Antique (province)

Antique
(from top: left to right) Tibiao Rice Terraces, Mount Madja-as, Mararison Island, old cemetery chapel in Hamtic, and Anini-y Church.
Nickname: 
The Land Where The Mountains Meet The Sea
Location in the Philippines
OpenStreetMap
Coordinates: 11°10′00″N 122°05′00″E / 11.16667°N 122.08333°E / 11.16667; 122.08333
CountryPhilippines
RegionWestern Visayas
Malayan Settlement13th Century (as Hamtik)
Spanish Settlement1569 (Hantíque, later on became Antíque)
Politico-Military Province1790
FoundedMarch 10, 1917
Capital
and largest municipality
San Jose de Buenavista
Government
  TypeSangguniang Panlalawigan
  GovernorRhodora J. Cadiao (NUP)
  Vice GovernorEdgar D. Denosta (NUP)
  LegislatureAntique Provincial Board
Area
  Total
2,729.17 km2 (1,053.74 sq mi)
  Rank49th out of 81
Highest elevation2,117 m (6,946 ft)
Population
 (2020 census)
  Total
612,974
  Rank52nd out of 81
  Density220/km2 (580/sq mi)
   Rank44th out of 81
DemonymAntiqueño
Divisions
  Independent cities0
  Component cities0
  Municipalities
  Barangays590
  DistrictsLegislative district of Antique
Time zoneUTC+8 (PHT)
IDD:area code+63(0)36
ISO 3166 codePH-ANT
HDI 0.640 (Medium)
HDI rank35th in Philippines (2019)
Spoken languages
GDP (2022)70.69 billion
$1.205 billion
Growth rate 8.7%
Websiteantique.gov.ph

Antique ([ɐnˈtike]), officially the Province of Antique, is a province in the Philippines located in the Western Visayas region. Its capital and most populous town is San Jose de Buenavista. The province is situated in the western section of Panay Island and borders Aklan, Capiz, and Iloilo to the east, while facing the Sulu Sea to the west.

The province is home to the indigenous Iraynun-Bukidnon, speakers of a dialect of the Kinaray-a language, who have crafted the only rice terrace clusters in the Visayas through indigenous knowledge and sheer vernacular capabilities. The rice terraces of the Iraynun-Bukidnon are divided into four terraced fields, namely, General Fullon rice terraces, Lublub rice terraces, Bakiang rice terraces, and San Agustin rice terraces. All of the rice terrace clusters have been researched by the National Commission for Culture and the Arts and various scholars from the University of the Philippines. There have been campaigns to nominate the Iraynun-Bukidnon Rice Terraces, along with the Central Panay Mountain Range, into the UNESCO World Heritage List.