538 NATIVE TRIBES OF THE PHILIPPINES. 



with A. Schiidonberg-, Volunio VIII, folio .series, Koyal Ethnographic 

 Museum, Dresden, 18i>0.J 



Oulanga, see Guianga. 



GnJanganeH^ see Dulanganes. 



Halaija\. — A Visaya dialect spoken in the interior of Panay. 



Ilaraya. — A Visaya dialect spoken in the interior of the island of 

 Pana}', nearly identical with the foregoing. 



fIUigu(iy)ia\. — A Visaya dialect spoken on the coast of the island 

 of Panay. Variants: Hiligueyna, Hiligvoyna. 



Ilillunas, Hilloonas^ see lllanos. 



Ihalone8\. — Ancient name of Bicols, especially those oi Albay. 



Ihinag. — Name of the language spoken l)y the Cagayanes. They 

 possess the letter/'. 



Idan^ Iclaan. — The Idan. sought by non-Spanish authors on the 

 islands of Palawan (Paragua) atul Sulu, have not been found. 



Ifugaos. — A dreaded Malay head-hunting people who inhabit the 

 provinces of Nueva Vizcaya and Isabela and the lately formed com- 

 andancia of Quiangan. To them belong the Quianganes, Silipanos, 

 etc. They are heathen. Their language possesses the sound of f. 



It'll iiiang'u's. — According to Diaz Arenas, this name applies to a tribe 

 of Igorrotes who were then (1S48) in the province of Nueva Vizca3"a. 

 The /'in their name leads to the suspicion that the}^ are Ifugaos. 



Ihilao-s. — A Malay head-hunting people, having also apparently 

 Negrito blood in their veins. Thev are heathen and inhal)it the border 

 lands of Nueva Vizcaya and Nueva Ecija. 



Igor/'ofc.s. — With the name Ygolot the first chroniclers characterized 

 the warlike heathen who now inhabit Benguet, therefore the pure 

 Igorrotes. Later, the name extended to all the head-hunters of north- 

 ern Luzon; still later it was made to cover the Philippine islanders 

 collectively, and to-day the title is so comprehensive that the name 

 Igorrote is synonymous with wild. According to Hans Meyer, the 

 name^ applies only to the Igorrotes of Lepanto and Benguet, who speak 

 the dialects Inibaloi, Cancanai, Cataoan, and a fourth (Suliin^), that of 

 the Berpe Data. 



Variant: Ygolot, Ygulut. 



[A Chinese- Japanese Tagala group. Brinton, Amer. Anthropolo- 

 gist, 1898, XI, p. 30:^. Consult A. B. Meyer, with A. Schadenberg, 

 in Vol. VIII, folio series of the Royal Ethnographic Museum, in Dres- 

 den, 1890; and Die Igorrotmi von Pangasinan, F. Blumenbritt, by 

 Mittheil. T. K. K. Geogr. Gesellschaft in Wien, 1900, hft 3 u. 4.] 



Ilamut.— Name of an Igorrote tribe always mentioned together with 

 that of Altsanes. If this tribe really exists, its home is in the Cordill- 

 eras which separate Benguet from Nueva Vizcaya, and is to be sought, 

 indeed, in the last-named province, especially in Quiangan. They may 

 be identical with the Alimut. 



