Santa Maria Church (Ilocos Sur)
Santa Maria Basilica | |
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Minor Basilica of Our Lady of the Assumption | |
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Basílica Menor de Nuestra Señora de la Asunción (Spanish) | |
![]() The church in September 2013 | |
Location in Luzon | |
17°22′0″N 120°28′59.2″E / 17.36667°N 120.483111°E | |
Location | Santa Maria, Ilocos Sur |
Country | Philippines |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
History | |
Status | Minor Basilica, Archdiocesan Shrine |
Dedication | Our Lady of the Assumption |
Architecture | |
Functional status | Active |
Heritage designation | National Historical Landmark; World Heritage Site; National Cultural Treasure |
Designated |
|
Architect(s) | Augustinian Friars |
Architectural type | Church building |
Style | Earthquake Baroque |
Groundbreaking | 1765 |
Specifications | |
Capacity | 800 |
Length | 99 meters (325 ft) wide.[1] |
Width | 22.7 meters (74 ft) |
Number of floors | 2 |
Number of towers | 1 |
Number of spires | 2 |
Materials | Brick |
Bells | 6 |
Administration | |
Archdiocese | Nueva Segovia |
Deanery | St. Lucy[2] |
Parish | Our Lady of the Assumption |
Clergy | |
Priest(s) | Fr. Ernesto A. Juarez Jr. Fr. Ramelle J. Rigunay |
Official name | Church of Nuestra Senora de la Asuncion |
Part of | Baroque Churches of the Philippines |
Criteria | Cultural: (ii)(iv) |
Reference | 677bis-002 |
Inscription | 1993 (17th Session) |
Extensions | 2013 |
National Historical Landmarks | |
Official name | Santa Maria Church |
Designated | August 1, 1973 |
Reference no. | No. 260, s. 1973 |
The Minor Basilica of Our Lady of the Assumption, commonly known as Santa Maria Church, Archdiocesan Shrine of Our Lady of the Assumption, and Santa Maria Pro-cathedral, is a Roman Catholic Basilica in Santa Maria, Ilocos Sur, Philippines. The church was designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site on December 11, 1993, as part of the Baroque Churches of the Philippines, a collection of four Baroque Spanish-era churches.[3] It is currently the Pro-Cathedral of the Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia while the Vigan Cathedral is undergoing repairs.
The Santa Maria Church is an attraction to tourists and Catholics in Ilocos Sur. It is a reminder of the four centuries of Spanish domination over the area, and is a unique structure with a diverse architectural design of bricks and mortar. It was built on top of a hill a lookout and a citadel as well as a religious center during the early administration of the region by friars and soldiers of Spain.

Chronicle of Santa Maria Church
[edit]Date | Event |
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1567
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Establishment as Visita - Began as a chapel-of-ease (visita) under the jurisdiction of Narvacan, serving the initial Filipino settler population in the area |
1700
|
The twin chapels of Santa Maria, Ilocos Sur were established during the late 18th century by the Augustinian missionaries as part of their expanding evangelization efforts. These chapels served as satellite places of worship for communities distant from the main church.
The northern chapel is dedicated to Santa Maria Milagrosa (Nuestra Señora de la Asunción) and is locally and lovingly known as “Apo Baket.” This chapel holds special significance due to the local legend of the wandering image of the Virgin, believed to have appeared on a guava tree in this area—an event that led to the decision to build the main church on the hilltop. The southern chapel is dedicated to Señor Santo Kristo Milagroso, a deeply venerated image of the Crucified Christ known for miraculous intercessions. Together, these twin chapels symbolize the deep-rooted faith and religious heritage of the people of Santa Maria. |
before 1765
|
Legend—the Wandering Image - Locals recount that the statue of the Virgin Mary kept disappearing from Bulala and was always found perched on a guava tree atop the hill, prompting relocation of the church to that site |
1765
|
Ground breaking and the beginning of construction - Augustinian missionaries initiated the building of the present hilltop church to honor Our Lady of the Assumption |
1767
|
The earliest recorded baptism in Santa Maria, Ilocos Sur dates back to the year 1767. |
1767
|
Santa Maria, Ilocos Sur was established by the Augustinian missionaries as a mission center for Abra. From this strategic location, they launched evangelization efforts into the interior regions of Northern Luzon, particularly reaching out to the indigenous communities in the mountains of Abra. |
1769
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Officially canonically established as a parish dedicated to the Virgin Mary under the Assumption title. |
1769
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Became Independent Parish |
1801
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Major Renovation by Fray Juan Cardaño - Fr. Cardaño strengthened the structure with massive buttresses, and enhanced the convent and bell tower—solidifying its fortress-like appearance. |
1810
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Bell Tower Constructed - A separate, octagonal pagoda-like belfry was built at a distance from the church to mitigate earthquake damage |
1811
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The year 1811 marked the arrival of the six church bells in Santa Maria namely Nuestra Señora dela Asuncion (biggest located at the central part of the belltower), Sto. Niño (smallest), San Jose (center facing north), San Agustin (topmost facing west), Sto. Kristo (Lower) and Sta. Barbara (topmost facing south). |
1863
|
Defensive Walls and Cemetery Added - A thick retaining and protective wall encompassing the church complex was erected, reinforced with buttresses every ~10 m to withstand seismic activity.
The cemetery and its brick chapel (simborio) associated with Santa Maria Church date back to 1863. During that year, Fray Lorenzo Rodriguez, OSA, oversaw the construction of the protective walls and the cemetery complex at the foot of the hill below the church. Access to the cemetery was provided via a grand staircase and brick walkway, now in ruins and overgrown, leading down from the church |
1863
|
Cemetery Added - The cemetery and its brick chapel (simborio) associated with Santa Maria Church date back to 1863. During that year, Fray Lorenzo Rodriguez, OSA, oversaw the construction of the protective walls and the cemetery complex at the foot of the hill below the church. Access to the cemetery was provided via a grand staircase and brick walkway, now in ruins and overgrown, leading down from the church |
1893
|
Major Renovation of Convent - The convent building in front of the church was significantly refurbished, modernizing the complex. |
1898
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Church Taken Over by the Philippine Independent Church - In 1898, following widespread resentment toward Spanish friars and fueled by the Philippine Revolution, members of the Philippine Independent Church (PIC) seized control of many Roman Catholic churches in the Ilocos region—including Santa Maria Church |
1898
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Santa Maria Church as a Fortress During the 1898 Philippine Revolution. During the Philippine Revolution of 1898, Santa Maria Church in Ilocos Sur played a dual role—not only as a religious center but also as a fortified refuge and stronghold for local Katipuneros and revolution supporters. |
1900's
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Early 1900s travelers (like Henry Savage Landor in 1900) described the structure as grand and castle-like, perched atop a hill with broad stairways and convent terraces. |
1934
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The Benedictine Nuns came to Santa Maria, Ilocos Sur in 1934 and took residence in the old convent beside the church. They used it as a monastic enclosure and served as a contemplative community dedicated to prayer, Eucharistic adoration, and spiritual support to the local faithful. |
1970
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National Landmark - Declared a National Historical Landmark by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines, recognizing its cultural and architectural importance. |
1993
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UNESCO Inscription. Designated part of the UNESCO World Heritage List as one of the Baroque Churches of the Philippines, reflecting its unique hybrid of European-Baroque and local adaptation. |
2010
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Watch and Restoration
Listed on the 2010 World Monuments Watch as endangered; removed after conservation efforts and local protection laws enacted |
2015
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Santa Maria Church joyfully celebrated its 250th year as an independent parish. The milestone also marked 250 years of steadfast Christian faith and devotion in the community. |
2015
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Santa Maria Church was elevated by the National Museum of the Philippines to National Cultural Treasure, under Republic Act No. 10066, recognizing its outstanding cultural, historical, and architectural importance |
2021
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Santa Maria Church underwent significant restoration to preserve its structural integrity and historical value. The project aimed to maintain its status as a UNESCO World Heritage Site and a treasured religious landmark in Ilocos Sur. |
August 15, 2022
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Santa Maria Church was officially elevated to the status of an Archdiocesan Shrine in time for the celebration of the Feast of Our Lady of the Assumption. The recognition highlighted the church’s deep Marian devotion and historical importance in the Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia. |
February 12, 2023
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Along with its elevation as an Archdiocesan Shrine, Santa Maria Church also held the rededication of its altar and retablos. This solemn rite symbolized the renewal of faith and reverence for its sacred heritage. |
2023
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Santa Maria Church was not only elevated as an Archdiocesan Shrine and had its altar and retablos rededicated, but it was also designated as the Temporary Cathedral or Pro-Cathedral of the Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia. This designation affirmed its vital role in the spiritual life and leadership of the archdiocese during a significant transitional period. |
October 7, 2024
|
It was officially announced that Santa Maria Church would be elevated to the status of a Minor Basilica by Pope Francis, making it the second Minor Basilica in the Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia. This distinguished honor highlights the church’s rich history, cultural heritage, and enduring role as a center of Marian devotion and faith. |
August 15, 2025
|
Santa Maria Church is elevated and officially declared as a Minor Basilica by the Papal Nuncio to the Philippines, Archbishop Charles John Brown. This historic event marks its formal recognition as the second Minor Basilica of the Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia, coinciding with the Feast of Our Lady of the Assumption, the church’s patroness. |
Present
|
There are ongoing plans for the Pontifical Coronation of the image of Apo Baket (Nuestra Señora dela Asunción). The venerated image of Apo Baket, known for miracles and intercessions, is central to local devotion. |
History
[edit]The parish of Santa Maria started as a chapel-of-ease (visita) of Narvacan, its neighboring town to the north, in 1567. The influx of the settlers after the full conquest of the Ilocos Region by the Spaniards greatly increased the population of Santa Maria. The chapel became an independent ministry in 1769 and was dedicated to the Virgin Mary under the title of Our Lady of the Assumption.[4] Besides economic progress, evangelical missions were expanded. The mission at Santa Maria, located on a narrow flat plain between the sea and the central mountain range of Luzon, close to the interior settlements, made Santa Maria as the center of both the religious and commercial activities.
According to the legend, before the Santa Maria Church was built on its present site, the Virgin Mary was enshrined at a different place called Bulala. The frequent disappearance of the Virgin Mary from her previous place of enthronement only to be found perched on a guava tree that grew where the present church is located, had led the townspeople to move the church to its present location.
Father Mariano Dacanay, the Ilocano parish priest from September 1, 1902, to May 27, 1922, has another variation of this legend which he assures, was gathered from reliable sources. He relates that the Blessed Virgin was enthroned in another chapel that was formerly erected below the present church and what is now the Sta. Maria East Central School compound. Father Dacanay adds, that from this chapel, the Virgin Mary made her peregrinations to that guava tree on the knoll.
This version of Father Dacanay of the legend gains greater probability if not credence for today, one of the twin structures bearing the features and architectural designs of what could have been a chapel or a church by then obtaining standards remains intact in said school compound and presently used as a classroom for grade school pupils.
Numerous and varying legends or stories about the Virgin Mother have long become part of Philippine religious lore. And if any one of them could be accepted as truth, then it is the blessed Virgin herself who manifested in a miraculous way her preference of a site for her permanent home.
Construction of the present church was started in 1765.[3][5] In 1810, the bell tower was built during the renovation of the church and furnished with a bell the following year. During the renovation of church complex in 1863, the protective wall around the sides of the hill was constructed.[4] After the bell tower was remodeled the same year, its foundation must have gradually settled down making the imposing structure slightly leaning or tilting as it appears today. The convent was greatly renovated in 1895.
Many foreigners who traveled to the north and saw the church were much impressed by its size and setting calling the church as a cathedral. Henry Savage Landor, an English painter, writer and explorer who visited the Philippines in 1900, says:
At Santa Maria a most picturesque church is to be found, reached on an imposing flight of steps. An enormous convent stands beside the church, upon a terrace some 80 feet above the plaza. There are a number of brick buildings, schoolhouses and office, which must have been very handsome but are tumbling down, the streets being in the absolute possession of sheeps [sic], goats and hogs. A great expanse of level land was now well-cultivated into paddy fields and across it is a road fifteen feet wide, well-metalled and with a sandy surface. Barrios and homes were scattered all around the plain.
The church was listed as one of the most endangered monuments in the world by World Monuments Fund in the 2010 World Monuments Watch, along with the Rice Terraces of the Philippine Cordilleras and San Sebastian Church, Manila. All of the sites were taken off the list in 2011 after the passage of the National Cultural Heritage Act.[6]
The parish church was elevated to an archdiocesan shrine on August 15, 2022.[7]
On November 18, 2024, Pope Francis declared the archdiocesan shrine as a minor basilica, making it the second basilica of the province.[8]
Design
[edit]Unlike other town churches in the Philippines, which conform to the Spanish tradition of sitting them on the central plaza, the Church and Convent of Our Lady of the Assumption in Santa Maria are situated on a hill surrounded by a defensive wall on all sides like a fortress. The church can be reached by climbing an 85-step stairway of granite rock. The grand three-flight stairway leads to a courtyard in front of the church doorway where a sweeping view of the lower plains and the town of Santa Maria may be made. A narrow roadway coming from the back of the church also leads up to the courtyard but is only used on special occasions.
Façade
[edit]
The church brick façade has one large portal with three windows. The recessed arched entrance is flanked by a pair of rectangular pilaster dividing the façade into three well-defined planes. The whole façade is then framed on the sides by heavy circular buttresses topped by urn-like finials.
An open pediment in the upper façade is topped by a small cupola. The curvilinear shape of the pediment serves as a graceful finish to the upward movement of the pilasters and the arch entrance. The blind niche, urn-shaped pinnacles and even proportions-overlooking at the top are decorative devices of the upward movement.[9]
Nave
[edit]
The church follows the standard Philippine layout with the façade fronting a long single nave rectangular building. The church measures about 99 meters (325 ft) long and 22.7 meters (74 ft) wide.[1] The thick outer walls have delicately carved side entrances with few openings. The eastern and western side of the outer walls are reinforced by thirteen huge rectangular buttresses each typical of Earthquake Baroque architecture. The first buttress from the front is adorned by a huge relief retelling how the statue of Our Lady of Assumption was found on top of a tree. The relief is visible as one ascends the front stairway. The middle buttress on the eastern wall (back) is built like a staircase for easy maintenance of the roof back when thatched roof was the norm in Philippine churches, before the advent of corrugated galvanised iron (CGI). The lighter CGI roof is also preferred in earthquake-prone areas than tile roof.
Bell tower
[edit]The bell tower is freestanding, constructed separate from the church and not parallel to the façade but situated about a third of the wall from the front. The octagonal four-story tower was built wide, with each level narrowing till it reaches the top, typical of earthquake baroque church towers. The top floor is covered by a dome that is capped by cupola. A cross above the cupola tops the structure. Blank walls are arranged alternately with open windows. Other decorative devices, like single pilasters, finials and balustrades indicate that this form is of later vintage. A clock on the third level faces the stairway for the churchgoers to see. Six bells are hung, five are seen from the outside, and a big bell can be found inside.
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The relief of Our Lady of Assumption on a tree on the first front buttress
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The pagoda-like bell tower
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The elevated walkway connecting the convent to the church
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The stairway leading to the church courtyard
Convent
[edit]In front of the church is the convent, partly blocking the frontal view of the façade of Santa Maria Church. The placement of the convent in front of the church and not adjacent is another unusual characteristic of the building, probably dictated by the long narrow hill on which the church is located. It is accessible from the church by an elevated stone walkway. In the early days of the colonization, the convent was the seat of the ecclesiastical administration as well as home of the church clergies. Under the elevated walkway is a gate that leads to the back courtyard with a commanding view of the back countryside.
Cemetery
[edit]Another wide stairway, similar to the front, leads down from the courtyard to a brick walkway that leads to an old abandoned cemetery evergreen with brush and weeds.[10] Within the brick fence of the square-shaped cemetery are the ruins of an old brick chapel and old graveyards.
Historical designations
[edit]National Historical Landmark
[edit]
The National Historical Institute (now the National Historical Commission of the Philippines) installed a marker next to the door of Santa Maria Church following Executive Order Nos. 260 on August 1, 1973; 375 on January 14, 1974; and 1515 on June 11, 1978, declaring the Santa Maria Church as a National Historical Landmark.[4]
National Cultural Treasure
[edit]With Republic Act No. 10066 - National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009 in place, all structures 50 years or older, structures with historical markers, and all structures designed by National Artists (regardless of age) are now presumed to be declared and cannot be demolished or altered without the permission of the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA). This is an attempt to compile all lists of formally declared cultural and historical structures and sites in the Philippines and make it available to the public via the Internet since the National Museum (NM) and National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP), both under the NCCA, maintain their own lists. Santa Maria Church Complex and Cemetery was declared one of the National Cultural Treasure of the Philippines in 2015 by the National Museum.
Miraculous image of Our Lady of the Assumption
[edit]The statue of Apo Baket is made of wood in ornate sculptural style with ivory face and hands. It is 112 centimeters (44 in) tall. Her hands are extended wide, and her head is looking upward portraying her assumption into heaven. Her blue cape is decorated with silver floral designs and her white dress is embroidered with gold thread motif. She stands on a pedestal of cloud surrounded by angels’ heads. This image, along with her bejeweled dress, was kept in an elaborate carved wooden chest believed to have been used for cargo in galleon ship. Her feast day is August 15.[11]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Measured using Google Earth.
- ^ "Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia". Claretian Publications. Retrieved May 24, 2023.
- ^ a b Dacumos, Jane (August 3, 2012). "The Nuestra Señora de la Asuncion – Ilocos Sur". Vigattin tourism. Retrieved on January 24, 2014.
- ^ a b c National Historical Institute
- ^ "Nuesta Senora de la Asuncion". World Monuments Fund. Retrieved on February 6, 2014.
- ^ Villalon, Augusto F. (November 9, 2009). "3 Philippine monuments land in global endangered list". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved December 16, 2023 – via PressReader.
- ^ "Ilocos Sur's Our Lady of the Assumption Church elevated to archdiocesan shrine". CBCP News. August 15, 2022. Retrieved March 4, 2024.
- ^ "Pope Francis designated Ilocos Sur's Assumption shrine as minor basilica". CBCP News. November 18, 2024. Retrieved November 19, 2024.
- ^ "Sta. Maria Church, Sta. Maria Ilocos Sur.JPG". Wikimedia Commons.
- ^ Imagine.asia. (December 13, 2007). "Santa Maria Church-3". Panoramio. Retrieved on January 6, 2014.
- ^ "Ilokos Religious Imagery", pg, 122.
External links
[edit]Media related to Santa Maria Church (Santa Maria, Ilocos Sur) at Wikimedia Commons
- Santa Maria Church on Facebook
- Baroque Churches of the Philippines - UNESCO World Heritage Site
- Roman Catholic churches in Ilocos Sur
- Baroque church buildings in the Philippines
- National Cultural Treasures of the Philippines
- Shrines to the Virgin Mary
- World Heritage Sites in the Philippines
- National Historical Landmarks of the Philippines
- Brick buildings and structures
- Churches in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Nueva Segovia
- Jubilee churches in the Philippines
- Basilica churches in the Philippines