Skip to main content

Paco Market


I'm glad to see now how Paco Municipal market looks and it was restored the way the old Paco Market looks like. Putting your emotion in place, Paco never cease to deliver the Philippine historical aura around the place. Paco is the home of popular people who live as heores and great Filipinos.

Today I bought some food in Paz Paco Manila and how I wonder to have such fresh and cheap products here. If tourist can be brought here from Paco Cemetery where hotels are in place and being near Taft Avenue, the place or market can benefit them from choosing Filipino products like food.

msg)

Popular posts from this blog

What's on Robinson Otis Paco

LEVEL 1 Storename Bacolod Chicken Inasal Binalot BPI Express Banking Chinoy King Dakasi Milk Tea Fortune Fountain Fully Loaded Imono LBC Express M.Y SHOES MADINA Money Changer McDonald's Mercury Drugstore Mr. Quickie MSP Dones Marketing National Bookstore Pho Hoa Restaurant Red Ribbon Robinsons Appliances Robinsons Appliances - L1 New Area Robinsons Supermarket Smart PLDT Payphone Starbucks The Old Spaghetti House Tokyo Tokyo Western Union LEVEL 2 Storename Aficionado Audiophile Avida Land Corp. Avida Land Corp. - Temporary Sales Office Balut Eggspress Big Apple Express Spa CD-R KING Cebuana Lhuillier David's Salon Ecodesign Solutions Inc. Ex...

Bit of History About Paco Manila

Dilao, was a settlement of 3000 Japanese during the Spanish era around the year 1600. The term probably originated from the Tagalog term 'dilaw', meaning 'yellow', which describes their general physiognomy[citation needed]. The Japanese had established quite early an enclave at Dilao, a suburb of Manila, where they numbered between 300 to 400 in 1593. A statue of Takayama can be found there. In 1603, during the Sangley rebellion, they numbered 1,500, and 3,000 in 1606. The Franciscan friar Luis Sotelo was involved in the support of the Dilao enclave between 1600 and 1608. The Japanese led an abortive rebellion in Dilao against the Spanish in 1606-1607, but their numbers rose again until the interdiction of Christianity by Tokugawa Ieyasu in 1614, when 300 Japanese Christian refugees under Takayama Ukon settled in the Philippines. They are at the origin of today's 200,000-strong Japanese population in the Philippines. A Sikh Temple and Unilever Philippines is located...