Province of Cavite[1]
Bacoon: Tuesdays
Imus: Wednesdays. Quiason, quoting Henry Ellis,[2] describes the “novel and interesting spectacle” but does not specify the day the weekly market was held.
Indang: Fridays. Medina says Saturday on p. 128.
Kawit: Mondays
Maragondon: Sundays
Naic: Saturdays.[3] Medina says Thursday on p. 128.
San Francisco de Malabon: “In April 1802, Fr. Domingo Sevilla Pilapil, vicar forane of Tierra Alta (Noveleta) requested the then governor of Cavite to transfer the tiangue day in San Francisco de Malabon, which was formerly assigned on Sundays, to either Mondays or Tuesday.” (Medina, 127) The author does not indicate whether this was done or not.
Siláng: Saturdays—Medina says Monday on p. 128
Tanza: Saturdays
[1] Initial listing and designation taken from Isagani R. Medina, Cavite before the Revolution (1571-1896) (Diliman, Quezon City: CSSP Publications, College of Social Sciences and Philosophy, University of the Philippines, February 1994), 127-128. I thank Dan Doeppers for leading me to this resource. Not all the municipalities indicated on the map of Cavite Province in 1898 (xxii) are listed with tiangue days. The ones omitted are San Roque, La Caridad, Noveleta, Rosario, Santa Cruz de Malabon, San Nicolás, Carmona, Perez Dasmariñas, Amadeo, Méndez Nuñez, Alfonso, Bailén, Magallanes, and Ternate. Tanza is not on that map but does appear on the 1994 one on p. xxi; and its tiangue day is given on page 127. “… Amadeo, Bailén and Méndez … and … Dasmariñas … did not have markets. San Roque, Caridad, Kawit, Bacoor, Imus and Naic had daily markets but were of little significance. Rosario, for instance, had market days from Mondays to Saturdays, except on Sundays. During this time tiangues were held every Monday in Siláng, Thursday in Naic, Saturday in Indang, and Sunday in Maragondon.” (Medina, 128)
[2] Hongkong to Manila and the Lake of Luzon in the Philippine Islands in the Year 1856 (London: Smith Elder & Co., 1959), 65.
[3] Siláng, Tanza, and Naic are reported to have had market days weekly on the same day, Saturday. This is a surprise. I would have expected to have different market days during the week so that merchants could more efficiently move from pueblo to pueblo to buy and sell. Perhaps the alternative days he mentions on page 128 for Siláng and for Naic are correct and the ones listed for these two municipalities on page 127 are incorrect.