Davao Region is on the island of Mindanao, Philippines. It used to be one province, but it has since been divided into five.
Davao Del Norte
Davao Del Sur
Davao de Oro
{{mapshape|type=geoshape|fill=|title=Davao Del Norte|wikidata=Q13792}} {{mapshape|type=geoshape|fill=|title=Davao Del Sur|wikidata=Q13794}} {{mapshape|type=geoshape|fill=|title=Davao Oriental|wikidata=Q13806}} {{mapshape|type=geoshape|fill=|title=Compostela Valley|wikidata=Q13789}}
"Davao" is somewhat ambiguous, and can either mean Davao City, or the region itself, also a former province that has been split further into the five provinces that compose the region today.
The first inhabitants in the present region are the Lumad, one of the original inhabitants of Mindanao until the colonial era. The region's name derives from the word for "fire" by one of the various tribes that inhabited the province.
The region is said to be the first part of the Philippines that have been in contact with Europeans, starting in the early 1500s. Francis Xavier is said to have been converted some of the natives long before the Spanish colonizers came, but there are no historical records saying so. The region remained outside colonial control until the Spaniards came in 1837.
Spanish control of the area began when Don Jose Oyanguren, a businessman, ordered the conquest of Kalagan, a Moro kingdom which has been controlling the area of present Davao City, and established an outpost there. The Moros, who knew of the impending invasion, evacuated immediately to Mount Apo. Oyanguren established the town of Nueva Vergara, which eventually became Davao City. Growth in the region is slow, despite Spanish control of the ports, and only did Davao began growing as Jesuit missionaries arrived in the 1890s.
Only after the Spaniards left did the region develop. The Americans occupied the region, developed the transportation and communications networks, and divided the land for the settlers.
Davao Region used to be a single province after the American occupation, but it was divided into the three provinces of Davao del Norte, Davao del Sur, and Davao Oriental. Then, Davao province (and its successors), belonged to Southern Mindanao, a former region which included much of Soccsksargen.
The general climate is tropical: there is no dry season, and temperatures doesn't vary much by time of year (except in the mountains). It means rainfall can fall at any time, and the weather is somewhat unpredictable, but most commonly, rain falls in short blasts in the afternoon, where thunderstorms form. Drought conditions, mostly caused by El Niño can create possibilities of having no rain in the region for weeks and months, as well as unbearable heat and humidity.
Davao Region is outside the typhoon belt, but it can get struck by typhoons, especially during the cooler months. The last destructive typhoon that struck the region is Typhoon Bopha (Pablo) in 2012, which devastated many small towns in the northeast provinces of Davao de Oro (then Compostela Valley) and Davao Oriental.
Davao Region has its own dialect of Cebuano (Bisaya), called Davaoeño, which is heavily influenced by Tagalog, as well as Lumad languages like Bagobo. Tagalog also have a significant presence in the region, and have heavily influenced the dialect of Cebuano spoken, especially around Davao City. A cross of Cebuano and Tagalog called "Bisalog" is common spoken in the region.
The main and the only operational airport in Davao Region is Francisco Bangoy International Airport (IATA: DVO), which has flights from most major national carriers, as well as some international flights.
The other airport, in Mati (IATA: MXI), is not served by any scheduled flights.
Philtranco has a daily bus trip from Manila down into Davao City via Asian Highway 26. They take the ferry between Leyte and Surigao. Bachelor Express also has one bus from Tacloban, also via AH26.
A ferry connects Davao City with the Indonesian port of Bitung.
For ferry trips within the Philippines, the nearest ports are in Surigao, Butuan, and Cagayan de Oro. From any of those mentioned ports, there are buses connecting with Davao.
Davao Metro Shuttle serves the cities of Davao, Panabo, and Tagum. Most of their buses are intercity buses, but some are minibuses.