Region
7: Central Visayas ••• Bohol Island
Jagna
San Miguel Arcángel
Parish
According to Cavada,
the parish of Jagna was established in1631. The Jesuit priest, José
Sanchez (Josef Zanzini [1616-92]) built a church and convento in
Jagna. Fr. Sanchez was an Austrian who arrived in the Philippines
in 1643 and was assigned to the Visayas where he worked in Bohol
and Leyte. He became vice-provincial for the Visayas. He was a well-known
builder and is reported by Jesuit historian Pedro Murillo Velarde
to have also been responsible for building churches in Loboc, Dauis
and Maribojoc. He embellished the churches with gilded retablos
and for Jagna built a three-story structure in honor of St. Michael.
Unfortunately, the church at Jagna (probably the one built by Sanchez)
was destroyed by an 1808 fire which also damaged the parish records.
By 1886, Redondo documents a rubble church 125 varas (yards)
long, 25 wide and 16 tall until the moldings. He notes that the
church had a nipa roof. Adjacent to the church was the convento
which was built of rubble with a metal roof. Both church and convento
must have been built by the Recollects who assumed administration
of Bohol with the departure of the Jesuits in 1768.
Jagna was a convenient
take off point for Camiguin Island, in colonial times the gateway
to northern Mindanao. Ships coming from the north would island hop,
stopping by Jagna on the way to Mindanao. On a clear day the volcanoes
of Camiguin can be clearly seen.
Heritage
Features:
The present church
of Jagna is greatly renovated. After suffering damage from a typhoon
in the 1980s, its façade was heavily plastered with cement.
The façade is embellished with a pointed arch reminiscent
of Gothic. The church interior is also renovated.

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