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The T'boli people () are an Austronesian indigenous people of in southern in the .


Ethnology
T'bolis currently reside on the mountain slopes on either side of the upper and the coastal area of Maitum, Maasim and Kiamba in the province of Sarangani. In former times, the Tbolis also resided in the upper floor of the Alah Valley. After World War II and the arrival of settlers from other parts of the Philippines, they have been gradually pushed to the mountain slopes, and have been almost expelled from the fertile valley floor.

Like their immediate neighbouring ethnic groups, the Úbûs, , Blit, Tàú-Segél, and the , they have historically been described as pagans or animists, as opposed to peoples or settlers. In political contexts, however, the term " " ("native") has become an umbrella term for the various polytheistic peoples of Mindanao.

In ethnographic and linguistic literature on Mindanao, their name is variously spelt Tboli, T'boli, Tböli, Tagabili, Tagabilil, Tagabulul and Tau Bilil. Their is Tboli. In the literature, their whereabouts and identity are somewhat imprecise: some publications present the Tboli and the Tagabili as distinct peoples, whereas some locate the Tbolis in the vicinity of in the or in Agusan del Norte.

Tbolis speak their . However, over the decades, Tbolis can speak and understand , Hiligaynon, and to some extent, , alongside their own native language. These languages were brought and introduced by these settlers from , , , , , , and , upon their arrival into Tboli homelands during the early 20th century.

They are considered to be an indigenous people in Philippine law.


Music
The Tboli have a musical heritage consisting of various types of agung ensembles, which are composed of large hanging, suspended or held, bossed/knobbed that act as drone without any accompanying melodic instrument.

Other instruments include the .


Tboli religion
The Tboli have a tradition of a highly complex religion. However, more recent variants of their religion have been influenced by Islam and . Nevertheless, some continue to preserve religious practices from traditions thousands of years old, while others have involved with syncretic beliefs combining their traditional religious elements with Christianity or Islam.


Immortals
  • Bulon La Mogoaw: one of two supreme deities; married to Kadaw La Sambad; lives in the seventh layer of the universeCasal, G. (1978). The T'boli Creation Myth and Religion. T'boli Art: in its Socio-Cultural Context, pp. 122-123.
  • Kadaw La Sambad: the second supreme deities; married to Bulon La Mogoaw; lives in the seventh layer of the universe
  • Cumucul: son of the supreme deities; has a cohort of fire, a sword, and shield; married to Boi’Kafil
  • Boi’Kafil: daughter of the supreme deities; married to Cumucul
  • Bong Libun: daughter of the supreme deities; married to S’fedat; could not bear children
  • S’fedat: son of the supreme deities; married to Bong Libun; could not bear children; asked Bong Libun to instead kill him, where his body became the land from which plants spout from
  • D’wata: son of the supreme deities; married to both Sedek We and Hyu We; placed the land-body of S’fedat on the sea
  • Sedek We: daughter of the supreme deities; married to D’wata
  • Hyu We: daughter of the supreme deities; married to D’wata
  • Blotik: son of the supreme deities; married to S’lel
  • S’lel: daughter of the supreme deities; married to Blotik
  • B’lomi: daughter of the supreme deities; married to Mule
  • Mule: son of the supreme deities; married to B’lomi
  • Loos K’lagan: son of the supreme deities; married to both La Fun and Datu B’noling
  • La Fun: daughter of the supreme deities; married to Loos K’lagan
  • Datu B’noling: daughter of the supreme deities; married to Loos K’lagan
  • Children of D’wata and Hyu We
    • L’tik
    • B’langa
    • Temo Lus
    • T’dolok
    • Ginton
    • L’mugot M’ngay
    • Fun Bulol: the owner of wild animalsHyndman, D., Duhaylungsod, L., Thomas, B. (1994). To the last grain of rice: T'boli subsistence production. Springer.
  • Children of D’wata and Sedek We
    • Kayung
    • Slew
    • S’mbleng
    • Nagwawang
    • Nga Hule
    • S’ntan
  • Fu: spirits that inhabit and own the natural environmentCudera, R. B., Razon, B. C., Millondaga, K. J. I. (2020). Cultural and ecological significance of Odonata (Insecta) to the T'boli of Lake Sebu, Mindanao, Philippines. Biodiversitas Journal of Biological Diversity.
    • Fu El: the spirit of water
    • Fu El Melel: the spirit of the river
  • D’wata (general): the generic term for the gods;Talavera, Manalo, Baybay, Saludario, Dizon, Mauro, Porquerino, Novela, Yakit, Banares, Francisco, Inocencio, Rongavilla, Cruz (2013). The T'boli: Songs, Stories and Society. University of the Philippines. guard lives and determine fate and destiny
  • Muhen: a god of fate in the form of a bird whose song when heard is thought to presage misfortune; any undertaking is immediately abandoned or postponed when one hears the Muhen singManzano, L. C. The T’boli. National Commission for Culture and the Arts.
  • Glinton: the god of metallurgy


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