'Austronesian' — the term that appears in textbooks, classrooms, the Matatag curriculum, social media, and research — is not a people nor is it one language'Austronesian' — the term that appears in textbooks, classrooms, the Matatag curriculum, social media, and research — is not a people nor is it one language

[Time Trowel] What does Austronesian really mean?

2026/04/12 13:00
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A trowel (/ˈtraʊ.əl/), in the hands of an archaeologist, is like a trusty sidekick — a tiny, yet mighty, instrument that uncovers ancient secrets, one well-placed scoop at a time. It’s the Sherlock Holmes of the excavation site, revealing clues about the past with every delicate swipe.


In the last Time Trowel column, I asked how some nationalist historians search for an “authentic” precolonial Filipino past. Many turn to one idea, the so-called Austronesians. The term appears in textbooks, classrooms, the Matatag curriculum, social media, and research. It is often treated as settled and unquestioned. But what does Austronesian really mean, and why does it shape how we understand the past in the Philippines and the wider Pacific?

The term Austronesian did not start in archaeology. It started with language. Linguisticians like Otto Dempwolff and Robert Blust studied languages spoken in Taiwan, the Philippines, Indonesia, and even as far as Madagascar and the Pacific. They noticed shared words, grammar, and sound patterns. Because of these similarities, they grouped them into one language family.

Thus, Austronesian refers to a language family. It is not one language.

There is a well-known idea often linked to Max Weinreich that “a language is a dialect with an army and a navy.” It sounds like a joke, but it highlights an important point. What we call a language is shaped by history and power, not just how people speak.

So how did this become a story about people?

Archaeologists began using this language model to explain the past. Peter Bellwood suggested that people moved out of Taiwan about 4,000 to 5,000 years ago, bringing language, farming, pottery, and ways of life as they traveled from island to island.

It is still a model. Treating it as fact overlooks how research works.

In archaeology, we work with limited evidence, and different researchers can build different interpretations from the same data. So, we should ask how this model was made, what evidence was used, and what ideas guided it.

Rice is an example.

One of the major points of the Austronesian model is that domesticated rice acted as a push factor, allowing “Austronesians” to move into Island Southeast Asia and onward into the Pacific, with rice assumed to have come from Taiwan. But recent datasets suggest a different picture. While rice was first domesticated in China, early cultivation also developed in multiple areas in Southeast Asia, including present-day Laos. In the Philippines, there is no strong archaeological evidence of wet-rice farming earlier than about 700 years ago, much later than the proposed Austronesian movement.

Before that, people relied on varied strategies. They grew root crops like taro (gabi), practiced dry farming, and used forest and coastal resources. This reflects local adaptation rather than a single group introducing one system everywhere.

Genetics tells a similar story. People in Island Southeast Asia come from multiple ancestral groups. There is no simple pattern of one group arriving and replacing others. Instead, there is long-term mixing. Some genetic links point to Taiwan, others to mainland Southeast Asia, and others to earlier populations already in the islands.

So, we now have three kinds of evidence. Language. Archaeology. Genetics.

They do not correspond in a straightforward way. This underscores a key point. The spread of language is not the same as the movement of people.

Languages can spread through trade, marriage, alliances, and everyday interaction. People can adopt a language without moving far. Language families serve as tools for identifying relationships and links across communities, but they do not map neatly onto migration.

Some scholars have raised this issue.

Roger Blench argues that the Austronesian model assumes that language, farming, and people moved together. In reality, these can move in different ways and at different times.

John Terrell takes this further. He shows that many accounts of Austronesian expansion are written as simple narratives, with one group at the center. This group is portrayed as moving across regions and shaping events. Other groups appear at the margins, described as people who were met, absorbed, or left behind. These narratives assign roles, presenting one group as active and others as less significant.

Rather than a single migration, what we see are multiple episodes of movement across the region. John Peterson calls this “the Austronesian Moment,” not as an explanation in itself, but as a way to describe recurring pulses of movement, interaction, and the temporary alignment of identities — processes that need to be examined in their specific contexts rather than grouped under a single label.

In this way, the model follows what John Terrell critiques as a racist structure. It resembles older ideas like the Waves of Migration, where people were placed into ranked groups. It suggests that change comes from one group, that movement belongs to one group, and that history is driven by a single expanding population.

But the evidence does not support this.

If we look at the past differently, we see networks. People moved back and forth. Communities shared ideas, crops, and practices. Movement occurred in many directions, not just one. There was no single center and no single path.

So, what is Austronesian?

It is NOT a people. It is NOT one language. It is a language family with many branches. Most of these branches are found in Taiwan, while one branch — Malayo-Polynesian — extends across the Philippines, Indonesia, the Pacific, and Madagascar.

The spread of these languages is well documented, but it does not follow a single migration story.

The Austronesian model became influential because it has the appearance of moving away from earlier colonial frameworks while highlighting connections across regions. Yet, it retains a colonial structure. Earlier models ranked populations. The newer model shifts the terms, but continues to look for a single origin and a single direction of movement.

The past does not work that way.

A better approach is to see the past as a network. People connected, moved, and interacted over time. Change came through contact, not from a single group spreading outward. To understand the past, we need multiple forms of evidence: archaeology, language, genetics, and community knowledge.

For example, some groups such as the Amis of Taiwan maintain stories that connect them to places like Luzon. These accounts offer another way of understanding the past.

In the end, a name like Austronesian is a tool. It helps us see connections, but it does not explain everything.

The past is not one story. It is many stories that do not always align, but together they broaden how we understand our shared histories. – Rappler.com

Stephen B. Acabado is professor of anthropology at the University of California-Los Angeles. He directs the Ifugao and Bicol Archaeological Projects, research programs that engage community stakeholders. He grew up in Tinambac, Camarines Sur. 

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