Thimuay

Part of a series on the
Pre-colonial history of the Philippines
Social classes
Ruling class (Maginoo, Ginu, Tumao)
  • Apo, Datu
  • Bagani
  • Lakan
  • Panglima
  • Rajah
  • Sultan
  • Thimuay
Middle class
  • Timawa
  • Maharlika
Commoners, serfs, and slaves
  • Aliping namamahay
  • Alipin sa gigilid
  • Bulisik
  • Bulislis
  • Horohan
  • Uripon
Political entities
Luzon
  • Caboloan
  • Cainta
  • Ibalon
  • Ma-i
  • Maynila
  • Namayan
  • Pulilu
  • Sandao
  • Tondo
Visayas
  • Cebu
  • Bo-ol/Dapitan
  • Madja-as
Mindanao
See also: History of the Philippines
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Thimuay (also spelled thimuway, timuay, and thimuway, among other variations) is the name of the most senior ancestral leader among the Subanon people of the Zamboanga Peninsula in the Philippines. Less senior ancestral leaders are called "datu", just as they are elsewhere in the Philippines. Thimuay is equivalent to the titles "lakan", "sultan", or "rajah" in other Philippine cultures.

A greatly honored thimuay is sometimes additionally called a thimuay labi, with the word "labi" simply being a descriptor meaning "highest" or most senior. In predominantly Muslim Subanon communities, the term solotan is sometimes used instead of thimuay.

Prominent thimuay

Perhaps the most prominent modern-day (20th century) thimuay was Thimuay Imbing (sometimes spelled Mbeng), who led the Subanon people from Lapuyan, Zamboanga del Sur during the Philippines' American colonial period. He is perhaps best known for his role in introducing Evangelical Protestantism (through the Christian and Missionary Alliance Churches of the Philippines) to the Subanon of Lapuyan.

See also


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