530 NATIVE TRIBES OF THE PHILIPPINES. 



(J(if.(ihni</f(,n«.')<. — A Mala}' p(M)ple of Mono-oloid typo. Thov live in 

 the flood plain of the Catalangan river (province of Lsabola de Luzon). 

 They are heathen and peaceable, and have the same lang-uage as the 

 Irayas. [Half Tat^ala and half Chinese, Hrinton, American Anthropol- 

 ogist, 1898, XI, p. 'AO'l. 1 



Cataocm. — A dialect spokiMi by the lo-orrotes of the district of 

 Lepanto, living in the valley of the Abra River. 



V<tti(ha)i(f<ine.s^ or VataJnuufeiu'.s. — Warlike heathen, settled in the 

 mountains of Guinayangan, in the province of Tayabas (Luzon). 

 Through lack of available information nothing can l)e said aliout their 

 race affiliations, whether they be pure Malay or Negrito-Malay. They 

 are probal)ly Remontados mixed with Negrito blood and gone wild. 



Cebuaiw. — Dialect Visaya. 



(JhmirroneH. — This characterization (''"wild,''' "gone wild") is given 

 to heathen tribes of most varied affiliations, living without attachment 

 and in poverty, chiefly posterity of the Remontados. [See note by 

 A. B. Meyer, 1899, p. 12.— Translator.] 



Coyuvos. — The natives of Cuyo archipelago (province of Calami- 

 an(\s). with exception of those who belong to the stock of Agutainos. 

 According to A. Marche, the Coyuvos appear to be Christianized 

 Tagbanuas. For that reason woidd the idiom called official Coyuvo 

 be the Tagbanua. 



Ciildiitanex. — Another name for the Mano])os, who live on the 

 southern portion of the east coast of Davao Bay, the so-called coast of 

 Culaman. 



Diuhtyiuj. — A Malay people, who occupy the mountain wilds in the 

 western part of Cal)agan (proxince of Cagayan). They have a lan- 

 guage of their own and are warlike heathen as well as head-hunters. 



Variant: Dadaya. 



Dup'dan (Nacion de)f. — Title conferred in the sixteenth century 

 on the Visayas of the present comandaiuia of Dapitan (province of 

 Misamis, Mindanao). 



Day1ia(jnu<i\. — According to S. Mas, before the arrival of the 

 Spaniards, the progeny of Borneo-Malays and Negrito women were 

 so called. 



DuJangancs. — This heathen people occupy the southern part of the 

 district of Davao. The name signifies ""wild men." It is not known 

 whether they are pure bloods or Malays with infusion of Negrito blood. 

 I believe that the Malay type predominates. Since they also bear the 

 name of Gulanganes, perhaps, more properly, it is to be suspected 

 that they form with the Mangulangas, Manguangas, and Guiangas 

 (q. V.) a single linguistic group, or at least a stock closely related to 

 them. This is merely a conjecture. By the Moros they are called 

 Bangal-Bangal. 



Dumagat. — A name conferred on the Negritos of the northeast coast 



