloses that their appointments were immediately brought by him to the attention of the proper authorities in Manila, thereby showing respondent’s good faith. Upon instruction of said authorities his appointees were separated from the service."|author=(Sgd.) Elpidio Qurino, Acting President & (Sgd.) Marciano Roque, Acting Executive Secretary|title=EXONERATING MR. LEON SA. AUREUS AS MAYOR OF NAGA CITY|source=[Administrative Order. 218, 6 October 1953]}} On 6 October 1953, Aureus was awarded a presidential pardon by then-President Elpidio Quirino but Aureus had already resigned by then, appointing Anastacio M. Prila as his successor. He served a short tenure from September to January of the following year, subsequently appointing Antonio P. Sibulo who likewise held the position from January to May 1954. After Sibulo, Monico Imperial was inaugurated with a permanent mayorship in June 1954 until 31 August 1959, the longest mayoral term in Naga thus far spanning 6 years.<ref>{{Cite web |title=City Officials: 1945-2022 – CITY OF NAGA |url=https://www2.naga.gov.ph/city-officials-1945-2022/ |access-date=2026-05-09 |language=en-US}}</ref>
During Imperial's administration, he led the completion of road-widening efforts across the city, along with the increased automobile ownership in the 1950s requiring all of the main arteries to be refitted with concrete asphalt. About ₱54,528 were spent maintaining and repairing the roads into and out of Naga. Imperial also oversaw the inception of the present-day City Hall which was then located in the City Heights Subdivision in Barrio Dayangdang, having the structure's construction span his mayoral term from 1954 to 1959.<ref name=":2" />{{Reference page|page=|pages=182-183}}
==== Elevation of Diocese of Cáceres to archdiocese status (1951) ==== {{Further|Archdiocese of Cáceres}}
Two months before the annual Our Lady of Peñafrancia festival that usually occurs in Naga, on 29 June 1951, Pope Pius XII ordained the elevation of the Diocese of Cáceres by virtue of the ''Papal Bull'' ''Quo'' ''in Philippina Republica'' to the Archdiocese of Cáceres. The document also outlined the creation of two new suffragan dioceses: Diocese of Sorsogon, with civil provinces Sorsogon and Masbate; Diocese of Legazpi, with civil provinces Legazpi and Catanduanes. In the interim, both Camarines Sur and Norte remained under the jurisdiction of the greater Ecclesiastical Province of Cáceres.<ref>{{Cite web |title=History {{!}} Archdiocese of Caceres |url=https://www.archdioceseofcaceres.org/history |access-date=2026-05-09 |website=Archdiocese of Cáceres |language=en}}</ref> thumb|Naga, Gen. Luna St. {{Circa|1952}}
==== Transfership of provincial capitol (1955) ==== Enshrined in the Charter of the City of Naga (RA 305) indicated itself a self-determinant municipality, separating de facto with the provincial jurisdiction of Camarines Sur. Between 1948 and 1955, especially with the construction of a new city hall in Naga away from the Capitol, Gov. Juan F. Trivio intiated the transfer of the provincial head from Naga to Pili. This was subsequently passed in Congress on 16 June 1955, with the official provincial capitol serving as the provincial seat of Camarines Sur in Naga being transferred to Barrio Palestina in Pili by virtue of Republic Act No. 1336.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Sur |first=Provincial Government of Camarines |title=Camarines Sur Provincial Government |url=https://www.camsur.com/about/capitol-history |access-date=2026-05-10 |website=Camarines Sur Provincial Government |language=en-PH}}</ref><ref>yes</ref>
=== 21st century === thumb|On 27 May 2026, Leni Robredo announced Ferdinand Marcos Jr.'s proclamation of Naga as a highly-industrialized city. Efforts to convert Naga into a highly urbanized city (HUC) began in 2026 under mayor Leni Robredo's term. The city council passed Resolution No. 2026-078 on 27 January urging President Bongbong Marcos to declare Naga a HUC owing to the city already achieving the required population and income thresholds. Robredo announced on 27 May 2026, on the 68th birth anniversary of Jesse Robredo, her late husband and long-time mayor of Naga, that Marcos signed a proclamation granting Naga's new status. A plebiscite will be conducted by the Commission on Elections within 120 days after the proclamation.<ref name="inquirer-huc" /><ref name="balita-huc" />
==Geography== Naga is located within the province of Camarines Sur at the southeastern part of Luzon, {{convert|15|km}} from Pili and {{convert|435|km}} southeast of Manila, the nation's capital, and near the center of the Bicol Region.<ref>{{cite web | title = Google Maps | url = https://www.google.com/maps/dir/Manila,+Metro+Manila/Naga,+Camarines+Sur/@14.0793282,121.5284983,9z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m14!4m13!1m5!1m1!1s0x3397ca03571ec38b:0x69d1d5751069c11f!2m2!1d120.9842195!2d14.5995124!1m5!1m1!1s0x33a18cad50331fcb:0x1dd856f8b79915ca!2m2!1d123.1948238!2d13.6217753!3e0 | access-date = 25 February 2023}}</ref>
left|thumb|Naga River along San Francisco, Naga City right|thumb|Mount Isarog
It is surrounded on all sides by forests and by rich agricultural and fishing areas. It has an area of 84.48 km<sup>2</sup> and is located on the serpentine and historic Naga River, at the confluence of the Naga and Bikol rivers. Thus, it has always been an ideal place for trade, and as center for schools, church, and government offices. Included in its territory is a portion of Mount Isarog, Barangay Panicuason, a declared protected area known as Mount Isarog Natural Park covering {{cvt|10090.89|ha}}.<ref>{{cite web | title = Mount Isarog Natural Park, Sec. 5 a.1, R.A. 11038, An Act Declaring Protected Areas and Providing For Their Management, Amending For This Purpose Republic Act No. 7658, Otherwise Known As The "National Integrated Protected Areas Systems (NIPAS) Act of 1992" And For Other Purposes. | date = 25 February 2023 | url = https://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/2018/06/22/republic-act-no-11038 | access-date = 25 February 2023}}</ref>
===Climate=== {{Weather box | location = Naga | width = auto | metric first = Yes | single line = Yes | Jan high C = 30.2 | Feb high C = 31.1 | Mar high C = 32.8 | Apr high C = 34.3 | May high C = 34.2 | Jun high C = 32.4 | Jul high C = 31.3 | Aug high C = 30.8 | Sep high C = 31.1 | Oct high C = 31.2 | Nov high C = 31.0 | Dec high C = 30.3 | year high C = | Jan mean C = 25.6 | Feb mean C = 26.1 | Mar mean C = 27.6 | Apr mean C = 29.1 | May mean C = 29.5 | Jun mean C = 28.4 | Jul mean C = 27.7 | Aug mean C = 27.4 | Sep mean C = 27.6 | Oct mean C = 27.3 | Nov mean C = 26.9 | Dec mean C = 26.0 | year mean C = | Jan low C = 20.9 | Feb low C = 21.1 | Mar low C = 22.5 | Apr low C = 24.0 | May low C = 24.8 | Jun low C = 24.4 | Jul low C = 24.1 | Aug low C = 24.0 | Sep low C = 24.0 | Oct low C = 23.5 | Nov low C = 22.8 | Dec low C = 21.6 | year low C = | Jan precipitation mm = 6.3 | Feb precipitation mm = 3.3 | Mar precipitation mm = 7.1 | Apr precipitation mm = 9.3 | May precipitation mm = 100.4 | Jun precipitation mm = 272.7 | Jul precipitation mm = 341.2 | Aug precipitation mm = 398.3 | Sep precipitation mm = 326.0 | Oct precipitation mm = 230.0 | Nov precipitation mm = 120.4 | Dec precipitation mm = 48.8 | year precipitation mm = | Jan rain days = 1.0 | Feb rain days = 1.0 | Mar rain days = 1.0 | Apr rain days = 1.0 | May rain days = 7.0 | Jun rain days = 14.0 | Jul rain days = 16.0 | Aug rain days = 19.0 | Sep rain days = 17.0 | Oct rain days = 13.0 | Nov rain days = 9.0 | Dec rain days = 5.0 | date = April 2012}}
According to the Köppen climate classification system, Naga has a tropical savanna climate.
The weather in the city from March to May is hot and dry, with temperatures ranging from {{convert|24|to|34|C|F}}. The typhoon season is from June to October, and the weather then is generally rainy. From November to February, the climate is cooler with temperatures ranging from {{convert|22|to|28|C|F}}. The average year-round humidity is 77%.<ref>[http://naga.gov.ph/see-naga/plan-your-trip/about-naga/facts-figures/facts-and-figures/ "General Information"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210128162818/http://naga.gov.ph/see-naga/plan-your-trip/about-naga/facts-figures/facts-and-figures/ |date=January 28, 2021 }}. See Naga – Official Website of Naga City. Retrieved on May 13, 2012.</ref>
===Barangays=== Naga is politically subdivided into 27 barangays.<ref name="nscb.gov.ph">{{cite web |title=Municipality/City: NAGA CITY |url=http://www.nscb.gov.ph/activestats/psgc/municipality.asp?muncode=051724000®code=05&provcode=17 |work=PSGC Interactive |publisher=National Statistical Coordination Board |access-date=April 22, 2014 |location=Makati, Philippines |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151113210308/http://www.nscb.gov.ph/activestats/psgc/municipality.asp?muncode=051724000®code=05&provcode=17 |archive-date=November 13, 2015 }}</ref> Each barangay consists of puroks and some have sitios.
320px|thumb|right|Political subdivisions of Naga
{| class="wikitable sortable" |- ! Barangays ! Class ! Population<ref name="NSO10">{{cite web |title=City of Naga |url=https://psa.gov.ph/classification/psgc/barangays/0501724000 |access-date=April 24, 2024 |work=psa.gov.ph |publisher=Philippine Statistics Authority}}</ref> ! Barangay head |- | Abella | Urban | 5,757 | Hon. Apolinario Malana Jr. |- | Bagumbayan Norte | Urban | 2,203 | Hon. Raquel Tutanes |- | Bagumbayan Sur | Urban | 7,867 | Hon. Josephine Camba |- | Balatas | Urban | 11,112 | Hon. Ferdinand De Hitta |- | Calauag | Urban | 11,295 | Hon. Ma. Corazon Peñaflor |- | Cararayan | Urban | 19,692 | Hon. Rodrigo Agravante Jr. |- | Carolina | Urban | 6,870 | Ho. Leoncio Libuit |- | Concepcion Grande | Urban | 11,125 | Hon. Jerrold Rito |- | Concepcion Pequeña | Urban | 25,139 | Hon. Juan Francis Mendoza |- | Dayangdang | Urban | 4,130 | Hon. Julius Cesar Sanchez |- | Del Rosario | Urban | 10,337 | Hon. Jose Peñas III |- | Dinaga | Urban | 344 | Hon. Ma. Cristina Intia |- | Igualdad Interior | Urban | 3,008 | Hon. Angelito Bendiola |- | Lerma | Urban | 1,640 | Hon. Domingo Serrado |- | Liboton | Urban | 3,105 | Hon. Ronald Luntok |- | Mabolo | Urban | 8,125 | Hon. Arthur Matos |- | Pacol | Urban | 14,747 | Hon Ruben Limbo |- | Panicuason | Urban | 3,100 | Hon. Domingo Ramos |- | Peñafrancia | Urban | 4,503 | Hon. Jacky Villafuerte |- | Sabang | Urban | 6,838 | Hon. Cyrus Caballero |- | San Felipe | Urban | 21,098 | Hon. Alfonso Rodriguez |- | San Francisco | Urban | 722 | Hon. Efren Nepomuceno |- | San Isidro | Urban | 3,432 | Hon. Veronica Panganiban |- | Santa Cruz | Urban | 7,135 | Hon. Felix Matias Largo |- | Tabuco | Urban | 4,240 | Hon. Elisa Carmona |- | Tinago | Urban | 2,904 | Hon. Estelita Bautista |- | Triangulo | Urban | 8,702 | Hon. Raymund Arevalo |}
==Demographics== {{Philippine Census | align= none | cols = 1 | title= Population census of {{PH wikidata|name}} | 1903 = {{PH census population|1903}} | 1918 = {{PH census population|1918}} | 1939 = {{PH census population|1939}} | 1948 = {{PH census population|1948}} | 1960 = {{PH census population|1960}} | 1970 = {{PH census population|1970}} | 1975 = {{PH census population|1975}} | 1980 = {{PH census population|1980}} | 1990 = {{PH census population|1990}} | 1995 = {{PH census population|1995}} | 2000 = {{PH census population|2000}} | 2007 = {{PH census population|2007}} | 2010 = {{PH census population|2010}} | 2015 = {{PH census population|2015}} | 2020 = {{PH census population|2020}} | 2024 = {{PH census population|2024}} | 2030 = | footnote= Source: Philippine Statistics Authority{{PH wikidata|population_reference}}{{PH census|2015}}{{PH census|2010}}{{PH census|2007}}{{LWUA population data}} }}
According to the 2024 census, the population of Naga is 210,545 people, with a density of 2,300/km<sup>2</sup>. Naga had an average annual population growth of 1.29% between 2010 and 2020 according to same census. All populated areas of the city are classified as urban. Naga City has about the same population as Legazpi City (209,533).
===Religion===
====Roman Catholicism==== [[File:Peñafrancia Basilica Minore.jpg|thumb|right|Minor Basilica of Our Lady of Peñafrancia]] The city is the ecclesiastical seat of the Archdiocese of Caceres, which oversees the Catholic population in the Bicol Region, whose archbishop is the primate of the region. This dominant faith is supported by the presence of old and influential Catholic institutions, from universities to churches run by different religious institutes, notably the Ateneo de Naga University by the Jesuits; the Universidad de Santa Isabel by the Daughters of Charity; the Naga Metropolitan Cathedral, which is the oldest cathedral that is still standing in Luzon outside Metro Manila; Peñafrancia Basilica Minore, which is the largest Catholic structure in southern Luzon in terms of size and land area; Our Lady of Peñafrancia Shrine; the historic San Francisco Church; and Peñafrancia Museum.
====Other Christian faiths==== Protestant denominations in the city include Seventh-day Adventists and Bible Baptists, whose churches are located along Magsaysay Avenue, while other Protestants attend the Methodist Church which is among the old structures along Peñafrancia Avenue.
The ''Assemblies of God'' maintains a fast-growing ministry in Naga. Aside from Naga Bethel Church (formerly Naga Bethel Temple), which is located on Felix Plazo Street, other local congregations are Philippians Christian Fellowship (in barangays San Felipe), Gethsemane Christian Ministries (in Carolina), and outreach ministries in other barangays.
The largest minority religion in Naga is Iglesia ni Cristo (INC). INC has several chapels in different barangays in the city, and the local congregation is the largest in the district. It is followed by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (formerly known as "Mormon") which has several congregations (wards) with their main church building situated along Panganiban Drive not far from the INC's.
There is also a concentration of Jesus Miracle Crusade ministries in the city.
====Other religions==== right|thumb|Taoist Temple along Naga river
Muslims, Sikhs, and Taoists can also be found in the city.
===Language=== The Coastal Bikol-Central dialect of the Coastal Bikol language is the dominant dialect spoken by the population in Naga.<ref name="NagaDemography">{{cite web |title=Demography |url=http://naga.gov.ph/uncategorized/demography/ |website=Naga City |access-date=April 4, 2019 |archive-date=April 4, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190404072632/http://naga.gov.ph/uncategorized/demography/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> Central Standard Bikol is also the basis for other dialects in the Bicol Region.<ref>{{cite web |title=Useful Filipino Words – Bicol Translations |url=http://www.camsurguidedelights.com/useful-filipino-words-bicol-translations/ |date=2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140427010026/http://www.camsurguidedelights.com/useful-filipino-words-bicol-translations/ |archive-date=April 27, 2014 |website=Cam Sur Guide Delights |access-date=April 4, 2019}}</ref> The majority of the city's population can understand and speak English, Filipino, and Tagalog. Because of the influx of people from the Rinconada area that are studying in different universities, Rinconada Bikol can also be heard in different schools and throughout the city. Some Nagueños have varying degrees of proficiency with Rinconada Bikol, since the southern half of Pili, which is the boundary between Rinconada Bikol and Coastal Bikol speakers, is just few kilometers away from Naga. Although the main language is Bikol, and the medium of instruction in school is English, people in Naga usually tell time and count in Spanish.
====Isarog Agta Language==== In 2010, UNESCO released its 3rd volume of ''Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger'', where three critically endangered languages were in the Philippines. One of these is the ''Isarog Agta'' language, of the Isarog Agta people, who live on Mount Isarog and are one of the original Negrito settlers in the Philippines, belonging to the Aeta people classification but with language and belief systems unique to their own culture and heritage.
Only five Isarog Agta spoke their indigenous language in the year 2000. The language was classified as "Critically Endangered", meaning the youngest speakers are grandparents and older, speak the language partially and infrequently, and hardly pass the language to their children and grandchildren. If the remaining 150 Isarog Agta do not pass their native language to the next generation, it will be extinct within one to two decades.
==Economy== {{PH poverty incidence}} right|thumb|Central Business District 2
Naga is the Bicol Region's center of commerce and industry. Strategically located at the midway of Bicol, Naga is the trade center in Bicol for goods from Luzon and Visayas. Naga was inducted into the “Hall of Fame – Most Business Friendly City” by the Philippine Chamber of Commerce & Industry for being a reliable partner to the business community. Based from the Cities and Municipalities Competitiveness Index (CMCI) released annually by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), National Competitiveness Council, and United States Agency for International Development since 2013, Naga is the number one most competitive component city in the Philippines from 2015 to 2016; and from 2021 to 2024 out of 116 component cities in the country.<ref>{{cite web | title = 2024 RANKINGS OF COMPONENT CITIES| publisher= Department of Trade and Industry | date = 2024 | url = https://cmci.dti.gov.ph/lgu-profile.php?lgu=Naga%20(CS) | access-date = 23 September 2024}}</ref>
The city's economy was severely impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic during mid-2020 and was estimated that its assets contracted by around 4% and an unidentified number of small to medium businesses closed. In the 2nd quarter of 2021 following the 11-12% quarterly growth of the country, several businesses in the city reopened. From 2021, the city is experiencing steady economic improvement and growth.
===Business districts=== left|thumb|Naga City People's Mall (Public Market) right|thumb|Plaza Rizal
Downtown Naga (commonly called "Centro") is located in the southern part of the city. It is bordered on the north by the Naga University Belt and on the south by the historical Naga City People's Mall or simply Naga City Community Supermarket. It encompasses the three public plazas of Naga: The Plaza Quince Martires, The Plaza Quezon, and the Plaza Rizal, which is the center of Central Business District 1 (CBD-1). Downtown Naga is the location of local businesses that sell local delicacies and native products from neighboring municipalities and provinces.
right|thumb|Panganiban Drive
A second business district, known as the Central Business District 2 (CBD-2), is located along Panganiban Drive and Roxas, Ninoy, and Cory avenues. It is also the location of several shopping complexes (S&R, Landers, SM, Robinsons and LCC Malls, a central bus terminal and PUV south-bound terminal,<ref name="NagaBusTerminal">{{cite web |title=P2.9M ingreso kan bus terminal cada bulan |trans-title=P2.9 million for the bus terminal |url=http://naga.gov.ph/news/p2-9m-ingreso-kan-bus-terminal-cada-bulan/ |website=Naga City |language=fil |access-date=February 13, 2019}}</ref> and the Naga City IT Park, which houses several business process outsourcing offices.<ref name="BicolMailPerez20150227" />
===South Riverfront growth area=== South Riverfront is composed of the whole of Barangay Sabang except those areas that are socialized housing sites or are otherwise excluded by the Naga City land-use plan for commercial or industrial development. It is bordered by CBD-1 (to the east), the Naga River, and the town of Camaligan, Camarines Sur.<ref name="NagaSouthRiverfront">{{cite web |title=South Riverfront Growth Area |url=http://naga.gov.ph/invest/growth-areas/south-riverfront-growth-area/ |website=City Government of Naga |access-date=January 12, 2019}}</ref>
===Magsaysay district=== right|thumb|Naga City-Magsaysay skyline.
The main road in the city is Magsaysay Avenue, or Boulevard, which runs from Bagumbayan Road (Naga-Calabanga–Siruma–Garchitorena–Partido North Road), connecting it to Magsaysay district, where accommodations and restaurants catering to travelers are found.<ref>Atiyah, Jeremy (2002). [{{Google books |plainurl=yes |id=uRX5zMsCeNgC |page=880 }} "Rough Guide to Southeast Asia"], pg. 880. Rough Guides Ltd., London. {{ISBN|1-85828-893-2}}.</ref> Businesses are usually open until late at night, with some shops open 24/7. Naga also has its share of fastfood restaurant chains. The city hall and several provincial offices are also located in the district, around the Peñafrancia Basilica.
===Naga City Industrial Park===
A sprawling 25+ hectares of land is the Naga City Export Processing Zone in Barangay Carolina, Naga City (Proclamation No. 299, s. 2023), to cater light manufacturing industries focused on high-value engineering products destined for export. First of its kind in Naga and the Bicol Region, the export processing zone will boost the city's economy, provide employment opportunities, and bolster the country's export manufacturing sector.
===Banking and finance=== thumb|right|Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (Central Bank of the Philippines) South Luzon headquarters, located at Roxas Avenue, Naga City.
There are currently 470 banking and financial institutions in the city.<ref>{{cite web|title= Regional Economic Center|url= https://www2.naga.gov.ph/opportunities/property-development/|publisher=Naga City Government}}</ref> The city is also home to the regional headquarters of Banco de Oro (BDO), Philippine National Bank (PNB), Metrobank, RCBC, Allied Bank, China Banking Corporation, Philtrust Bank, UnionBank of the Philippines, Philippine Veterans Bank, Asia United Bank (AUB), Maybank, Bank of Commerce, East West Bank, Bank of Makati, Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI), and the Philippine Postal Savings Bank. Government owned and controlled banks which include Landbank of the Philippines and Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) have satellite offices in the city while the South Luzon headquarters of Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), which oversees and regulates banking, financial, and lending establishments in the entire Bicol Region as well as CALABARZON and MIMAROPA, is located in Roxas Avenue.
===Shopping malls and Hotels===
right|thumb|SM City Naga
SM City Naga, the first SM Supermall in Bicol Region opened in 2009. LCC Mall Naga, located at Felix Plazo Street, Sabang was opened in 1997 becoming the city's first full-service shopping mall, while Nagaland E-Mall, was opened in 2004, is in Downtown Naga. Built in 2005, Avenue Square is the region's first "lifestyle center", along Magsaysay Avenue. Super Metro Hypermarket, opened in 2015 is near Bicol Medical Center while Robinsons Place Naga opened in 2017, followed by Vista Mall Naga in 2018 along Maharlika Highway, in Barangay Del Rosario. Both S&R Membership Shopping and Landers Superstore which opened in 2023 and 2024, respectively, are located along Roxas Avenue. Leisure hubs abound in the city proper and suburbs but most of which are in Magsaysay Avenue, Dayangdang, and along Roxas Avenue (Diversion Road). There are more than sixty (60) hotels and inns within the city proper, having two 4-star hotels: Avenue Plaza Hotel and Summit Hotel Naga, and ten (10) 3-star hotels.
===IT–Business Process outsourcing=== thumb|Naga City Technology Park Naga was cited as one of the best places to conduct information technology–business process outsourcing (IT–BPO) activities in the Philippines.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.curranrecruit.com.au/#!BPO-Hot-spots-in-the-Philippines--looking-beyond-Manila-/c15hi/3CB5CF5C-6C36-44CA-82E0-78C458CE16D9 |title=Curran + Associates :: Home |website=www.curranrecruit.com.au |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071211133127/http://www.curranrecruit.com.au/ |archive-date=December 11, 2007}}{{cbignore}}</ref>
As of 2024, the city currently has several IT parks and centers (registered special eco-zones) — the Naga City IT Park (Triangulo IT Park, Proclamation No. 616, s. 2013), ALDP E-Park, ANR Business Center, and the Robinsons Cybergate Naga.
thumb|Cybergate Naga
Current clients include IBM,<ref>{{cite news |work=ABS-CBN News|title=IBM unit to set up BPO facility in Naga City |url=http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/business/05/21/13/ibm-unit-set-bpo-facility-naga-city |date=May 21, 2013 |publisher=ABS-CBN Corporation |access-date=April 6, 2019}}</ref> Quantrics, Concentrix, ProbeCX (formerly known as Stellar), Klasp Global Solutions, and Digital Minds BPO.
==Culture== Naga is considered to be Bicol's cultural center, due to the largest festival in the region, the Peñafrancia Festival, being held in the city.
===Festivals=== thumb|Fluvial Procession for Our Lady of Peñafrancia
====Peñafrancia Festival==== The city celebrates the feast of ''Nuestra Señora de Peñafrancia'' (Our Lady of Peñafrancia), the patroness of the Bicol Regio]. Starting on the second Friday of September each year, the 10-day feast, the largest Marian devotion in the country. The start of the festival is signalled by a procession (or ''Translacion'') when the centuries-old image of the Blessed Virgin Mary is transferred from its shrine at the Peñafrancia Basilica Minore de Nuestra Señora de Peñafrancia to the 400-year-old Naga Metropolitan Cathedral. Coinciding with nine days of novena prayer at the cathedral, the city celebrates with parades, pageants, street parties, singing contests, exhibits, concerts, and other activities. Finally, on the third Saturday of September, the image is returned, shoulder-borne by so-called ''voyadores'', to the basilica via the historic Naga River. The following day marks the feast day of Our Lady of Peñafrancia, when Pontifical High Masses are celebrated in the basilica, attended by hundreds of thousands of faithful devotees.
====Kamundagan Festival==== Naga celebrates the Kamundagan Festival every Christmas. It begins with the lighting of the Christmas Village in the Plaza Quezon Grandstand.
====Kinalas Festival==== Naga celebrates the Kinalas Festival during its yearly anniversary of chartership or cityhood. It honors local delicacies, including kinalas and siling labuyo, with a food contest.
===Food and delicacies=== Naga is known for some native foods and delicacies.
Kinalas and log-log are noodle soup dishes served Bicol style, similar to ''mami'' except for a topping of what looks like a pansit palabok sauce, and the meaty dark soup made from boiling a cow's or a pig's head until the flesh falls off. Kinalas is from the old Bicol word ''kalas'',<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Lisboa |first=Maŕcos de |title=Calas |date=1865 |url=https://quod.lib.umich.edu/p/philamer/aqa2025.0001.001/90?page=root;rgn=full+text;size=100;view=image;q1=calas |dictionary=Vocabulario de la lengua Bicol: compuesto por Maŕcos de Lisboa |page=89 |language=es |access-date=April 8, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Lisboa |first=Maŕcos de |title=Hinglas |date=1865 |url=http://quod.lib.umich.edu/p/philamer/aqa2025.0001.001/182?q1=hinglas&view=image&size=150 |dictionary=Vocabulario de la lengua Bicol: compuesto por Maŕcos de Lisboa |page=181 |language=es |access-date=April 6, 2019}}</ref> which refers to the "fall off the bone" meat that is placed on top of the noodles. The soup is the broth of beef bone and bone marrow (sometimes skull and brain included) or what Manileños call ''bulalo''.<ref>{{cite web |author=Naguenian |title=Kinalas |url=https://kinalasnaga.blogspot.com/ |date=August 23, 2010 |website=Blogspot |access-date=April 8, 2019}}</ref> The soup is topped with very tender meat slices that also come from the head. It is usually served hot with an egg, and sprinkled with roasted garlic and spring onions. Kalamansi and patis may be added according to taste. Kinalas is usually paired with Baduya, or with Banana or camote cue.
Other delicacies, such as, ''buko'' juice, ''nata de coco'', and ''pan de Naga'' are found in the city.<ref>{{cite web |last=Gonzalez |first=Eduardo |title=The Beneficial Buko Juice |url=http://www.pchrd.dost.gov.ph/index.php/2012-05-23-07-46-36/2012-05-24-00-03-06/5588-the-beneficial-buko-juice |date=January 16, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130424040945/http://www.pchrd.dost.gov.ph/index.php/2012-05-23-07-46-36/2012-05-24-00-03-06/5588-the-beneficial-buko-juice |archive-date=April 24, 2013 |website=Philippine Council For Health Research And Development |access-date=April 8, 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |author=Leah |title=Pan de Naga (Pugon Pandesal) |url=https://leahdeleon.com/2012/10/17/pan-de-naga-pugon-pandesal/ |date=October 17, 2012 |website=The Bright Spot |access-date=April 22, 2019}}</ref>
==Sports== thumb|Jesse M. Robredo Coliseum The Metro Naga Sports Complex, in Barangay Pacol, has Olympic-sized swimming pools, tennis courts, and a track oval.<ref name="Tour">[http://naga.gov.ph/see-naga/attractions/heritage-tour/ "Heritage Tour"]. See Naga. Retrieved on June 13, 2012.</ref>
The Jesse M. Robredo Coliseum, formerly the Naga City Coliseum which is renamed in honor of the late DILG secretary and former mayor of Naga, is the largest indoor arena in southern Luzon.
==Transportation== ===Airport=== thumb|Naga Airport The city is served by Naga Airport (WNP) located in Barangay San Jose in the neighboring town of Pili. It has a runway of {{convert|1402|m|ft|sp=us}} and thus is capable of handling only small aircraft.
===Railways=== [[File:WTNaga BAHALANA B47.JPG|right|thumb|Philippine National Railways Naga Station]]
Naga is the regional head office and the center point of the Philippine National Railway's Bicol Line.
Naga, along with adjacent towns and cities from Tagkawayan, Quezon Province to Ligao in Albay, is served daily by the Bicol Express. Naga City to Ligao City, Albay route resumed operations in July 2023, while Naga to Legazpi route resumed in December 2023.
===Roads and bridges=== {{As of|2009|December}}, Naga's total road network is {{convert|185.02|km|mi|sp=us}} in length, of which {{convert|147.67|km|mi|sp=us}} are paved with concrete, {{convert|14.63|km|mi|sp=us}} with asphalt overlay, {{convert|4.10|km|mi|sp=us}} with asphalt, {{convert|11.87|km|mi|sp=us}} are gravel, while {{convert|5.76|km|mi|sp=us}} are dirt. This translates to an increase of {{convert|19.74|km|mi|sp=us}} since 1998.<ref name="NagaTransportation">{{cite web |title=Transportation |url=http://naga.gov.ph/ecological-profile/infrastructure-ecological-profile/transportation-2/ |website=Naga City |access-date=February 16, 2019}}</ref>
The city is connected to the capital Manila by the Andaya and Maharlika highways.
To spur development in the city, the Toll Regulatory Board declared Toll Road 5 as the extension of South Luzon Expressway.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.yugatech.com/news/slex-toll-road-5-to-connect-quezon-province-to-sorsogon/|title=SLEX Toll Road 5 to connect Quezon province to Sorsogon|work=YugaTech|date=August 18, 2020|access-date=January 9, 2021}}</ref> A {{convert|420|km}}, four-lane expressway starting from the terminal point of the under-construction SLEX Toll Road 4 at Barangay Mayao in Lucena City, Quezon, to Matnog, Sorsogon, near the Matnog Ferry Terminal. On August 25, 2020, San Miguel Corporation announced that it would fund the project, which would reduce travel time from Lucena to Matnog from 9 hours to 5.5 hours.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.gmanetwork.com/news/money/companies/752828/san-miguel-investing-p122b-for-slex-toll-road-5-pasig-river-expressway-projects/story/|title=San Miguel investing P122B for SLEX Toll Road 5, Pasig River Expressway projects|work=GMA News Online|date=August 25, 2020|access-date=January 9, 2021}}</ref>
===Public transportation=== thumb|Bicol Central Station The most common vehicles used for intra-city travel are public utility jeepneys (PUJ), multicabs, tricycles (trikes) and e-trikes, and ''padyak''.
PUJs and multicabs, a total of 300+ units, are a major mode of intra-city transport used by regular commuters.
Trikes are the most used land transport in the city. There are around 1,500 units available for hire while 1,150 are for private use. Concerns with abusive local transport drivers, overcharging and traffic violations are reported and handled by the Naga City Public Safety Office and city transport franchising.
''Padyak'' is commonly used in short distances such as subdivisions and barangay roads transportation. They are generally slow and small, perfect for cul-de-sacs and alleys.
Inter-town trips are served by 400+ filcab vans and 700+ jeepneys, while inter-provincial trips are served by an average of 300+ airconditioned and non-airconditioned buses and 80+ Filcab vans.
By 2019, about 50+ taxi units are available in the city. SM City Naga serves are their waiting area for passengers.<ref name="NagaTransportation" />
==Public services==
===Health care===
Naga is the medical center of the Bicol Region. The largest hospitals include the government-owned Bicol Medical Center (1000-bed capacity by virtue of Republic Act No. 11478), and the Universidad de Sta Isabel – Mother Seton Hospital, owned and operated by the Daughters of Charity. The Metropolitan Naga Medical District, in Naga, is the only medical district in Bicol.
thumb|Bicol Medical Center
Bicol Medical Center (BMC) offers residency programs in anesthesia, otolaryngology, head and neck surgery (ENT), internal medicine, pathology and laboratories, obstetrics & gynecology, orthopedics, pediatrics, radiology, and surgery, among others. It is also a base hospital of the Helen Keller Foundation, where eye specialists from all over the country are trained and later assigned to different parts of the Philippines.<ref>[https://bmc.doh.gov.ph/ "Bicol Medical Center"]</ref>
thumb|Naga City General Hospital
Universidad de Santa Isabel - Mother Seton Hospital (USI – MSH), is the largest private hospital in the region by number of admissions, medical equipment facilities, number of beds available, physical structure, and number of board-certified medical consultants. It is the only private hospital in Bicol offering specialty training programs, accredited by the Philippine Medical Association's component society, in major fields of medicine, such as internal medicine, pediatrics, and general surgery.<ref>[http://msh.dcphilippines.org/ "Universidad de Santa Isabel-Mother Seton Hospital"].</ref>
Located in Balatas Development Center, Balatas, Naga City, the Naga City General Hospital (NCGH), was inaugurated last December 12, 2023, to provide top-notch additional medical care and services to Naga City constituents.
NICC Doctors Hospital (Naga Imaging Center Cooperative Doctors Hospital, commonly known as “NICC”) is one of the leading private tertiary hospitals in Naga City, Camarines Sur, and a major component of the health care landscape of the Bicol Region. Strategically located along Roxas Avenue, Diversion Road, Barangay Triangulo, the Level-II hospital has a capacity of 156 beds and serves as a modern referral center for patients in Naga City as well as neighboring provinces across the region.<ref>https://niccdoctorshospital.com/about-us/</ref>
The Plaza Medica houses the Naga Endocrine Laboratory (also called the ''Endolab''), a modern hormone laboratory and facility.
Bicol Access Health Centrum is another large hospital located in the city. It houses the Regional Disease Research Center, the first and only in the region.
Several secondary and tertiary hospitals can be found in the city.
===Waste management and disposal===
====Solid waste==== The main pollutants in the city come in the form of solid waste generated daily. Generally, these wastes come from various sources: residential, commercial, industrial, and institutional.
Naga generates approximately 85.8 tons of waste per year, based on the latest 2009 estimates, where agricultural waste makes up a little more than one-fourth (26%) of the total volume. Food waste makes up a slightly smaller share, at 23%. Paper-based materials compose 12%, while other categories contribute smaller percentages.
Solid wastes are disposed of and collected via the city's garbage trucks, which traverse ten routes on a daily basis. Collected wastes are then dumped at the new sanitary landfill in Barangay San Isidro, where they are segregated according to type of waste, and whether biodegradable or non-biodegradable.<ref>{{cite web |last=Neola |first=Jason B. |title=Solid Waste Management Office created; also named as Special Concerns Office |url=http://naga.gov.ph/naga-smiles-2/solid-waste-management-office-created-also-named-as-special-concerns-office-2/ |website=Naga City |access-date=February 27, 2019}}</ref><ref name="NagaWasteMgmt">{{cite web |title=Waste Management |url=http://naga.gov.ph/ecological-profile/waste-management/ |website=Naga City |access-date=February 27, 2019}}</ref>
====Liquid waste==== A study of wastewater treatment facilities is incorporated in the proposed septage management ordinance, where the city will be very strict in forcing compliance with proper waste treatment by housing and establishment owners. The local water-utility agency has made the Metro Naga Water District its local partner in providing septage services, in exchange for adding environmental fees to water bills.
The new wastewater treatment facility of SM City Naga, operational since April 20, 2009, has a capacity of 500 cubic meters per day; but at present, it is treating only around 200.<ref name="NagaWasteMgmt" />
===Fire safety=== The Naga City Central Fire Station (BFP) is one of the most well equipped fire stations in the country. Other fire stations include Naga Chin Po Tong Fire Brigade, and the Naga White Volunteers.<ref>{{cite web |last=Macatangay |first=Ana-Liza S. |title=Naga City kicks off observance of Fire Prevention Month |url=http://news.pia.gov.ph/index.php?article=861393921793 |date=March 4, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140512223622/http://news.pia.gov.ph/index.php?article=861393921793 |archive-date=May 12, 2014 |website=Philippine Information Agency |access-date=April 10, 2019}}</ref>
===Police and law enforcement=== The city is the location of two of the largest police stations in the Bicol Region. The historic Naga City Police Station (now Naga City Police Office), which had been the military base of operations of the Guardia Civil in the region, during the time of Spanish rule.<ref name="NagaPoliceStation">{{cite web |title=Naga City Police Station |url=http://naga.gov.ph/see-naga/attractions/naga-city-police-station/ |website=Naga City |access-date=April 10, 2019}}</ref><ref>http://r05.pia.gov.ph/index.php?article=861357375545{{dead link|date=April 2019|reason=archive snapshot not found}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Another police office, located in Barangay Concepcion Grande, is the provincial office of the Philippine National Police for Camarines Sur.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Macatangay |first1=Ana-Liza S. |title=PNP CamSur cites outstanding police stations, personnel |url=http://r05.pia.gov.ph/index.php?article=861385550341 |work=Philippine Information Agency |access-date=November 19, 2021 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20140511032639/http://r05.pia.gov.ph/index.php?article=861385550341 |archive-date=May 11, 2014 |date=November 28, 2013}}</ref>
==Education== Naga is the home of the three largest universities in the Bicol Region. The city is also the home of several colleges.
===Tertiary education=== thumb|Ateneo de Naga University [[File:WTNaga BAHALANA A13.JPG|thumb|Universidad de Santa Isabel]]
Ateneo de Naga University is a Jesuit university and the largest Catholic university in the Bicol Region. The school has been accredited by PAASCU since 1979 and is the first university in the Philippines to achieve PAASCU Institutional Accreditation, on top of its Autonomous and Level III status. It is a "center of excellence" in teacher education, and a center of development in business administration, entrepreneurship, and information technology. It has produced animators for the country since it launched its bachelor's degree in animation.
The Universidad de Santa Isabel was inaugurated on April 12, 1869, as a private Catholic university owned and run by the Daughters of Charity and is the "first normal school for women in the Philippines and Southeast Asia and the Heritage and Historical University of Bicol".<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://filles-de-la-charite.org/home-2/|title=Formation - Information - Sharing - Prayer... {{!}} Filles de la Charité de Saint Vincent de Paul|language=en-US|access-date=May 14, 2019|archive-date=February 18, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200218020137/http://filles-de-la-charite.org/home-2/|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03605a.htm|title=CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul|website=www.newadvent.org|access-date=May 14, 2019}}</ref> It was established by six sisters of the order who arrived in the Bicol Region on April 4, 1868, with the Bishop of Caceres, Francisco Gainza, O.P., the founder of Colegio de Santa Isabel.
University of Nueva Caceres was the very first university in Bicol, and is considered to be largest in the region, due to its attendance and size, that offers courses from kindergarten to graduate school. Founded by Dr. Jaime Hernandez in 1948, it has grown to become one of the leading institutions of higher learning in the Philippines. All course offerings are recognized by the government, and the colleges of Arts and Sciences, Education, and Commerce are accredited by the Philippine Association of Colleges and Universities Commission on Accreditation (PACU-COA). Its College of Engineering and Architecture is now one of the few regional centers for technological education in the Philippines.<ref>{{cite web |title=About UNC |url=http://www.unc.edu.ph/campus/?page_id=750 |date=2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131203011411/http://www.unc.edu.ph/campus/?page_id=750 |archive-date=December 3, 2013 |website=University of Nueva Caceres |access-date=April 11, 2019}}</ref>
Technical colleges in the city include the Bicol State College of Applied Sciences and Technology (South East Asian University of Technology), Naga College Foundation, Mariner's Polytechnic Colleges Foundation, AMA Computer College, and STI College.<ref>{{cite web |title=ACLC College |url=http://www.aclc.edu.ph |website=ACLC College |access-date=April 11, 2019}}</ref><ref>[http://www.sti.edu/campuses.asp?id=55 "STI College - Naga"]. STI College. Retrieved on May 13, 2012.</ref> Specialized computer schools include Worldtech Resources Institute (WRI), among others.
The country's oldest live-in Christian higher educational institute for the clergy was established in the city in the early part of the 18th century. The Holy Rosary Seminary (''El Seminario del Santissimo Rosario''), a Roman Catholic seminary run by the Archdiocese of Caceres, has produced 22 bishops, including the first Filipino bishop, Jorge Barlin, and the first Filipino cardinal to work in the Roman Curia, Jose Tomas Sanchez. The seminary has contributed, as well, to the national heritage, through José María Panganiban, Tomás Arejola, and seven of the Fifteen Martyrs of Bicol. On January 29, 1988, the National Historical Institute declared the Holy Rosary Seminary a National Historical Landmark.
===Secondary and primary education=== The government-run Camarines Sur National High School, which was established in 1902, registers over 10,000 enrollees every school year, and it is the biggest secondary school in the region. Among other secondary schools in the city is the Tinago National High School.
Naga City Science High School was established in Naga in 1994. It has pilot curricula, including the Spanish curriculum, which is the third one in the Philippines, and the journalism curriculum, which allows students to receive training and exposure to college-level situations. The school is consistently a champion at the ''Doon Po Sa Amin'' national documentary contest.<ref>{{cite press release |title=Naga generates best hometown stories |url=https://www1.smart.com.ph/about/newsroom/press-releases/csr-news/2014/02/20/naga-generates-best-hometown-stories |date=February 20, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140312213038/https://www1.smart.com.ph/about/newsroom/press-releases/csr-news/2014/02/20/naga-generates-best-hometown-stories |archive-date=March 12, 2014 |website=Smart Communications, Inc. |access-date=April 11, 2019}}</ref>
Two schools in the city, Saint Joseph School (SJS) and Naga Hope Christian School (NHCS), cater to Filipino-Chinese students.
Naga Parochial School (NPS) is the largest parochial school in the region; it receives 850 enrollees yearly. It is run by priests of the Archdiocese of Caceres. It is the first PAASCU-accredited parochial school in the Philippines. Some members of the clergy (63 as of 2007 with 3 bishops) assigned to the city are alumni of the school. Well-known personalities—such as the late Raul Roco, Jesse Robredo, Francis Garchitorena, Luis Villafuerte, Jaime Fabregas, Jonathan Dela Paz Zaens, Archbishop Adolfo Tito Yllana, and Bishop Jose Rojas—are graduates of NPS.
Private schools—such as Arborvitae Plains Montessori, Inc.; Naga City Montessori School; and the Village Montessori School—can be found in the city. Tutorial and review centers for higher education are also found in the city.
==Media==
===Television networks=== {{For|the complete lists of the TV and radio stations|List of television and radio stations in Naga, Camarines Sur}}
All of the major television broadcasting channels' regional offices are located in the city. TV5 Network Inc.'s TV5 airs shows via channel 2 and 22 (both affiliates), GMA Network's channel 7 and GTV channel 28. ABS-CBN TV-11 Naga, ceased operations amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
===Cable/satellite TV, ISPs, Telcos and Cellular Networks=== The city's cable and satellite TV companies include South Luzon Cable and DCTV Cable Network Naga (Formerly SkyCable Naga).
Internet service providers and Telcos include Globe, PLDT/Smart, DITO, Converge, and DCTV. 5G is available in selected areas.
===Radio stations=== Naga has a number of FM and AM radio stations, some of which operate 24 hours daily.
==Notable personalities== <!--NOTE: Only add people with Wikipedia articles as per WP notability.--> *Johnny Abarrientos – a Philippine basketball player who played in the PBA from 1993 to 2010. He is currently serving as a assistant coach of the team Barangay Ginebra San Miguel<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.spin.ph/sports/basketball/news/barroca-draws-comparisons-with-abarrientos-as-he-steps-up-for-injury-hit-san-mig |title=Barroca draws comparisons with Abarrientos as he steps up for injury-hit San Mig | PBA | SPIN.PH |access-date=April 11, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140413132056/http://www.spin.ph/sports/basketball/news/barroca-draws-comparisons-with-abarrientos-as-he-steps-up-for-injury-hit-san-mig |archive-date=April 13, 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref> *Tomás Arejola – was a Filipino lawyer, legislator, diplomat, political writer and a propagandist during the Spanish colonial period. *Joker Arroyo<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Chua-Eoan |first=Howard |title=The Philippines – The Joker Was Not Laughing |url=http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,965575-1,00.html |date=September 21, 1987 |magazine=Time |url-access=subscription |access-date=April 11, 2019}}</ref> – was a statesman and key figure in the EDSA People Power Revolution which evicted then-president Ferdinand Marcos and his family from office. He also served as Congressman of Makati for 9 years, and a member of the Senate for 12 years<ref>Toms, S. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/4609892.stm "The Philippine name game"], ''BBC News'', January 14, 2006. Accessed last February 21, 2007.</ref><ref>Mydans, S. [https://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F40711F739580C7B8DDDA00894DF484D81 "Aquino, Under Pressure, Removes Her Closest Adviser"], ''The New York Times'', September 18, 1987. Accessed last February 21, 2007.</ref><ref>Chua-Eoan, H. [https://web.archive.org/web/20070312221011/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,965575-2,00.html "The Philippines The Joker Was Not Laughing"], ''Time'' p. 2, September 21, 1987. Accessed last February 21, 2007.</ref> *Wally Bayola – is a Filipino comedian, actor, and TV host of ''Eat Bulaga!'' *Ely Buendia – whose real name is Eleandre Basiño Buendia. He is a Filipino singer, frontman of Eraserheads and Pupil *Jose Fabian Cadiz – was a Filipino politician and vice mayor of Marikina. *Dave Capucao – Filipino Catholic Bishop and the fifth Prelate of Infanta *AJ Dee – whose real name is Angel James Dee III, is an actor and an international competitive swimmer, like his younger brother Enchong Dee. *Enchong Dee – whose real name is Ernest Lorenzo Velasquez Dee, is an actor, director and model, and an international competitive swimmer. He is a contract artist of ABS-CBN and has won numerous awards for his work in movies and television. *Andrew E – Filipino singer and rapper *Amalia Fuentes – was a Filipina actress *Kyle Negrito – Filipina professional volleyball player *Victor Dennis T. Nierva – poet, teacher, journalist, theatre actor, translator, graphic and book designer. *Salvador Panelo – former spokesman and chief legal counsel of President Rodrigo Duterte; practicing lawyer known for representing controversial figures. *Jesse Robredo – was a Filipino statesman and former mayor of Naga. Robredo was able to transform Naga from being dull and lethargic to being one of the "Most Improved Cities in Asia", as cited by ''Asiaweek Magazine'' in 1999. During his time in city hall, Robredo was credited for "dramatically improved stakeholdership and people *Leni Robredo – wife of Jesse Robredo, former congresswoman of the Third District of Camarines Sur (2013–16), and the 14th Vice President of the Philippines. *Bembol Roco – Filipino actor *Raul Roco – was a political figure in the Philippines. He was the standard-bearer of Aksyon Demokratiko, which he founded in 1997 as a vehicle for his presidential bids in 1998 and 2004. He was a then senator and secretary of the Department of Education under the presidency of Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. *Tecla San Andres Ziga – female senator in the Philippines notable for being the first woman in the country to top the bar examination for law-degree graduates.<ref name=PS>{{cite web|title=Tecla San Andres Ziga|url=http://www.senate.gov.ph/senators/former_senators/tecla_ziga.htm|publisher=Senate of the Philippines|access-date=November 23, 2013}}</ref> *Adolfo Tito Yllana – catholic Archbishop serving as Apostolic Nuncio to Israel and Cyprus, and Apostolic Delegate to Jerusalem and Palestine
Other personalities include: *Baron Geisler, whose mother hails from Naga *Jomari Yllana, whose parents hail from Naga
==Gallery== <gallery mode="packed"> File:WTNaga EURO B45.JPG|Downtown Naga File:WTNaga EURO A33.JPG|Avenue Square File:Naga city hall.JPG|Naga City Hall File:Malabsay Falls.jpg|Malabsay falls at Mt. Isarog, Panicuason </gallery>
==Sister cities==
===Local=== *{{flagicon|Philippines}} Bacolod *{{flagicon|Philippines}} Cotabato City *{{flagicon|Philippines}} General Santos *{{flagicon|Philippines}} Iloilo City *{{flagicon|Philippines}} Lucena *{{flagicon|Philippines}} Makati *{{flagicon|Philippines}} Ozamiz *{{flagicon|Philippines}} Parañaque *{{flagicon|Philippines}} Quezon City<ref name="QuezonCityGovPH-SisterCities">{{cite web |title=Sister Cities |url=http://quezoncity.gov.ph/index.php/quezon-city-business-district/350-sister-cities |website=The Local Government of Quezon City |access-date=April 9, 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171001010801/http://quezoncity.gov.ph/index.php/quezon-city-business-district/350-sister-cities |archive-date=October 1, 2017}}</ref> *{{flagicon|Philippines}} San Fernando, Pampanga *{{flagicon|Philippines}} Vigan, Ilocos Sur *{{flagicon|Philippines}} Puerto Princesa
===International=== *{{flagicon|USA}} San Leandro, California, United States *{{flagicon|USA}} Scranton, Pennsylvania, United States
==See also== * List of renamed cities and municipalities in the Philippines * Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Caceres * Bicolano People * List of Bicol Region Cities and Municipalities
== Notes == {{Notelist|liststyle=lower-roman}}
==References== {{reflist|40em}}
==External links== {{Commons category}} {{wikivoyage|Naga City}} * {{OSM relation|3084673}} * {{official website|https://www.naga.gov.ph/}} * [{{NSCB detail}} Philippine Standard Geographic Code] * [https://web.archive.org/web/20131004104825/http://census.gov.ph/ Philippine Census Information]
{{Geographic location <!-- This geo box is for DIRECTLY ADJACENT municipalities as standardized for all other municipalities --> | Centre = Naga | North = Bombon / Calabanga | East = Tinambac / ''Mount Isarog'' | South = Pili | Southwest = Milaor | West = Canaman<br/>Camaligan | Northwest = Magarao }} {{City of Naga}} {{Navboxes | title = Articles Related to Naga, Camarines Sur | list = {{Bicol Region}} {{Camarines Sur}} {{Naga City}} {{Most populous cities in Philippines}} {{Philippine cities}} }}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Naga, Camarines Sur Category:Cities in Camarines Sur Category:Populated places established in 1573 Category:Populated places established in 1575 Category:1575 establishments in the Philippines Category:Former provincial capitals of the Philippines Category:Independent component cities in the Philippines Category:Metro Naga