The San Agustin Church is located within Manila's walled city Intramuros. It is the oldest existing stone church in the Philippines. Known as the first religious structure built in the northern Philippine island of Luzon during the Spanish colonization, it is the only surviving building in the country kept intact after Intramuros was burnt to the ground during the liberation of Manila in 1945.
The Order of St. Augustine
Built from 1587 to 1607, the San Agustin Church is a Roman Catholic structure under the auspices of The Order of St. Augustine, a religious order of brothers within the Catholic Church. The Augustinians utilized this church as a sanctuary, surviving bombings and natural calamities including two world wars and a series of earthquakes in 1645, 1754, 1852, 1863 and 1880. The structure shielded, nursed and protected many lives and became a witness to centuries of tribulations in Manila's history.
UNESCO World Heritage Site
The San Agustin Church is one of the four Philippine churches built during the Spanish colonial period to be designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site under the classification "Baroque Churches of the Philippines." Since 1976, it has also been named as a National Historical Landmark in the Philippines.
Design and Architecture
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