Our Lady of Peñafrancia, Naga City

    "Where Bicolano faith flows through river and street, carrying a mother's presence to millions"

    Our Lady of Peñafrancia, Naga City

    Naga, Bicol Region, Philippines

    Roman CatholicismSyncretic Bicolano Folk Catholicism

    For over three centuries, the image of Our Lady of Penafrancia has been the spiritual heart of the Bicol Region. Each September, more than a million devotees gather in Naga City for the largest Marian pilgrimage in Asia, carrying their Ina through streets and across waters in a festival that blurs the boundary between earth and heaven, community and cosmos.

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    Quick Facts

    Location

    Naga, Bicol Region, Philippines

    Coordinates

    13.6322, 123.2005

    Last Updated

    Jan 8, 2026

    Our Lady of Penafrancia traces to a Spanish devotion originating in 1434 with the miraculous discovery of a hidden image. Transplanted to the Philippines in 1710 by a grateful seminarian, the devotion took root in Naga City and grew into the largest Marian pilgrimage in Asia. The site carries three centuries of accumulated history, from colonial-era expansion through modern basilica construction to recognition by the papacy.

    Origin Story

    The story begins not in the Philippines but in Spain, at a mountain called Pena de Francia near Salamanca. In 1434, a wealthy Frenchman named Simon Vela renounced his inheritance to become a Franciscan lay brother. He received a prophetic voice commanding him to find a sacred image of Mary. After five years of searching—much of it wasted in France before he understood the name referred to a Spanish mountain—he and four companions finally unearthed the hidden image on May 19, 1434. All five were instantly healed of their ailments, confirming the image's sacred power.

    Near three centuries later and half a world away, a young Filipino seminarian named Miguel Robles de Covarrubias lay ill at the University of Santo Tomas in Manila. His father had come from Pena de Francia, and the family kept devotion to the Virgin of that place. The suffering student placed a holy card of her image on his body and was healed.

    Ordained and assigned to Naga City in the Bicol region, Father Miguel carried his gratitude with him. He commissioned a local artisan to carve a replica of the Spanish image from baliti wood and built a chapel to house it. The year was 1710, or perhaps 1712—sources disagree. Miracles were reported almost immediately. A dog killed for its blood, to be used in painting the image, was thrown in the river and came back to life, swimming before hundreds of witnesses. Word spread. The devotion grew.

    From that chapel grew first a stone church, then a shrine, then a basilica. Each expansion reflected the same reality: whatever had been planted here would not stop growing.

    Key Figures

    Simon Vela

    Roman Catholic

    founder

    The French layman who discovered the original Pena de Francia image in Spain in 1434 after receiving prophetic guidance. His miraculous healing upon finding the image established the devotion that would eventually reach the Philippines.

    Father Miguel Robles de Covarrubias

    Roman Catholic

    founder

    The seminarian whose healing led to the Philippine devotion. After ordination, he commissioned the Naga image and built the first chapel, translating his personal gratitude into a devotion that would define an entire region.

    Bishop Ysidro Arevalo

    Roman Catholic

    historical

    Builder of the shrine in 1741 to accommodate the growing number of devotees.

    Our Lady of Penafrancia / Ina

    Nuestra Senora de Penafrancia / Ina ng Bicolandia

    Roman Catholic / Bicolano Folk Catholicism

    deity

    The Virgin Mary under this particular title, understood as the spiritual Mother and Patroness of the entire Bicol Region. For devotees, she is not merely an image but a presence who hears prayers, grants healing, and protects her children.

    Divino Rostro

    Roman Catholic

    sacred_object

    The image of the Holy Face of Jesus that accompanies the Virgin in procession. This devotion began in 1882 when a cholera epidemic ended after the image was placed on the cathedral altar. The Divino Rostro sails ahead of the Virgin's pagoda during the fluvial procession.

    Spiritual Lineage

    The devotion passed from Father Miguel through successive generations of clergy and faithful. Bishops expanded the physical structures; the people expanded the ritual traditions. The voyadores emerged as a distinct group, men who pledged their service to carry the image. The fluvial procession developed its unique form. Each generation added its layer while maintaining continuity with what came before. The formal recognition came in stages. In 1924, the image received Canonical Coronation as Queen and Patroness of Bicolandia—only the second Marian image in the Philippines and Asia to receive this honor. In 1985, Pope John Paul II elevated the church to Basilica Minore status. But the true lineage is not measured in papal decrees. It passes through the grandmother who teaches her grandchild to say 'Ina,' through the fisherman who credits the Virgin with his safe return, through every pilgrim who adds their story to three centuries of accumulated faith.

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