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San Pedro, officially the City of San Pedro (Filipino: Lungsod ng San Pedro), is a component city in the province of Laguna, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 326,001 people. [8] [12] It is named after its patron saint, Saint Peter. [13]
San Pedro 277 359 326 129 261 59 Luisiana: San Pedro 3,120 2,402 2,318 1,738 1,354 1,228 San Pablo: San Rafael 200 247 161 152 254 26 Luisiana: San Rafael 4,672 3,467 3,326 3,249 2,660 2,350 San Pablo: San Roque 2,283 1,536 1,714 1,436 1,235 1,073 Alaminos: San Roque 383 423 500 392 233 147 Luisiana: San Roque 110 299 200 241 48 3 Majayjay: San ...
This is a complete list of cities and municipalities in the Philippines. ... San Pedro: 326,001 24.05 13,555.14 27 CC Laguna: Santa Cruz: 123,574 38.59 3,202.23 26
The following is a list of renamed cities and municipalities in the Philippines. Luzon. Adan → Adams [1] ... San Pedro de Tunasan → San Pedro (1914) [77]
The district currently consists of the northwestern city of San Pedro. It also encompassed the western Laguna municipalities of Alaminos, Bay, Cabuyao, Calamba, Calauan, Los Baños, Pila, San Pablo, and Victoria until 1972; Biñan until 2016; [4] and Santa Rosa until 2022.
This is a list of chartered cities in the Philippines. ... Each city is governed by both the Local Government Code of 1991 [2] ... San Pedro: 326,001 24.05 km 2
In comparison, Quezon City (2015 pop.: 2,936,116) – the largest city both in terms of land area and population – only has 142 barangays. The number of barangays in other local government units in Metro Manila range from 9 in Muntinlupa to 38 in Taguig .
San Pedro, Bagabag, a barangay in Nueva Vizcaya, Philippines; San Pedro Cathedral, a Roman Catholic Church in Davao City, Philippines; San Pedro College, a private college in Davao City, Philippines; San Pedro Cutud, a barangay in San Fernando, Pampanga, Philippines; San Pedro Bay (Philippines), at the northwest end of Leyte Gulf