Feb 12 2007

Jesuit House of 1730 in Pari-an

Published by Emperor Karl

The article below was published in Cebu Daily News’ Lifestyle Section, June 16, 2007 while the photos where shot on August 14, 2010, a difference of three years. The photos and the accompanying captions may not match the article since the house has just been recently rehabilitated and converted into a museum.


A top view of the main house.

Not many people know of the existence of an 18th-century house in Pari-an, Cebu City that is reputed to be the oldest dated house in the country today. As of now, this house lie hidden behind the very high walls of a warehouse and only its terracotta-tiled roof can be seen if one stands at a particular spot in Colon street specifically near the Obelisk.

The Jesuit House of 1730, as it is known by the year that it was built, was once the residence of the Jesuit Superior in Cebu. When the Jesuits were suppressed in Europe and eventually expelled from the Philippines in 1768, several of their properties were put on sale. During the late 19th-century, a wealthy landowner and rancher from Bohol, Don Jose Alvarez, bought this particular residence. Sometime during the 1950s it was leased by Governor Sergio Osmeña, Jr. where it became an exclusive club for Cebu’s elite.


The contemporary entrance to the residence.

Permission is needed to see this house presently owned by the Sy family, owners of Ho Tong Hardware.The original entrance to the residence is along Binakayan street, a very narrow road, although access to it now is through the main entrance of the warehouse in Zulueta street. Carved monograms or medallions of Mother Mary, the society’s IHS and St. Joseph decorate the lintel of the gate of the original entrance whose door is made of molave and iron. As of now, a steel gate covers the original entrance to protect it from the elements although the medallions are clearly discernible.


Details of a decorative iron work in the wooden door at the original gate entrance of the residence at Binakayan Street.

There are actually two structures, both connected by a bridge, inside the compound that comprise the residence. The two-level main house, also referred to as “House A” in previous articles about it, is made all of cut coral stones similar while the second smaller house (House B) is a bipartite structure of cut coral stone in the lower level and wood in the second level. Although the smaller house bears traces of renovation, both houses still retain the original corbels and the stout wooden posts while the main house still has the original roofing of clay tiles. Iron grilles secure the windows at the upper level of House A. A low relief bearing the words “Año 1730″ can be found above the portal in the interior of House A that opens into the bridge that leads to the smaller house.


A view of the interiors in “House A.”


Details of one of the decorative corbels inside the house


A low relief in one of the walls inside “House A.”

The flooring on both houses is made of alternating planks of light and dark shades of hardwood. According to Fr. Rene Javellana, S.J. in his essay about this Jesuit residence which was published in 1989, House B functioned more of like a roofed azotea where the Jesuits probably spent the afternoon praying alone or was perhaps used for community gathering and recreation. As of now, House B has wooden walls, a ceiling and partitions which were probably just recent additions and not necessarily of 18th century vintage. Chinese influences are very much evident both in the interiors and exteriors. For example, in House B the decorative corbels are very much similar to those found in Chinese temples. At House A, the lines of the clay-tiled roof suggest those of a Chinese pagoda.

The main staircase used to have decorative banisters and newel posts although these are now gone. According to another article written by Fr. Javellana for Panublion, a website about heritage sites in the Visayas, both banister and post were similar in design to those found in the Augustinian monastery at the Basilica Minore del Santo Niño. And when the Alvarez family sold the house to the Sys, they asked for the banister and the post.


The original main entrance to the residence as one enters through Binakayan Street.

Like many old structures of the past, both houses have undergone a series of transformations through the years although both are still intact. House A itself looks very much in good condition that one could hardly believe that it was built in 1730, or perhaps 1750, whichever. Judging from the look of it, this residence can still be rehabilitated to its former grandeur and adaptively reused as a museum. When we speak of Pari-an, what immediately comes into our mind is Casa Gorordo. Now there is this Jesuit House. Cebuanos need to appreciate the historical value of this structure. It would make them proud that they have the oldest dated house in the country today, the second being Casa Ordoveza in Laguna.


The covered bridgeway that connects the two structures that comprise the residence.


The interiors of “House B.”


Details of a post and the decorative corbels in “House B.”

5 responses so far

5 Responses to “Jesuit House of 1730 in Pari-an”

  1. 1
    alex umacob Says:

    I am amazed that the first wave Jesuits (1581-1768) build a residence in Parian. This answers my question that they were indeed in charge of the now non extant parish of Parian, St John. This was demolished not only because of ecclesiastical juridical reasons but of course envy and despair from the Spanish run Cebu cathedral. The Jesuits were originally ministering to the catholic chinese communities in Cebu to which the Parian is the most illustrous.

  2. 2
    Emperor Karl Says:

    Yes indeed. Bruce Fenner’s “A social and economic history of Cebu,” published by the University of San Carlos, gives us more insight about the Parian conflict.

  3. 3
    gaile Says:

    are there any other Jesuit retreat house found in Cebu city?

  4. 4
    Emperor Karl Says:

    There’s one in Banawa.

  5. 5
    gaile Says:

    how about outside Cebu city?

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