Datu Piang

Piang Tan (Maguindanaon pronunciation: [daːtʊ pɪjaːŋ]; c. 18461933) a Maguindanaon-Chinese ruler, popularly known as Datu Piang, is often referred to as the Grand Old Man of Cotabato.

Datu Piang
Piang Tan
دات ڤياڠ
大都皮昂
Datu Piang (fourth from left) with American officers, 1899.
Bornc. 1846
Kuta Watu, Sultanate of Maguindanao
DiedAugust 24, 1933 (aged 8687)
Cotabato, Insular Government of the Philippine Islands
HouseSultanate of Maguindanao
FatherTuya Tan
MotherTiko
ReligionIslam

Born of a Chinese merchant named Tuya Tan (陳名頓) from Amoy, China and a Maguindanaon woman named Tiko, he was Datu Utto's Minister of Lands and became the wealthiest and the most prominent datu during the American era. He was a Chinese mestizo due to his Maguindanaon and Chinese mixture. Datu Piang (sometimes referred to as Amai Mingka) was recognised as the undisputed Moro leader in Central Mindanao when the United States Army occupied and administered what was then referred to as "Moroland".

Datu Piang's son by his sixth wife, Polindao, was Datu Gumbay Piang, who led the Moro-Bolo Battalion to fight against the Japanese during their occupation of Mindanao in World War II.

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