<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"
	xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/"
	xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Mandirigma.org&#187; Historic Figures</title>
	<atom:link href="https://mandirigma.org/?cat=96&#038;feed=rss2" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
	<link>https://mandirigma.org</link>
	<description>Mandirigma Research Organization</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Fri, 23 May 2025 08:49:04 +0000</lastBuildDate>
	<language>en-US</language>
	<sy:updatePeriod>hourly</sy:updatePeriod>
	<sy:updateFrequency>1</sy:updateFrequency>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=3.6</generator>
		<item>
		<title>Photo: Members of &#8220;The Tinio Brigade&#8221;. Anti American Resistance in the Ilocos Provinces, 1899-190.</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3760</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3760#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 20 Jul 2019 21:14:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[American Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General Philippine History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine American War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Photo Archive]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Photo Gallery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Regional History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=3760</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Photo: Members of &#8220;The Tinio Brigade&#8221;. Anti American Resistance in the Ilocos Provinces, 1899-190. Staff: (to which Apolinario Querubin&#8217;s Guerilla 4 belonged) seated L to R: Captain Yldefonso Villareal, Brig. Gen. Benito Natividad, Brig. Gen. Manuel Tinio, Lt. Col. Joaquin Alejandrino and Maj. Joaquin Buencamino(son of Felipe Buencamino, a minister in the Aguinaldo cabinet); Standing [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Photo: Members of &#8220;The Tinio Brigade&#8221;. Anti American Resistance in the Ilocos Provinces, 1899-190.</h3>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/67176442_2224305747618724_5415895374470578176_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone  wp-image-3761" alt="67176442_2224305747618724_5415895374470578176_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/67176442_2224305747618724_5415895374470578176_n.jpg" width="576" height="448" /></a><br />
Staff: (to which Apolinario Querubin&#8217;s Guerilla 4 belonged) seated L to R: Captain Yldefonso Villareal, Brig. Gen. Benito Natividad, Brig. Gen. Manuel Tinio, Lt. Col. Joaquin Alejandrino and Maj. Joaquin Buencamino(son of Felipe Buencamino, a minister in the Aguinaldo cabinet); Standing L to R: 2lt. Francisco Natividad and two unidentified officers; Seated: the 15 year-old officer 2Lt. Pastor Alejandrino.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Source: <a title="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manuel_Tinio" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manuel_Tinio" target="_blank">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manuel_Tinio</a></p>
<p><b>Manuel Tinio y Bundoc</b> (June 17, 1877 – February 22, 1924) was the youngest General<sup id="cite_ref-2">[2]</sup> of the Philippine Revolutionary Army, and was elected Governor<sup id="cite_ref-books.google.com.ph_3-0">[3]</sup> of the Province of Nueva Ecija, Republic of the Philippines in 1907. He is one of the three Fathers of the Cry of Nueva Ecija along with Pantaleon Valmonte and Mariano Llanera.</p>
<h2></h2>
<p>Manuel Tinio, then 18 years old, joined the Katipunan in April 1896. By August he had organized a company composed of friends, relatives and tenants. Personally leading his group of teenaged guerillas, he conducted raids and depredations against Spanish detachments and patrols in Nueva Ecija. Occasionally, he joined up with similar forces under other youthful leaders.</p>
<div>
<div><img alt="" src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/09/Philippine_revolution_flag_kkk1.svg/220px-Philippine_revolution_flag_kkk1.svg.png" srcset="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/09/Philippine_revolution_flag_kkk1.svg/330px-Philippine_revolution_flag_kkk1.svg.png 1.5x, https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/09/Philippine_revolution_flag_kkk1.svg/440px-Philippine_revolution_flag_kkk1.svg.png 2x" width="220" height="132" data-file-width="250" data-file-height="150" /></p>
<div>
<div></div>
<p>An Early flag of the <i>Katipunan</i>.</div>
</div>
</div>
<p>On September 2, 1896, Manuel Tinio and his men joined the combined forces of Mariano Llanera and Pantaleon Belmonte, capitanes municipales or mayors of Cabiao and Gapan, respectively, in the attack on San Isidro. Of 3,000 who volunteered, 500 determined men were chosen for the attack. Led by a bamboo orchestra or musikong bumbong of Cabiao, the force came in two separate columns from Cabiao and Gapan City and converged in Sitio Pulu, 5 km. from San Isidro. Despite the fact that they had only 100 rifles, they furiously fought the Spaniards holed up in the Casa Tribunal, the arsenal, other government buildings and in the houses of Spanish residents. Capt. Joaquin Machorro, commander of the Guardias Civiles, was killed on the first day of battle. According to Julio Tinio, Manuel&#8217;s cousin and a participant in the battle, Manuel had a conference in the arsenal with Antonio Luna and Eduardo Llanera, the general&#8217;s son, immediately after the battle.</p>
<p>The Spanish authorities hastily organized a company of 200 civilian Spaniards and mercenaries the following day and attacked the overconfident insurgents, driving the besiegers away from the government center. The next day more Spanish reinforcements arrived from Peñaranda, forcing the poorly armed rebels to retreat, leaving behind 60 dead. The Spaniards went in hot pursuit of the insurgents, forcing those from Cabiao to flee to Candaba, Pampanga, and those from Gapan to hide in San Miguel de Mayumo in Bulacan. The insurgents from San Isidro fled across the river to hide in Jaen. The relatives of those who were recognized were driven away from their homes by the colonial authorities. Manuel Tinio and his troop stayed to protect the mass of people from Calaba, San Isidro, who were all his kinfolk, hastening across the river to Jaen, Nueva Ecija.</p>
<p>The Spaniards’ relentless pursuit of the rebels forced them to disband and go into hiding until January 1897. Tinio was a special target. At 5 feet 7 inches (170 cm) tall, he literally stood out among the attackers, whose average height was below 5 feet (150 cm). He fled to Licab. A platoon of cazadores (footsoldiers) was sent to arrest him, forcing Hilario Tinio Yango, his first cousin and the Capitan Municipal of the town, to lead them to him. Warned of the approaching soldiers, Manuel again escaped and fled on foot back to San Isidro, where, in the barrios of Calaba, Alua and Sto. Cristo, he hid with relatives in their various farms beside the Rio Gapan (now known as the Peñaranda River). Fear of arrest compelled him to be forever on the move. He never slept in the same place. Later on, he would attribute his ill health in his middle age to the privations he endured during those months of living exposed to the elements.</p>
<h2></h2>
<p>The passionate rebels reorganized their forces the moment Spanish pursuit died down. Tinio and his men marched with Gen. Llanera in his sorties against the Spaniards. Llanera eventually made Tinio a Captain.</p>
<p>The aggressive exploits of the teen-aged Manuel Tinio reached the ears of General Emilio Aguinaldo, whose forces were being driven out of Cavite and Laguna, Philippines. He evacuated to Mount Puray in Montalban, Rizal and called for an assembly of patriots in June 1897. In that assembly, Aguinaldo appointed Mamerto Natividad, Jr. as commanding general of the revolutionary army and Mariano Llanera as vice-commander with the rank of Lt.-General. Manuel Tinio was commissioned a Colonel and served under Gen. Natividad.</p>
<p>The constant pressure from the army of Gov. Gen. Primo de Rivera drove Aguinaldo to Central Luzon. In August, Gen. Aguinaldo decided to move his force of 500 men to the caves of Biac-na-Bato in San Miguel, Bulacan because the area was easier to defend. There, his forces joined up with those of Gen. Llanera. With the help of Pedro Paterno, a prominent Philippines lawyer, Aguinaldo began negotiating a truce with the Spanish government in exchange for reforms, an indemnity, and safe conduct.</p>
<p>On August 27, 1897, Gen. Mamerto Natividad and Col. Manuel Tinio conducted raids in Carmen, Zaragoza and Peñaranda, Nueva Ecija. Three days later, on the 30th, they stormed and captured Santor (now Bongabon) with the help of the townspeople. They stayed in that town till September 3.</p>
<p>On September 4, with the principal objective of acquiring provisions lacking in Biac-na-Bato, Gen. Natividad and Col. Manuel Tinio united their forces with those of Col. Casimiro Tinio, Gen. Pío del Pilar, Col. Jose Paua and Eduardo Llanera for a dawn attack on Aliaga. (Casimiro Tinio, popularly known as ‘Capitan Berong’, was an elder brother of Manuel through his father&#8217;s first marriage.)</p>
<p>Thus began the Battle of Aliaga, considered one of the most glorious battles of the rebellion. The rebel forces took the church and convent, the Casa Tribunal and other government buildings. The commander of the Spanish detachment died in the first moments of fighting, while those who survived were locked up in the thick-walled jail. The rebels then proceeded to entrench themselves and fortify several houses. The following day, Sunday the 5th, the church and convent as well as a group of houses were put to the torch due to exigencies of defense.</p>
<p>Spanish Governor General Primo de Rivera fielded 8,000 Spanish troops under the commands of Gen. Ricardo Monet and Gen. Nuñez in an effort to recapture the town. A column of reinforcements under the latter&#8217;s command arrived in the afternoon of September 6. They were met with such a tremendous hail of bullets that the general, two captains and many soldiers were wounded, forcing the Spaniards to retreat a kilometer away from the town to await the arrival of Gen. Monet and his men. Even with the reinforcements, the Spaniards were overly cautious in attacking the insurgents. When they did so the next day, they found the town already abandoned by the rebels who had gone back to Biac-na-Bato. Filipino casualties numbered 8 dead and 10 wounded.</p>
<p>Gen. Natividad and Col. Manuel Tinio shifted to guerrilla warfare. The following October with full force they attacked San Rafael, Bulacan to get much-needed provisions for Biac-na-Bato. The battle lasted several days and, after getting what they came for, they left a detachment in Bo. Kaingin to hold back the Spanish reinforcements from Baliwag, Bulacan. To divert Spanish forces from Nueva Ecija, Natividad and Tinio attacked Tayug, Pangasinan on Oct. 4, 1897, occupying the church in the heart of the poblacion.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, peace negotiations continued and in October Aguinaldo gathered together his generals to convene a constitutional assembly. On Nov. 1, 1897 the Constitution was unanimously approved and on that day the Biac-na-Bato Republic was established.</p>
<p>However, Gen. Natividad, who believed in the revolution, opposed the peace negotiations and continued to fight indefatigably from Biac-na-Bato. On Nov. 9, while leading a force of 200 men with Gen. Pío del Pilar and Col. Ignacio Paua, Natividad was killed in action in Entablado, Cabiao. Col. Manuel Tinio brought the corpse back to the general&#8217;s grieving wife in Biac-na-Bato. (Incidentally, Gen. Natividad&#8217;s widow, Trinidad, was the daughter of Casimiro Tinio–&#8221;Capitan Berong&#8221;.) With the death of the army&#8217;s commanding general, Col. Manuel Tinio was commissioned Brigadier General and designated as commanding general of operations on Nov. 20, 1897. Gen. Tinio, all of 20 years, became the youngest general of the Philippine Revolutionary Army. (Gregorio del Pilar, already 22, was only a Lt. Colonel at that time.)</p>
<p>On Dec. 20, 1897, the Pact of the Biac-na-Bato was ratified by the Assembly of Representatives. In accordance with the terms of the peace pact, Aguinaldo went to Sual, Pangasinan, where he and 26 members of the revolutionary government boarded a steamer to go into voluntary exile in Hongkong. The Novo-Ecijanos in the group were Manuel Tinio, Mariano and Eduardo Llanera, Benito and Joaquin Natividad, all signatories of the Constitution.</p>
<p>In Hongkong, the exiles agreed among themselves to live as a community and spend only the interest of the initial P400,000 the Spanish Government had paid in accordance with the Pact of the Biac-na-Bato. The principal was to be used for the purchase of arms for the continuation of the revolution at a future time. The Artacho faction, however, wanted to divide the funds of the Revolution among themselves. The Novo-Ecijanos did not vote with the opportunist Artacho ‘faction’, and, being relatively well off, thanks to a relative who provided them with funds (Trinidad Tinio vda. de Natividad), &#8220;they got a house where they lived like a republic&#8221;, as they said.</p>
<h2></h2>
<p>Would history have been different if the Spanish authorities had not reneged on the terms of the Pact and withheld the amount of P900,000 which was supposed to have been divided among non-combatants who had suffered in the fighting? Thus shortchanged, considering themselves no longer honor bound to lay down arms, the revolutionists rose again. Once again fighting broke out all over Luzon. In Nueva Ecija, the rebels captured the towns again one by one.</p>
<p>But American intervention was on the way. As early as February 1898 an American naval squadron had steamed into Manila Bay. On May 1, less than a week after the declaration of the Spanish–American War, the American naval squadron completely destroyed the Spanish fleet. Admiral Dewey of the United States of America immediately dispatched the revenue cutter &#8220;McCulloch&#8221; to Hongkong to fetch Aguinaldo, who returned to the Philippines on May 19. On May 21 Aguinaldo issued a proclamation asking the nation to rally behind him in a second attempt to obtain independence. Revolutionary leaders promptly stepped up their raids and ambuscades on Spanish garrisons in Central Luzon, capturing more than 5,000 prisoners. By the end of May, the whole of central and southern Luzon, except Manila, was practically in Filipino hands. Aguinaldo promptly established a Dictatorial Government on May 24, with himself as Supremo (supreme commander) and proclaimed Philippine Independence on June 12, 1898. Apolinario Mabini, however, prevailed upon Aguinaldo to decree the establishment of a Revolutionary Government on June 23.</p>
<h2></h2>
<p>Manuel Tinio and the rest of the revolutionists in Hongkong sailed for Cavite on June 6 on board the 60-ton contraband boat &#8220;Kwan Hoi&#8221; to join their Filipino leader. Upon his arrival in Cavite, Tinio was instructed to organize an expeditionary force to wrest the Ilocano provinces from Spanish hands. Thus would start the thrust into the North and its conquest by Novo-Ecijano General Manuel Tinio. First, he retrieved from Hagonoy, Bulacan 300 Mauser and Remington rifles that had been captured from the Spaniards and stored in that town. He then took the steamer to San Isidro, Nueva Ecija. Upon his arrival on June 13 he immediately set up 3 companies of 108 men each under the commands of Captains Joaquin Alejandrino, Jose Tombo and 1st Lt. Joaquin Natividad who was given overall command. All the officers were Novo-Ecijanos, except for Celerino Mangahas who hailed from Paombong, Bulacan.</p>
<p>On July 7, 1898 Aguinaldo reorganized the provincial government of Nueva Ecija and appointed Felino Cajucom as governor. The province was divided into four military zones:</p>
<ul>
<li>Zone 1 under Gen. Mariano Llanera with Gen. Tinio as deputy covered the towns of San Isidro, San Antonio, Jaén, Gapan and Peñaranda;</li>
<li>Zone 2 under Pablo Padilla and Angelo San Pedro covered the towns of Cabanatuan, San Leonardo, Sta. Rosa, Sto. Domingo and Talavera;</li>
<li>Zone 3 under Delfin Esquivel and Ambrosio Esteban covered the towns of Aliaga, Licab, Zaragoza, San Jose, San Juan de Guimba and Cuyapo;</li>
<li>Zone 4 under Manuel Natividad and Francisco Nuñez covered the towns of Rosales, Nampicuan, Umingan, Balungao and San Quintin.</li>
</ul>
<p>On June 19, Gen. Tinio and his men proceeded to Pangasinan to assist Gen. Makabulos in the siege of Dagupan which was the most important of the three Spanish strongholds in the North at that time, the others being Tarlac, Tarlac and San Fernando, La Union. Dagupan was held by the Spaniards under the command of Col. Federico J. Ceballos. In Dagupan, Gen. Tinio met the force of Lt. Col. Casimiro Tinio, composed of Captains Feliciano Ramoso and Pascual Tinio, Lt. Severo Ortega, several other officers, and 300 Novo-Ecijano soldiers. Gen. Makabulos, who had taken over the Central Luzon Command the previous April, was optimistic that he had the situation well in hand and allowed Gen. Tinio and the combined Novo-Ecijano troops at Dagupan to proceed northward to liberate Ilocos from the Spaniards. This Ilocos Expeditionary Force would become the nucleus of the future Tinio Brigade.</p>
<p>The Novo-Ecijano troops, now over 600 strong, reached San Fernando, on July 22, the day that Dagupan surrendered to Gen. Makabulos. They found the capital of La Union already besieged by revolutionists under the command of Gen. Mauro Ortiz. The Spaniards, under the command of Col. Jose Garcia Herrero, were entrenched in the convent, the Casa Tribunal and the provincial jail and were waiting for succour. Gen. Tinio wanted a ceasefire and sent for Col. Ceballos in Dagupan to mediate a peaceful capitulation of the San Fernando garrison. But despite news that the Spaniards had already surrendered Central Luzon to the Revolutionists and the pleadings of Col. Ceballos, the besieged Spaniards refused to capitulate. On the morning of the eighth day, July 31, Gen. Tinio ordered the assault of the convent from the adjoining church. At a cost of 5 lives and 3 wounded, Capt. Alejandrino&#8217;s company occupied the kitchen and cut the water supply in the aljibe or cistern under the azotea, the terrace beside the kitchen. At 4 p.m. a 4&#8243;-cannon taken from the gunboat &#8220;Callao&#8221; moored in the harbor was fired against the left side of the convent. The deafening blast frightened the Spaniards who immediately called for a ceasefire and flew the white flag. Alejandrino received the saber of Lt. Col. Herrero as a token of surrender. 400 men, 8 officers, 377 rifles, 3 cannons and P 12,000 in government silver were turned over. Upon seeing his captors, the Spanish commander wept in rage and humiliation, for many of the Filipino officers and men were but mere youths. Gen. Tinio himself had just turned 21 the previous month!</p>
<p>From San Fernando the Tinio Brigade and its prisoners marched on to Balaoan, where they met stubborn resistance from the enemy who were again entrenched in the convent. The siege lasted for five days, and, despite the support of the populace, resulted in the deaths of more than 70 Filipinos, mostly townspeople. Camilo Osías, a witness to the event, wrote in his memoirs that after the siege, the Balaoan katipuneros were inducted en masse into the ranks of the Tinio Brigade. Meanwhile, the company of Capt. Alejandrino, dispatched earlier by Gen. Tinio to reconnoiter and clear the neighboring commandancia or military district of Benguet, had met no opposition for the small force of cazadores in La Trinidad had fled to Bontoc upon learning of their approach. Alejandrino immediately turned back and rejoined Gen. Tinio.</p>
<p>From Balaoan, the rebels marched on to Bangar, the northernmost town of La Union, where they laid siege to the Spaniards holed up, again, in the convent. They won a victory on Aug. 7 after four days of fighting at a cost of 2 casualties. 87 Spaniards surrendered in Bangar.</p>
<p>The Tinio Brigade then crossed the mighty Amburayan River that divides the province of La Union from Ilocos Sur. The colonial force occupying the strategic heights on the opposite bank was the last obstacle to Tinio&#8217;s advance to Vigan. Tinio stormed their positions, causing the enemy to withdraw to Tagudin,<sup id="cite_ref-Sonnichsen_5-0">[5]</sup><sup>:250</sup> the first town of Ilocos Sur. There, the Spaniards consolidated all the available forces they could muster (1,500 men according to one source)<sup id="cite_ref-Sonnichsen_5-1">[5]</sup><sup>:250</sup> and prepared to make a stand in the convent and surrounding buildings. However, their spirited defense the first three days turned into a rout, when the native volunteers in the Spanish army deserted their units to fight with the rebels. The Brigade suffered no casualties in that siege. The Spaniards fled north, but were intercepted in Sta. Lucia, Ilocos Sur by Ilocano and Abra revolutionists under Gen. Isabelo Abaya.</p>
<p>The Tinio Brigade, now over 2,000 strong, marched northward and encountered the Ilocano patriots in Sabuanan, Sta. Lucia. The latter escorted them to Candon, whose inhabitants jubilantly received the conquerors.</p>
<p>There, Isabelo Abaya, a native of the place and the initiator of the revolution in Ilocos, was given a regular rank of Captain of Infantry in the Tinio Brigade.</p>
<p>On August 13, 1898, the same day that the Spaniards surrendered Intramuros to the Americans, Gen. Tinio entered Vigan, the capital of Ilocos Sur and the citadel of Spanish power in the North.<sup id="cite_ref-Sonnichsen_5-2">[5]</sup><sup>:251</sup> He found the capital already in rebel hands. Gov. Enrique Polo de Lara, newly appointed Spanish governor of both Ilocos Norte and Ilocos Sur, had fled to Laoag, the capital of Ilocos Norte, with all the resident Spaniards of Vigan. There he spent five days at the beach of Diriqui, loading the civilians and friars, including Bishop Campomanes, on boats which would hazard the rough weather for the journey to Aparri. He then ordered the troops under Col. Mariano Arques, district commander of the Civil Guards and Jefe de Linea in Ilocos, to take the coastal road to Aparri, Cagayan.</p>
<p>Upon his arrival in Vigan, Gen. Tinio had immediately launched a two-pronged movement to capture the Spaniards fleeing northward and those escaping into the interior.<sup id="cite_ref-Sonnichsen_5-3">[5]</sup><sup>:251</sup> He dispatched his brother, Casimiro, with a light cavalry column of 600 men to Ilocos Norte to pursue the fleeing enemy. Without encountering any opposition along the way, the Filipino column reached Laoag on August 17. They overtook some of the fleeing Spaniards at Bacarra, the next town, where, after exchanging a few token shots, more than 300 Spaniards surrendered. The Spaniards had heard of the humane treatment Gen. Tinio afforded prisoners and did not put up much of a fight.</p>
<p>Two companies were then dispatched to Bangui, the northernmost town of Ilocos Norte, and to Claveria, the first town in Cagayan. Capt. Vicente Salazar&#8217;s company pressed the northward pursuit with more tenacity, overtaking the enemy on the road to the Patapat Pass leading to Cagayan province. Right there and then, on August 22, Col. Arques and some 200 Spanish regulars, all tired and frustrated, surrendered almost willingly. In Patapat itself, the crack Regiment No. 70, composed of Ilocano and Visayan volunteers, stationed there to guard the pass, deserted their officers and joined the revolutionaries. The enemy was on the run, and even Aparri at the very end of Luzon was secured too by the detachment under the command of Col. Daniel Tirona.</p>
<p>Relentlessly, from Vigan, Capt. Alejandrino and 500 men, with Capt. Isabelo Abaya as guide, went to Bangued, Abra to track and capture the enemy who were retreating towards the rugged and mountainous interior towns of Cervantes, Lepanto and Bontoc. The Filipinos easily achieved their goal with only 3 casualties, the whole Ilocos and the Cordillera commandancias were now in Philippine hands.</p>
<p>Gen. Tinio is credited with capturing the most number of Spanish prisoners during the revolution, over 1.000 of them. The prisoners were brought to Vigan, their number later augmented by other prisoners sent over from the Cagayan Valley and Central Luzon during the last quarter of 1898. Gen. Tinio exercised both firmness and compassion in dealing with the prisoners. Fray Ulpiano Herrero y Sampedro, a Dominican who had been captured and sent over from Cavite, kept a journal of his 18-month imprisonment together with over a hundred other friars. He wrote that when they were imprisoned in Vigan, &#8220;Gen. Tinio wanted to improve the living conditions of the friar prisoners … sent us food, clothing, books, paper and writing implements.&#8221;</p>
<p>There was another group of prisoners. The revolucionarios’ anger against the friars extended even to their native mistresses, and these women were imprisoned in the girls’ school beside the Bishop&#8217;s Palace. Their properties were confiscated. One of the incarcerated women, a native of Sinait, had a 15-year-old daughter, Laureana Quijano, who pleaded with Gen. Tinio for her mother&#8217;s release and the restoration of their properties. The general, attracted to her beauty, forthwith acceded to her request, and then began to court her. Later, Laur, as she was called, also pleaded for the release of another prisoner, her mother&#8217;s first cousin, and introduced the daughter, Amelia Imperial Dancel. Again, the general gave in and released Amelia&#8217;s mother. Subsequently, Gen. Tinio also fell in love with Amelia.</p>
<h2></h2>
<p>Gen. Tinio set up his Command Headquarters in the Bishop&#8217;s Palace in Vigan. There he lived with 18 of his officers, all very young, mostly 16–20 years of age, the oldest being the 29-year-old Captain Pauil.</p>
<p>In accordance with Aguinaldo&#8217;s Dictatorial Decree of June 18, 1898 which set the guidelines for setting up a civil government in those towns liberated from the Spaniards, Gen. Tinio conducted elections for the whole region. First to be elected were the officials of each town. Under the revolutionary government, the mayor, instead of being called the capitan municipal, was now addressed as the presidente municipal. These mayors then elected the Provincial Governor and Board.</p>
<p>With the civil government in place, Gen. Tinio then reorganized the Tinio Brigade. The successful military exploits of the Brigada Tinio were heralded all over Luzon and attracted hundreds of volunteers. The Brigade swelled to over 3,400 men, with scores of officers and more than 1,000 non-commissioned officers and soldiers coming from Nueva Ecija. The rest consisted mostly of Ilocanos, Abreños, Igorots and Itnegs, with a few Bulakeños, Bicolanos and Visayans. There were also some Spaniards in the group.</p>
<p>The Brigade garrisoned the entire western portion of Northern Luzon which included the four genuine Ilocano provinces of Ilocos Norte, Ilocos Sur, Abra and La Union, and also the comandancias of Amburayan, Lepanto-Bontoc and Benguet. Gen. Tinio divided this territory into 3 zones, each under a military commander who commanded a regiment, as follows:</p>
<p>Zone 1 under Lt. Col. Casimiro Tinio covered La Union, Benguet and Amburayan;</p>
<p>Zone 2 under Lt. Col. Blas Villamor covered Southern Ilocos Sur from Tagudin to Bantay, Abra and Lepanto-Bontoc;</p>
<p>Zone 3 under Lt. Col. Irineo de Guzman covered Northern Ilocos Sur from Sto. Domingo to Sinait and Ilocos Norte.</p>
<p>Captains Vicente Salazar, Jose Tombo and Juan Villamor were the deputy commanders.</p>
<p>The establishment of the civil and military government in the Ilocos brought 15 months of peace in the region. The young general and his officers became social denizens sought after and regally entertained by the people. Being young, they caught the eyes of pretty señoritas of the best families in the region. The dashing Manuel Tinio, rich, handsome and a bachelor to boot, seized the moment with the many belles of Ilocandia. He was unforgettably charming and popular. In the 1950s, women reminiscing about their youth, and the Tinios, would look up and sigh, &#8220;how handsome they were.&#8221; A grandmother from Ilocos Norte living in Baguio City could still passionately say in the 1960s, &#8220;all the ladies in the province were in love with the general.&#8221; An old maid in Vigan proudly recalled in her twilight years of the 1970s the dashing general&#8217;s visits every Friday afternoon when she was 14.</p>
<p>With the Ilocos in stable condition, Gen. Tinio then went to Malolos to report to Gen. Aguinaldo and upon the request of Felipe Buencamino, Minister of Finance, turned over P120,000 that had been contributed by the citizens of Vigan. During his visit, everyone, particularly his fellow generals, admired and congratulated Gen. Tinio for having the largest and best-equipped army in the country!</p>
<p>In October 1898 Gen. Tinio received his appointment as Military Governor of the Ilocos provinces and Commanding General of all Filipino forces in Northern Luzon. His army was formally integrated as an armed unit of the Republic. Thus he became one of only four regional commanders in the Republican Army!</p>
<p>Upon his return to Vigan, Gen. Tinio marshalled his troops, all well equipped and completely in uniform. He assembled them in the town&#8217;s main Plaza and made them swear to defend the new Republic with their lives. The next month, on Nov. 11, 1898 Manuel Tinio was appointed Brigadier General of Infantry.</p>
<h2></h2>
<div>
<div><img alt="" src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d3/General_Manuel_Tinio%2C_General_Benito_Natividad%2C_LtCol_Jose_Alejandrino.jpg/220px-General_Manuel_Tinio%2C_General_Benito_Natividad%2C_LtCol_Jose_Alejandrino.jpg" srcset="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d3/General_Manuel_Tinio%2C_General_Benito_Natividad%2C_LtCol_Jose_Alejandrino.jpg/330px-General_Manuel_Tinio%2C_General_Benito_Natividad%2C_LtCol_Jose_Alejandrino.jpg 1.5x, https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d3/General_Manuel_Tinio%2C_General_Benito_Natividad%2C_LtCol_Jose_Alejandrino.jpg/440px-General_Manuel_Tinio%2C_General_Benito_Natividad%2C_LtCol_Jose_Alejandrino.jpg 2x" width="220" height="148" data-file-width="500" data-file-height="337" /></p>
<div>
<div></div>
<p>Group showing General Manuel Tinio (seated, center), General Benito Natividad (seated, 2nd from right), Lt. Col. Jose Alejandrino (seated, 2nd from left), and their aides-de-camp.</p></div>
</div>
</div>
<p>A shot fired at a Filipino in Sociego Street, Sta. Mesa District in the suburbs of Manila on February 4, 1899 triggered the Philippine–American War. (Contrary to popular belief that prevailed for over a century, the first shot of the Philippine–American War was not fired on San Juan bridge but on Sociego Street in Santa Mesa district, Manila. The Philippines&#8217; National Historical Institute (NHI) recognized this fact through Board Resolution 7 Series of 2003. On Feb. 4, 2004 the marker on the bridge was removed and transferred to a site at the corner of Sociego and Silencio streets.) Soon after, when war with the Americans seemed imminent, Col. Casimiro Tinio and most of the Tagalog troops in the Tinio Brigade were sent back to Nueva Ecija. When the conflict became critical in Central Luzon, all the soldiers in the Brigade who had seen service in the Spanish army were ordered to report to the Luna Division.</p>
<p>The inactivity of the Tinio Brigade during the period of peace in the Ilocos region spawned problems. Boredom led to in-fighting among the soldiers and the perpetration of some abuses. Gen. Tinio adhered to his principles of discipline among his troops, even imprisoning Col. Estanislao de los Reyes, his personal aide-de-camp, who had slapped a fellow officer in an effort to rectify the situation, Tinio asked Gen. Aguinaldo for the assignment of his forces to the frontlines of the new battle at hand, but Aguinaldo paid no heed to Tinio&#8217;s request.</p>
<p>Ever keen in foresight and strategy, anticipating an invasion by the American aggressors, Gen. Tinio ordered the construction of 636 trenches, well designed and strategically placed for cross fire, to protect the principal roads and ports and to guard the entire coastline from Rosario, La Union to Cape Bojeador in Ilocos Norte.</p>
<p>At the start of the Philippine–American War, Gen. Tinio&#8217;s forces were 1,904 strong, with 68 officers, 200 sandatahanes or bolomen, 284 armorers, 37 medics, 22 telegraphers, 80 cavalrymen, 105 artillerymen and 2 Spanish engineers. (By April 1899, this would be reduced to 1,789 officers and men.)</p>
<p>On May 18, 1899, six months before his forces began battling the American invaders, he married Laureana Quijano.</p>
<p>On June 5, 1899 members of the Kawit Battalion assassinated Gen. Antonio Luna, the commanding general of the republican army. His death in Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija created a lot of antipathy against the Tagalogs, particularly in Ilocos Norte, where Luna hailed from. The Luna assassination, however, did not diminish the love and admiration of the Ilocanos for Gen. Tinio, who referred to the former as ‘my Ilocanos’. Luna&#8217;s death resulted in a cooling off in Tinio&#8217;s attitude towards Aguinaldo. Tinio, however, never failed to obey the orders of his superior and never made a comment on the deaths of Bonifacio or Luna. Whenever he was asked, he would shrug his shoulders and say, &#8220;answering the question would mean a betrayal of my superior.&#8221;</p>
<p>Less than two weeks later, on the occasion of his 22nd birthday, delegations from the entire region congregated in the capital to give him an asalto or dawn serenade in the main plaza of Vigan. One of the highlights of the day-long festivities, which included a royal feast and a grand ball, was the dedication of a birthday hymn specially written for him, set to music and sung by the populace.</p>
<p>Towards the end of June, Aguinaldo recalled Gen. Tinio by telegram and ordered him to help in the reorganization of the forces in Nueva Ecija. In his place, Brigadier Gen. Benito Natividad, recently promoted (at age 24) and on leave because of wounds sustained in the Battle of Calumpit, Bulacan, took over as temporary commander of the Ilocos provinces.</p>
<p>Gen. Tinio, seeing the handwriting on the wall, began taking private English lessons from David Arnold, an American captive who had come over to the Filipino side. In anticipation of the coming of the Americans, he began the construction of a formidable bank of defenses in Tangadan Pass between Narvacan, Ilocos Sur and Bangued, Abra.</p>
<p>Late in September, Gen. Tinio and his northern army were finally called to the front line to guard the beaches of Pangasinan and La Union. The Brigade was diminished in size when Gen. Tinio marched with his general staff and several battalions to Bayambang, Pangasinan to cover President Aguinaldo&#8217;s retreat while the others were sent to Zambales under Col. Alejandrino.</p>
<p>Gen. Benito Natividad stayed behind as post commander in Vigan with some officers and 50 riflemen, 20 others in Bangued and a few others scattered in neighboring towns. They were the only armed forces that guarded the whole Ilocos region! At that time, there were 4,000 Spanish prisoners of war (including 1 general) and 26 Americans being held in Vigan, Bangued and Laoag, where the military hospitals were located. More than half of the prisoners had been sent from Central Luzon at the height of the hostilities. Despite their great number, the prisoners did not rise up against their guards, because, on instructions of Gen. Tinio, they were well fed and nicely treated. As early as June, American prisoners had begun arriving from the battlefields of Central Luzon. Among them were Navy Lt. Gillmore and the war correspondent Albert Sonnichsen.<sup id="cite_ref-Sonnichsen_5-4">[5]</sup><sup>:382–383</sup> Gen. Tinio&#8217;s humane treatment of prisoners was legendary. Sonnichsen wrote:</p>
<p>&#8220;. . while in Vigan, Tinio learned that the captive friars were living well on money sent from Manila, while the poor Cazadores were obliged to subsist on their meager rations (as prisoners of war). Before they could hide it, the young Tagalog had their money seized and, having all the soldier prisoners assembled in the plaza, he divided the pesos of the friars equally among them, the Cazadores cheering the Tagalog General lustily.&#8221;<sup id="cite_ref-Sonnichsen_5-5">[5]</sup><sup>:252</sup></p>
<p>Having abandoned his last capital in Tarlac, Tarlac, Pres. Aguinaldo decided to retreat to the north and went to Bayambang, Pangasinan. Unknown to him, the Americans had planned a pincer-like movement in the overall battle plan to cut off his northward escape route and capture him.</p>
<p>On November 7, the Americans bombarded San Fabian, Pangasinan and the 33rd Infantry landed, including a battalion commanded by Col. Luther R. Hare, an old cavalryman who had served 25 years before under Gen. Custer.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-0">[6]</sup><sup>:138</sup> But on Nov. 11, on their way to San Jacinto, the next town, the invaders came across the entrenched forces of Gen. Tinio. Maj. John Alexander Logan, Jr and 8 American soldiers died in the fierce 3.5-hour battle that ensued, but the Americans, armed with a Gatling gun, claimed the lives of 134 Filipino soldiers, wounding 160 more.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-1">[6]</sup><sup>:144–146</sup></p>
<p>On November 13 a national council of war held in Bayambang resolved to disband the Philippine Army and ordered the generals and their men to return to their own provinces and organize the people for general resistance by means of guerrilla warfare.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-2">[6]</sup><sup>:146</sup> Gen. Aguinaldo divided the country into zones, each under a general. Gen. Tinio was designated regional commander of the Ilocos provinces. The following evening, Gen. Aguinaldo, accompanied by his family, the cabinet, their aides and the Kawit Battalion, left Bayambang by special train for Calasiao, only 15 kilometers away from American Headquarters!</p>
<p>On November 14, early in the morning, the presidential party struggled through the knee-deep mud of backwoods trails towards Sta. Barbara, where they met with the Mixto Battalion under Lt. Jose Joven and the Del Pilar Brigade. The column, now with 1,200 armed men, managed to reach the forests of Manaoag and proceeded to Pozorrubio, where the party was greeted by Gen. Tinio. The evening before, Maj. Samuel M. Swiggert&#8217;s pursuing squadron had caught up with part of the Tinio Brigade in Manaoag, but on the morning of the 14th, failed to pursue Aguinaldo at Pozorrubio.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-3">[6]</sup><sup>:147</sup></p>
<p>Aguinaldo spent the night in Pozorrubio and was unaware of the proximity of the enemy. He only came to know about it when Gen. Tinio informed him that the Americans were in pursuit. The presidential party hurriedly left for Rosario, La Union, and then for Bauang. Fortunately, the encounters with the Tinio Brigade had delayed the American pincer movements and, by the time these closed, Aguinaldo was already far in the north.</p>
<p>On Nov. 18, 1899 Gen. Samuel B. M. Young with 80 men of the 3rd Cavalry plus 300 native scouts, made a forced march north through Pangasinan in pursuit of Aguinaldo.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-4">[6]</sup><sup>:151</sup> Ahead of them was Gen. Tinio, who caught up with Gen. Aguinaldo in Bauang, La Union on the 19th. The following day Gen. Tinio, upon Aguinaldo&#8217;s orders, accompanied Col. Simeon Villa to San Fernando, La Union, where most of Tinio&#8217;s troops were helping the townspeople with the rice harvest. Young&#8217;s troops made a surprise raid on the town at 3 in the morning, and, recognizing Tinio and Villa, pursued them. Luckily the two were able to flee into the mountains on foot and to make their way to San Juan, the next town. Gen. Tinio reassembled his men in San Juan and, in an orderly manner, marched with their wounded to Narvacan, only a day or two ahead of the pursuing Gen. Young. Tinio then set up his command headquarters in San Quintin, Abra and sent the wounded further ahead to the military hospital in Bangued.</p>
<p>On Nov. 26, 1899, Vigan became the hottest spot as the American battleship ‘Oregon’ and the former Spanish gunboats ‘Callao’ and ‘Samar’ anchored off it and started shelling Caoayan, Ilocos Sur.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-5">[6]</sup><sup>:131</sup> Vigan was immediately evacuated on orders of post commander Gen. Benito Natividad. The prisoners, both Spanish and American, together with his meager troops moved on to Abra and Bangued as early as Sept.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-6">[6]</sup><sup>:120</sup> When the Americans landed the following day, led by Commander McCracken and Lt. Col. James Parker, there were no Filipino soldiers in Vigan.<sup id="cite_ref-Sonnichsen_5-6">[5]</sup><sup>:358</sup> A few days later, 225 American troops, mostly Texas volunteers forming a battalion of the 33rd Infantry under Major Peyton C. March,<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-7">[6]</sup><sup>:153</sup> arrived from San Fabian, took up residence in the Archbishop&#8217;s Palace and stored their ammunition and supplies in the adjoining girls’ school.</p>
<p>On Nov. 27, the day the Americans occupied Vigan, Gen. Tinio sent orders for all active soldiers of the Brigade to concentrate along the shores of the Abra River towns of San Quintin, Piddigan and Bangued, beyond the Tangadan Pass. Gen. Young, who was chasing them relentlessly; had reached Candon on the 28th and, from seized documents, discovered that he was no longer trailing the enemy, but was right in their midst! He also learned that Aguinaldo was at Angaki, 25 km. away to the southeast, while Tinio was up north some 40 km. away.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-8">[6]</sup><sup>:153</sup> Young realized immediately that Gen. Tinio&#8217;s purpose in taking his forces to the north was, as he phrased it, &#8220;to lead us away from following Aguinaldo.&#8221; Unsure whether he should pursue Aguinaldo or go after Tinio, the decision was made for him when a battalion of the 34th Volunteer Infantry arrived under Lt. Col. Robert Howze. They had been sent by Gen. Arthur MacArthur to reinforce Gen. Young&#8217;s northern column.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-9">[6]</sup><sup>:154</sup> Forthwith, March&#8217;s battalion was sent in pursuit of Aguinaldo through Tirad Pass, while the bigger part of Young&#8217;s army, with Howze&#8217;s battalion, marched towards Tangadan Pass in an attempt to destroy the Tinio Battalion, the last remaining army of the Republic.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-10">[6]</sup><sup>:156</sup></p>
<h2></h2>
<p>From San Quentin, General Tinio ordered 400 riflemen and bolomen, led by Capt. Alejandrino, went down the Mestizo River in bancas and spread out on both sides of the plaza of Vigan.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-11">[6]</sup><sup>:163</sup> Just before 4 AM on 4 Dec., some of the attackers in the dark streets were challenged by an American patrol who then gave the alarm to the 250 Americans in the city.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-12">[6]</sup><sup>:163</sup> Although Filipino snipers were already in position in the buildings around the plaza, in the ensuing 4-hour battle at close range they were no match for the legendary Texas marksmanship and the inexhaustible supply of American ammunition. The rebels were routed, leaving over 40 dead and 32 captured, while 8 Americans were killed.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-13">[6]</sup><sup>:165</sup> The survivors fled to Tangadan.</p>
<p>By 3 Dec. 1899, Gen. Young and Lt. Col. Howze were at Tangadan Pass with his 260 men.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-14">[6]</sup><sup>:165</sup> The pass was defended by 1,060 men under Lt. Col. Blas Villamor, Tinio&#8217;s chielf of staff, in trench works constructed over the last year with the assistance of Spanish engineers.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-15">[6]</sup><sup>:162</sup> The Americans successfully scaled the steep, 200-foot cliffs flanking the entrenchments to gain a vantage position.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-16">[6]</sup><sup>:168–169</sup> The final assault came in the evening of Dec. 4, added by the arrival of Col. Luther Hare&#8217;s 270 men from the 33rd Infantry.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-17">[6]</sup><sup>:168–169</sup> Outflanked and outnumbered, Lt. Col. Villamor decided to save his men from carnage, and retreated, abandoning rifles and ammunition, and after losing 35 killed and 80 wounded to the American loss of 2 killed and 13 wounded.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-18">[6]</sup><sup>:170</sup>Thus ended the <b>Battle of Tangadan Pass</b>.</p>
<p>Tinio, however, earned the admiration of Col. Howze who wrote glowingly on the Vauban-type Tangadan defenses:</p>
<p>&#8220;The trenches captured are the best field trenches that have ever come under my observation. They terrace the mountainside, cover the valley below in all directions, and thoroughly control the road for a distance of 3 miles. They are permanent in nature, with perfect approaches, bomb-proofs, living sheds, etc., with shapes and revetments sodded and supported by timbers. The complete terrace of trenches number 10 in all, well connected for support, defense and retreat.&#8221;</p>
<p>Gen. Young reported on the bravery of General Tinio and his men, that at the Battle of Tangadan,</p>
<p>&#8220;Some of their officers exposed themselves very gallantly on the parapets during heavy firing.&#8221;</p>
<p>The day after the Battle of Tangadan, December 5, the pursuing Americans invaded Tinio&#8217;s headquarters in San Quintin, five kilometers away from the pass.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-19">[6]</sup><sup>:171</sup> They continued upstream on the Abra River to Pidigan and Bangued, liberating 1,500 starving Spaniards, on 6 Dec.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-20">[6]</sup><sup>:171, 173</sup> The American prisoners and the Spanish general had been sent ahead to Ilocos Norte by Gen. Tinio for strategic reasons, with orders for them to be shot rather than be rescued by the Americans.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-21">[6]</sup><sup>:172</sup> But the capture of Bangued was a major setback for the Filipinos, because the Brigade arsenal was located there. Three tons of sheet brass, two tons of lead, as well as supplies of powder, saltpeter and sulphur were found by the Americans. General Benito Natvidad joined General Tinio at Tayum.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-22">[6]</sup><sup>:193</sup></p>
<p>The onslaught had started! Having captured Bangued, Gen. Young re-armed at Vigan and within a week made unopposed landings in Ilocos Norte at Pasuquin, Laoag and Bangui. He sent cavalry north from Vigan, destroying trenches and defense works around Magsingal, Sinait, Cabugao and Badoc.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the rescue of the American prisoners from Bangued became the task of Col. Hare&#8217;s 220 men of the 33rd Infantry and Col. Howze&#8217;s 130 men of the 34th Infantry.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-23">[6]</sup><sup>:172</sup></p>
<p>In Abra, Gen. Tub had been roaming the farms disguised as a rich planter on a white horse. In this way he made regular daily visits to the various American outposts to chat with the enemy soldiers. He even went so far as to invite them to his house in Bangued for dinner. After gathering all the information that he could, Tinio went back to the hills each day to instruct his men on what to do that night. Unfortunately, one day his photograph was circulated among the Americans and the daring general had no choice but to take to the hills with Col. Hare and a picked group trailing him!</p>
<p>Howze caught up with the Brigade&#8217;s baggage train in Danglas on 8 Dec.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-24">[6]</sup><sup>:182</sup> and 750 more Spanish prisoners on 10 Dec. at Dingras<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-25">[6]</sup><sup>:188</sup> This last group included General Leopoldo Garcia Pena, former commander of Cavite province.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-26">[6]</sup><sup>:188</sup> Hare&#8217;s column joined Howze at Maananteng, where they sent the freed Spanish and Chinese prisoners on to Laoag, and the remaining force of 151 men continued the pursuit into the Cordilleras on 13 Dec.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-27">[6]</sup><sup>:189–192</sup></p>
<p>When Gen. Tinio realized that the Americans were exerting all efforts to surround him, he had the American prisoners conducted to Cabugaoan in Apayao country as a diversion, spreading false rumors that he was with the group. (He had, in fact, on Dec. 12, though surrounded by the Americans in Solsona, Ilocos Norte, near the boundary of Apayao, managed to elude them dressed as a peasant woman.)<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-28">[6]</sup><sup>:189</sup></p>
<p>After days of marching in the wild Cordillera Mountains, the Americans finally caught up with the abandoned prisoners on Dec.18 at the headwaters of the Apayao-Abulug River, having been abandoned by their Filipino guards in Isneg territory.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-29">[6]</sup><sup>:207–208</sup> On crudely constructed rafts, the Americans eventually reached the coast in Abulug, Cagayan, on 2 Jan. 1900, where the footsore and weary soldiers found the <i>USS Princeton</i> and USS <i>Venus</i> waiting to take them back to Vigan and Manila.<sup id="cite_ref-Westfall_6-30">[6]</sup><sup>:217</sup></p>
<p>Gen. Tinio spent the next couple of months in the mountains of Solsona, where he began fortifying the peak of Mt. Bimmauya, east of Lapog. It was also in the remote headwaters of the Bical River above Lapog that an arsenal had been set up to replace that captured at Bangued. This operated for a year. Rifles were repaired, cartridges refilled, gunpowder and homemade hand guns (paltik) manufactured with real feats of mechanical ingenuity. Twenty to thirty silversmiths and laborers could fashion 30-50 cartridges a day by hand!</p>
<p>The defenses constructed by Gen. Tinio were similar to those that he had put up in Tangadan the year before, but, having learned his lesson, he situated the defenses on a peak that Lt. J. C. Castner described as follows:</p>
<p>&#8220;one of the principal peaks (is) on the coast range of northwestern Luzon. Its altitude is between 2,500 and 3,000 feet above the Rio Cabugao that washes its western shore. By reason of standing more to the westward than its immediate neighbors and being bare of timber, it affords a view of the entire coastal plain from Vigan on the South to Laoag on the north. The lower part of Monte Bimmauya is wooded, but the upper three-fourths is bare of trees and bush, and, in certain places, even the grass has been burned off by the insurgents. Consequently, there is no cover for attacking troops ascending the western spur of the mountain. The slopes of the upper portion make angles of from 45-60 degrees with the horizon. The only trail in existence or even possible on this western spur&#8230; is so narrow that it is what is known among geographers as a ‘knife-edge’, hence the only formation admissible was a column of files, two men not being able to march abreast. The ascent is so steep and the footing so insecure that one has to watch continually where he plants his feet to avoid precipitation down the precipice-like slopes on either side.&#8221;</p>
<h2></h2>
<p>New Year&#8217;s Day 1900 signaled the outburst of guerilla warfare throughout the Ilocos region. On that day, Gen. Tinio engaged in a skirmish with American forces at Malabita, San Fernando, La Union. The disconcerted Gen. Young ordered daily patrols by all his units &#8220;to settle this insurgent business with the least possible delay.&#8221; The following day, he requested another battalion of veterans with which he promised &#8220;to drive these outlaws out or kill them and settle the savages before letting up.&#8221; The day after that he repeated the request:</p>
<p>&#8220;My belief is that by keeping up a constant hunt after these murderers, thieves and robbers, the country can be cleared of them within two months.&#8221; Needless to say, he did not receive any reinforcements, because he already had 3,500 men, more than thrice the number of Tinio&#8217;s troops!</p>
<p>On January 13 the Americans intercepted an order from Gen. Tinio to execute all Filipinos who surrender to the enemy.</p>
<p>The following day, January 14. the only artillery duel of the Fil-American War was fought in Bimmuaya between the Republicans and the combined forces of Maj. Steever and Lt. Col. Howze. The barrage lasted from noon until sundown. Despite holding the ‘strongest position in Luzon’, as Steever believed the Bimmuaya stronghold to be, the Filipinos, with their paltry stock of rifles and ammunition, succumbed in less than 24 hours to the mighty American forces. Steever&#8217;s two Maxim guns dominated the show. Although the Americans halted their fire at sunset, the Filipinos kept up desultory fire until midnight. The next day the Americans discovered that it was just to cover the withdrawal of Gen. Tinio and his men!</p>
<p>After the Battle of Bimmuaya, Gen. Tinio&#8217;s guerrilla forces continuously fought and harassed the American garrisons in the different towns of Ilocos for almost 1½ years. His command was probably the first to initiate guerrilla activities in Luzon in accordance with the Aguinaldo&#8217;s official proclamation at Bayambang on Nov. 12, 1899. Once again, he reorganized the Tinio Brigade, now greatly reduced by the casualties sustained in San Jacinto, Manaoag and other places. Discarding its inter-provincial designation of units, he reformed his forces as a guerrilla organization with overlapping territories and troops, Ilocos Sur being shared by other Ilocano provinces. The military commands came to be known as:</p>
<p>· Ilocos Norte-Vigan Line covering the province of Ilocos Norte south to northern Ilocos Sur down to Vigan, · Abra-Candon Line under Lt.-Col. Juan Villamor which covered the Province of Abra and Ilocos Sur south of Vigan down to Candon · La Union-Sta. Cruz Line covering the province of La Union north to southern Ilocos Sur as far as Sta. Cruz.</p>
<p>The battalion commanders came to be known as Jefes de Linea, while the company commanders were now called Jefes de Guerrilla. Companies of riflemen became numbered units of guerrillas, each ranging from 50-100 soldiers, depending on the number of fighters a unit could arm and equip. These troops were then divided further into destacamentos or detachments of 20 men, more or less, under a subaltern officer. These bands were virtually independent of each other in their operations. But they could function occasionally as a unit on rare instances of mass assaults, as in the raids on Laoag on April, Bangued in June and Candon in February 1901.</p>
<p>Col. Bias Villamor, now 2nd in command as a result of his good showing in the Pangasinan campaigns, gave the full count of the Tinio Brigade in January 1900 at 1,062 men, 64 of them officers. The high proportion of officers to men was due to the nature of guerrilla warfare with its small separate units and flying columns of 20-30 men that strike at their chosen times and places. The majority of the officers were Novo-Ecijanos and veterans of earlier campaigns, some even from the Revolution of 1896!</p>
<p>The use of guerrilla tactics by the Filipinos resulted in more American losses than they had previous to Nov. 14, 1899. The never-ending guerrilla raids forced Gen. Young to start garrisoning the towns, setting up 15 of them in January, 4 in March and a total of 36 by April. Detachments varied in size from 50 in San Quintin, 200 in Sinait to 1,000 in Cabugao and Candon. These garrison troops were under fire in one place or another for the next 18 months. Cabugao alone was attacked every Sunday for 7 consecutive weeks! Ambuscades of American patrols became almost a daily occurrence and resulted in so many casualties for the invaders, that by March 1900, no patrols were sent out unless they were 40-50 strong! Gen. Arthur MacArthur, in an official report, stated that:</p>
<p>&#8220;The extensive distribution of troops has strained the soldiers of the army to the full limit of endurance. Each little command has had to provide its own service of security and information by never ceasing patrols, explorations, escorts, outposts and regular guards. . . In all things requiring endurance, fortitude and patient diligence, the guerilla period has been pre-eminent.&#8221;</p>
<p>The &#8220;secret weapon&#8221; of these attacks was the Ilocano people. The whole population was an espionage network and developed a warning system to apprise the revolutionists of approaching invaders. Even priests would tap church bells as a warning of approaching American patrols. Pvt. James Lyons, a prisoner in Tinio&#8217;s camp, reported that &#8220;runners came in every few minutes&#8221; with information. It seemed that the whole Ilocos was now engaged in war, with trade and agriculture virtually at a standstill!</p>
<p>Gen. Tinio&#8217;s raids were so sporadic and simultaneous that many, including the Americans, believed that Tinio had the power of bilocation, appearing in several places at the same time! His personal movements indicated an energetic contact with his forces – organizing, inspecting, consulting, encouraging or commanding in action, and constantly eluding his would-be captors. He was everywhere.</p>
<p>On 31 January, Gen. Tinio and his men had a skirmish on the Candon-Salcedo road with American troops. Fortunately they did not suffer any casualties.</p>
<p>The next day, February 1, Tinio, visited Sto. Domingo, unescorted and dressed as a farmer.</p>
<p>On February 9, he ambushed a troop of 7 cavalry in Sabang, Bacnotan, but withdrew when American reinforcements arrived.</p>
<p>On 16 February, from Bacnotan, he ordered Capt. Galicano Calvo to apprehend certain American spies.</p>
<p>On February 19, he ambushed an enemy patrol in Kaguman and captured the equipment.</p>
<p>On February 26, he ambushed an American convoy between San Juan and Bacnotan, together with their supplies of food, medicine, shoes, mules, etc.</p>
<p>On March 5 the next month, he surprised and routed an American camp in San Francisco, Balaoan, capturing all the equipment. He then went north to Magsingal, but left the next day on an inspection trip.</p>
<p>On the 8th, a surprise search for him in Sto. Domingo and San Ildefonso was frustrated by warnings of church bells.</p>
<p>On the 10th, he issued a warning to the Mayor of Candon, prompting the American command there to request for a picture of Gen. Tinio.</p>
<p>On the 14th, while holding a meeting in Bacnotan, he was surprised by an American patrol. Fortunately, a troop of Filipino cavalry arrived, and, with the support of two guns in the house, the Filipinos were able to repulse the attackers and enable Tinio to escape.</p>
<p>Two days after, on the 16th, Tinio met with Mayor Almeida in Bacsayan, Bacnotan.</p>
<p>On March 29, Gen. Tinio and his escort had a skirmish with an American patrol and routed them. An escaping American was drowned in the river between San Esteban and Sta. Maria.</p>
<p>In April, Tinio reported to Aguinaldo in Lubuagan, Kalinga and in May conferred with Aglipay in Badoc and fought a battle in Quiom, Batac, Ilocos Norte. He then moved on to Piddig, Ilocos Norte and, in June he set up a camp at a remote peak called Paguined on the Badoc River east of Sinait. The last was near his arsenal in Barbar.</p>
<p>All this incessant movement did not detract from his love life. Although he was already married, he continued his various liaisons, even going to the extent of bringing Amelia Dancel into the mountains of Ilocos Norte with him in July. American military reports even mention Amelia as his wife! In disguise, he once visited a maiden in enemy-occupied Vigan. The Americans, hearing that he was in town, began to make a house-to-house search, but were unable to find him, even when they searched his ladyfriend&#8217;s house. The woman had hidden him under the voluminous layers of her Maria Clara skirt! That was probably the narrowest escape he ever made! The incident became the talk of the town and was always cited whenever the name of Gen. Tinio came up. (The quick-thinking &#8220;heroine&#8221; lived until the 1970s.)</p>
<p>By November 1900, the number of American forces in the Ilocos had increased to 5,700 men—plus 300 mercenaries. The number of garrisons also rose to 59, spread thinly over 250 kilometers from Aringay, La Union to Cape Bojeador, Ilocos Norte. Earlier, mercenaries had been brought in from Macabebe, Pampanga and were stationed in Vigan, Sta. Maria, and San Esteban. These mercenaries started recruiting fellow Filipinos and by April numbered over 200, half of them Ilocanos and a quarter of them Tagalogs. Attached to regular occupation troops, these mercenaries caused significant damage to the nationalists by leading the enemy to hidden food supplies and inducing many defections. Because of this, Gen. Tinio issued a proclamation on March 20, 1900 as follows:</p>
<p>First and last article. The following shall be tried by summary court martial and sentenced to death:</p>
<ul>
<li>All local presidents and other civil authorities, both of towns and of the barrios, rancherias (settlements of Christianized tribesmen) and sitios or hamlets, of their respective jurisdictions, who do not give immediate notice of any plan, direction, movement or number of the enemy as soon as they learn of it.</li>
<li>Those who, regardless of age or sex, reveal the location of the camp, stopping places, movements or direction of the revolutionaries to the enemy.</li>
<li>Those who voluntarily offer to serve the enemy as guides, unless it be for the purpose of misleading them from the right road, and</li>
<li>Those who, whether of their own free will or not, capture revolutionary soldiers who are alone, or persuade them to surrender to the enemy.</li>
</ul>
<p>The insidious guerrilla war saw such rules and warnings proclaimed from both parties. The American commands in Ilocos Norte were ordered to warn barrio officials that those who did not report ‘insurgents’ immediately (meaning, within an hour for every 5 km. from the nearest American troops) would be considered insurgents themselves, and their barrios ‘absolutely destroyed’. Theft of telegraph wires or ambuscades of American patrols resulted in the nearest villages being burned and the inhabitants killed. When 200 m. of telegraph wire was destroyed in Piddigan, Abra, the Bangued command reported the next day that, &#8220;There is not a single building standing out of Piddigan.&#8221;</p>
<p>Gen. Tinio, on the other hand, ordered all the towns to aid the revolutionaries. Pasuquin, a town in Ilocos Norte, refused to cooperate with Filipino forces, so Tinio threatened to burn the town &#8220;at his leisure&#8221; and did so on Nov. 3, 1900.</p>
<p>On Dec. 21, Gen. Tinio issued a proclamation against crimes by military forces. On Christmas Day, Tinio, with Maj. Reyes and ten officers celebrated the holiday in Lemerig near Asilang, Lapog. On Holy Innocents’ Day, Dec. 28, the Americans made a surprise raid on Lemerig. Fortunately, the general and his officers managed to escape.</p>
<h2></h2>
<p>The first month of 1901 began inauspiciously with the capture of Gen. Tinio&#8217;s arsenal at Barbar on January 29, 1901.</p>
<p>The following month, on February 19, 1901, Brigadier Gen. James Franklin Bell came into the picture. Gen. Young turned over the command of the First District, Department of Northern Luzon to him. It is this General Bell who would later gain notoriety for his ‘re-concentration’ methods in the southern Tagalog provinces right after his stint in the North.</p>
<p>Determined to continue the same policy of repression, Gen. Bell, with an additional 1,000 men, ordered his forces to pursue, kill and wipe out the insurrectos. Food supplies were destroyed to prevent them from reaching the guerrillas. Inasmuch as the barrios were supplying rice from the recent harvests to the guerrillas, whole populations were evacuated to town centers within 10 days of notification. Noncompliance resulted in the burning of the whole barrio. Even some interior towns were completely evacuated, while others, like Magsingal and Lapog were surrounded by stockades to prevent the revolutionaries from infesting them.</p>
<p>On February 26, Gen. Tinio attacked the Americans fortified in the convent of Sta. Maria. It was his last attack against American forces.</p>
<p>The whole Ilocos was being laid waste and was in danger of starvation due to Gen. Bell&#8217;s iron fisted policies. The lack of supplies eventually forced hundreds of patriots to lay down their arms and return to their homes. By March the Brigade only had a few hundred soldiers left.</p>
<p>On March 25, 1901, the top brass of the Tinio Brigade met in a council of war at Sagap, Bangued. In this meeting, Generals Tinio and Natividad, the two Villamors and Lt. Colonels Alejandrino, Gutierrez and Salazar resolved that &#8220;the final action of the Tinio Brigade should depend upon the decision of the Honorable President.&#8221;</p>
<p>Unknown to them, Aguinaldo had been captured in Palanan, Isabela on March 23, 1901. When word of Aguinaldo&#8217;s surrender reached Gen. Tinio on April 3, he only had two command-rank subordinates remaining, his former classmates Joaquin Alejandrino and Vicente Salazar.</p>
<p>On April 19, 1901 Aguinaldo proclaimed an end to hostilities and urged his generals to surrender and lay down their arms. In compliance with Gen. Aguinaldo&#8217;s proclamation, Gen. Tinio sent Col. Salazar to Sinait under a flag of truce to discuss terms of surrender. The following day, Salazar was sent back with the peace terms. On April 29, 1901, Gen. Manuel Tinio, whom the American military historian, William T. Sexton, called &#8220;the soul of the insurrection in the Ilocos provinces of Northern Luzon&#8221; and &#8220;a general of a different stamp from the majority of the insurgent leaders&#8221;, surrendered. The following day, April 30, he signed the Oath of Allegiance. When Tinio handed his revolver to Gen. Bell as a token of surrender, the latter immediately returned it to him – a token of great respect. Gen. Tinio was only 23 years old!</p>
<p>The Americans suspended all hostilities on May 1 and printed Tinio&#8217;s appeal for peace on the Regimental press on the 5th. On May 9 he surrendered his arms together with Gen. Benito Natividad, thirty-six of his officers and 350 riflemen.</p>
<p>While the Americans boasted that they eliminated 5 insurrecto generals within a month, it took them 11/2 years and 7,000 men to ‘civilize’ Manuel Tinio y Bundoc, the Tagalog boy-general of the Ilocanos!</p>
<p>The significance attached to Gen. Tinio&#8217;s surrender by the Americans was felt throughout the country. Gen. MacArthur said that the little war in the Ilocos was the &#8220;most troublesome and perplexing military problem in all Luzon.&#8221; On May 5, as Military Governor of the Philippines, MacArthur issued General Order No. 89 releasing 1,000 Filipino prisoners of war &#8220;to specially signalize the recent surrender of Gen. Manuel Tinio and other prominent military leaders in the provinces of Abra and Ilocos Norte.&#8221; La Fraternidad, a Manila newspaper, happily reported, &#8220;The 1st of May is now for 2 reasons an important date in contemporary Philippine history – 1898, the destruction of the Spanish squadron in Cavite; 1901, the surrender of Generals Tinio and Natividad and the complete pacification of Northern Luzon.</p>
<p>Manuel Tinio, surprisingly, never suffered any injury during his entire military career even as he was known to stand up and face a barrage of artillery fire! He attributed this to an amulet, anting-anting, that he always wore and which he kept in a safe after the cessation of hostilities.</p>
<h2></h2>
<p>Upon his release, Manuel Tinio went back to Nueva Ecija to rehabilitate his neglected farms in present-day Licab, Sto. Domingo and Talavera. He lived in a camarin or barn together with all the farming paraphernalia and livestock. A typical hacendero, he was very paternalistic and caring, extending his protection, not only on his family, but also to his friends and supporters. His men even compared him to a ‘hen’.</p>
<p>As a family man, he was very protective of his daughters. Being family-oriented, he took in all the children of his deceased sisters and half sisters (from his father&#8217;s previous marriages) when their widowers eventually remarried or played around. He treated all his nephews and nieces as if they were his children, giving them the same education and privileges. This resulted in the extremely close family ties of the Tinio Family. He was very loving and fatherly and would entertain his children with stories of his campaigns. Perhaps because he never finished high school, he believed in a good education and, in 1920, sent his two eldest sons to the United States to study in Cornell University.</p>
<p>Manuel Tinio treated everyone equally, rich and poor alike, so everyone looked up to him and respected him. In fact, he paid more attention to the poor than to the rich, because, according to him, the poor had nothing but their pride and were, for that reason, more sensitive. When rich relatives came to visit, his children had but to kiss their hand in greeting, but when a poor relation came, they had to greet their kin in the same manner, but on bended knees – the highest form of respect in those days!.</p>
<p>All his tenants idolized Manuel Tinio, who was not an absentee landlord, but lived with them in the farm with hardly any amenities. However, he always kept a good table and had flocks of sheep and dovecotes in every property he owned, so that he could have his favorite caldereta and pastel de pichon anytime he wanted. He also enjoyed his brandy, finishing off daily a bottle of Tres Cepes by Domecq. Wherever he lived, he received a constant stream of visitors, relatives and friends. Many veterans of the Tinio Brigade, often coming from the Ilocos, invariably came to reminisce and ask for his assistance. Later, as Governor, he would help them settle in Nueva Ecija.</p>
<p>Although he was but a civilian, the prominence he earned as a revolutionary general and his immense network of social and familial alliances eventually became the nucleus of a political machine that he controlled until his death. An ardent nationalist, he fought against the federalists who wanted the Philippines to become an American state. He did not run for any position, but any candidate he endorsed was sure to win the position. Dr. Benedicto Adorable, one of the richest and most prominent men in Gapan, was so fanatically loyal that he often said, &#8220;I would vote for a dog if Gen. Tinio asked me to.&#8221; Of course, he was fanatically loyal because Gen. Tinio had saved him from a Spanish firing squad in 1896!</p>
<p>When Gov. Gen. Henry C. Ide lifted the ban on independence parties in 1906, the political parties with similar ideology merged into the present Nacionalista Party. Manuel Tinio always supported Sergio Osmeña, the leader of the party, throughout his political career. Even during the split between Osmeña and Quezon in 1922, Tinio remained loyal to the former. As the founder and leader of the Nacionalista Party in Nueva Ecija, Tinio stressed the significance of a unified party, emphasizing in every local party convention that the winner will be supported wholly by each party member. Any party member who won an election could serve only one term in office to give the other party members a chance. Should the incumbent seek re-election, Tinio advised his colleagues to support the choice of the convention. As a party leader, he did not want warring factions within the party, and exerted every effort to make rival groups come to terms. Thus, during his lifetime, the Nacionalista Party in Nueva Ecija was unified.</p>
<p>On July 15, 1907 Gov. Gen. James F. Smith appointed Manuel Tinio as Governor of the Province of Nueva Ecija, to serve the remainder of the 3-year term of Gov. Isauro Gabaldon, who had resigned to run as a candidate for the 1st National Assembly. Incidentally, one of the first major bills Assemblyman Gabaldon proposed was the establishment of a school in every town in the archipelago. The Gabaldon-type schoolhouses and Gabaldon town in Nueva Ecija are named after him. Gabaldon&#8217;s wife, Bernarda, was the eldest daughter of Casimiro Tinio.</p>
<p>Manuel Tinio&#8217;s first term as governor was marked by the return of peace and order to the province. William Cameron Forbes, Commissioner of Commerce and Police under both Gov.-Generals Wright and Smith, wrote of Tinio:</p>
<p>&#8220;…we picked up the new Governor of Nueva Ecija at San Isidro, the capital, General Tinio. He used to be a celebrated insurecto General and Governor Smith has just made him Governor.. . We have more robbery and murders here than almost anywhere, one leading band being continually on the move. General Tinio informed me that he had most of the band in jail already, his guns captured, and the robberies stopped, and the principal outstanding ladron (the only one that I know by name in the whole of Luzon) driven from his borders and over to Pangasinan. I talked busily on road building and maintenance to him for a couple of hours while we sped up to Cabanatuan and went up to call on the local officials..</p>
<p>An anecdote on Gov. Tinio&#8217;s bravery has him negotiating with a dreaded tulisan or bandit who held a family hostage for days, threatening to kill them if the constables, policemen, tried to rush him. Unarmed, Tinio went into the house, talked to the bandit and went out after 30 minutes with the bandit peacefully in tow.</p>
<p>Gov. Tinio also brought about agricultural expansion. His Governor&#8217;s report for the fiscal year 1907–1908 stated that the area of cultivated land increased by 15%. The following year, this was augmented by an additional 40%. These lands, which were settled by over 5,000 homesteaders, mostly Ilocanos, were in the towns of Bongabon (then including Rizal), Talavera, Sto. Domingo, Guimba (which still included Muñoz) and San Jose. The influx of settlers from the north explains why many people speak Ilocano in those towns today.</p>
<p>It was also during his term as Governor that his wife, Laureana, died. The Provincial Board then passed a resolution naming the town Laur, after her. Soon after, he married Maura Quijano, the younger sister of Laureana, who had accompanied her from Ilocos after Gen. Tinio&#8217;s surrender to the Americans.</p>
<p>Gen. Tinio ran for reelection under the Nacionalista Party in 1908 and won. But there were other things in store for him. His executive ability and decisiveness had not gone unnoticed by the Americans, especially by Forbes who had become Acting Gov. Gen. on May 8, 1909. Months before Forbes assumed the office,</p>
<p>&#8220;Manila was being troubled by a series of strikes generally fomented by the shamelessly corrupt labor leader Dominador Gomez, who was taking a cut out of sums levied as blackmail against major American firms. Gomez had been arrested for threats, and some of the other unions collapsed when Gov.-Gen. Smith had questioned the legality of the unions’ use of their funds.&#8221;</p>
<p>To help settle labor problems, Forbes set up the Bureau of Labor and asked Manuel Tinio to head it. Forthwith, Tinio resigned as Governor of Nueva Ecija and became the first Director of Labor on July 1, 1909, thereby becoming the first Filipino Bureau Director! He quickly solved the strikes. Three weeks later, Forbes welcomed Director Tinio to his staff meeting and wrote in his diary:</p>
<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s a good man, and Col. Bandholtz says he&#8217;s got Gomez scared to death&#8230; Gomez had tried Tinio to employ him, but Tinio refused: &#8220;Why pay you to do the work the Government is paying me to do?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;In a short time the condition of labor and industry in the region about Manila was vastly improved. In general, it may be said that, as a result of Gen. Tinio&#8217;s management of the bureau, strikes ceased, laborers went their way contented, employees readily corrected abuses brought to their attention, and the (union) leaders fell back into their proper role of caring for and representing the laborers.&#8221;</p>
<p>Manuel Tinio eventually became a close friend of the aristocratic Forbes, whom he invited to hunting parties in Pantabangan. The latter liked Tinio&#8217;s company, even offering to give him a hectare of land along Session Road in Baguio, (newly developed by Forbes) so that Tinio could build a house there and keep him company whenever he went up to the cool mountain resort. Tinio did not accept the offer. Gov.-Gen. Forbes also wrote in his journal:</p>
<p>&#8220;Tinio later became a great friend of mine. I made him Director of Labor and I rated him as one of the best Filipinos in the Islands. In fact, from the point of view of staunchness of character, and good judgement, and other good qualities, I liked Tinio best of all and wanted to make him Commissioner [member of the Philippine Commission].&#8221;</p>
<p>Gov.-Gen. Francis Burton Harrison succeeded Gov. Forbes. His term was characterized by increased Filipinization of the insular bureaucracy, and he appointed Tinio as the first Filipino Director of Lands on October 17, 1913. It was while he was Director of the Bureau of Lands that cadastral surveys for each municipality began to be made, and the area now covered by the towns of Rizal, Llanera, Gen. Natividad, Laur, Lupao and Muñoz were subdivided into homesteads. In the largest wave of migration ever experienced by the province, thousands of landless Tagalogs and Ilocanos came and settled in Nueva Ecija. But Tinio suffered intrigues sown by the American Assistant Director, who wanted to be appointed to the position. The intrigues came to the point that Tinio was even accused of manipulating the sale of the 6,000 hectare Sabani Estate that was subsequently rescinded. In disgust and for delicadeza, he resigned on September 13, 1914 and returned to Nueva Ecija to manage his landholdings. A subsequent investigation cleared him of all charges, but, disillusioned with the government system, he refused to go back to government service, preferring to live the quiet life of a landowner instead. The Sabani Estate, in present-day Gabaldon, Nueva Ecija and Dingalan, Aurora, never found another buyer and still belongs to the government and is administered by the National Development Corporation.</p>
<p>It was during his term as Director of Lands that his wife, Maura, died. He then married Basilia Pilares Huerta, a Bulakeña from Meycauayan.</p>
<p>After his resignation from the Bureau of Lands, Manuel Tinio went back to Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija, and built his house on Burgos St. It was the largest house in town. He entertained and kept open house, which meant that anyone present at lunchtime was automatically invited to dine. Everyday was like an Election Day – with people coming to ask for assistance, financial or otherwise. A very generous man, he was not averse to using his personal financial resources to help those in need.</p>
<p>Manuel Tinio dedicated the remainder of his life to politics. The hold that Manuel Tinio had on the province was awesome. Even if he did not have any position, he maintained absolute control over the local government with the unchallenged power to make or unmake provincial leaders. In order to maintain and gain his political power, Manuel Tinio made it a practice to visit every voter during an election year, reserving for last those who were known to be against his party. A few days before the election, Tinio would visit them. He would sit where everyone who passed by the house could see him. After chatting with his host for an hour or two, without even discussing politics, the whole barrio would conclude that the fellow had been won over by Tinio! His credibility with his partymates shattered, the poor fellow had no choice but to move over eventually to the Nationalista Party!</p>
<p>Lewis Gleeck wrote of Manuel Tinio as &#8220;the supreme example of caciquism in the Philippines&#8221; and cited the case of one of Tinio&#8217;s most prominent political leaders who had shot and killed a man in front of many witnesses. The Americans, wanting to show that there was equality under American law, tried to make a big case out of it. However, they could not find a single lawyer in the whole province willing to act for the prosecution. After sending an American lawyer from Manila, the case had to be dismissed, because no witness came up to testify! J. Ralston Hayden, a high American official, said:</p>
<p>&#8220;Tinio controlled the entire government: the Courts of First Instance, the Justices of the Peace, the chiefs of police and police forces, the mayors and the councilors. These, together with a tremendous money power, were in his hands. No one dared to stand up against him.&#8221;</p>
<p>Manuel Tinio was also a very good friend of Manuel Quezon and Sergio Osmeña, the Speaker of the National Assembly and the most powerful Filipino in the political scene at that time. It was not surprising, therefore, that Manuel Tinio was included in the Independence Mission that went to Washington D. C. in 1921.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=3760</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Agueda Kahabagan y Iniquinto the only woman in the roster of generals of the Army of the Philippine Republic.</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3642</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3642#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 14 Jun 2019 08:54:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General Philippine History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=3642</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#160; &#160; Agueda Kahabagan y Iniquinto is referred to in the few sources that mention her as &#8220;Henerala Agueda&#8221;. Not so much is known about her but from snatches of information available, she was presumably a native of Sta. Cruz, Laguna. Henerala&#8217;s bravery in battle was legendary. She was reportedly often seen in the battlefield dressed in [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Agueda-Kahabagan.png"><img class="alignnone  wp-image-3643" alt="Agueda Kahabagan" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Agueda-Kahabagan.png" width="658" height="928" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><b>Agueda Kahabagan y Iniquinto</b> is referred to in the few sources that mention her as &#8220;Henerala Agueda&#8221;. Not so much is known about her but from snatches of information available, she was presumably a native of <a title="Sta. Cruz, Laguna" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sta._Cruz,_Laguna">Sta. Cruz, Laguna</a>. Henerala&#8217;s bravery in battle was legendary.</p>
<p>She was reportedly often seen in the battlefield dressed in white, armed with a rifle and brandishing a bolo. Apparently she was commissioned by General <a title="Miguel Malvar" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miguel_Malvar">Miguel Malvar</a> to lead a detachment of forces sometime in May 1897. Kahabagan was mentioned in connection with the attack led by General <a title="Artemio Ricarte" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artemio_Ricarte">Artemio Ricarte</a> on the Spanish garrison in <a title="San Pablo, Laguna" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Pablo,_Laguna">San Pablo</a> in October 1897. It was most probably General <a title="Pío del Pilar" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P%C3%ADo_del_Pilar">Pío del Pilar</a> who recommended that she be granted the honorary title of <i>Henerala</i>. In March 1899, she was listed as the only woman in the roster of generals of the Army of the Philippine Republic.<sup id="cite_ref-1"><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agueda_Kahabagan#cite_note-1">[1]</a></sup> She was appointed on January 4, 1899.</p>
<p>Reference:</p>
<p><a title="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agueda_Kahabagan" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agueda_Kahabagan" target="_blank">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agueda_Kahabagan</a></p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p>
<p>More information about &#8221;Henerala Agueda&#8221; here:</p>
<p><a title="https://www.scoutmag.ph/culture/first-woman-general-agueda-kahabagan-paolov-20190329?fbclid=IwAR35yz5SEt-g4j9vSX-NcvInyRKAMzGj2gADzc8EFp3jxuWW0nMVgDOOXq0" href="https://www.scoutmag.ph/culture/first-woman-general-agueda-kahabagan-paolov-20190329?fbclid=IwAR35yz5SEt-g4j9vSX-NcvInyRKAMzGj2gADzc8EFp3jxuWW0nMVgDOOXq0" target="_blank">https://www.scoutmag.ph/culture/first-woman-general-agueda-kahabagan-paolov-20190329?fbclid=IwAR35yz5SEt-g4j9vSX-NcvInyRKAMzGj2gADzc8EFp3jxuWW0nMVgDOOXq0</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div>
<h1 itemprop="name headline">Agueda Kahabagan was our first woman general. But do you know her?</h1>
<div>
<div>by Paolo Vergara</div>
<div><span style="color: #333333;">It’s a great time for history buffs. Topics once deemed too nerdy now spill into the mainstream and into pop culture consciousness, through carefully-crafted and -researched movies like </span><i style="color: #333333;">Bonifacio: Ang Unang Pangulo</i><span style="color: #333333;"> (2014), </span><i style="color: #333333;">Heneral Luna</i><span style="color: #333333;"> (2015) and </span><i style="color: #333333;">Goyo: Ang Batang Heneral</i><span style="color: #333333;"> (2018).</span></div>
</div>
</div>
<div>
<p>Alongside Philippine folklore, history has been resurfacing here and there through articles, manga, or Twitter threads from professional researchers and passionate laypeople alike. Political awareness and once-forgotten issues from more than a hundred years (“Who killed Luna?”) add a dimension of urgency, too.</p>
<p>But there are stories still threatened by obscurity: a shelved book gathering dust is one thing. The lack of records another. Such is the case of many women who actively took part in the Philippines’ formative years. If their stories surface at all, it’s usually limited to the supporting roles they played for men.</p>
<p>Enter Agueda Kahabagan y Iniquinto, the only officially listed general during the Philippine Revolution of 1896-1898 and the Philippine-American War of 1899-1902.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>“Good daughters and dutiful wives”</h3>
<p>Records refer to a speech by a Mrs. C.F. Calderón before American socialite Alice Roosevelt in a 1905 Manila reception that contained interesting descriptions of Filipina women.</p>
<p>Calderón said Pre-Hispanic Filipinas were freer and had power equal to males in pre-colonial society but Spanish women “corrupted” in Mexico imported their “defects” to the Philippines. (Note that for most of the Spanish colonial period, our islands were governed from the “viceroyalty of New Spain.”)</p>
<p>The upbringing of the colonized Filipino woman rendered them “ignorant, frivolous, proud” and “gave little heed to her intellectual culture…confined to the external practices of Catholicism.”</p>
<p>Educational opportunities were scant as Calderón laments: “Such was the destiny of the woman of that social order—either mother or nun.” She also became aware, however, that business conducted through industrial capitalism changes how people relate with each other.</p>
<p>Calderón said it was under a social climate of thinly veiled ass-kissing where <i>Henerala</i> Agueda took a leap of faith and plunged into two wars that shaped the birth of the nation. So yes, she was a good daughter of the cause, and a dutiful mother of the nation.</p>
<h3>Who is she?</h3>
<p>Little is known about the <i>Henerala</i>. A Google-up reveals well-meaning articles and a Wikipedia page, all with much conjecture, but little confirmation (The search entry photo is of Gregoria de Jesus, wife of Andres Bonifacio).</p>
<p>“Not so much is known about her but from snatches of information available,” the Wikipedia page reads.<i>Scout</i> approached a number of professional historians who gave either leads while acknowledging their relative unfamiliarity with Agueda Kahabagan, or who did not respond at all.</p>
<p>A treasure trove of data may be waiting in the National Library and Lopez Museum, but as of press time, both are under renovation.</p>
<p>Continue article at the link: <a title="https://www.scoutmag.ph/culture/first-woman-general-agueda-kahabagan-paolov-20190329?fbclid=IwAR35yz5SEt-g4j9vSX-NcvInyRKAMzGj2gADzc8EFp3jxuWW0nMVgDOOXq0" href="https://www.scoutmag.ph/culture/first-woman-general-agueda-kahabagan-paolov-20190329?fbclid=IwAR35yz5SEt-g4j9vSX-NcvInyRKAMzGj2gADzc8EFp3jxuWW0nMVgDOOXq0" target="_blank">https://www.scoutmag.ph/culture/first-woman-general-agueda-kahabagan-paolov-20190329?fbclid=IwAR35yz5SEt-g4j9vSX-NcvInyRKAMzGj2gADzc8EFp3jxuWW0nMVgDOOXq0</a></p>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=3642</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>June 12 as Independence Day by Diosdado Macapagal Former President of the Philippines</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3657</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3657#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 Jun 2019 08:15:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[American Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Flags]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General Philippine History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine American War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Regional History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=3657</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[June 12 as Independence Day by Diosdado Macapagal Former President of the Philippines June 12 as Independence Day by Diosdado Macapagal Former President of the Philippines “A nation is born into freedom on the day when such a people, moulded into a nation by a process of cultural evolution and sense of oneness born of [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>June 12 as Independence Day by Diosdado Macapagal Former President of the Philippines</h2>
<div></div>
<div>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Philippine-Independence-Declaration-1898.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-3658" alt="Philippine-Independence-Declaration-1898" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Philippine-Independence-Declaration-1898.jpg" width="371" height="300" /></a><br />
<strong>June 12 as Independence Day</strong><br />
by Diosdado Macapagal<br />
Former President of the Philippines</p>
<p>“A nation is born into freedom on the day when such a people, moulded into a nation by a process of cultural evolution and sense of oneness born of common struggle and suffering, announces to the world that it asserts its natural right to liberty and is ready to defend it with blood, life, and honor.”</p>
<p>The promotion of a healthy nationalism is part of the responsibility of the leaders of newly independent nations. After they lay the foundation for economic development, they promote nationalism and spur the search for national identity. This we can do by honoring our distinguished forebears and notable periods in our history. A step we took in this direction was to change the date for the commemoration of Philippine Independence day.</p>
<p>When I was a congressman, I formed the opinion that July 4 was not the proper independence day for Filipinos and should be changed to June 12– the date General Emilio Aguinaldo proclaimed the independence of the Filipinos in Kawit, Cavite, in 1898.</p>
<p>Having served in the foreign service, I noted that the celebration of a common independence day with the United States on July 4 caused considerable inconvenience. The American celebration dwarfed that of the Philippines. As if to compound the irony, July 4 seemed tantamount to the celebration of Philippine subjection to and dependence on the United States which served to perpetuate unpleasant memories.</p>
<p>I felt, too, that July 4 was not inspiring enough for the Filipino youth since it recalled mostly the peaceful independence missions to the United States. The celebration of independence day on June 12, on the other hand, would be a greater inspiration to the youth who would consequently recall the heroes of the revolution against Spain and their acts of sublime heroism and martyrdom. These acts compare favorably with those of the heroes of other nations.</p>
<p>In checking the reaction to my plan to shift independence day to June 12, I found that there was virtual unanimity on the desirability of transferring the celebration from July 4. Likewise, there was a preponderant view for choosing June 12 as the proper day.</p>
<p>A few suggested January 21, the opening day of the Malolos Congress in 1899, or January 23, when the Malolos Congress, ratifying the independence proclamation of June 12, established a republican system of government. The reason for this view was that the government temporarily by Aguinaldo when he proclaimed independence on June 12 was a dictatorship.</p>
<p>There was no difficulty in adhering to June 12, however, because although Aguinaldo Government was a dictatorship in view of the military operations he was then leading, he led in converting it into a republican Government in the Malolos Congress. Moreover, the celebration of independence refers to its proclamation rather than to the final establishment of the government. In the case of America, when independence was proclaimed on July 4, the American Government was still a confederation and it was much later when it finally became a federal government.</p>
<p>The historical fact was that the Filipinos proclaimed their independence from foreign rule on June 12. Even the national anthem and the Filipino flag which are essential features in the birth of a nation were played and displayed respectively at the independence proclamation in Kawit.</p>
<p>When I became President, I knew that this was the opportunity to take action on what had been in my mind since entering public life. The specific question was when to make the change.</p>
<p>The opportunity came when the US House of Representatives rejected the $73 million additional war payment bill on May 9, 1962. There was indignation among the Filipinos. There was a loss of American good will in the Philippines, although this was restored later by the reconsideration of the action of the US lower chamber. At this time, a state visit in the United States had been scheduled for Mrs. Macapagal and me on the initiative and invitation of President John F. Kennedy. Unable to resist the pressure of public opinion, I was constrained to obtain the agreement of Kennedy to defer the state visit for another time.</p>
<p>To postpone the state visit, I wrote a letter on May 14, 1962, to Kennedy, which read in part as follows:</p>
<p>The feeling of resentment among our people and the attitude of the US Congress negate the atmosphere of good will upon which my state visit to your country was predicated. Our people would never understand how, in the circumstances now obtaining, I could go to the United States and in all honesty affirm that I bear their message of good will. It is with deep regret theredore that I am constrained to ask you to agree to the postponement of my visit to a more auspicious time.</p>
<p>On May 28, 1962, Kennedy wrote me explaining the situation on the war damage bill. His letter stated:</p>
<p>In the meantime, I must respect your decision that your visit to the United States should be postponed. We do not want your visit to be less than first class, when it comes. But I do hope that we will be able to find another convenient time.</p>
<p>I decided to effect the change of independence day at that time not as an act of resentment but as a judicious choice of timing for the taking of an action which had previously been decided upon.</p>
<p>I called Press Secretary Rufino Hechanova to consult him on my contemplated action. I asked him outright what he thought of my step if I should move the celebration of independence day from July 4 to June 12.</p>
<p>Hechanova winced and said: “Please Mr. President, don’t act on that yet. Let us give it a thorough study. I am flying to Iloilo today and on my return on Monday I will come to discuss it with you.”</p>
<p>After his departure, I called in Legal Adviser Juan Cancio. “Johnny,” I asked, “Do I have the power to change independence day from July 4 to June 12?” Cancio readily answered: “Yes, sir, because July 4 is being celebrated as independence day not because it is so specifically designated by law but as an official holiday. Since the President has the authority to declare official holidays, you may declare June 12 as a holiday and hold an independence celebration on that day.”</p>
<p>I immediately directed Cancio to prepare the proclamation, revised and signed it, and asked him to release it to the press through the Malacañang press office. On May 17, 1962, I certified as urgent to the Congress the enactment of a measure to fix June 12 statutorily as independence day.</p>
<p>The change was justified by the successful celebration. General Emilio Aguinaldo was the guest of honor. At least one million people attended whereas in previous celebrations on July 4, only from two to three hundred thousand came.</p>
<p>Bespeaking of the nobility of the American people, President Kennedy was among the first to extend the congratulations of the United States to the Filipino people in celebrating their freedom on June 12, 1962. In a message to me, he said:</p>
<p>It is with pleasure that I join the people of the United States in extending our best wishes and warmest congratulations to Your Excellency and the people of the Republic of the Philippines on the occasion of the Philippine Independence Day.</p>
<p>A letter of thanks in Spanish was also sent to me by General Aguinaldo on May 19, 1962. A translation of the letter reads in part as follows:</p>
<p>I cannot but send you this letter to express the most profound gratitude for the proclamation which Your Excellency has recently issued naming June 12 as independence day– the date when we announced to the whole world that we were a free and independent nation. I who took an active if modest part in the effort of our people to break the colonial yoke we were subjected to, feel joy and pride over the patriotic act which Your Excellency has just performed.</p>
<p>In my address on the first June 12 as independence day celebration, I said:</p>
<p>In the discharge of my responsibility as President of the Republic, I moved the observance of the anniversary of our independence to this day because a nation is born into freedom on the day when such a people, moulded into a nation by the process of cultural evolution and a sense of oneness born of common struggle and suffering, announces to the world that it asserts its natural right to liberty and is ready to defend it with blood, life, and honor.</p>
<p>While we were seated at the grandstand during the ceremonies, General Aguinaldo thanked me again for the rectification of an erroneous historical practice and then asked: “When will there be an Aguinaldo monument at the Luneta like that of Rizal?” I could not answer the question. The next generation might have the answer.</p>
<p>The following year the same successful celebration was held. The commemoration on the third year was likewise a success.</p>
<p>I noted by this time that Congress had not yet approved a measure to prescribe June 12 as independence day by statute. I followed up the matter with members of the Senate and the House.</p>
<p>Rep. Ramon Mitra Sr. was leading the spade work in the House for the approval of the new independence day measure. The bill was authored by him and Rep. Justiniano Montano. Senator Lorenzo Tañada authored a similar measure in the Senate.</p>
<p>Among those whom I talked to in following up the bill was Senator Gerardo Roxas, son of President Roxas who raised the Filipino flag on July 4, 1946 to mark the independence of the Philippines from American rule and thereby became the first President of the Republic of the Philippines. I thought it possible that Senator Roxas might be lukewarm toward the change of independence day since the historical focus on the first Presidency of the Republic may shift from Roxas to Aguinaldo. My talk with him did not bear out my fear. Roxas informed me that what had delayed the approval of the independence day bill was the desire of some legislators to retain some significance for July 4. In the consideration of the measure, the snag was solved by the provision that with June 12 being declared Independence Day, July 4 shall be known as Republic Day.</p>
<p>Finally, on August 4, 1964, I signed at Malacañang Republic Act No. 4166 statutorily prescribing June 12 as Philippine Independence Day. Special witnesses invited to the signing were children of Presidents, including Carmen Melencio-Aguinaldo, Manuel Quezon Jr., Maria Osmeña-Charnley, Gerardo Roxas, Tomas Quirino, and my sons Arturo and Diosdado Jr.</p>
<p>(Thanks to the Philippine Consulate General in Los Angeles for making this document available.)</p>
<p>To cite:<br />
Macapagal, Diosdado. “June 12 as Independence Day” in Hector Santos, ed., Philippine Centennial Series; at http://www.bibingka.com/phg/documents/whyjun12.htm. US, 30 April 1997.9</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img title="philippine-independence" alt="kali arnis eskrima escrima" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/philippine-independence.jpg" width="425" height="268" /></p>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=3657</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Imprinting Andres Bonifacio: The Iconization from Portrait to Peso by The Malacañan Palace Library</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3562</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3562#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Oct 2018 20:27:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[American Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General Philippine History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine American War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Photo Archive]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Photo Gallery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Regional History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=3562</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Imprinting Andres Bonifacio: The Iconization from Portrait to Peso by The Malacañan Palace Library Source: http://malacanang.gov.ph/2942-imprinting-andres-bonifacio-the-iconization-from-portrait-to-peso/Imprinting Andres Bonifacio: The Iconization from Portrait to Peso by The Malacañan Palace Library &#160; The face of the Philippine revolution is evasive, just like the freedom that eluded the man known as its leader. &#160; &#160; The only known [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Imprinting Andres Bonifacio: The Iconization from Portrait to Peso by The Malacañan Palace Library</h2>
<div><a title="Source: http://malacanang.gov.ph/2942-imprinting-andres-bonifacio-the-iconization-from-portrait-to-peso/" href="Source: http://malacanang.gov.ph/2942-imprinting-andres-bonifacio-the-iconization-from-portrait-to-peso/" target="_blank"><span style="font-size: 1.17em;">Source: http://malacanang.gov.ph/2942-imprinting-andres-bonifacio-the-iconization-from-portrait-to-peso/Imprinting Andres Bonifacio: The Iconization from Portrait to Peso by The Malacañan Palace Library</span></a></div>
<div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/Andres_Bonifacio_photo.jpg"><img title="Andres_Bonifacio_photo" alt="" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/Andres_Bonifacio_photo.jpg" width="290" height="398" /></a></p>
<p>The face of the Philippine revolution is evasive, just like the freedom that eluded the man known as its leader.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The only known photograph of Andres Bonifacio is housed in the Archivo General de Indias in Seville, Spain. Some say that it was taken during his second wedding to Gregoria de Jesus in Katipunan ceremonial rites. It is dated 1896 from Chofre y Cia (precursor to today’s Cacho Hermanos printing firm), a prominent printing press and pioneer of lithographic printing in the country, based in Manila. The faded photograph, instead of being a precise representation of a specific historical figure, instead becomes a kind of Rorschach <a id="_GPLITA_0" title="Click to Continue &gt; by CouponDropDown" href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/2942-imprinting-andres-bonifacio-the-iconization-from-portrait-to-peso/#">test</a>, liable to conflicting impressions. Does the picture show the President of the Supreme Council of the Katipunan as a bourgeois everyman with nondescript, almost forgettable features? Or does it portray a dour piercing glare perpetually frozen in time, revealing a determined leader deep in contemplation, whose mind is clouded with thoughts of waging an armed struggle against a colonial power?</p>
<p>Perhaps a less subjective and more fruitful avenue for investigation is to compare and contrast this earliest documented image with those that have referred to it, or even paid a curious homage to it, by substantially altering his faded features.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/Agoncillo-book.jpg"><img title="The Revolt of the Masses" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/Agoncillo-book-222x300.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>This undated image of Bonifacio offers the closest resemblance to the Chofre y Cia version. As attested to by National Scientist Teodoro A. Agoncillo and the National Historical Commission of the Philippines, it is the image that depicts the well-known attribution of Bonifacio being of sangley (or Chinese) descent. While nearly identical in composition with the original, this second image shows him with a refined–even weak–chin, almond-shaped eyes, a less defined brow, and even modified hair. The blurring of his features, perhaps the result of the image being timeworn, offers little room for interjection.</p>
<p>In contrast, the next image <a id="_GPLITA_2" title="Click to Continue &gt; by CouponDropDown" href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/2942-imprinting-andres-bonifacio-the-iconization-from-portrait-to-peso/#">dating</a> from a February 8, 1897 issue of <em>La Ilustración Española y Americana</em>, a Spanish-American weekly publication, features a heavily altered representation of Bonifacio at odds with the earlier depiction from Chofre y Cia.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/La-Ilustracion-Espanola-y-Americana..jpg"><img title="La Ilustración Española y Americana" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/La-Ilustracion-Espanola-y-Americana..jpg" /></a></p>
<p>This modification catered to the Castilian idea of racial superiority, and to the waning Spanish Empire’s shock–perhaps even awe?–over what they must have viewed at the time as indio impudence. Hence the Bonifacio in this engraving is given a more pronounced set of features–a more prominent, almost ruthless jawline, deep-set eyes, a heavy, furrowed brow and a proud yet incongruously vacant stare. Far from the unassuming demeanor previously evidenced, there is an aura of unshakable, even obstinate, determination surrounding the revolutionary leader who remained resolute until his last breath. Notice also that for the first (although it would not be the last) time, he is formally clad in what appears to be a three-piece suit with a white bowtie–hardly the dress one would expect, given his allegedly humble beginnings.</p>
<p>Given its printing, this is arguably the first depiction of Bonifacio to be circulated en masse. The same image appeared in Ramon Reyes Lala’s <em>The Philippine Islands</em>, which was published in 1899 by an American publishing house for distribution in the Philippines.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/From-Kasaysayan-book1.jpg"><img title="El Renacimiento Filipino" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/From-Kasaysayan-book1-698x1024.jpg" width="234" height="344" /></a></p>
<p>The records of both the Filipinas Heritage Library and the Lopez Museum reveal a third, separate image of Bonifacio which appears in the December 7, 1910 issue of <em>El Renacimiento Filipino</em>, a Filipino publication during the early years of the American occupation.</p>
<p>El Renacimiento Filipino portrays an idealized Bonifacio, taking even greater liberties with the Chofre y Cia portrait. There is both gentrification and romanticization at work here. His <a id="_GPLITA_1" title="Click to Continue &gt; by CouponDropDown" href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/2942-imprinting-andres-bonifacio-the-iconization-from-portrait-to-peso/#">receding hairline</a> draws attention to his wide forehead–pointing to cultural assumptions of the time that a broad brow denotes a powerful intellect–and his full lips are almost pouting. His cheekbones are more prominent and his eyes are given a curious, lidded, dreamy, even feminine emphasis, imbuing him with an air of otherworldly reserve–he appears unruffled and somber, almost languid: more poet than firebrand.</p>
<p>It is difficult to imagine him as the Bonifacio admired, even idolized, by his countrymen for stirring battle cries and bold military tactics. He is clothed in a similar fashion to the <em>La Ilustración Española y Americana</em> portrait: with a significant deviation that would leave a telltale mark on succeeded images derived from this one. Gone is the white tie (itself an artistic assumption when the original image merely hinted at the possibility of some sort of neckwear), and in its stead, there is a sober black cravat and even a corsage on the buttonhole of his coat.</p>
<p>Here the transformation of photograph to engraving takes an even more curious turn; as succeeding interpretations in turn find reinterpretation at the hands of one artist in two media; with each interpretation in turn becoming iconic in its own right.</p>
<p>For it was from contemporary history textbooks such as <em>The Philippine Islands</em> that the future National Artist for Sculpture, Guillermo Tolentino, based his illustration, <em>Filipinos Ilustres</em>, which was completed sometime in 1911. Severino Reyes, upon seeing the image, agreed to have it lithographed and published in <em>Liwayway</em>, of which he was the editor at the time, under the name <em>Grupo de Filipinos Ilustres</em>.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/tumblr_mdsispzyDO1rppiioo1_r1_500.jpg"><img title="Filipino Ilustres" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/tumblr_mdsispzyDO1rppiioo1_r1_500.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>Grouping prominent Filipinos together as if posing for a formal studio portrait with the Partido Nacionalista emblem hanging above the group (though other versions do not have the seal), resonated with the public; the illustration was once a regular fixture in most homes in the first decades of the twentieth century. A stern, serious Bonifacio, with wide eyes and a straight nose, is seated between Jose Rizal and Marcelo H. del Pilar.</p>
<p><em>Filipinos Ilustres</em> would inspire other depictions from around the same period–notably, Manuel Artigas’ <em>Andres Bonifacio y el Katipunan</em>.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/From-Inventing-A-Hero-book.jpg"><img title="Artigas" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/From-Inventing-A-Hero-book-181x300.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>The Artigas image is decidedly patrician in both dress and mien, with larger but still almond-shaped eyes but with a slightly more aquiline nose, complemented by prominent cheekbones and a defined jaw. Already far-removed from the original, this gentrified and respectable portrait almost betrays Bonifacio’s class background and visually thrusts him into the exclusive club of ilustrados–the reformists who sought change from above instead of slashing revolution.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/20-1.jpg"><img title="20 peso bill" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/20-1-300x125.jpg" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/202.jpg"><img title="20-peso bill (back)" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/202-300x123.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>The first depiction of Bonifacio on Philippine banknotes (part of the English series of currency issued by the Central Bank of the Philippines from 1949 to 1969 and printed by the British printing company Thomas De La Rue &amp; Co. Ltd.) mirrored both the Artigas rendition and a sculpture by Ramon Martinez. The twenty-peso bill had both Bonifacio and Emilio Jacinto on the obverse. On the reverse is a near-photographic depiction of Martinez’ Balintawak monument, which was unveiled on September 3, 1911. Though he originally intended to commemorate the fallen heroes of the 1896 Revolution in general, this soon became the image of one particular man, Bonifacio, that lingered in the minds of many.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/vinzon.jpg"><img title="Martinez monument" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/vinzon-239x300.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>It is almost as if, in the face of conflicting representations, the engravers of the banknote decided to avoid controversy by simply depicting both. For here, the gentrified Bonifacio appears, while the increasingly more iconic–yet ironically not actual (because the statue was never explicitly intended to portray Bonifacio)– sculpture is portrayed on the reverse of the banknote.</p>
<p>However, it would be the <em>El Renacimiento Filipino</em> adulteration, despite its provenance, that would be lent credibility throughout the years with its use in Philippine currency, starting with banknotes issued under the Pilipino series, in circulation from 1969 to 1973.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/5-peso-pilipino-o.jpg"><img title="5-peso bill (Pilipino)" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/5-peso-pilipino-o-300x121.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>The Bagong Lipunan series of President Ferdinand E. Marcos, which was in circulation from 1973 to 1985, would follow this design with simple alterations.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/ABL.jpg"><img title="5-peso bill (Bagong Lipunan)" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/ABL-300x120.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>This would likewise be featured alongside the portrait of Apolinario Mabini on the ten-peso bill released in 1997, which the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas has since demonetized.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/10peso.jpg"><img title="10-peso" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/10peso-300x123.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>Bonifacio’s image undergoes another re-imagining altogether in Philippine coinage–following conventions established, this time in sculpture, by Guillermo Tolentino.</p>
<p>There was, however, a re-ordering of the hierarchy of heroes. While Rizal was enshrined as the foremost hero by the construction of the Rizal Monument, the second (in scale and artistic ambition) grander monument was that of Bonifacio in 1933. In contrast, there were no monuments dedicated to Emilio Aguinaldo, very much alive, mired as he was in the partisan politics of the 1920s. The era of monumentalism for Aguinaldo would begin only in the 1960s, with <a href="http://www.gov.ph/republic-day/">the transfer of Independence Day to June 12 in 1962</a>, the renaming of Camp Murphy to Camp Aguinaldo in 1965, and Aguinaldo’s donation of his mansion to the Filipino People shortly before his death. President Marcos consciously adopted the Malolos Republic–with its unicameral legislature and strong presidency– as the historical antecedent for his regime, <a href="http://www.gov.ph/about/gov/the-legislative-branch/">inaugurating the Interim Batasan Pambansa on June 12, 1978</a>; and transferring the start of official terms to June 30 from Rizal Day (which had been the date since 1941). The looming centennial of the Proclamation of Independence kept the spotlight on Aguinaldo, and with it, the promotion of Aguinaldo in the hierarchy of banknotes: formerly it had been Rizal on the basic unit of currency, the Peso, followed by Bonifacio on two pesos. With the abolition of the two peso coin, Bonifacio was reduced in rank, so to speak, to share the ten peso banknote while Aguinaldo was promoted, so to speak, to the five peso coin.</p>
<p>In 1983, Emilio Aguinaldo replaced Bonifacio on the five-peso bill, and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas minted a unique, octagonal two-peso coin featuring Bonifacio. This was in circulation from 1983 to 1990, re-released in a smaller, circular form from 1991 to 1994. Bonifacio is more stern and masculine in profile, with a kerchief knotted around his neck.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/25.jpg"><img title="2-peso coin (1983)" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/25.jpg" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/andresbonifacio.jpg"><img title="2-peso coin (1991)" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/andresbonifacio-300x300.jpg" width="194" height="194" /></a></p>
<p>The current bimetallic 10-peso coin, first minted in 2000, is similar in design to the 10-peso bill with Bonifacio and Mabini.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/Php_coin_10_obv.png"><img title="10-peso coin (2000)" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/Php_coin_10_obv.png" /></a></p>
<p>The image on the coins is most likely sourced from the 45-foot tall bronze monument that bears his name in the City of Caloocan, sculpted by Guillermo Tolentino, who was already middle-aged by this time–the second time the artist had featured Bonifacio in his art.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/Caloocan.jpg"><img title="Caloocan monument" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/Caloocan.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>Here, at what was once the entrance to Manila before the era of the expressway, stands a calm Bonifacio, dressed in an embroidered Barong Tagalog and knotted kerchief, with a bolo in one hand, a revolver in the other, surrounded by Jacinto and two other Katipuneros, symbolizing the Cry of Pugad Lawin.</p>
<p>Tolentino’s work was the culmination of extensive research and consultations not just with Bonifacio’s living contemporaries, but also with the occult through seances and espiritistas. The artist also based his sculpture on Bonifacio’s sister Espiridiona.</p>
<p>The Bonifacio of Tolentino was done in the classical sense, expressing almost no emotion–a cool, calculating, even serene leader in the midst of battle. Napoleon Abueva, a student of Guillermo Tolentino, offers an alternative interpretation: that Bonifacio’s quiet dignity and confidence evokes the resilient spirit of Filipinos.</p>
<p>The monument itself was a purely Filipino project from start to finish, proposed by Bonifacio’s fellow revolutionary leader Guillermo Masangkay in the Philippine Legislature, and funded by Act No. 2760 s. 1918, which also enacted Bonifacio Day as a national holiday. Inaugurated on Bonifacio’s birthday in November 30, 1933, it presaged the transition to independence.</p>
<p>This is in stark contrast to the aforementioned Martinez monument in Balintawak, which was transferred to Vinzons Hall in the University of the Philippines Diliman campus in 1968. Here, a lone figure stands barefoot with his arms outstretched, mouth open in a silent cry to arms. In one hand, a bolo, in the other, the flag of the Katipunan. He is clothed in red pants and an unbuttoned camisa chino.</p>
<p>This image of Bonifacio would endure in popular consciousness, appearing in even the unlikeliest of places, such as in cigarette boxes.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/img08254.jpg"><img title="Martinez monument - cigarette" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/img08254-300x231.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>National Artist for Painting Carlos V. Francisco seemingly strikes a balance between both renditions in his famous mural <em>Filipino Struggles Through History</em>, 1964. While the fiery revolutionary in camisa chino and rolled-up red pants resemble the monument that previously stood in Balintawak, he also holds a bolo and a revolver, reflecting the research undertaken by Tolentino.</p>
<p>Amidst the bustling environs of Divisoria in Manila, another side of the President of the Supreme Council is given prominence–poring over a piece of parchment, here is the Bonifacio who wrote impassioned manifestos that rallied the masses. The Katipunan flag waves in the background.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/tutuban.jpg"><img title="Tutuban monument" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/tutuban-300x225.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>Discrepancies abound even in the commemorative memorabilia released for the Bonifacio centenary in 1963. While the Philippine Postal Corporation evoked the defiant Katipunero of Ramon Martinez’s creation, the BSP chose to follow the serene figure of Tolentino’s monument. Notice that on the stamps marking Bonifacio’s Centenary, he is in what is considered the trademark, though hardly definitive, Katipunero attire; while the coin shows him clad in a suit and tie.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/bonifacio_birth_centenary.jpg"><img title="1963 centenary stamp" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/bonifacio_birth_centenary-300x237.jpg" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/img08132-1.jpg"><img title="1963 centenary coin" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/img08132-1-300x169.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>Commemorative memorabilia were likewise released for his death centenary in 1997. The stamps would now feature the various monuments that have been erected to pay tribute to Bonifacio–the calm Bonifacio of Tolentino’s creation, the fiery Bonifacio in Martinez’s sculpture and the pensive Bonifacio that stands in Tutuban.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/bonifacio-stamp.jpg"><img title="Bonifacio stamp" alt="" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/bonifacio-stamp-300x179.jpg" /></a></p>
<p>Written accounts are similarly inconclusive when it comes to the physical characteristics of Bonifacio–none of his contemporaries nor the historians who specialized in the study of the Katipunan are able to provide a concrete description of Bonifacio.</p>
<p>Through the multiple visualizations and renditions of Bonifacio, we may never truly know how he looked. But revolutions are waged not by faces–rather, by the faceless hundreds and thousands who took up arms with the notable and the noted. In death, a definitive image of Bonifacio remains elusive, which presents a concluding irony: that the man unfortunate in battle, achieved his true glory not through the sword, but the pen, through the manifestos and letters that ignited revolutionary ardor, sustaining the revolution in times of adversity, and, regardless of the eventual means for achieving independence, lives on in the hearts and minds of every Filipino who has read the words of Maypagasa–Bonifacio’s nom-de-guerre, which encapsulated in one word, what he himself sought to represent and inspire in his countrymen.</p>
<p>_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _</p>
<p>Source: http://malacanang.gov.ph/2942-imprinting-andres-bonifacio-the-iconization-from-portrait-to-peso/</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Bonifacio.png"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-3563" alt="Bonifacio" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Bonifacio-231x300.png" width="231" height="300" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/peso-andresbill.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-3568" alt="peso-andresbill" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/peso-andresbill.jpg" width="449" height="380" /></a></p>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=3562</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Novel: Noli Me Tangere by José Rizal. First Published in Berlin, Germany 1887</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3553</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3553#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Oct 2018 20:12:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General Philippine History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Regional History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=3553</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#160; Noli Me Tangere is a novel by Filipino polymath José Rizal and first published in 1887 in Berlin, Germany. Early English translations used titles like An Eagle Flight and The Social Cancer, but more recent translations have been published using the original Latin title. Though originally written in Spanish, it is more commonly published [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/JoseRizal-1.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-3546" alt="JoseRizal-1" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/JoseRizal-1-229x300.jpg" width="229" height="300" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Noli Me Tangere is a novel by Filipino polymath José Rizal and first published in 1887 in Berlin, Germany. Early English translations used titles like An Eagle Flight and The Social Cancer, but more recent translations have been published using the original Latin title.</p>
<p>Though originally written in Spanish, it is more commonly published and read in the Philippines in either English or Filipino. Together with its sequel (El Filibusterismo), the reading of Noli is obligatory for high school students all throughout the archipelago.</p>
<p>References for the novel</p>
<p>Jose Rizal, a Filipino nationalist and medical doctor, conceived the idea of writing a novel that would expose the ills of Philippine society after reading Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin. He preferred that the prospective novel express the way Filipino culture was backward, anti-progress, anti-intellectual, and not conducive to the ideas of the Age of Enlightenment. He was then a student of medicine in the Universidad Central de Madrid.</p>
<p>In a reunion of Filipinos at the house of his friend Pedro A. Paterno in Madrid on 2 January 1884, Rizal proposed the writing of a novel about the Philippines written by a group of Filipinos. His proposal was unanimously approved by the Filipinos present at the party, among whom were Pedro, Maximino and Antonio Paterno, Graciano López Jaena, Evaristo Aguirre, Eduardo de Lete, Julio Llorente and Valentin Ventura. However, this project did not materialize. The people who agreed to help Rizal with the novel did not write anything. Initially, the novel was planned to cover and describe all phases of Filipino life, but almost everybody wanted to write about women. Rizal even saw his companions spend more time gambling and flirting with Spanish women. Because of this, he pulled out of the plan of co-writing with others and decided to draft the novel alone.</p>
<p>Plot</p>
<p>Having completed his studies in Europe, young Juan Crisóstomo Ibarra y Magsalin came back to the Philippines after a 7-year absence. In his honor, Don Santiago de los Santos, a family friend commonly known as Captain Tiago, threw a get-together party, which was attended by friars and other prominent figures. One of the guests, former San Diego curate Fray Dámaso Vardolagas belittled and slandered Ibarra. Ibarra brushed off the insults and took no offense; he instead politely excused himself and left the party because of an allegedly important task.</p>
<p>The next day, Ibarra visits María Clara, his betrothed, the beautiful daughter of Captain Tiago and affluent resident of Binondo. Their long-standing love was clearly manifested in this meeting, and María Clara cannot help but reread the letters her sweetheart had written her before he went to Europe. Before Ibarra left for San Diego, Lieutenant Guevara, a Civil Guard, reveals to him the incidents preceding the death of his father, Don Rafael Ibarra, a rich hacendero of the town.</p>
<p>According to Guevara, Don Rafael was unjustly accused of being a heretic, in addition to being a subservient — an allegation brought forth by Dámaso because of Don Rafael’s non-participation in the Sacraments, such as Confession and Mass. Dámaso’s animosity against Ibarra’s father is aggravated by another incident when Don Rafael helped out on a fight between a tax collector and a child fighting, and the former’s death was blamed on him, although it was not deliberate. Suddenly, all of those who thought ill of him surfaced with additional complaints. He was imprisoned, and just when the matter was almost settled, he died of sickness in jail. Still not content with what he had done, Dámaso arranged for Don Rafael’s corpse to be dug up from the Catholic church and brought to a Chinese cemetery, because he thought it inappropriate to allow a heretic a Catholic burial ground. Unfortunately, it was raining and because of the bothersome weight of the body, the undertakers decide to throw the corpse into a nearby lake.</p>
<p>Revenge was not in Ibarra’s plans, instead he carried through his father’s plan of putting up a school, since he believed that education would pave the way to his country’s progress (all over the novel the author refers to both Spain and the Philippines as two different countries, which form part of a same nation or family, being Spain the mother and the Philippines the daughter). During the inauguration of the school, Ibarra would have been killed in a sabotage had Elías — a mysterious man who had warned Ibarra earlier of a plot to assassinate him — not saved him. Instead the hired killer met an unfortunate incident and died. The sequence of events proved to be too traumatic for María Clara who got seriously ill but was luckily cured by the medicine Ibarra sent.</p>
<p>After the inauguration, Ibarra hosted a luncheon during which Dámaso, gate-crashing the luncheon, again insulted him. Ibarra ignored the priest’s insolence, but when the latter slandered the memory of his dead father, he was no longer able to restrain himself and lunged at Dámaso, prepared to stab him for his impudence. As a consequence, Dámaso excommunicated Ibarra, taking this opportunity to persuade the already-hesitant Tiago to forbid his daughter from marrying Ibarra. The friar wished María Clara to marry Linares, a Peninsular who had just arrived from Spain.</p>
<p>With the help of the Governor-General, Ibarra’s excommunication was nullified and the Archbishop decided to accept him as a member of the Church once again. But, as fate would have it, some incident of which Ibarra had known nothing about was blamed on him, and he is wrongly arrested and imprisoned. The accusation against him was then overruled because during the litigation that followed, nobody could testify that he was indeed involved. Unfortunately, his letter to María Clara somehow got into the hands of the jury and is manipulated such that it then became evidence against him by the parish priest, Fray Salví. With Machiavellian precision, Salví framed Ibarra and ruined his life just so he could stop him from marrying María Clara and making the latter his concubine.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, in Capitan Tiago’s residence, a party was being held to announce the upcoming wedding of María Clara and Linares. Ibarra, with the help of Elías, took this opportunity to escape from prison. Before leaving, Ibarra spoke to María Clara and accused her of betraying him, thinking that she gave the letter he wrote her to the jury. María Clara explained that she would never conspire against him, but that she was forced to surrender Ibarra’s letter to Father Salvi, in exchange for the letters written by her mother even before she, María Clara, was born. The letters were from her mother, Pía Alba, to Dámaso alluding to their unborn child; and that María Clara was therefore not Captain Tiago’s biological daughter, but Dámaso’s.</p>
<p>Afterwards, Ibarra and Elías fled by boat. Elías instructed Ibarra to lie down, covering him with grass to conceal his presence. As luck would have it, they were spotted by their enemies. Elías, thinking he could outsmart them, jumped into the water. The guards rained shots on him, all the while not knowing that they were aiming at the wrong man.</p>
<p>María Clara, thinking that Ibarra had been killed in the shooting incident, was greatly overcome with grief. Robbed of hope and severely disillusioned, she asked Dámaso to confine her into a nunnery. Dámaso reluctantly agreed when she threatened to take her own life, demanding, “the nunnery or death!”[2] Unbeknownst to her, Ibarra was still alive and able to escape. It was Elías who had taken the shots.</p>
<p>It was Christmas Eve when Elías woke up in the forest fatally wounded, as it is here where he instructed Ibarra to meet him. Instead, Elías found the altar boy Basilio cradling his already-dead mother, Sisa. The latter lost her mind when she learned that her two sons, Crispín and Basilio, were chased out of the convent by the sacristan mayor on suspicions of stealing sacred objects. (The truth is that, it was the sacristan mayor who stole the objects and only pinned the blame on the two boys. The said sacristan mayor actually killed Crispín while interrogating him on the supposed location of the sacred objects. It was implied that the body was never found and the incident was covered-up by Salví).</p>
<p>Elías, convinced that he would die soon, instructs Basilio to build a funeral pyre and burn his and Sisa’s bodies to ashes. He tells Basilio that, if nobody reaches the place, he come back later on and dig for he will find gold. He also tells him (Basilio) to take the gold he finds and go to school. In his dying breath, he instructed Basilio to continue dreaming about freedom for his motherland with the words:</p>
<p>“     I shall die without seeing the dawn break upon my homeland. You, who shall see it, salute it! Do not forget those who have fallen during the night.”     ”</p>
<p>Elías died thereafter.</p>
<p>In the epilogue, it was explained that Tiago became addicted to opium and was seen to frequent the opium house in Binondo to satiate his addiction. María Clara became a nun where Salví, who has lusted over her from the beginning of the novel, regularly used her to fulfill his lust. One stormy evening, a beautiful crazy woman was seen at the top of the convent crying and cursing the heavens for the fate it has handed her. While the woman was never identified, it is suggested that the said woman was María Clara.</p>
<p>Publication history</p>
<p>Rizal finished the novel on December 1886. At first, according to one of Rizal’s biographers, Rizal feared the novel might not be printed, and that it would remain unread. He was struggling with financial constraints at the time and thought it would be hard to pursue printing the novel. A financial aid came from a friend named Máximo Viola. Rizal at first, however, hesitated but Viola insisted and ended up lending Rizal P300 for 2,000 copies; Noli was eventually printed in Berlin, Germany. The printing was finished earlier than the estimated five months. Viola arrived in Berlin in December 1886, and by March 21, 1887, Rizal had sent a copy of the novel to his friend Blumentritt.[3]</p>
<p>On August 21, 2007, a 480-page then-latest English version of Noli Me Tangere was released to major Australian book stores. The Australian edition of the novel was published by Penguin Books Classics, to represent the publication’s “commitment to publish the major literary classics of the world”.[4] American writer Harold Augenbraum, who first read the Noli in 1992, translated the novel. A writer well-acquainted with translating other Hispanophone literary works, Augenbraum proposed to translate the novel after being asked for his next assignment in the publishing company. Intrigued by the novel and knowing more about it, Penguin nixed their plan of adapting existing English versions and instead translated it on their own.[4]</p>
<p>Reaction and legacy</p>
<p>Noli Me Tangere was Rizal’s first novel. He was 26 years old at the time of its publication.</p>
<p>This novel and its sequel, El filibusterismo (nicknamed El Fili), were banned in some parts of the Philippines because of their portrayal of corruption and abuse by the country’s Spanish government and clergy. Copies of the book were smuggled in nevertheless, and when Rizal returned to the Philippines after completing medical studies, he quickly ran afoul of the local government. A few days after his arrival, Governor-General Emilio Terrero summoned Rizal to the Malacañang Palace and told him of the charge that Noli Me Tangere contained subversive statements. After a discussion, the Governor General was appeased but still unable to offer resistance against the pressure of the Church against the book. The persecution can be discerned from Rizal’s letter to Leitmeritz:<br />
“     My book made a lot of noise; everywhere, I am asked about it. They wanted to anathematize me ['to excommunicate me'] because of it… I am considered a German spy, an agent of Bismarck, they say I am a Protestant, a freemason, a sorcerer, a damned soul and evil. It is whispered that I want to draw plans, that I have a foreign passport and that I wander through the streets by night…     ”</p>
<p>Rizal was exiled to Dapitan, then later arrested for “inciting rebellion” based largely on his writings. Rizal was executed in Manila on December 30, 1896 at the age of thirty-five.</p>
<p>Rizal depicted nationality by emphasizing the qualities of Filipinos: the devotion of a Filipina and her influence on a man’s life, the deep sense of gratitude, and the solid common sense of the Filipinos under the Spanish regime.</p>
<p>The work was instrumental in creating a unified Filipino national identity and consciousness, as many natives previously identified with their respective regions. It lampooned, caricatured and exposed various elements in colonial society. Two characters in particular have become classics in Filipino culture: Maria Clara, who has become a personification of the ideal Filipina woman, loving and unwavering in her loyalty to her spouse; and the priest Father Dámaso, who reflects the covert fathering of illegitimate children by members of the Spanish clergy.</p>
<p>The book indirectly influenced a revolution, even though the author actually advocated direct representation to the Spanish government and a larger role for the Philippines within Spain’s political affairs. In 1956, the Congress of the Philippines passed the Republic Act 1425, more popularly known as the Rizal Law, which all levels of Philippine schools to teach the novel as part of their curriculum. Noli Me Tangere is being taught to third year secondary school students, while its sequel El filibusterismo is being taught for fourth year secondary school students. The novels are incorporated to their study and survey of Philippine literature.</p>
<p>Major characters</p>
<p>Ibarra</p>
<p>Juan Crisóstomo Ibarra y Magsalin, commonly referred to the novel as Ibarra or Crisóstomo, is the protagonist in the story. Son of a Filipino businessman, Don Rafael Ibarra, he studied in Europe for seven years.  Ibarra is also María Clara’s fiancé. Several sources claim that Ibarra is also Rizal’s reflection: both studied in Europe and both persons believe in the same ideas. Upon his return, Ibarra requested the local government of San Diego to construct a public school to promote education in the town.</p>
<p>In the sequel of Noli, El filibusterismo, Ibarra returned with different character and name: he called himself as Simoun, the English mestizo.</p>
<p>María Clara<br />
María Clara de los Santos y Alba, commonly referred to as María Clara, is Ibarra’s fiancée. She was raised by Capitán Tiago, Binundok’s cabeza de barangay and is the most beautiful and widely celebrated girl in San Diego.  In the later parts of the novel, María Clara’s identity was revealed as an illegitimate daughter of Father Dámaso, former parish curate of the town, and Doña Pía Alba, wife of Capitán Tiago. In the end she entered local covenant for nuns Beaterio de Santa Clara. In the epilogue dealing with the fate of the characters, Rizal stated that it is unknown if María Clara is still living within the walls of the covenant or she is already dead.</p>
<p>The character of María Clara was patterned after Leonor Rivera, Rizal’s first cousin and childhood sweetheart.</p>
<p>Capitán Tiago</p>
<p>Don Santiago de los Santos, known by his nickname Tiago and political title Capitán Tiago is a Filipino businessman and the cabeza de barangay or head of barangay of the town of Binundok. He is also the known father of María Clara.</p>
<p>In the novel, it is said that Capitán Tiago is the richest man in the region of Binondo and he possessed real properties in Pampanga and Laguna de Bay. He is also said to be a good Catholic, friend of the Spanish government and was considered as a Spanish by colonialists. Capitán Tiago never attended school, so he became a domestic helper of a Dominican friar who taught him informal education. He married Pía Alba from Santa Cruz.</p>
<p>Padre Dámaso</p>
<p>Dámaso Verdolagas, or Padre Dámaso is a Franciscan friar and the former parish curate of San Diego. He is best known as a notorious character who speaks with harsh words and has been a cruel priest during his stay in the town.  He is the real father of María Clara and an enemy of Crisóstomo’s father, Rafael Ibarra.  Later, he and María Clara had bitter arguments whether she would marry Alfonso Linares or go to a convent.[13] At the end of the novel, he is again re-assigned to a distant town and is found dead one day.</p>
<p>In popular culture, when a priest was said to be like Padre Dámaso, it means that he is a cruel but respectable individual. When one says a child is “anak ni Padre Damaso” (child of Padre Dámaso), it means that the child’s father’s identity is unknown.</p>
<p>Elías</p>
<p>Elías is Ibarra’s mysterious friend and ally. Elías made his first appearance as a pilot during a picnic of Ibarra and María Clara and her friends.[14] He wants to revolutionize the country and to be freed from Spanish oppression.</p>
<p>The 50th chapter of the novel explores the past of Elías and history of his family. In the past, Ibarra’s great-grandfather condemned Elías’ grandfather of burning a warehouse which led into misfortune for Elías’ family. His father was refused to be married by his mother because his father’s past and family lineage was discovered by his mother’s family. In the long run, Elías and his twin sister was raised by their maternal grandfather. When they were teenagers, their distant relatives called them hijos de bastardo or illegitimate children. One day, his sister disappeared which led him to search for her. His search led him into different places, and finally, he became a fugitive and subversive.</p>
<p>Filosofo Tacio</p>
<p>Filosofo Tacio, known by his Filipinized name Pilosopo Tasyo is another major character in the story. Seeking for reforms from the government, he expresses his ideals in paper written in a cryptographic alphabet similar from hieroglyphs and Coptic figures hoping “that the future generations may be able to decipher it” and realized the abuse and oppression done by the conquerors.</p>
<p>His full name is only known as Don Anastacio. The educated inhabitants of San Diego labeled him as Filosofo Tacio (Tacio the Sage) while others called him as Tacio el Loco (Insane Tacio) due to his exceptional talent for reasoning.</p>
<p>Doña Victorina</p>
<p>Doña Victorina de Espadaña, commonly known as Doña Victorina, is an ambitious Filipina who classifies herself as a Spanish and mimics Spanish ladies by putting on heavy make-up.[12] The novel narrates Doña Victorina’s younger days: she had lots of admirers, but she didn’t choose any of them because nobody was a Spaniard. Later on, she met and married Don Tiburcio de Espadaña, an official of the customs bureau who is about ten years her junior.  However, their marriage is childless.</p>
<p>Her husband assumes the title of medical doctor even though he never attended medical school; using fake documents and certificates, Tiburcio practices illegal medicine. Tiburcio’s usage of the title Dr. consequently makes Victorina assume the title Dra. (doctora, female doctor). Apparently, she uses the whole name Doña Victorina de los Reyes de de Espadaña, with double de to emphasize her marriage surname.  She seems to feel that this awkward titling makes her more “sophisticated.”</p>
<p><img title="lameco eskrima, lameco eskrima, lameco eskrima" alt="lameco eskrima, lameco eskrima, lameco eskrima" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/rizal-luna-fencing.jpg" width="459" height="333" /></p>
<p><img title="lameco eskrima, backyard eskrima, sulite" alt="kali ilustrisimo, backyard eskrima, ricketts" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/Noli_Me_Tangere.jpg" width="317" height="505" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=3553</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Rajah Sulaiman III, Last Muslim King of Manila (1558 – 1575) – Written in Tagalog by Jose N. Sevilla and Tolentino in the early 1920′s</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3538</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3538#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 14 Oct 2018 19:55:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippines Ethnic Groups]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pre Colonial Philippines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Regional History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=3538</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Rajah Sulaiman III, Last Muslim King of Manila (1558 – 1575) – Written in Tagalog by Jose N. Sevilla and Tolentino in the early 1920′s Rajah Suliman, Last Muslim King of Manila Rajah Sulaiman III (1558 – 1575) was the last native Muslim king of Manila, now the site of the capital of the Philippines, Manila. [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3></h3>
<h3></h3>
<h3>Rajah Sulaiman III, Last Muslim King of Manila (1558 – 1575) – Written in Tagalog by Jose N. Sevilla and Tolentino in the early 1920′s</h3>
<div></div>
<div>
<h2>Rajah Suliman, Last Muslim King of Manila</h2>
<p><strong>Rajah Sulaiman III</strong> (1558 – 1575) was the last native Muslim king of Manila, now the site of the capital of the Philippines, Manila. He was one of three chieftains, along with Rajah Rajah Lakandula and Adults, to have played a significant role in the Spanish conquests of the kingdoms of the Manila Bay-Pasig River area, first by Martín de Goiti, and Juan de Salcedo in 1570; and later by Miguel Lopez de Legazpi in 1571</p>
<p>The following biography of Rajah Soliman was written in Tagalog by Jose N. Sevilla and Tolentino in the early 1920s:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/soliman.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-3541" alt="soliman" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/soliman-705x1024.jpg" width="705" height="1024" /></a></p>
<p>TALAMBUHAY NI RAHA SOLIMAN</p>
<p>Bago nagíng̃ Rahá si Solimán, ay nagíng̃ katulong̃ muna sa pang̃ang̃asiwà ng̃ mg̃a súliranin dito sa Maynilà, ni Raháng̃ Matandâ.</p>
<p>Si Lakán Dulà na nanánahanan sa Tundó ay siyá niyáng̃ kasama. Itó ay nang̃ kapanáhunan ni Raháng̃ Matandâ nang̃ taóng̃ 1570. Noón ay isáng̃ pulutóng̃ nang̃ mg̃a sasakyáng̃ kastilà na pinamumunuan ni Martin de Goití at Juan de Salcedo ang̃ dumaong̃ sa luók ng̃ Maynilà. Niyaóng̃ unang̃ datíng̃ dito niná Goití ay dî sila nakalunsád pagdaka. Ang̃ Maynilà, ay may matitibay na mg̃a muóg at sila’y pinaputukán at sinagupà.</p>
<p>Nabalitaan niláng isá sa mg̃a makapang̃yarihan doón ay si Solimán, kaya’t nagpadalá sina Goití rito ng̃ sugò na nagsásaysáy na silá’y dî naparito upáng̃ makidigmâ kundî upáng̃ makipagkásundô, at ang̃ ganitó’y tinugón sa pamamagitan ng̃ sugò, na ang̃ Hari sa Maynilà ay nagnanasà ng̃ makipagkaibigan sa mg̃a kastilà.</p>
<p>Pagtang̃gáp ni Goití ng̃ paklí ni Solimán ay nasók siyá at ang̃ kanyáng̃ mg̃a tao sa ilog ng̃ Pasig at silá’y lumunsád sa isáng̃ baybáy na itinakdâ ng̃ Harì. Sinalubong̃ silá ni Raháng Matandâ at nakipagkamáy sa kanilá, pagkaliban ng̃ iláng̃ sandali ay dumatíng si Rahá Solimán at nakipágkamáy din ng̃uni’t nagpasubalì ng̃ gayari: «Kamí ay nagnánasang̃ makipagkaibigan sa mg̃a kastilà samantalang̃ silá’y mabuti sa amin; ng̃uni’t mahíhirapan silá ng̃ gaya ng̃ hirap na tiniís na ng̃ ibá, kailán ma’t nasain niláng̃ kami’y alisán ng̃ puri».</p>
<p>Pagkaraán ng̃ iláng̃ araw si Goití ay nagkulang̃ sa pagkakáibigan sa pagpapaputók ng̃ kaniláng̃ kanyón, at si Rahá Solimán ay napilitang̃ magbago ng̃ kilos. Ipinawasák nitó ang̃ mg̃a sasakyán nina Goití at ipinapuksâ ang̃ kanyáng̃ mg̃a kawal.</p>
<p>Nápakabuti ang̃ pagtatang̃gól sa mg̃a kutà at dî nagawâ nang̃ mg̃a kastilà ang̃ makapasok agád, ng̃uni’t nang̃ mang̃asalantà ang̃ mg̃a tao ni Solimán at maubos na ang̃ mg̃a punlô ay napipilan din. At nang̃ makuha ng̃ mg̃a kastilà ang̃ Maynilà ay sinalakay ang̃ bahay ni Solimán at dito’y nátagpuán nilá ang̃ isáng̃ mainam na gusali, maiinam na kasang̃kapang̃ sigay, mg̃a damit na mariring̃al na nagkakahalagá ng̃ may 23.000 piso.</p>
<p>Hindî nagtaksíl kailán man si Solimán, gaya ng̃ ipinararatang̃ sa kanyá ng̃ mg̃a kastilà. Siyá’y tumupád lamáng̃ sa kanyáng̃ dakilang̃ katung̃kulan na makibaka sa sino mang̃ magnánasang̃ sumirà ng̃ kanyáng̃ kapuriháng̃ pagkaharì, at yáyamang̃ ang̃ mg̃a kastilà ay siyáng̃ nagpasimulâ ng̃ pagbabaka, ay siyá ay nagtang̃gól lamang̃ at natalo, ng̃uni’t hindî kailán man nagtaksíl.</p>
<p>Ang̃ kanyáng̃ pagibig sa sariling̃ Lupà ay nagudyók sa kanyáng̃ makibaka at siyá ay nakibaka dahil doón.</p>
<p>Kung̃ saán mákikitang̃ ang pagguhò ng̃ kaharian ni Solimàn ay utang̃ sa kagahaman ng̃ isáng̃ lahing̃ mang̃aalipin; sa isáng̃ pámahalaáng̃ pinagágaláw ng̃ lakás ng̃ lakás at di ng̃ lakás ng̃ katuwiran.</p>
<p>Kawawang̃ bayang̃ maliliít na linúlupig at ginágahasà ng̃ malalakíng bansâ.</p>
<p>Ang̃ daigdíg ay patung̃o sa pagunlád, at buhat niyaóng̃ 1914 na gahasain ang̃ Belhika, ang malalakíng̃ Bansâ ay nagsasapì at ipinagtang̃gól ang̃ katwiran ng̃ maliliít na bayan. Panibagong̃ kilos sa daigdíg na bung̃a ng̃ mayamang̃ diwà ng̃ dakilang̃ Wilson sa kaamerikahan.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img title="mandirigma.org" alt="kapisanang mandirigma" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/btngsoli1.jpg" width="196" height="412" /></p>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=3538</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Antonio “Tatang” Ilustrisimo: Legendary Swordsman from Cebu. By Melanie -March 22, 2017</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3864</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=3864#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Mar 2018 11:34:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Filipino Martial Arts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FMA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ilustrisimo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kali Arnis Eskrima Escrima]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Masters and Guros]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Warrior Arts of the Philippines]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=3864</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#160; &#160; Original Article at Queen City Cebu https://queencitycebu.com/antonio-tatang-ilustrisimo-legendary-swordsman-cebu/?fbclid=IwAR3JgsSD7GcR_SqTXfEoTA4B16q2k9LeF_NPjyqbrGp9ylxNAeJDp3SQnGs &#160; Antonio “Tatang” Ilustrisimo: Legendary Swordsman from Cebu By Melanie  - March 22, 2017 We have been super fans of martial artists like Jackie Chan and Bruce Lee, of wrestlers Hulk Hogan and The Rock, of MMA fighters Anderson Silva and Ronda Rousey, and of boxing [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Original Article at Queen City Cebu</p>
<p><a href="https://queencitycebu.com/antonio-tatang-ilustrisimo-legendary-swordsman-cebu/?fbclid=IwAR3JgsSD7GcR_SqTXfEoTA4B16q2k9LeF_NPjyqbrGp9ylxNAeJDp3SQnGs">https://queencitycebu.com/antonio-tatang-ilustrisimo-legendary-swordsman-cebu/?fbclid=IwAR3JgsSD7GcR_SqTXfEoTA4B16q2k9LeF_NPjyqbrGp9ylxNAeJDp3SQnGs</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div>
<div>
<div>
<header>
<h1>Antonio “Tatang” Ilustrisimo: Legendary Swordsman from Cebu</h1>
<div>
<div>
<div>By</div>
<p><a href="https://queencitycebu.com/author/melanie/">Melanie</a></p>
<div> -</div>
</div>
<p><time datetime="2017-03-22T12:30:13+00:00">March 22, 2017</time></div>
</header>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div>
<div role="main">
<div>
<div></div>
<div>
<div><a href="https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego.jpg" data-caption="" data-featherlight="image"><img title="Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego" alt="" src="https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego-696x433.jpg" srcset="https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego-696x433.jpg 696w, https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego-300x187.jpg 300w, https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego-768x478.jpg 768w, https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego-1024x637.jpg 1024w, https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego-356x220.jpg 356w, https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego-675x420.jpg 675w, https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego.jpg 1030w" width="696" height="433" /></a></div>
<div></div>
<div id="dpsp-content-top"></div>
<p>We have been super fans of martial artists like Jackie Chan and Bruce Lee, of wrestlers Hulk Hogan and The Rock, of MMA fighters Anderson Silva and Ronda Rousey, and of boxing champ Manny Pacquiao. But how much do we know of one Antonio “Tatang” Ilustrisimo – a legendary swordsman, a master of Filipino Martial Arts, born in Cebu?</p>
<p><img alt="tatang_1024x1024" src="http://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/tatang_1024x1024.jpg" srcset="https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/tatang_1024x1024.jpg 320w, https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/tatang_1024x1024-198x300.jpg 198w, https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/tatang_1024x1024-278x420.jpg 278w" width="320" height="484" data-srcset="https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/tatang_1024x1024.jpg 320w, https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/tatang_1024x1024-198x300.jpg 198w, https://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/tatang_1024x1024-278x420.jpg 278w" data-src="http://queencitycebu.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/tatang_1024x1024.jpg" data-sizes="auto" /></p>
<div></div>
<p><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnis"><strong>Eskrima</strong></a><strong> Ancestry</strong></p>
<p>Antonio Ilustrisimo’s combat skills and unusual courage was perhaps partly innate. He was born to a family with a long history of martial and mystical arts. In fact, the Ilustrisimos were recognized as one of the three eskrima clans in Cebu during the time, along with the Saavedras and the Romos. Pablo Ilustrisimo was known to be the first in the family to practice eskrima. Pablo then passed the skill to Juan de Dios Ilustrisimo, who passed it to Isidro, Melecio and Regino Ilustrisimo.</p>
<p>Antonio’s paternal uncles, Regino and Melecio Ilustrisimo, were martial arts masters. Regino became an arnis master in Stockton, USA while Melecio became a famous Kali master in the Philippines and especially popular in Central Visayas (Cebu and Bohol) at the turn of the 20th century. Much of Antonio’s early eskrima training he got from his father, Isidro Illustrisimo, and from his uncles.</p>
<p>Whatever the young Antonio learned from his father and uncles, he passed on to younger family members including his cousin, <a href="http://www.villabrillelargusakali.com/ben-largusa-a-simple-man-of-kali/the-legend-of-floro-villabrille">Floro Villabrialle</a>, who became a renowned Filipino arnis master in Hawaii, and his grandnephew, Samuel Ilustrisimo.</p>
<p><strong>Sultanate Adoption</strong></p>
<p>A master in the making, Antonio was truly fit in the courts of kings (or in this case, of sultans). Although only nine, he was already very ambitious and adventurous. He dreamed of setting foot on American soil and making a name for himself there. Deprived of his family’s permission and blessing, the young Antonio took a boat out to sea with nothing but some of his family’s money and a machete.</p>
<p>Little did he know that the land of milk and honey was thousands of miles away and cannot be reached by a lowly paddle boat rowed by a boy of nine.</p>
<p>While paddling in the open sea, Antonio chanced upon a ship and agreed to sail with its crew, visiting various local ports. In one of the ports, the young Antonio met a family friend, a Muslim, who brought him to Jolo, Sulu in Mindanao where Antonio’s transitioned from boyhood to manhood.</p>
<p>As his physical body developed, his combat and eskrima skills did too. According to accounts, he was later adopted by <a href="http://en.wikipilipinas.org/index.php/Hadji_Butu">Hadji Butu</a>, a Sultan of Sulu and the first Muslim senator of the Philippines. There, Antonio took the Muslim name, Montesali.</p>
<p>While at the Sultan’s courts, Antonio further honed his combat skills alongside Moro warriors and Pedro Cortes, a famous martial arts master of Mindanao and a former sparring partner of Antonio’s father.</p>
<p><strong>First Kill</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.warriorseskrima.com/articles/magazines-articles/the-deadly-art-of-kalis-illustrisimo/">Antonio’s first actual fight and kill</a> took place in Jolo, Sulu. At 17, he had already mastered kali using the “<a href="http://www.knives-reviews.eu/contents/story/36-english/content-info/story-knives/177-barong.html">barong</a>”, the Tausug national sword – a leaf-shaped blade esteemed for its ability to sever an arm, leg or neck with a single blow. Unmindful of the Islamic restriction against drinking, Antonio had some beer but was reprimanded by another Muslim. The two had a couple of heated exchanges and ended up drawing each of their Tausug swords.</p>
<p>The opponent was skillful, but teenaged Antonio was nimble and clever. Using the “tumbada” technique of parrying and cutting simultaneously, Antonio instantly beheaded his opponent.</p>
<p>Although it was a gentleman’s fight, Antonio was intoxicated – a big no-no in Muslim law. To prevent inter-clan war, his adoptive Sultan father paid blood money and sent Antonio on exile to Cebu.</p>
<p>Antonio was back to his home province and was reunited with his family. But this reunion was rather brief. Antonio seemed to grow restless when on safe harbor, in the confines of his hometown. He returned to sailing and traveled extensively.</p>
<p><strong>Tournament vs Real Combat</strong></p>
<p>Grandmaster Antonio Ilustrisimo never stopped training and perfecting his combat skills. He would join arnis matches in barrio fiestas, and even fought grand masters in other countries such as Singapore, India, America, Europe and Australia. Albeit his undefeated position in the martial arts arena, Antonio would rather fight naturally, without restrictions, without combat pads or armor, and fight according to specific terms of defeat, which may mean a fight to the death.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.yellowbamboohk.com/arnis/arnisarticles/Tatang%20interview%20by%20Steven%20Drape.html">According to Tatang</a>, during an interview with Australasian Fighting Arts Magazine (AFAM), “the fancy stuff in arnis, all the flowery movements, is only for stage shows and demonstrations, not for real fighting.” He would go on to explain that “training for tournaments is not training for real fighting. Wearing armor is bad for the art, students don’t learn well.”</p>
<p><strong>Last Kill</strong></p>
<p>It seemed that wherever he went, violence would follow. His stay in Manila was no different. Living in Tondo, he was surrounded with muggers, robbers, bullies and criminals. It was even said that Antonio, along with martial artists Floro Villabraille, Jose Mena and Felicissimo Dizon, formed the group “Gang of Four”, an alleged “De Facto Dock Police” who cleared the docks of bad elements.</p>
<p>Perhaps the most talked about story of Antonio’s life in Manila was when he was 40 or 50 years old and working at a local port. The middle-aged Antonio had dispatched a port bully nicknamed “Doming” who threatened a friend’s life.</p>
<p>Antonio had agreed to standby and to witness his friend stand up to Doming, but to come to his friend’s aid in case the latter loses. The port bully was good with knives and instantly disarmed Antonio’s friend. To save his friend, Antonio took out a short iron pipe hidden beneath his long sleeve and rammed it on the back of the bully’s neck three times. It was a fatal strike. The bully died. Antonio’s friend admitted the murder.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, ship operators rejoiced over the bully’s death. In gratitude, they made Antonio a ship officer eligible to sail on international waters. When on furloughs, Antonio would rejoin his long time friends, participate in matches and train some more. Grandmaster Antonio Ilustrisimo was yet to accept students for he was not keen at teaching others his craft until his senior years.</p>
<p><strong>Guerilla Days</strong></p>
<p>As a seasoned martial artist, Antonio had a hard time finding worthy opponents, even sparring partners. His invitations to a fight were often rejected or declined. In an AFAM interview, Tatang said no one wanted to fight him and recalled his real fight was at Dock 8 with the bully Doming who he killed with a pipe.</p>
<p>When the WWII broke, Antonio had the opportunity to put his combat skills to practical use. He became a guerilla fighter and killed so many Japanese soldiers at the time with his kali techniques. He was said to have never been defeated in battle and thus earned the nicknames, “Executioner” and “Dagohoy” (with respect to Francisco Dagohoy, hero of Bohol).</p>
<p><strong>Mystical Powers</strong></p>
<p>Grandmaster Antonio Ilustrisimo was no ordinary eskrima warrior. Together with his superb combat skills, it was told he possessed special powers through the use of “anting-anting” (amulet) and “oracion” (incantation). He would spend Good Fridays testing his special powers in empty lots.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.warriorseskrima.com/articles/magazines-articles/the-deadly-art-of-kalis-illustrisimo/">Romeo “Romy” Macapagal</a>, one of Tatang’s notable students” said that he did saw anting-anting and oracion at work while training with the grandmaster. Romy cited one instance where Tatang asked him to write an oracion to protect the former from blade cuts.  The oracion worked. Romy never had a cut despite working with blades and training kali. Only Tatang could hurt him. However, the oracion negatively affected Romy’s finances. When Romy got rid of the oracion “armadura” or armor, his finances improved and became vulnerable to blades once again.</p>
<p>In another account, Tatang was said to have used incantation to “defeat” Indonesian grandmaster Penchak Silat. Indonesian masters were known for using spiritual powers against their opponent. Many say that Tatang’s oracion was more powerful than that of the Indonesian grandmaster. The match between the two grandmasters ended before it even started. Penchak Silat refused to fight. Tatang won and bagged home $5,000.</p>
<p><strong>His Legacy: </strong><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalis_Ilustrisimo"><strong>Kalis Ilustrisimo</strong></a></p>
<p>Antonio Ilustrisimo will forever be remembered for “Kalis Ilustrisimo” aka The Bladed Art of Ilustrisimo. The legendary grandmaster had perfected the use of bladed weapons in eskrima and had passed on the knowledge to several students, who call him “Tatang” or grandfather.</p>
<p>Though he did teach young relatives in Bantayan Island while a young boy, Tatang initially never wanted to teach others what he knew. Tatang wanted to keep his combat secrets to himself. He would get incessant requests from prospect tutees, but it was only in the 70s when Tatang finally disclosed his art.</p>
<p>Tatang’s first students were Antonio “Tony” Diego, Epifanio “Yuli” Romo, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Ricketts">Christopher “Topher” Ricketts</a> (the brother of action star Ronnie Ricketts), Romeo “Romy” Macapagal, Pedro Reyes, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rey_Galang">Rey Galang</a>, and <a href="http://www.fmapulse.com/fma-legends/grandmaster-timoteo-maranga-sr">Timoteo Maranga Sr.</a>, among others.</p>
<p>Timoteo Maranga Sr., also from Cebu (Olango Island), founded the Art of Combat Eskrima Maranga headquartered in Pasil, Cebu City.</p>
<p>Tony Diego later succeeded Tatang as head of Kalis Ilustrisimo. Meanwhile, Tatang’s other senior students set up their own schools and continued teaching Kalis Ilustrisimo.</p>
<p>They say <a href="https://www.facebook.com/fmajunkie2/videos/268361790253099/">Tatang lived and died poor</a>. Perhaps this was the downside to him practicing his mystical powers (much like what happened to Romy). However, his legacy will live forever. Though bereft of money, Tatang left behind a rich legacy handed down to every dedicated student of Kalis Ilustrisimo.</p>
<p>Tatang lived in a time where it was necessary for each man to learn self defense, where mastering martial arts was a requirement for survival. Amid all the violence surrounding him, Tatang was a lover of life and surprisingly gentle. He admonished his students to dispatch only the crooks of society, following Bushido, the code of the Samurai warrior.</p>
<p>Fellow Cebuanos, if you are looking for a martial arts idol, look no more. Cebu is home to several masters of eskrima. And Antonio “Tatang” Ilustrisimo is simply too iconic to overlook.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-3865" alt="Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Antonio-Tatang-Ilustrisimo_Tony-Diego-150x93.jpg" width="150" height="93" /></a></p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=3864</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Budo Magazine Publishes the final Interview of Grandmaster Tony Diego of Kalis Ilustrisimo. Interview by  Tim Fredianell. September 2015.</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=2900</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=2900#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 21 Sep 2015 12:44:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Documentary/Footage]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[DVDs/Magazines/TV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eskrima Tournament/Competition/Challenge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Filipino Martial Arts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FMA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ilustrisimo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IN MEMORY OF]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kali Arnis Eskrima Escrima]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Masters and Guros]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Warrior Arts of the Philippines]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=2900</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#160; Budo Magazine Publishes the final Interview of Grandmaster Tony Diego of Kalis Ilustrisimo. Interview by  Tim Fredianell. &#160; Read interview in English here: http://issuu.com/budoweb/docs/martial_arts_magazine_budo_internat_f897c9abdb5660 Read interview in Spanish here: http://issuu.com/budoweb/docs/revista_artes_marciales_cinturon_ne_86c3fa97b13e16?e=1589527%2F30101651 &#160; &#160; &#160;]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3>Budo Magazine Publishes the final Interview of Grandmaster Tony Diego of Kalis Ilustrisimo. Interview by  Tim Fredianell.</h3>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Read interview in English here: <a title="Budo Magazine Publishes the final Interview of Grandmaster Tony Diego of Kalis Ilustrisimo. September 2015." href="Budo Magazine Publishes the final Interview of Grandmaster Tony Diego of Kalis Ilustrisimo. September 2015." target="_blank">http://issuu.com/budoweb/docs/martial_arts_magazine_budo_internat_f897c9abdb5660</a></p>
<p>Read interview in Spanish here: <a title="http://issuu.com/budoweb/docs/revista_artes_marciales_cinturon_ne_86c3fa97b13e16?e=1589527%2F30101651" href="http://issuu.com/budoweb/docs/revista_artes_marciales_cinturon_ne_86c3fa97b13e16?e=1589527%2F30101651" target="_blank">http://issuu.com/budoweb/docs/revista_artes_marciales_cinturon_ne_86c3fa97b13e16?e=1589527%2F30101651</a></p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/GM-Tony-Diego.jpg"><img class="alignnone  wp-image-2901" alt="GM Tony Diego" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/GM-Tony-Diego.jpg" width="542" height="768" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12033029_10153684968318447_28149091748843350_n.jpg"><img alt="12033029_10153684968318447_28149091748843350_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12033029_10153684968318447_28149091748843350_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12009686_10153684969573447_4150365982300027088_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2917" alt="12009686_10153684969573447_4150365982300027088_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12009686_10153684969573447_4150365982300027088_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a> <a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12020035_10153684968443447_7953418535675147064_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2918" alt="12020035_10153684968443447_7953418535675147064_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12020035_10153684968443447_7953418535675147064_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a> <a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12027769_10153684968498447_1788665408628512094_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2919" alt="12027769_10153684968498447_1788665408628512094_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12027769_10153684968498447_1788665408628512094_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a> <a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12032023_10153684969258447_6614435272858853001_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2920" alt="12032023_10153684969258447_6614435272858853001_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12032023_10153684969258447_6614435272858853001_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a> <a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12036945_10153684969148447_4724005518936483978_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2922" alt="12036945_10153684969148447_4724005518936483978_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12036945_10153684969148447_4724005518936483978_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a> <a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12038052_10153684969013447_565804608788492649_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2923" alt="12038052_10153684969013447_565804608788492649_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12038052_10153684969013447_565804608788492649_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a> <a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12038095_10153684969823447_7501350384259812907_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2924" alt="12038095_10153684969823447_7501350384259812907_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12038095_10153684969823447_7501350384259812907_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a> <a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12042888_10153684971173447_8804314859211882879_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2925" alt="12042888_10153684971173447_8804314859211882879_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12042888_10153684971173447_8804314859211882879_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a> <a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12046980_10153684970023447_6331740979928129452_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2926" alt="12046980_10153684970023447_6331740979928129452_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12046980_10153684970023447_6331740979928129452_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a> <a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12049158_10153684969698447_5353903193222644643_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2927" alt="12049158_10153684969698447_5353903193222644643_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12049158_10153684969698447_5353903193222644643_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a> <a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12049231_10153684969483447_4516827899635980519_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2928" alt="12049231_10153684969483447_4516827899635980519_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12049231_10153684969483447_4516827899635980519_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a> <a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12049388_10153684969373447_9083422858432016754_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2929" alt="12049388_10153684969373447_9083422858432016754_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12049388_10153684969373447_9083422858432016754_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a> <a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12049505_10153684968853447_5588171139608537808_n.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2930" alt="12049505_10153684968853447_5588171139608537808_n" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/12049505_10153684968853447_5588171139608537808_n.jpg" width="508" height="720" /></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=2900</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>The first written account of &#8220;KALI&#8221; as the pre-Hispanic name of the Filipino Martial Arts by FMA History Redux</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=2588</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=2588#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 28 Nov 2014 01:34:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books & Film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eskrima Tournament/Competition/Challenge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Filipino Martial Arts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FMA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kali Arnis Eskrima Escrima]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Warrior Arts of the Philippines]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=2588</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The first written account of &#8220;KALI&#8221; as the pre-Hispanic name of the Filipino Martial Arts Source: http://fmahistoryredux.blogspot.com/2014/11/the-first-written-account-of-kali-as.html?spref=fb http://fmahistoryredux.blogspot.com/2014/11/philippine-hero-rev-fr-gregorio-aglipay.html “Mga Karunungan sa Larong Arnis” by Placido Yambao and Buenaventura Mirafuente, University of the Philippines Press, 1957&#8230; the first book on the Filipino Martial Arts that we know now&#8230; its section on the history of the Filipino Martial [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3 itemprop="name">The first written account of &#8220;KALI&#8221; as the pre-Hispanic name of the Filipino Martial Arts</h3>
<p>Source: <a title="http://fmahistoryredux.blogspot.com/2014/11/the-first-written-account-of-kali-as.html?spref=fb" href="http://fmahistoryredux.blogspot.com/2014/11/the-first-written-account-of-kali-as.html?spref=fb" target="_blank">http://fmahistoryredux.blogspot.com/2014/11/the-first-written-account-of-kali-as.html?spref=fb</a></p>
<p><a title="http://fmahistoryredux.blogspot.com/2014/11/philippine-hero-rev-fr-gregorio-aglipay.html" href="http://fmahistoryredux.blogspot.com/2014/11/philippine-hero-rev-fr-gregorio-aglipay.html" target="_blank">http://fmahistoryredux.blogspot.com/2014/11/philippine-hero-rev-fr-gregorio-aglipay.html</a></p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Mga-Karunungan.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2589" alt="Mga Karunungan" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/Mga-Karunungan.jpg" width="187" height="269" /></a></p>
<p>“Mga Karunungan sa Larong Arnis” by Placido Yambao and Buenaventura Mirafuente, University of the Philippines Press, 1957&#8230; the first book on the Filipino Martial Arts that we know now&#8230; its section on the history of the Filipino Martial Arts stated that when the Spaniards arrived in the Philippines, Filipino Martial Arts was not yet called &#8220;ARNIS&#8221; but &#8220;KALI&#8221; (“Ang KALI na dinatnan ng mga Kastila ay hindi pa ARNIS ang tawag noong 1610&#8243;)&#8230; The book also mentioned that a KALI demonstration was once performed in honor of the newly-arrived Conquistador Miguel Lopez de Legazpi on the order of a tribal leader in the Island of Leyte&#8230;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<h3 itemprop="name">Philippine Hero Rev. Fr. Gregorio Aglipay, the source of Yambao &amp; Mirafuente&#8217;s &#8220;KALI&#8221;&#8230;</h3>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div></div>
<div id="post-body-267183944102701937" itemprop="description articleBody">
<div><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-hKmvbRmoXUo/VHZ11v4U0MI/AAAAAAAAAPU/Yfo044vjGXA/s1600/Aglipay.jpg"><img alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-hKmvbRmoXUo/VHZ11v4U0MI/AAAAAAAAAPU/Yfo044vjGXA/s1600/Aglipay.jpg" width="219" height="320" border="0" /></a></div>
<div></div>
<div></div>
<div></div>
<div>REV. FR. GREGORIO AGLIPAY, 1860-1940 (center), the first Supreme Bishop of the Philippine Independent Church (Wikipedia photo)&#8230;Rev. Fr. Aglipay was the source of the information that the original name of the Filipino Martial Arts is KALI in the book “Mga Karunungan sa Larong Arnis” authored by Placido Yambao and Buenaventura Mirafuente (University of the Philippines Press, 1957):&#8217;Ang KALI na Dinatnan ng mga Kastila ay Hindi pa Arnis ang Tawag nuong 1610&#8230;. Noong unang panahon ang larong ito&#8217;y kilala sa tawag na &#8220;KALI&#8221; ng ating mga ninuno, nguni&#8217;t <span style="text-decoration: underline;">sa hindi maiwasang pagbabago ng panahon at pangyayari</span> (underscoring mine) ay pinamagatan nila ng &#8220;Panandata&#8221; sa Tagalog, &#8220;Pagkalikali&#8221; sa kapatagan ng Kagayan ng mga Ibanag, &#8220;Kalirongan&#8221; sa Pangasinan, &#8220;Kaliradman&#8221; sa Bisaya at &#8220;Pagaradman&#8221; sa Ilongo nuong 1860, at &#8220;Didya&#8221; sa Ilokos at muling naging &#8220;Kabaroan,&#8221; ayon kay Rev. Fr. Gregorio Aglipay na bantog din sa arnis nuong 1872.&#8217;TRANSLATION:</p>
</div>
<div>&#8216;The indigenous martial art that the Spanish encountered in 1610 was not yet called Arnis at that time. During those times, this martial art was known as &#8220;KALI&#8221; to our ancestors.  Due to the<span style="text-decoration: underline;">unavoidable changing of the times and circumstances</span> (underscoring mine), this martial art became known as &#8220;Panandata&#8221; to the Tagalogs, &#8220;Pagkalikali&#8221; to the Ibanags of the plains of Cagayan, &#8220;Kalirongan&#8221; to the people of Pangasinan, &#8220;Kaliradman&#8221; to the Visayans, &#8220;Pagaradman&#8221; to the Ilonggos in 1860, and &#8220;Didya&#8221; to the Ilocanos (but later on changed to &#8220;Kabaroan&#8221;).  This is according to Rev. Fr. Gregorio Aglipay, who himself was a famous Arnis practitioner in 1872.&#8217;</div>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=2588</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>The Bolomen of the Revolution by Perry Gil S. Mallari , FIGHT Times Editor</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=2421</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=2421#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Jun 2014 02:09:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Warrior Arts of the Philippines]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=2421</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The Bolomen of the Revolution by Perry Gil S. Mallari , FIGHT Times Editor Arma Blanca is the name of the clandestine regiment of Filipino bolomen active during the revolution against the Spaniards and the Americans. Arma Blanca is a Spanish singular term for a bladed weapon like a sword or a knife. A fairly [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_2422" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 510px"><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/1-Bolomen-MAIN.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-2422" alt="An illustration by J. Alexander Mackay published in the book Bamboo Tales by Ira L. Reeves (1900) IMAGE FROM PROJECT GUTENBERG" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/1-Bolomen-MAIN.jpg" width="500" height="829" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">An illustration by J. Alexander Mackay published in the book Bamboo Tales by Ira L. Reeves (1900) IMAGE FROM PROJECT GUTENBERG</p></div>
<h3>The Bolomen of the Revolution by Perry Gil S. Mallari , FIGHT Times Editor</h3>
<p>Arma Blanca is the name of the clandestine regiment of Filipino bolomen active during the revolution against the Spaniards and the Americans. Arma Blanca is a Spanish singular term for a bladed weapon like a sword or a knife.</p>
<p>A fairly recent mention of Arma Blanca was made in Orlino Ochosa’s book Bandoleros: The Outlawed Guerillas of the Philippine-American War of 1903 to 1907 (New Day Publications, 1995), and it reads, “Manila’s Arma Blanca that phantom army of bolomen whom General Luna had so much depended upon in his bold attack of Manila at the start of the war with the Americans.”</p>
<p>An earlier reference to Arma Blanca can be found in The Philippines Past and Present, by Dean C. Worcester released in 1914. Worcester, who had served as Secretary of the Interior of the Philippine Islands from 1901 to 1913 and was a member of the Philippine Commission from 1900 to 1913, wrote, “The regiment of Armas Blancas had already been raised in Tondo and Binondo. It was in existence there in December, 1898, and may have been originally organized to act against Spain.”</p>
<p>The bolo being both a farm implement and a weapon was carried with impunity by Filipinos even in the presence of Spanish and American soldiers. Its blade is often designed heavily weighted towards the tip for ease of chopping hence when used in combat, it can easily severe a limb with a single stroke. The Philippine bolo boasts of a sturdy construction and minor dents on its blade could easily be fixed by a little hammering and filing.</p>
<p>In the absence of guns, the Philippine revolutionary forces greatly depended upon the bolo in inflicting casualty on the enemy. A part of Worcester’s book reads, “There is no reason for believing that this is a complete statement of sandatahan [Filipino armed groups] organized in Manila by the end of January, and yet this statement gives a force of at least 6,330 men. General Otis said that this force had been reported to him as being 10,000 men. It is probably true that only a small number of them had rifles; but armed with long knives and daggers they could have inflicted much damage in a sudden night attack in the narrow and badly lighted streets of Manila.”</p>
<p>Filipino bolomen even received precise instructions on how to use the blade in conducting raids to snatch the guns of their enemies. A part of Emilio Aguinaldo’s order to the sandatahan was included in Worcester’s book, and it reads, “At the moment of the attack the sandatahan should not attempt to secure rifles from their dead enemies, but shall pursue, slashing right and left with bolos until the Americans surrender, and after there remains no enemy who can injure them, they may take the rifles in one hand and the ammunition in the other.”</p>
<p>Continue reading story at: <a title="http://www.manilatimes.net/the-bolomen-of-the-revolution/104227/" href="http://www.manilatimes.net/the-bolomen-of-the-revolution/104227/" target="_blank">http://www.manilatimes.net/the-bolomen-of-the-revolution/104227/</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=2421</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>BOOK: True Version of the Philippine Revolution  By  Don Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy  President of the Philippine Republic., Tarlak (Philippine Islands),   23rd September, 1899</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=2090</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=2090#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 03 Nov 2013 12:00:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[American Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Books & Film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine American War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Regional History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=2090</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[True Version of the Philippine Revolution By Don Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy President of the Philippine Republic. Tarlak (Philippine Islands), 23rd September, 1899 To All Civilized Nations and Especially to the Great North American Republic I dedicate to you this modest work with a view to informing you respecting the international events which have occurred [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Aguinaldo-Emilio.jpg"><img alt="Aguinaldo-Emilio" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Aguinaldo-Emilio.jpg" width="444" height="600" /></a></p>
<h4 style="font: normal normal normal 12px/18px Consolas, Monaco, monospace;"></h4>
<h4 style="font: normal normal normal 12px/18px Consolas, Monaco, monospace;"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Georgia, 'Times New Roman', 'Bitstream Charter', Times, serif; font-size: 26px; font-weight: bold; line-height: 19px; white-space: normal;">True Version of the Philippine Revolution</span></h4>
<h4 style="font-size: 1.5em;">By<br />
Don Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy<br />
President of the Philippine Republic.</h4>
<h4 style="font-size: 1.5em;">Tarlak (Philippine Islands),</h4>
<h4><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: Georgia, 'Times New Roman', 'Bitstream Charter', Times, serif; font-size: 20px; font-weight: bold; line-height: 19px; white-space: normal;">23rd September, 1899</span></h4>
<h4></h4>
<h4>To All Civilized Nations and Especially to the Great North American Republic</h4>
<p id="d0e75">I dedicate to you this modest work with a view to informing you respecting the international events which have occurred during the past three years and are still going on in the Philippines, in order that you may be fully acquainted with the facts and be thereby placed in a position to pronounce judgment upon the issue and be satisfied and assured of the Justice which forms the basis and is in fact the foundation of our Cause. I place the simple truth respectfully before and dedicate it to you as an act of homage and as testimony of my admiration for and recognition of the wide knowledge, the brilliant achievements and the great power of other nations, whom I salute, in the name the Philippine nation, with every effusion of my soul.</p>
<p id="d0e77">The Author.</p>
<p>Page 1</p>
<h1>The Revolution of 1896</h1>
<p id="d0e87">Spain maintained control of the Philippine Islands for more than three centuries and a half, during which period the tyranny, misconduct and abuses of the Friars and the Civil and Military Administration exhausted the patience of the natives and caused them to make a desperate effort to shake off the unbearable galling yoke on the 26th and 31st August, 1896, then commencing the revolution in the provinces of Manila and Cavite.</p>
<p id="d0e89">On these memorable days the people of Balintawak, Santa Mesa, Kalookan, Kawit, Noveleta and San Francisco de Malabon rose against the Spaniards and proclaimed the Independence of the Philippines, and in the course of the next five days these uprisings were followed by the inhabitants of the other towns in Cavite province joining in the revolt against the Spanish Government although there was no previous arrangement looking to a general revolt. The latter were undoubtedly moved to action by the noble example of the former.Page 2</p>
<p id="d0e92">With regard to the rising in the province of Cavite it should be stated that although a call to arms bearing the signatures of Don Augustin Rieta, Don Candido Firona and myself, who were Lieutenants of the Revolutionary Forces, was circulated there was no certainty about the orders being obeyed, or even received by the people, for it happened that one copy of the orders fell into the hands of a Spaniard named Don Fernando Parga, Military Governor of the province, who at that time was exercising the functions of Civil Governor, who promptly reported its contents to the Captain-General of the Philippines, Don Ramon Blanco y Erenas. The latter at once issued orders for the Spanish troops to attack the revolutionary forces.</p>
<p id="d0e94">It would appear beyond doubt that One whom eye of man hath not seen in his wisdom and mercy ordained that the emancipation of the oppressed people of the Philippines should be undertaken at this time, for otherwise it is inexplicable how men armed only with sticks and<i>gulok</i>1 wholly unorganized and undisciplined, could defeat the Spanish Regulars in severe engagements at Bakoor, Imus and Noveleta and, in addition to making many of them prisoners, captured a large quantity of arms and ammunition. It was owing to this astonishing success of the revolutionary troops that General Blanco quickly concluded to endeavour, to maintain Spanish control by the adoption of a Page 3conciliatory policy under the pretext that thereby he could quel the rebellion, his first act being a declaration to the effect that it was not the purpose of his Government to oppress the people and he had no desire “to slaughter the Filipinos.”.</p>
<p id="d0e106">The Government of Madrid disapproved of General Blanco&#8217;s new policy and speedily appointed Lieutenant-General Don Camilo Polavieja to supersede him, and despatched forthwith a large number of Regulars to the Philippines.</p>
<p id="d0e108">General Polavieja advanced against the revolutionary forces with 16,000 men armed with Mausers, and one field battery. He had scarcely reconquered half of Cavite province when he resigned, owing to bad health. That was in April, 1897.</p>
<p id="d0e110">Polavieja was succeeded by the veteran General Don Fernando Primo de Rivera, who had seen much active service. As soon as Rivera had taken over command of the Forces he personally led his army in the assault upon and pursuit of the revolutionary forces, and so firmly, as well as humanely, was the campaign conducted that he soon reconquered the whole of Cavite province and drove the insurgents into the mountains.</p>
<p id="d0e112">Then I established my headquarters in the wild and unexplored mountain fastness of Biak-na-bató, where I formed the Republican Government of the Philippines at the end of May, 1897.Page 4</p>
<hr />
<div>
<p>1 A kind of sword—<i>Translator</i>.</p>
</div>
<h1>The Treaty of Biak-na-bató</h1>
<p id="d0e118">Don Pedro Alejandro Paterno (who was appointed by the Spanish Governor-General sole mediator in the discussion of the terms of peace) visited Biak-na-bató several times to negotiate terms of the Treaty, which, after negotiations extending over five months, and careful consideration had been given to each clause, was finally completed and signed on the 14th December, 1897, the following being the principal conditions:—</p>
<p id="d0e120">(1) That I would, and any of my associates who desired to go with me, be free to live in any foreign country. Having fixed upon Hongkong as my place of residence, it was agreed that payment of the indemnity of $800,000 (Mexican) should be made in three installments, namely, $400,000 when all the arms in Biak-na-bató were delivered to the Spanish authorities; $200,000 when the arms surrendered amounted to eight hundred stand; the final payment to be made when one thousand stand of arms shall have been handed over to the authorities and the <i>Te Deum</i>sung in the Cathedral in Manila as thanksgiving for the restoration of peace. The latter part of February was fixed as the limit of time wherein the surrender of arms should be completed.</p>
<p id="d0e125">(2) The whole of the money was to be paid to me personally, leaving the disposal of the money to my discretion and knowledge of thePage 5understanding with my associates and other insurgents.</p>
<p id="d0e129">(3) Prior to evacuating Biak-na-bató the remainder of the insurgent forces under Captain-General Primo de Rivera should send to Biak-na-bató two General of the Spanish Army to be held as hostages by my associates who remained there until I and a few of my compatriots arrived in Hongkong and the first installment of the money payment (namely, four hundred thousand dollars) was paid to me.</p>
<p id="d0e131">(4) It was also agreed that the religious corporations in the Philippines be expelled and an autonomous system of government, political and administrative, be established, though by special request of General Primo de Rivera these conditions were not insisted on in the drawing up of the Treaty, the General contending that such concessions would subject the Spanish Government to severe criticism and even ridicule.</p>
<p id="d0e133">General Primo de Rivera paid the first installment of $400,000 while the two Generals were hold as hostages in Biak-na-bató.</p>
<p id="d0e135">We, the revolutionaries, discharged our obligation to surrender our arms, which were over 1,000 stand, as everybody knows, it having been published in the Manila newspapers. But the Captain General Primo de Rivera failed to fulfill the agreement as faithfully as we did. The other installments were never paid; the Friars were neither restricted in their acts of tyranny and Page 6oppression nor were any steps taken to expel them or secularize the religious Orders; the reforms demanded were not inaugurated, though the <i>Te Deum</i> was sung. This failure of the Spanish authorities to abide by the terms of the Treaty caused me and my companions much unhappiness, which quickly changed to exasperation when I received a letter from Lieutenant-Colonel Don Miguel Primo de Rivera (nephew and private Secretary of the above-named General) informing me that I and my companions could never return to Manila.</p>
<p id="d0e142">Was the procedure of this special representative of Spain just?</p>
<h1>Negotiations</h1>
<p id="d0e147">But I and my companions were not to be kept long in our distress, grieving over the bad faith of the Spaniards, for in the month of March of the year referred to (1898) some people came to me and in the name of the Commander of the U.S.S. <i>Petrel</i> asked for a conference in compliance with the wishes of Admiral Dewey.</p>
<p id="d0e152">I had some interviews with the above-mentioned Commander, <i>i.e.</i>, during the evening of the 16th March and 6th April, during which the Commander urged me to return to the Philippines to renew hostilities against the Spaniards with the object of gaining our independence, and he assured me of the assistance of the United States in the event of war between the United States and Spain.Page 7</p>
<p id="d0e158">I then asked the Commander of the <i>Petrel</i> what the United States could concede to the Filipinos. In reply he said: “<i>The United States is a great and rich nation and needs no colonies</i>.”</p>
<p id="d0e166">In view of this reply I suggested to the Commander the advisability of stating in writing what would be agreed to by the United States, and be replied that he would refer the matter to Admiral Dewey.</p>
<p id="d0e168">In the midst of my negotiations with the Commander of the <i>Petrel</i> I was interrupted by letters from Isabelo Artacho and his solicitors, on the 5th April, claiming $200,000 of the money received from the Spanish authorities, and asserting that he (Artacho) should receive this sum as salary due to him while acting as Secretary of the Interior, he having been, it was alleged, a member of the Filipino Government established in Biak-na-bató. These letters contained the threat that failure to comply with the demand of Artacho would result in him bringing me before the Courts of Law in Hongkong. It may make the matter clearer if I mention at this point that Isabelo Artacho arrived at Biak-na-bató and made himself known to and mixed with the officers in the revolutionary camp on the 21st day of September, 1897, and was appointed Secretary of the Interior in the early part of November of that year, when the Treaty of Peace proposed and negotiated by Don Pedro Alejandro Paterno was almost concluded, as is proved by the fact that the document was signed on the 14th of December of that year.Page 8</p>
<p id="d0e174">In the light of these facts the unjust and unreasonable nature of the claim of Artacho is easily discernable, for it is monstrous to claim $200,000 for services rendered to the Revolutionary Government during such a brief period.</p>
<p id="d0e176">Moreover, it is a fact that it was agreed between ourselves (the leaders of the Revolution assembled in Biak-na-bató) that in the event of the Spaniards failing to comply with each and every one of the terms and conditions of the Agreement the money obtained from the Spanish Government should not be divided, but must be employed in the purchase of arms and ammunition to renew the war of independence.</p>
<p id="d0e178">It is therefore evident that Artacho, in making this preposterous demand, was acting as a spy for the enemy, as an agent of General Primo de Rivera, for he wanted to extinguish the rebellion by depriving its organizers and leaders of the most indispensable element, the “sinews of war,” which is money. This was the view, too, of the whole of my colleagues, and it was resolved by us that I should leave Hongkong immediately and thereby avoid the litigation which Artacho seemed bent upon and thereby afford my companions time and opportunity to remove this new and wholly unexpected barrier to the realization of our cherished plans for the emancipation of our beloved fatherland. I am profoundly pleased to say that they succeeded, Artacho withdrawing the suit through a transaction.Page 9</p>
<p id="d0e181">In accordance with the decision of the meeting above referred to, I left Hongkong quietly on the 7th April, 1898, on board the steamship<i>Taisany</i>, and after calling at Saigon I reached Singapore as a passenger by the s.s. <i>Eridan</i>, landing there as secretly as possible on the 21st April. I at once proceeded to the residence of one of my countrymen.</p>
<p id="d0e189">Thus is explained the cause of the interruption of the vitally important negotiations with Admiral Dewey, initiated by the Commander of the<i>Petrel</i>.</p>
<p id="d0e194">But “Man proposes and God disposes” is a proverb which was verified in its fullest sense on this occasion, for, notwithstanding the precautions taken in my journey to avoid identification yet at 4 o&#8217;clock in the afternoon of the day I arrived at Singapore an Englishman came to the house in which I was residing and in a cautious manner stated that the United States Consul at that port, Mr. Spencer Pratt, wished to have an interview with Don Emilio Aguinaldo. The visitor was told that in that house they did not know Aguinaldo; this being the prearranged answer for any callers.</p>
<p id="d0e196">But the Englishman returned to the house several times and persisted in saying that it was no use trying to conceal the fact of Aguinaldo&#8217;s arrival for Consul Pratt had received notice from Admiral Dewey of General Aguinaldo&#8217;s journey to Singapore.Page 10</p>
<p id="d0e199">In reply, the Consul said he would telegraph about this matter to Admiral Dewey, who was, he said, Commander-in-Chief of the squadron which would invade the Philippines, and who had, he also stated, full powers conferred on him by President McKinley.</p>
<p id="d0e201">Between 10 or 12 in the forenoon of the next day the conference was renewed and Mr. Pratt then informed me that the Admiral had sent him a telegram in reply to the wish I had expressed for an agreement in writing. He said the Admiral&#8217;s reply was—<i>That the United States would at least recognize the Independence of the Philippines under the protection of the United States Navy. The Consul added that there was no necessity for entering into a formal written agreement because the word of the Admiral and of the United States Consul were in fact equivalent to the most solemn pledge that their verbal promises and assurance would be fulfilled to the letter and were not to be classed with Spanish promises or Spanish ideas of a man&#8217;s word of honour. In conclusion the Consul said, “The Government of North America, is a very honest, just, and powerful government.</i>”</p>
<p id="d0e206">Being informed of what had been said by the visitor I consented to meet Consul Pratt, and had a strictly private interview with him between 9 and 12 p.m. on 22nd April, 1898, in one of the suburbs of Singapore. As soon as Mr. Pratt met me he said that war had been formally declared by the United States against Spain the day before, <i>i.e.</i>, on the 21st April.Page 11</p>
<p id="d0e212">In the course of the interview alluded to, Consul Pratt told me that as the Spaniards had not fulfilled the promises made in the Biak-na-bató Agreement, the Filipinos had the right to continue the revolution which had been checked by the Biak-na-bató arrangement, and after urging me to resume hostilities against the Spaniards he assured me that the United States would grant much greater liberty and more material benefits to the Filipinos than the Spaniards ever promised.</p>
<p id="d0e214">I then asked the Consul what benefits the United States would confer on the Philippines, pointing out at the same time the advisability of making an agreement and setting out all the terms and conditions in black and white.</p>
<p id="d0e216">Being as anxious to be in the Philippines as Admiral Dewey and the North American Consul—to renew the struggle for our Independence—I took the opportunity afforded me by these representatives of the United States, and, placing the fullest confidence in their word of honour, I said to Mr. Pratt (in response to his persistent professions of solicitude for the welfare of my countrymen) that he could count upon me when I returned to the Philippines to raise the people as one man against the Spaniards, with the one grand object in view as above mentioned, if I could take firearms with me to distribute amongst my countrymen. I assured him that I would put forth my utmost endeavours to crush and extinguish the power of Spain in the islands and I added that if in possession of one Page 12battery of a dozen field-guns I would make the Spaniards surrender Manila in about two weeks.</p>
<p id="d0e220">The Consul said he would help me to get over to the Philippines the consignment of arms in respect of which I had made the preliminary arrangements in Hongkong, and he added that he would at once telegraph to Admiral Dewey informing him of this promise in order that the Admiral might give what assistance laid in his power to make the expedition in question a success.</p>
<p id="d0e222">On the 25th April the last conference was held in the United States Consulate at Singapore. I was invited by the Consul to meet him on this occasion and as soon as we met he said he had received a telegram from the Admiral requesting him to ask me to proceed to Hongkong by first steamer to join the Admiral who was then with his squadron in Mir&#8217;s Bay; a Chinese harbour close to Hongkong. I replied to this proposal in the affirmative, and gave directions to my <i>aide-de-camp</i> to at once procure passages for myself and companions, care being taken that the tickets should bear the assumed names we had adopted on the occasion of our journey from Hongkong to Singapore, it being advisable that we should continue to travel <i>incognito</i>.</p>
<p id="d0e230">On the 26th April I called on Consul Pratt to bid him adieu on the eve of my departure from Singapore by the steamship <i>Malacca</i>. The Consul, after telling me that when I got near the port of Hongkong I would be met by the Admiral&#8217;s launch Page 13and taken from the <i>Malacca</i> to the American squadron (a precaution against news of my movements becoming public property, of which I highly approved), then asked me to appoint him Representative of the Philippines in the United States, there to zealously advocate official recognition of our Independence. My answer was, that I would propose him for the position of Representative of the Philippines in the United States when the Philippine Government was properly organized, though I thought it an insignificant reward for his assistance, for, in the event of our Independence becoming <i>un fait accompli</i> I intended to offer him a high position in the Customs Department, besides granting certain commercial advantages and contributing towards the cost of the war whatever sum he might consider due to his Government; because the Filipinos had already decided such a policy was the natural outcome of the exigencies of the situation and could be construed only as a right and proper token of the nation&#8217;s gratitude.</p>
<p id="d0e243">But to continue the statement of facts respecting my return to Hongkong from Singapore: I left Singapore with my A.D. Cs., Sres Pilar and Leyba, bound for Hongkong by the s.s. <i>Malacca</i>, arriving at Hongkong at 2 a.m. on the 1st May, without seeing or hearing anything of the launch which I had been led by Consul Pratt to expect to meet me near the entrance of Hongkong harbour. In response to an invitation from Mr. Rounsevelle Wildman, United States Consul at Hongkong, I wended my way to the United States Consulate and between 9 and 11 p.m. Page 14of the same day I had an interview with him. Mr. Wildman told me that Admiral Dewey left for Manila hurriedly in accordance with imperative orders from his Government directing him to attack the Spanish Fleet. He was therefore unable to await my arrival before weighing anchor and going forth to give battle to the Spaniards. Mr. Wildman added that Admiral Dewey left word with him that he would send a gunboat to take me across to the Philippines. In the course of this interview with Mr. Wildman I spoke to him about the shipment of arms to the islands which I had previously planned with him, and it was then agreed among ourselves that he (Mr. Rounsevelle Wildman) and the Filipino Mr. Teodoro Sandico should complete the arrangements for the despatch of the expedition, and I there and then handed to and deposited with them the sum of $50,000.</p>
<p id="d0e250">A steam launch was quickly purchased for $15,000, while a contract was made and entered into for the purchase of 2,000 rifles at $7 each and 200,000 rounds of ammunition at $33 and 56/100 per 1000.</p>
<p id="d0e252">A week later (7th May) the American despatch-boat <i>McCulloch</i> arrived from Manila bringing news of Admiral Dewey&#8217;s victory over the Spanish fleet, but did not bring orders to convey me to Manila. At 9 o&#8217;clock that night I had another interview with Consul Wildman, at his request.</p>
<p id="d0e257">On the 15th of the same month the <i>McCulloch</i> again arrived at Hongkong from Manila, this time Page 15bringing orders to convey me and my companions to Manila. I was promptly notified of this by Consul Wildman who requested that we go on board the <i>McCulloch</i> at 10 o&#8217;clock at night on 16th May. Accompanied by Consul Wildman, the Captain of the <i>McCulloch</i>, and Mr. John Barrett (who then usually styled himself “ex-Secretary of the United States Legation in Siam”) we boarded an American steam launch and proceeded to Chinese Kowloon Bay, where the <i>McCulloch</i> was anchored. While bidding us adieu Mr. Barrett said he would call on me in the Philippines, which he did later on in Cavite and Malolos.</p>
<p id="d0e273">Mr. Wildman strongly advised me to establish a Dictatorship as soon as I arrived in the Philippines, and he assured me that he would use his best endeavours to have the arms already contracted for delivered to me in the Philippines, which he in fact did. [It is to be observed, though, that the first expedition having been conducted satisfactorily, the arms reaching me in due course, I was naturally grateful and had confidence in the sincerity and good faith of Consul Wildman, and there was nothing surprising therefore in the fact that I asked him to fit out another expedition and caused the sum of $67,000 to be deposited with him for that purpose. I regret to state, however, that Mr. Wildman has failed to comply with my request and I am informed that he refuses to refund the money.]</p>
<p id="d0e275">The <i>McCulloch</i> left Hongkong at 11 a.m. on the 17th May and arrived off Cavite (Manila Bay) Page 16between noon and 1 p.m. on the 19th idem. No sooner had the <i>McCulloch</i> dropped anchor than the Admiral&#8217;s launch, carrying his Adjutant and Private Secretary, came alongside to convey me the flagship <i>Olympia</i>, where I was received with my Adjutant (Sr. Leyba) with the honours due to a General.</p>
<p id="d0e288">The Admiral ushered me into his private quarters, and after the exchange of the usual greetings I asked <i>whether it was true that he had sent all the telegrams to the Consul at Singapore, Mr. Pratt, which that gentleman had told me he received in regard to myself. The Admiral replied in the affirmative, adding that the United States had come to the Philippines to protect the natives and free them from the yoke of Spain. He said, moreover, that America is exceedingly well off as regards territory, revenue, and resources and therefore needs no colonies</i>, assuring me finally that <i>there was no occasion for me to entertain any doubts whatever about the recognition of the Independence of the Philippines by the United States</i>. Then Admiral Dewey asked me if I could induce the people to rise against the Spaniards and make a short, sharp, and decisive campaign of it.</p>
<p id="d0e296">I said in reply that events would speak for themselves, but while a certain arms expedition (respecting which Consul Wildman was duly informed that it would be despatched from a Chinese port) was delayed in China we could do nothing, because without arms every victory would assuredly cost us the lives of many brave and dashing Page 17Filipino warriors. The Admiral thereupon offered to despatch a steamer to hurry up the expedition. (This, be it borne in mind, in addition to the General orders he had given the Consul to assist us to procure arms and ammunition.) Then he at once placed at my disposal all the guns seized onboard the Spanish warships as well as 62 Mausers and a good many rounds of ammunition which had been brought up from Corregidor Island by the U.S.S. <i>Petrel</i>.</p>
<p id="d0e303">I then availed myself of an early opportunity to express to the Admiral my deep gratitude for the assistance rendered to the people of the Philippines by the United States, as well as my unbounded admiration of the grandeur and beneficence of the American people. I also candidly informed the Admiral that before I left Hongkong the Filipinos residing in that colony hold a meeting at which the following question was fully discussed, namely, <i>the possibility that after the Spaniards were defeated, and their power and prestige in the islands destroyed, the Filipinos might have to wage war against the United States owing to the American Government declining to recognize our independence. In that event the Americans, it was generally agreed, would be sure to defeat us for they would find us worn out and short of ammunition owing to our struggle with the Spaniards. I concluded by asking the gallant Admiral to excuse me for an amount of frankness that night appear to border on impudence, and assured him of the fact that I was actuated only by a desire to have a perfectly clear understanding in the interest of both parties.</i>Page 18</p>
<p id="d0e309"><i>The Admiral said he was very glad to have this evidence of our earnestness and straightforwardness and he thought the Filipinos and Americans should act towards one another as friends and allies, and therefore it was right and proper that all doubts should be expressed frankly in order that explanations be made, difficulties avoided, and distrust removed; adding that, as he had already indicated</i>, the United States would unquestionably recognize the Independence of the people of the Philippines, guaranteed as it was by the word of honour of Americans, <i>which, he said, is more positive, more irrevocable than any written agreement, which might not be regarded as binding when there is an intention or desire to repudiate it, as was the case in respect of the compact made with the Spaniards at Biak-na-bató. Then the Admiral advised me to at once have made a Filipino National Flag, which he said he would recognize and protect in the presence of the other nations represented by the various squadrons anchored in Manila Bay, adding, however, that he thought it advisable that we should destroy the power of Spain before hoisting our national flag, in order that the act would appear more important and creditable in the eyes of the world and of the United States in particular. Then when the Filipino vessels passed to and fro with the national flag fluttering in the breeze they would attract more attention and be more likely to induce respect for the national colours</i>.</p>
<p id="d0e319">I again thanked the Admiral for his good advice and generous offers, giving him to understand clearly that I was willing to sacrifice my Page 19own life if he would be thereby more exalted in the estimation of the United States, more honoured by his fellow-countrymen.</p>
<p id="d0e323">I added that under the present conditions of hearty co-operation, good fellowship and a clear understanding the whole nation would respond to the call to arms to shake off the yoke of Spain and obtain their freedom by destroying the power of Spain in all parts of the archipelago. If, however, all did not at once join in the movement that should not cause surprise, for there would be many unable to assist owing to lack of arms and ammunition, while others, again, might be reluctant to take an active part in the campaign on account of the loss and inconvenience to themselves and families that would result, from open hostility to the Spaniards.</p>
<p id="d0e325">Thus ended my first interview with Admiral Dewey, to whom I signified my intention to reside for a while at the headquarters of the Naval Commandant of Cavite Arsenal.</p>
<h1>The Revolution of 1898</h1>
<p id="d0e330">I returned to the <i>McCulloch</i> to give directions for the landing of the luggage and <i>war materials</i> which I brought over with me from Hongkong. On my way to the <i>McCulloch</i> I met several of my old associates in the 1896 revolution who had come over from Bataan province. To these friends I gave two letters directing the people of that Page 20province and Zambales to rise against the Spaniards and vigorously attack them.</p>
<p id="d0e343">Before returning to the Arsenal and when near the landing place I came across several <i>bancas</i> [large open boats] loaded with revolutionists of Kawit (my birth-place) who told me they had been looking out for me for about two weeks, the Americans having announced that I would soon return to the islands. The feeling of joy which I experienced on the occasion of this reunion with my own kith and kin—people who had stood shoulder to shoulder with me in the desperate struggles of the 1896–97 revolution—is simply indescribable. Words fail to express my feelings—joy mingled with sadness and strong determination to accomplish the salvation, the emancipation, of my beloved countrymen. Hardly had I set foot in the Naval Headquarters at Cavite, at 4 o&#8217;clock in the afternoon, than I availed myself of the opportunity to give these faithful adherents orders similar to those despatched to Bataan and Zambales.</p>
<p id="d0e348">I was engaged the whole of that night with my companions drawing up orders and circulars for the above mentioned purpose.</p>
<p id="d0e350">We were also kept very busy replying to letters which were pouring in from all sides asking for news respecting the reported return of myself to the islands and requesting definite instructions regarding a renewal of hostilities against the Spaniards.Page 21</p>
<p id="d0e353">That the invisible, albeit irresistible, hand of Providence was guiding every movement and beneficently favouring all efforts to rid the country of the detestable foreign yoke is fairly evidenced by the rapid sequence of events above recorded, for in no other way can one account for the wonderful celebrity with which news of my projected return spread far and wide.</p>
<p id="d0e355">Sixty-two Volunteers, organized and armed by the Spaniards with Mausers and Remingtons, from San Roque and Caridad, placed themselves under my orders. At first the Americans apprehended some danger from the presence of this armed force, which was promptly placed on guard at the entrance to the Arsenal. When I heard of this I went down and gave them orders to occupy Dalajican, thereby preventing the Spaniards from carrying out their intention to approach Cavite by that route.</p>
<p id="d0e357">When the Americans were informed of what I had done they were reassured, and orders were given to the Captain of the <i>Petrel</i> to hand over to me the 62 rifles and ammunition which Admiral Dewey had kindly promised. About 10 a.m. the <i>Petrel&#8217;s</i> launch landed the arms and ammunition in question at the Arsenal and no time was lost in distributing the arms among the men who were by this time coming in ever increasing numbers to offer their services to me and expressing their willingness to be armed and assigned for duty at the outposts and on the firing line.Page 22</p>
<p id="d0e366">During the evening of the 20th May the old Revolutionary officer Sr. Luciano San Miguel (now a General in command of a Brigade) came to me and asked for orders, which were given to him to effect the uprising of the provinces of Manila, Laguna, Batangas, Tayabas, Bulakan, Morong, Pampanga, Tarlak, Newva Ecija and other northern provinces. He left the same night to execute the orders.</p>
<p id="d0e371">During the 21st, 22nd and 23rd and subsequent days of that month my headquarters were simply besieged by my countrymen, who poured into Cavite from all sides to offer their services in the impending struggle with the Spaniards. To such an extent, indeed, were my quarters in the Arsenal invaded that I soon found it necessary to repair to another house in the town, leaving the place entirely at the disposal of the U.S. Marines, who were then in charge of and guarding Cavite Arsenal.</p>
<h1>The Dictatorial Government</h1>
<p id="d0e376">On the 24th May a Dictatorial Government was established, my first proclamation being issued that day announcing the system of government then adopted and stating that I had assumed the duties and responsibilities of head of such government. Several copies of this proclamation were delivered to Admiral Dewey and through the favour of his good offices forwarded to the representatives of the Foreign Powers then residing in Manila, notwithstanding our lack of intercourse with Manila.Page 23</p>
<p id="d0e379">A few days later the Dictatorial Government was removed to the house formerly occupied by the Spanish Civil Governor of Cavite, because, owing to the great number of visitors from the provinces and the rapid increase of work the accommodation in the private house was wholly inadequate and too cramped. It was while quartered in the first mentioned house that glad tidings reached me of the arrival at Cavite of the long-expected arms expedition. The whole cargo, consisting of 1,999 rifles and 200,000 rounds of ammunition, besides other special munitions of war, was landed at the very same dock of the Arsenal, and was witnessed by the U.S.S. “<i>Petrel</i>.”</p>
<p id="d0e384">I immediately despatched a Commission to convey to the Admiral my thanks for the trouble he had taken in sending to hurry up the expedition. I also caused my Commissioners to inform the Admiral that I had fixed the 31st May as the day when the Revolutionary Forces should make a General attack upon the Spaniards. The Admiral returned the compliment by sending his Secretary to congratulate me and my Government upon the activity and enthusiasm displayed in preparing for the campaign, but he suggested that it was advisable to postpone the opening of the campaign to a later date in order that the insurgent troops might be better organized and better drilled. I replied to the Admiral through his Secretary that there was no cause for any anxiety for everything would be in perfect readiness by the 31st and, moreover, that the Filipinos were very anxious to Page 24free themselves from the galling Spanish yoke, that they would therefore fight and my troops would make up for any deficiency in discipline by a display of fearlessness and determination to defeat the common enemy which would go far to ensure success, I was, I added, nevertheless profoundly grateful to the Admiral for his friendly advice.</p>
<p id="d0e388">I promptly gave orders for the distribution of the arms which had just arrived, sending some to various provinces and reserving the remainder for the revolutionaries of Kawit, the latter being smuggled into the district of Alapang during the night of 27th May.</p>
<h1>The First Triumphs</h1>
<p id="d0e393">The next day (8th May, 1898), just when we were distributing arms to the revolutionists of Kawit, in the above mentioned district a column, composed of over 270 Spanish Naval Infantry, appeared in sight. They were sent out by the Spanish General, Sr. Peña, for the purpose of seizing the said consignment of arms.</p>
<p id="d0e395">Then it was that the first engagement of the Revolution of 1898 (which may be rightly styled a continuation of the campaign of 1896–97) took place. The battle raged from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., when the Spaniards ran out of ammunition and surrendered, with all their arms, to the Filipino Revolutionists, who took their prisoners to Cavite. Page 25In commemoration of this glorious achievement I hoisted our national flag in presence of a great crowd, who greeted it with tremendous applause and loud, spontaneous and prolonged cheers for “Independent Philippines” and for “the generous nation”—the United States of America. Several officers and Marines from the American fleet who witnessed the ceremony evinced sympathy with the Filipino cause by joining in the natural and popular rejoicings of the people.</p>
<p id="d0e399">This glorious triumph was merely the prelude to a succession of brilliant victories, and when the 31st May came—the date fixed for general uprising of the whole of the Philippines—the people rose as one man to crush the power of Spain.</p>
<p id="d0e401">The second triumph was effected in Binakayan, at a place known as <i>Polvorin</i>, where the Spanish garrison consisting of about 250 men was attacked by our raw levvies and surrendered in a few hours, their stock of ammunition being completely exhausted.</p>
<p id="d0e406">I again availed myself of the opportunity to hoist our national flag and did so from an upper story of the <i>Polvorin</i> facing the sea, with the object of causing the sacred insignia of our Liberty and Independence to be seen fluttering in the breeze by the warships, representing all the great and civilized nations of the world, which were congregated in the harbour observing the providential evolution going on in the Philippines after upwards of three hundred years of Spanish domination.Page 26</p>
<p id="d0e412">Scarcely had another hour elapsed before another flag was seen flying over the steeple of the Church at Bakoor—which is also in full view of vessels in the harbour—being the signal of another triumph of our troops over the Spanish forces which held that town. The garrison consisted of about 300 men, who surrendered to the Revolutionary Army when their ammunition was exhausted.</p>
<p id="d0e414">And so the Revolution progressed, triumph following triumph in quick succession, evidencing the power, resolution and ability of the inhabitants of the Philippines to rid themselves of any foreign yoke and exist as an independent State, as I affirmed to Admiral Dewey and in respect of which he and several American Commanders and officers warmly congratulated me, specially mentioning the undeniable triumphs of the Philippine Army as demonstrated and proved by the great number of prisoners we brought into Cavite from all parts of Luzon.</p>
<h1>The Philippine Flag</h1>
<p id="d0e419">In conformity with my orders issued on the 1st of September, all Philippine vessels hoisted the national flag, the Marines of the Filipino flotilla being the first to execute that order. Our little flotilla consisted of some eight Spanish steam launches (which had been captured) and five vessels of greater dimensions, namely, the <i>Taaleño, Baldyan, Taal, Bulucan</i>, and <i>Purisima Concepcion</i>. Page 27These vessels were presented to the Philippine Government by their native owners and were converted by us, at our Arsenal, into gunboats, 8 and 9 centimetre guns, taken from the <i>sunken Spanish warships</i>, being mounted on board.</p>
<p id="d0e432">Ah! what a beautiful, inspiring joyous sight that flag was fluttering in the breeze from the topmasts of our vessels, side by side, as it were, with the ensigns of other and greater nations, among whose mighty warships our little cruisers passed to and fro dipping their colours, the ensign of Liberty and Independence! With what reverence and adoration it was viewed as it suddenly rose in its stately loneliness crowning our victories, and, as it were, smiling approvingly upon the undisciplined Philippine Army in the moment of its triumphs over the regular forces of the Spanish Government! One&#8217;s heart swells and throbs again with the emotions of extreme delight; the soul is filled with pride, and the goal of patriotism seems well-nigh reached in the midst of such a magnificent spectacle!</p>
<p id="d0e434">At the end of June I called on Admiral Dewey, who, after complimenting me on <i>the rapid triumphs of the Philippine Revolution</i>, told me he had been asked by the German and French Admirals why he allowed the Filipinos to display on their vessels a flag that was not recognized. Admiral Dewey said his reply to the French and German Admirals was—with <i>his knowledge and consent the Filipinos used that flag</i>, and, apart from this, Page 28he was of opinion that in view of the courage and steadfastness of purpose displayed in the war against the Spaniards the Filipinos deserved the right to use their flag.</p>
<p id="d0e444">I thereupon expressed to the Admiral my unbounded gratitude for such unequivocal protection, and on returning to the shore immediately ordered the Philippine flotilla to convey troops to the other provinces of Luzon and to the Southern islands, to wage war against the Spaniards who garrisoned them.</p>
<h1>Expedition to Bisayas</h1>
<p id="d0e449">The expedition to Bisayas was a complete success as far as the conveyance of our troops to the chief strategic points was concerned, our steamers returning safely to Cavite after landing the soldiers. The steamer <i>Bulusan</i>, however, which sailed for Masbate with Colonel Sr. Mariano Riego de Dios&#8217; column destined for duty in Samar was sighted by the Spanish gunboats <i>Elcano</i> and <i>Uranus</i>, which gave chase, and the former proving the faster overtook and attacked the <i>Bulusan</i> doing so much damage to her that she foundered after a hot engagement in which considerable damage was done to the Spaniard. Happily the crew and troops on board of the <i>Bulusan</i> saved their lives by swimming ashore.</p>
<h1>The Steamer “Compania de Filipinas”</h1>
<p id="d0e469">In a few days the Spanish steamer <i>Compania de Filipinas</i> was brought to Cavite by my countrymen, Page 29who captured her in the harbour of Aparri. Cannon were at once mounted on board this vessel and she was loaded with troops and despatched for Olongapo, but she had not gone far before I sent another gunboat to recall her because Admiral Dewey requested me to do so in order that a question raised by the French Consul might be duly settled. The Admiral having been informed that when captured the <i>Compania de Filipinas</i> was flying the Spanish flag abstained from interfering in the matter and handed the French Consul&#8217;s protest over to me, affirming at the same time that <i>he and his forces were in no way concerned in the matter</i>.</p>
<p id="d0e482">This incident, which was soon settled, clearly demonstrates the recognition of and protection extended to the Philippine Revolution by Admiral Dewey.</p>
<p id="d0e484">The <i>Filipinas</i> (as this steamer has since been styled) was again despatched to Olongapo and on her way back landed troops in the provinces of Cagayan and the Batanes islands for the purpose of wresting the government of those districts from Spain. This steamer, whose name has more recently been changed to <i>Luzon</i>, is at present ashore in the Rio Grande, in Cagayan, where she was beached owing to some damage to her machinery.</p>
<p id="d0e492">When our steamers were leaving the harbour with troops for the provinces they dipped their ensigns in passing Admiral Dewey&#8217;s flagship<i>Olympia</i>, performing this act in conformity with the rules of international courtesy, a demonstration Page 30of friendship that was invariably promptly responded to in the usual way.</p>
<h1>The Proclamation of Independence</h1>
<p id="d0e502">The Dictatorial Government decided that the proclamation of Independence should take place on the 12th June, the ceremony in connection therewith to be held in the town of Kawit. With this object in view I sent a Commission to inform the Admiral of the arrangement and invite him to be present on the occasion of the formal proclamation of Independence, a ceremony which was solemnly and impressively conducted. The Admiral sent his Secretary to excuse him from taking part in the proceedings, stating the day fixed for the ceremony was mail day.</p>
<p id="d0e504">About the end of that month (June) the Spanish gunboat <i>Leyte</i> escaped from the Macabebe river and reached Manila Bay, where she was seized by General Torres&#8217; troops. She had on board part of the troops and volunteers which were under the command of the Filipino Colonel Sr. Eugenio Blanco, but on being sighted by an American gunboat she voluntarily surrendered. Admiral Dewey delivered to me all the prisoners and arms on board the vessel, which latter, however, he took possession of; but after the fall of Manila he demanded that I should give back the prisoners to him.</p>
<p id="d0e509">On the 4th July the first United States military expedition arrived, under command of General Page 31Anderson, and it was quartered in Cavite Arsenal. This distinguished General called on me in the Filipino Government House at Cavite, an honour and courtesy which I promptly returned, as was right and proper, seeing that we were friends, of equal rank, and allies. In the course of official intercourse General Anderson solemnly and completely endorsed the promises made by Admiral Dewey to me, asserting on his word of honour that America had not come to the Philippines to wage war against the natives nor to conquer and retain territory, but only to liberate the people from the oppression of the Spanish Government.</p>
<p id="d0e513">A few days before the arrival of this military expedition, and others that followed under command of General Merritt, Admiral Dewey sent his Secretary to my Government to ask me to grant permission for the stationing of American troops in Tambo and Maytubig, Paranaque and Pasay. In view of the important promises of Admiral Dewey, above mentioned, the Dictatorial Government consented to the movement of troops as proposed.</p>
<p id="d0e515">During that month (July) Admiral Dewey accompanied by General Anderson visited Cavite, and after the usual exchange of courtesies he said—“You have had ocular demonstration and confirmation of all I have told you and promised you. How pretty your flag is! It has a triangle, and is something like the Cubans&#8217;. Will you give me one as a memento when I go back home?”Page 32</p>
<p id="d0e518">I replied that I was fully satisfied with his word of honour and of the needlessness of having our agreement in documentary form. As to the flag he wanted, he could have one whenever he wished.</p>
<p id="d0e520">The Admiral continued: <i>Documents are useless when there is no sense of honour on one side, as was the case in respect of the compact with the Spaniards, who failed to act up to what had been written and signed. Have faith in my word, and I assure you that the United States will recognize the independence of the country. But I recommend you to keep a good deal of what we have said and agreed secret at present. I further request you to have patience if any of our soldiers insult any Filipinos, for being Volunteers they are as yet undisciplined</i>.</p>
<p id="d0e525">I replied that I would bear in mind all his advice regarding cautiousness, and that with respect to the misconduct of the soldiers orders had already been issued enjoining forbearance, and I passed the same remarks to the Admiral about unpleasantness possibly arising through lack of discipline of our own forces.</p>
<h1>The Spanish Commission</h1>
<p id="d0e530">At this juncture the Admiral suddenly changed the topic of conversation and asked—“Why don&#8217;t the people in Manila rise against the Spaniards as their countrymen in the provinces have done? Is it true that they accept the <i>autonomy</i> offered by General Augustin with a representativePage 33Assembly? Is the report which has reached me true, that a Filipino Commission has been sent from Manila to propose to you the acceptance of that <i>autonomy</i> coupled with a recognition of your rank of General, as well as recognition of the rank held by your companions?”</p>
<p id="d0e540">“The people of Manila,” I answered, “are quiet because they have no arms and because as merchants and landlords they fear that their valuable properties and money in the banks will be confiscated by the Spaniards if they rise up and begin burning and destroying the property of others. On this account they had ostensibly accepted <i>autonomy</i>, not because that was what they wanted but more as a means of deceiving the Spaniards and being allowed to live in peace; but I am confident that all the Filipinos in Manila are for <i>independence</i>, as will be proved the very day our troops capture Manila. At that time I fully expect the people of Manila will join with us in raising loud cheers for the Independence of the Philippines, making fresh demonstrations of loyalty to our Government.”</p>
<p id="d0e548">I also told him it was true that a Mixed Commission had arrived and in the name of General Augustin and Archbishop Nozaleda made certain proposals; but they made known to us their intention to adhere to our Cause. The members of the Commission said the Spaniards instructed them to say they came <i>motu propio</i>1 without being formally Page 34appointed or &#8216;coached&#8217; by the Spanish authorities in what they should say, representing, on the contrary, that they were faithful interpreters of the sentiment of the people of Manila and that they had good reason for believing that if I was willing to accept <i>autonomy</i> General Augustin and Archbishop Nozaleda would recognize my rank of General, and that of my companions, would give me the $1,000,000 indemnity agreed upon at Biak-na-bató and still unpaid, as well as liberal rewards for and salaries to the members of a popular Assembly promises which the Commissioners did not put any faith in, though some of them held the opinion that the money should be accepted because it would reduce the funds of the Spanish Government and also because the money had been wrung from Filipinos. The Commissioners, I added, left after assuring me that the people in Manila would rise against the Spaniards if supplied with arms, and that the best thing I could do was to make an attack on Manila at the places they pointed out as being the weakest parts of the Spanish defense and consequently the easiest to overcome.</p>
<p id="d0e563">I thanked the Commission for their loyalty and straightforwardness, told them they would be given an escort to take them safely back to the Spanish lines, and that when they got back they should inform those who had sent them that they were not received because they were not duly accredited and that even if they had brought credentials according to what they had seen and heard from the Revolutionists Don Emilio Aguinaldo would certainly Page 35not consider, much less accept, their proposals respecting autonomy because the Filipino people had sufficient experience to govern themselves, that they are tired of being victimised and subjected to gross abuses by a foreign nation under whose domination they have no wish to continue to live, but rather wish for their <i>independence</i>. Therefore the Spaniards might prepare to defend their sovereignty, for the Filipino Army would vigorously assault the city and with unflagging zeal prosecute the siege until Manila was captured.</p>
<p id="d0e570">I also told the Commissioners to tell Archbishop Nozaleda that he was abusing the privileges and authority of his exalted position; that such conduct was at variance with the precepts of His Holiness the Pope, and if he failed to rectify matters I would throw light on the subject in a way which would bring shame and disgrace upon him. I added that I knew he and General Augustin had commissioned four Germans and five Frenchmen to disguise themselves and assassinate me in the vain hope that once I am disposed of the people of the Philippines would calmly submit to the sovereignty of Spain, which was a great mistake, for were I assassinated, the inhabitants of the Philippines would assuredly continue the struggle with greater vigor than ever. Other men would come forward to avenge my death. Lastly I recommended the Commissioners to tell the people in Manila to go on with their trades and industries and be perfectly at ease about our Government, whose actions were guided in the paths of rectitude and justice, and Page 36that since there were no more Friars to corrupt the civic virtues, the Filipino Government was now endeavouring to demonstrate its honesty of purpose before the whole world. There was therefore no reason why they should not go on with their business as usual and should not think of leaving Manila and coming into the Camp, where the resources were limited, where already more were employed than was necessary to meet the requirements of the Government and the Army, and where, too, the lack of arms was sorely felt.</p>
<p id="d0e577">The Commissioners asked me what conditions the United States would impose and what benefits they would confer on the Filipinos, to which I replied that is was difficult to answer that question in view of the secret I was in honour bound to keep in respect of the terms of the Agreement, contenting myself by saying that they could learn a good deal by carefully observing the acts, equivalent to the exercise of sovereign rights, of the Dictatorial Government, and especially the occular demonstrations of such rights on the waters of the harbour.</p>
<p id="d0e579">These statements, which were translated by my interpreter, Sr. Leyba, made such an impression on the Admiral that he interrupted, asking—“Why did you reveal our secret?” Do you mean that you do not intend to keep inviolate our well understood silence and watchword?</p>
<p id="d0e581">I said in reply that I had revealed nothing of the secret connected with him and the Consul.Page 37</p>
<p id="d0e584">The Admiral then thanked me for my cautiousness, bid we good-by and left with General Anderson, after requesting me to refrain from assaulting Manila because, he said, they were studying a plan to take the Walled City with their troops, leaving the suburbs for the Filipino forces.</p>
<p id="d0e586">He advised me, nevertheless, to study other plans of taking the city in conjunction with their forces, which I agreed to do.</p>
<hr />
<div>
<p>1 Of their own free will and accord—<i>Translator</i>.</p>
</div>
<h1>More American Troops</h1>
<p id="d0e591">A few days later American troops arrived, and with them came General Merritt. The Admiral&#8217;s Secretary and two officers came to the Dictatoriat Government and asked that we allow them to occupy our trenches at Maytubig; from the harbour side of that place right up to the main road, where they would form a continuation of our lines at Pasay and Singalong. This I also agreed to on account of the solemn promises of the Admiral and the trust naturally placed in them owing to the assistance rendered and recognition of our independence.</p>
<p id="d0e593">Ten days after the Americans occupied the trenches at Maytubig (this move being well known by the Spaniards who were entrenched at the Magazine in San Antonio Abad) their outposts, composed of a few men only, were surprised by the Spaniards, who made a night attack on them. They had barely time to get out of their beds and fall back on the centre, abandoning their rifles and six field-guns in their precipitate retreat.Page 38</p>
<p id="d0e596">The firing being distinctly heard, our troops immediately rushed to the assistance of our friends and allies, repulsing the Spaniards and recapturing the rifles and field-guns, which I ordered to be returned to the Americans as a token of our good-will and friendship.</p>
<p id="d0e598">General Noriel was opposed to this restitution, alleging that the arms did not belong to the Americans since the Filipino troops captured them from the Spaniards. But I paid no attention to the reasonable opposition of my General and gave imperative instructions that they be returned to the Americans, showing thereby clearly and positively the good-will of the Filipinos. The said rifles and field-guns, with a large quantity of ammunition, was therefore restored to those who were then our allies, notwithstanding the fact of General Noriel&#8217;s brigade capturing them at a cost of many lives of our compatriots.</p>
<p id="d0e600">Later on more American reinforcements arrived and again Admiral Dewey, through his Secretary, asked for more trenches for their troops, averring that those which we had given up to them before were insufficient. We at once agreed and their lines were then extended up to Pasay.</p>
<h1>The Thirteenth of August</h1>
<p id="d0e605">The 13th August arrived, on which day I noticed a general advance of the American land Page 39and sea forces towards Manila, the former being under command of General Anderson at Paranaque.</p>
<p id="d0e609">Subsequently I ordered a general assault of the Spanish lines and in the course of this movement General Pio del Pilar succeeded in advancing through Sampalok and attacked the Spanish troops who where defending the Puente Colgante,1 causing the enemy to fall back on the Bridge of Spain. The column commanded by our General, Sr. Gregorio II. del Pilar, took the suburbs of Pretil, Tendo, Divisoria and Paseo de Azcarraga, situated north of Manila city; while General Noriel&#8217;s command, near Pasay, took the suburbs of Singalong and Pako, and following the American column he out-flanked the Spaniards who were defending San Antonio Abad. The Spanish officers observing General Noriel&#8217;s move ordered their men to retreat towards the Walled City, whereupon the Americans who held the foremost trenches entered Malate and Ermita without firing a shot. At this point the Americans met General Noriel&#8217;s troops who had captured the above mentioned suburbs and were quartered in the building formerly used by the Exposicion Regional de Filipinas,2 in the Normal, and in Sr. Perez&#8217; house in Paco.</p>
<p id="d0e623">In Santa Ana (the eastern section of Manila) General Ricarto successfully routed five companies of Spaniards, being aided in this by the manoeuvres of General Pio del Pilar&#8217;s brigade.Page 40</p>
<hr />
<div>
<p>1 Suspension bridge.—<i>Translator</i>.</p>
</div>
<div>
<p>2 Philippine Local Exhibition.—<i>Translator</i>.</p>
</div>
<h1>First Clouds</h1>
<p id="d0e629">Our troops saw the American forces landing on the sea shore near the Luneta and Paseo de Santa Lucia, calling the attention of everybody to the fact that the Spanish soldiers in the city forts were not firing on them (the Americans), a mystery that was cleared up at sunset when details of the capitulation of Manila, by General Jaudenes in accordance with terms of an agreement with General Merritt, became public property—a capitulation which the American Generals reserved for their own benefit and credit in contravention of the agreement arrived at with Admiral Dewey in the arrangement of plans for the final combined assault on and Page 41capture of Manila by the allied forces, American and Filipino.</p>
<p id="d0e633">Some light was thrown upon this apparently inexplicable conduct of the American Commanders by the telegrams which I received during that day from General Anderson, who wired me from Maitubig asking me to issue orders forbidding our troops to enter Manila, a request which I did not comply with because it was not in conformity with the agreement, and it was, moreover, diametrically opposed to the high ends of the Revolutionary Government, that after going to the trouble of besieging Manila for two months and a half, sacrificing thousands of lives and millions of material interests, it should be supposed such sacrifices were made with any other object in view than the capture of Manila and the Spanish garrison which stubbornly defended the city.</p>
<p id="d0e635">But General Merritt, persistent in his designs, begged me not only through the Admiral but also through Major Bell to withdraw my troops from the suburbs to (as it was argued) prevent the danger of conflict which is always to be looked for in the event of dual military occupation; also by so doing to avoid bringing ridicule upon the American forces; offering, at the same time, in three letters, to negotiate after his wishes were complied with. To this I agreed, though neither immediately nor at one time, but making our troops retire gradually up to the blockhouses in order that the whole of the inhabitants of Manila should witness the proceedings of our troops and amicability toward our American allies.</p>
<p id="d0e637">Up to that time, and in fact right up to the time when the Americans openly commenced hostilities against us, I entertained in my soul strong hopes that the American Commanders would make absolute with their Government the verbal agreement made and entered into with the Leader of the Philippine Revolution, notwithstanding the indications to the contrary which were noticeable in their conduct, especially in respect of the conduct of Admiral Dewey, who, without any reason or justification, one day in the month of October seized all our steamers and launches.</p>
<p id="d0e639">Being informed of this strange proceeding, and at the time when the Revolutionary Government Page 42had its headquarters in Malolos, I despatched a Commission to General Otis to discuss the matter with him. General Otis gave the Commissioners a letter of recommendation to the Admiral to whom he referred them; but the Admiral declined to receive the Commission notwithstanding General Otis&#8217;s recommendation.</p>
<p id="d0e643">Notwithstanding the procedure of the American Commanders, so contrary to the spirit of all the compacts and antecedents above mentioned, I continued to maintain a friendly attitude towards them, sending a Commission to General Merritt to bid him farewell on the eve of his departure for Paris. In his acknowledgement of his courtesy General Merritt was good enough to say that he would advocate the Filipino Cause in the United States. In the same manner I sent to Admiral Dewey a <i>punal</i>1 in a solid silver scabbard and a walking stick of the very best cane with gold handle engraved by the most skilful silversmiths as a souvenir and mark of our friendship. This the Admiral accepted, thereby in some measure relieving my feelings and the anxiety of my compatriots constituting the Revolutionary Government, whose hearts were again filled with pleasant hopes of a complete understanding with Admiral Dewey.</p>
<hr />
<div>
<p>1 Short sword—<i>Translator</i>.</p>
</div>
<h1>Vain Hopes</h1>
<p id="d0e656">Vain indeed became these hope when news arrived that Admiral Dewey had acted and was Page 43continuing to act against the Revolutionary Government by order of His Excellency Mr. McKinley, who, prompted by the “Imperialist” party, had decided to annex the Philippines, granting, in all probability, concessions to adventurers to exploit the immense natural wealth lying concealed under our virgin soil.</p>
<p id="d0e660">This news was received in the Revolutionary camp like a thunderbolt out of a clear sky. Some cursed the hour and the day we treated verbally with the Americans; some denounced the ceding of the suburbs, while others again were of opinion that a Commission should be sent to General Otis to draw from him clear and positive declarations on the situation, drawing up a treaty of amity and commerce if the United States recognize our independence or at once commence hostilities if the States refused.</p>
<p id="d0e662">In this crisis I advised moderation and prudence, for I still had confidence in the justice and rectitude of United States Congress, which, I believed, would not approve the designs of the Imperialist party and would give heed to the declarations of Page 44Admiral Dewey, who, in the capacity of an exalted Representative of the United States in these Islands concerted and covenanted with me and the people of the Philippines recognition of our independence.</p>
<p id="d0e666">In fact in no other way was such a serious matter to be regarded, for if America entrusted to Admiral Dewey the honour of her forces in such a distant region, surely the Filipinos might equally place their trust in the word of honour of such a polished, chivalrous gentleman and brave sailor, in the firm belief, of course, that the great and noble American people would neither reject his decision nor expose to ridicule the illustrious conqueror of the Spanish fleet.</p>
<p id="d0e668">In the same way the not less known and notorious circumstances, that the American Commanders who came soon after the echoes of the Admiral&#8217;s victory reached their native shores, namely, Generals Merritt, Anderson and Otis, proclaimed to the people of the Philippines that America <i>did not come to conquer territories, but to liberate its inhabitants from the oppression of Spanish Sovereignty</i>. I would therefore also expose to universal ridicule and contempt the honour of these Commanders if the United States, by repudiating their official and public acts, attempts to annex these islands by conquest.</p>
<h1>The American Commission</h1>
<p id="d0e676">With such prudent as well as well founded reflections, I succeeded in calming my companions shortly before the official news arrived reporting that the Washington Government, acting on Admiral Dewey&#8217;s suggestion, had intimated its intention to despatch a Civil Commission to Manila which would treat with the Filipinos with a view Page 45to arriving at a definite understanding respecting the government of the Islands.</p>
<p id="d0e680">Joy and satisfaction now filled the breasts of all the Revolutionists, and I thereupon set about the appointment of a Commission to meet the American Commissioners. At the same time I gave strict orders that the most friendly relations should be maintained with the Americans, enjoining toleration and overlooking of the abuses and atrocities of the soldiery because the effect on the Commissioners would not be good it they found us at loggerheads with their nation&#8217;s forces.</p>
<p id="d0e682">But the abases of the Americans were now becoming intolerable. In the market-place at Arroceros they killed a woman and a little boy under the pretext that they were surprising a gambling den, thus causing the greatest indignation of a great concourse of people in that vicinity.</p>
<p id="d0e684">My Adjutants, too, who hold passes permitting them to enter Manila with their uniform and sidearms, were molested by being repeatedly stopped by every patrol they met, it, being perfectly evident that, the intention was to irritate them by exposing them to public ridicule.</p>
<p id="d0e686">While this sort of thing was going on as against our people the American Commanders and officers who visited our camp were treated with the utmost courtesy and consideration.</p>
<p id="d0e688">In Lacoste Street an American guard shot and killed a boy seven years of age for taking a banana from a Chinaman.Page 46</p>
<p id="d0e691">The searching of houses was carried on just as it was during the Spanish regime, while the American soldiers at the outposts often invaded our lines, thus irritating our sentries. It would make this book a very large volume if I continued to state seriatim the abuses and atrocities committed by the American soldiery in those days of general anxiety.</p>
<p id="d0e693">It seemed as if the abuses were authorised or at least winked at in official quarters for the purpose of provoking an outbreak of hostilities. Excitement ran high among all classes of people, but the Filipino Government, which had assumed responsibility for the acts of the people, by the constant issue of prudent orders succeeded in calming the excited populace and maintained peace, advising all sufferers to be patient and prudent pending the arrival of the Civil Commission.</p>
<h1>Impolitic Acts</h1>
<p id="d0e698">At such a critical juncture as this, and before the anxiously-awaited Civil Commission arrived, it occurred to General Otis, Commandant of the American forces, to commit two more impolitic acts. One of them was the order to search our telegraph offices in Sagunro Street, in Tondo, where the searching party seized the apparatus and detained the officer in charge, Sr. Reyna, in the Fuerza Santiago1 under the pretext that he was conspiring against the Americans.Page 47</p>
<p id="d0e704">How and why was Sr. Reyna conspiring? Was not this sufficient for the Filipino Government to give the order to attack and rescue Reyna and thereby we (eight thousand strong) be plunged immediately into war with the United States? Was there any reason for conspiring when the power was in our own hands? And, above all, would a telegraphist, be likely to interfere in <i>affaires de guerre</i> when there was an army near by to attend to such matters?</p>
<p id="d0e709">It was abundantly manifest that the object was by wounding the feelings of and belittling the Filipino Government to provoke a collision, and it was clear also that this system of exasperating us was not merely the wanton act of the soldiery but was actually prompted by General Otis himself, who, imbued with imperialistic tendencies, regarded the coming of the Civil Commission with disfavour and especially would it be unsatisfactory that this Commission should find the Philippines in a state of perfect tranquility, because it was evident to the said General, as well as to the whole world, that the Filipinos would assuredly have arrived at a definite amicable agreement with the aforesaid Commission if it reached the islands while peace prevailed.</p>
<p id="d0e711">We, the Filipinos, would have received the Commission with open arms and complete accord as honourable Agents of the great American nation. The Commissioners could have visited all our provinces, seeing and taking note of the complete tranquility throughout our territory. They Page 48could have seen our cultivated lands, examined our Constitution and investigated the administration of public affairs in perfect peace and safety, and have felt and enjoyed the inimitable charm of our Oriental style,—half negligent, half solicitude, warmth and chilliness, simple confidence and suspiciousness; characteristics which cause descriptions of contact with us to be depicted by foreigners in thousands of different hues.</p>
<p id="d0e715">Ah! but neither did General Otis nor the Imperialists wish for such a landscape. It was better for their criminal designs that the American Commission should view the desolation and horrors of war in the Philippines, inhaling on the very day of their arrival the revolting odour emitted from American and Filipino corpses. It was better for their purposes that that gentleman, Mr. Schurman, President of the Commission, should return from Manila, limiting his investigation to inquiries among the few Filipinos, who, seduced with gold, were siding with the Imperialists. It were better for them that the Commission should view the Philippines problem through fire and slaughter, in the midst of whizzing bullets and the uncontrolled passion of infuriated foes, thus preventing them from forming correct judgment of the exact and natural conditions of the problem. Ah! it was, lastly, better that the Commission return to the States defeated in its mission of obtaining peace and blaming me and other Filipinos for its inability to settle matters, when, in reality, I and all the Philippine people were longing that that Page 49peace had been concluded yesterday,—long before now—but an honest and honourable peace, honourable alike for the United States and the Philippine Republic in order that it be sincere and everlasting.</p>
<p id="d0e719">The second impolitic act of General Otis was the issue of a proclamation on the 4th of January, 1899, asserting in the name of President McKinley the sovereignty of America in these islands, with threats of ruin, death and desolation to all who declined to recognize it.</p>
<p id="d0e721">I, Emilio Aguinaldo—though the humble servant of all, am, as President of the Philippine Republic, charged with the safeguarding of the rights and independence of the people who appointed me to such an exalted position of trust and responsibility—mistrusted for the first time the honour of the Americans, perceiving of course that this proclamation of General Otis completely exceeded the limits of prudence and that therefore no other course was open to me but to repel with arms such unjust and unexpected procedure on the part of the commander of friendly forces.</p>
<p id="d0e723">I protested, therefore, against such a proclamation—also threatening an immediate rupture of friendly relations,—for the whole populace was claiming that an act of treason had been committed, plausibly asserting that the announcement of the Commission applied for by Admiral Dewey was a ruse, and that what General Otis was scheming for was to keep us quiet while he brought reinforcement after reinforcement from the United Page 50States for the purpose of crashing our untrained and badly equipped Army with one blow.</p>
<p id="d0e727">But now General Otis acted for the first time like a diplomatist, and wrote me, through his Secretary, Mr. Carman, a letter inviting the Filipino Government to send a Commission to meet an American Commission for the purpose of arriving at an amicable arrangement between both parties; and although I placed no trust in the professions of friendly intentions of the said General—whose determination to prevent the Commission arriving at a peaceful solution of the difficulties was already evident—I acceded to the request, partly because I saw the order, dated 9th January, given by the above mentioned General confirmed, and on the other hand to show before the whole world my manifest wishes for the conservation of peace and friendship with the United States, solemnly compacted with Admiral Dewey.</p>
<hr />
<div>
<p>1 The “Black Hole” of Manila.</p>
</div>
<h1>The Mixed Commission</h1>
<p id="d0e732">Conferences of the Mixed Commission, Americans and Filipinos, were held in Manila from the 11th to the 31st of the said month of January, the Filipino Commissioners clearly expressing the wish of our people for recognition as an independent nation.</p>
<p id="d0e734">They also frankly stated the complaints of the Filipino people about the abuses and atrocities of the American soldiery, being attentively andPage 51benevolently listened to by the American Commissioners. The latter replied that they had no authority to recognize the Filipino Government, their mission being limited to hearing what the Filipinos said, to collect data to formulate the will of our people and transmit it fully and faithfully to the Government of Washington, who alone could arrive at a definite decision on the subject. These conferences ended in perfect harmony, auguring well for happier times and definite peace when Mr. McKinley should reply to General Otis&#8217;s telegrams transmitting our wishes with his favourable recommendations, as the American Commissioners said.</p>
<h1>Outbreak of Hostilities</h1>
<p id="d0e741">While I, the Government, the Congress and the entire populace were awaiting the arrival of such a greatly desired reply, many fairly overflowing with pleasant thoughts, there came the fatal day of the 4th February, during the night of which day the American forces suddenly attacked all our lines, which were in fact at the time almost deserted, because being Saturday, the day before a regular feast day, our Generals and some of the most prominent officers had obtained leave to pass the Sabbath with their respective families.</p>
<p id="d0e743">General Pantaleon Garcia was the only one who at such a critical moment was at his post in Maypajo, north of Manila, Generals Noriel, Rizal and Ricarte and Colonels San Miguel, Cailles and others being away enjoying their leave.Page 52</p>
<p id="d0e746">General Otis, according to trustworthy information, telegraphed to Washington stating that the Filipinos had attacked the American Army. President McKinley read aloud the telegram in the Senate, where the Treaty of Paris of the 10th December, 1898, was being discussed with a view to its ratification, the question of annexation of the Philippines being the chief subject of debate, and through this criminal procedure secured the acceptation of the said Treaty <i>in toto</i> by a majority of only three votes,1 which were cast simultaneously with a declaration that the voters sided with the “Ayes” on account of war having broken out in these Islands.</p>
<p id="d0e757">This singular comedy could not continue for a great length of time because the Filipinos could never be the aggressors as against the American forces, with whom we had sworn eternal friendship and in whose power we expected to find the necessary protection to enable us to obtain recognition of our independence from the other Powers.</p>
<p id="d0e759">The confusion and obfuscation of the first moments was indeed great, but before long it gave place to the light of Truth which shone forth serene, bringing forth serious reflections.</p>
<p id="d0e761">When sensible people studied the acts of Mr. McKinley, sending reinforcement after reinforcement to Manila at a time after an armistice was agreed upon and even when peace with Spain Page 53prevailed; when they took into account that the despatch of the Civil Commission to settle terms of a treaty of amity with the Filipinos was being delayed; when, too, they knew of the antecedents of my alliance with Admiral Dewey, prepared and arranged by the American Consuls of Singapore and Hongkong, Mr. Pratt and Mr. Wildman; when they became acquainted with the actual state of affairs on the 4th February knowing that the Filipinos were awaiting the reply of Mr. McKinley to the telegram of General Otis in which he transmitted the peaceful wish of the Filipino people of live as an independent nation; when, lastly, they riveted their attention to the terms of the Treaty of Paris, the approval of which, in as far as it concerned the annexation of the Philippines, was greeted with manifestations of joy and satisfaction by the Imperialist party led by Mr. McKinley, then their eyes were opened to the revelations of truth, clearly perceiving the base, selfish and inhuman policy which Mr. McKinley had followed in his dealings with us the Filipinos, sacrificing remorselessly to their unbridled ambition the honour of Admiral Dewey, exposing this worthy gentleman and illustrious conqueror of the Spanish fleet to universal ridicule; for no other deduction can follow from the fact that about the middle of May of 1898, the U.S.S. <i>McCulloch</i>brought me with my revolutionary companions from Hongkong, by order of the above mentioned Admiral, while now actually the United States squadron is engaged in bombarding the towns and ports held by these Page 54revolutionists, whose objective is and always has been Liberty and Independence.</p>
<p id="d0e770">The facts as stated are of recent date and must still be fresh in the memory of all.</p>
<p id="d0e772">Those who in May, 1898, admired the courage of Admiral Dewey&#8217;s sailors and the humanitarianism of this illustrious Commander in granting visible aid to an oppressed people to obtain freedom and independence, surely cannot place an honest construction upon the present inhuman war when contrasting it with those lofty and worthy sentiments.</p>
<p id="d0e774">I need not dwell on the cruelty which, from the time of the commencement of hostilities, has characterized General Otis&#8217;s treatment of the Filipinos, shooting in secret many who declined to sign a petition asking for autonomy. I need not recapitulate the ruffianly abuses which the American soldiers committed on innocent and defenseless people in Manila, shooting women and children simply because they were leaning out of windows; entering houses at midnight without the occupants&#8217; permission—forcing open trunks and wardrobes and stealing money, jewellery and all valuables they came across; breaking chairs, tables and mirrors which they could not carry away with them, because, anyhow, they are consequences of the war, though improper in the case of civilized forces. But what I would not leave unmentioned is the inhuman conduct of that General in his dealings with the Page 55Filipino Army, when, to arrange a treaty of peace with the Civil Commission, of which Mr. Schurman was President, I thrice sent emissaries asking for a cessation of hostilities.</p>
<p id="d0e778">General Otis refused the envoys&#8217; fair and reasonable request, replying that he would not stop hostilities so long as the Philippine Army declined to lay down their arms.</p>
<p id="d0e780">But why does not this Army deserve some consideration at the hands of General Otis and the American forces? Had they already forgotten the important service the Filipino Army rendered to the Americans in the late war with Spain?</p>
<p id="d0e782">Had General Otis forgotten the favours conferred on him by the Filipino Army, giving up to him and his Army the suburbs and blockhouses which at such great sacrifice to themselves the Filipinos had occupied?</p>
<p id="d0e784">Why should General Otis make such a humiliating condition a prime factor or basis of terms of peace with an Army which stood shoulder to shoulder with the American forces, freely shedding its blood, and whose heroism and courage were extolled by Admiral Dewey and other Americans?</p>
<p id="d0e786">This unexplained conduct of General Otis, so manifestly contrary to the canons of international law and military honour, is eloquent testimony of his deliberate intention to neutralize the effects of Mr. Schurman&#8217;s pacific mission.</p>
<p id="d0e788">What peace can be concerted by the roaring of cannon and the whizzing of bullets?Page 56</p>
<p id="d0e791">What is and has been the course of procedure of General Brooke in Cuba? Are not the Cubans still armed, notwithstanding negotiations for the pacification and future government of that Island are still going on?</p>
<p id="d0e793">Are we, perchance, less deserving of liberty and independence than those revolutionists?</p>
<p id="d0e795">Oh, dear Philippines! Blame your wealth, your beauty for the stupendous disgrace that rests upon your faithful sons.</p>
<p id="d0e797">You have aroused the ambition of the Imperialists and Expansionists of North America and both have placed their sharp claws upon your entrails!</p>
<p id="d0e799">Loved mother, sweet mother, we are here to defend your liberty and independence to the death! We do not want war; on the contrary, we wish for peace; but honourable peace, which does not make you blush nor stain your forehead with shame and confusion. And we swear to you and promise that while America with all her power and wealth could possibly vanquish us; killing all of us; but enslave us, never!!!</p>
<p id="d0e801">No; this humiliation is not the compact I celebrated in Singapore with the American Consul Pratt. This was not the agreement stipulated for with Mr. Wildman, American Consul in Hongkong. Finally, it was not the subjection of my beloved country to a new alien yoke that Admiral Dewey promised me.Page 57</p>
<p id="d0e804">It is certain that these three have abandoned me, forgetting that I was sought for and taken from my exile and deportation; forgetting, also, that neither of these three solicited my services in behalf of American Sovereignty, they paying the expense of the Philippine Revolution for which, manifestly, they sought me and brought me back to your beloved bosom!</p>
<p id="d0e806">If there is, as I believe, one God, the root and fountain of all justice and only eternal judge of international disputes, it will not take long, dear mother, to save you from the hands, of your unjust enemies. So I trust in the honour of Admiral Dewey: So I trust in the rectitude of the great people of the United States of America, where, if there are ambitious Imperialists, there are defenders of the humane doctrines of the immortal Monroe, Franklin, and Washington; unless the race of noble citizens, glorious founders of the present greatness of the North American Republic, have so degenerated that their benevolent influence has become subservient to the grasping ambition of the Expansionists, in which latter unfortunate circumstance would not death be preferable to bondage?</p>
<p id="d0e808">Oh, sensible American people! Deep is the admiration of all the Philippine people and of their untrained Army of the courage displayed by your Commanders and soldiers. We are weak in comparison with such Titanic instruments of your Government&#8217;s ambitious Caesarian policy and find it difficult to effectively resist their courageous Page 58onslaught. Limited are our warlike resources, but we will continue this unjust, bloody, and unequal struggle, not for the love of war—which we abhor—but to defend our incontrovertible rights of Liberty and Independence (so dearly won in war with Spain) and our territory which is threatened by the ambitions of <i>a party</i> that is trying to subjugate us.</p>
<p id="d0e815">Distressing, indeed, is war! Its ravages cause us horror. Luckless Filipinos succumb in the confusion of combat, leaving behind them mothers, widows and children. America could put up with all the misfortunes she brings on us without discomfort; but what the North American people are not agreeable to is that she should continue sacrificing her sons, causing distress and anguish to mothers, widows and daughters to satisfy the whim of maintaining a war in contravention of their honourable traditions as enunciated by Washington and Jefferson.</p>
<p id="d0e817">Go back, therefore, North American people, to your old-time liberty. Put your hand on your heart and tell me: Would it be pleasant for you if, in the course of time, North America should find herself in the pitiful plight, of a weak and oppressed people and the Philippines, a free and powerful nation, then at war with your oppressors, asked for your aid promising to deliver you from such a weighty yoke, and after defeating her enemy with your aid she set about subjugating you, refusing the promised liberation?Page 59</p>
<p id="d0e820">Civilized nations! Honourable inhabitants of the United States, to whose high and estimable consideration I submit this unpretentious work, herein you have the providential facts which led to the unjust attack upon the existence of the Philippine Republic and the existence of those for whom, though unworthy, God made me the principal guardian.</p>
<p id="d0e822">The veracity of these facts rests upon my word as President of this Republic and on the honour of the whole population of eight million souls, who, for more than three hundred years have been sacrificing the lives and wealth of their brave sons to obtain due recognition of the natural rights of mankind—liberty and independence.</p>
<p id="d0e824">If you will do me the honour to receive and read this work and then pass judgment impartially solemnly declaring on which side right and justice rests, your respectful servant will be eternally grateful.</p>
<p id="d0e826">(Signed) Emilio Aguinaldo. <i>Tarlak, 23rd September, 1899</i>.</p>
<hr />
<div>
<p>1 Many of the American papers reported that the majority was <i>one</i> vote only in excess of the absolutely requisite two-thirds majority.</p>
</div>
<h1>Index</h1>
<ul id="d0e838">
<li id="d0e839">I.—The Revolution of 1896 1</li>
<li id="d0e844">II.—The Treaty of Peace of Biak-na-bató 4</li>
<li id="d0e849">III.—Negotiations 6</li>
<li id="d0e854">IV.—The Revolution of 1898 19</li>
<li id="d0e859">V.—The Dictatorial Government 22</li>
<li id="d0e864">VI.—The First Triumphs 24</li>
<li id="d0e869">VII.—The Philippine Flag 26</li>
<li id="d0e874">VIII.—Expedition to Bisayas 28</li>
<li id="d0e879">IX.—The Steamer “Compania de Filipinas” 28</li>
<li id="d0e884">X.—The Proclamation of Independence 30</li>
<li id="d0e889">XI.—The Spanish Commission 32</li>
<li id="d0e894">XII.—More American Troops 37</li>
<li id="d0e899">XIII.—The 13th August 38</li>
<li id="d0e904">XIV.—First Clouds 40</li>
<li id="d0e909">XV.—Vain Hopes 42</li>
<li id="d0e914">XVI.—The American Commission 44</li>
<li id="d0e919">XVII.—Impolitic acts 46</li>
<li id="d0e924">XVIII.—The Mixed Commission 50</li>
<li id="d0e929">XIX.—Outbreak of Hostilities 51</li>
</ul>
<pre></pre>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=2090</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Katipunero: Simeón Ola y Arboleda -Philippine Revolution Hero and the last General to surrender to American forces during the Philippine-American War</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=739</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=739#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 02 Aug 2013 19:07:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine American War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=739</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#160; The Paternal Great Grandfather of Mandirigma.orgs&#8217; Guro Dino Flores, Segundo Flores was a Katipunero serving under the General Simeón Ola y Arboleda in the Bicol Region. Major Simeón Ola y Arboleda was under General Vito Belarmino, the Zone Commander of the Revolutionary Forces in the Bicol Region. &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;- Simeón Ola y Arboleda Municipal President [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-740" title="eskrima escrima ilustrisimo lameco" alt="backyard eskrima" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/GeneralOla-1.jpg" width="459" height="344" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The Paternal Great Grandfather of Mandirigma.orgs&#8217; Guro Dino Flores, Segundo Flores was a Katipunero serving under the<br />
General Simeón Ola y Arboleda in the Bicol Region. Major Simeón Ola y Arboleda was under General Vito Belarmino, the Zone Commander of the Revolutionary Forces in the Bicol Region.</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;-</p>
<p><strong>Simeón Ola y Arboleda</strong></p>
<p>Municipal President of Albay, In office 1904–1908</p>
<p>Born: 2 September 1865<br />
Guinobatan, Albay, Philippines<br />
Died : 14 February 1952 (aged 86)<br />
Guinobatan, Albay, Philippines<br />
Organization: Katipunan</p>
<p>Simeón Ola y Arboleda (September 2, 1865 – February 14, 1952) was a hero of the Philippine Revolution and the last general to surrender to American forces during the Philippine-American War.</p>
<p>Biography<br />
Simeon Ola was born on September 2, 1865 to Vicente Ola and Apolonia Arboleda, who were ordinary citizens with little money. He was enrolled in Holy Rosary Minor Seminary and studied Philosophy, but didn&#8217;t finish the course. He joined the local branch of the Katipunan in his hometown province of Albay and later became the leader. With the help of a parish priest he was able to acquire arms to support his men. He was promoted to the rank of captain after the battle of Camalig in Albay, 1898 and again promoted to the rank of major after a daring ambush mission that led to the capture of three Americans. He was also the leader of the subsequent valiant attacks on Albay towns namely, Oas, Ligao and Jovellar. He later surrendered on the condition that his men would be granted amnesty. He was put on trial and was proven guilty of sedition and was sentenced to thirty years in prison. In 1904, he was given a pardon and returned to his place of birth and became the municipal president. The regional police command in Legazpi City was name after him.</p>
<p>SIMEON A. OLA<br />
(1865-1952)</p>
<p>Revolutionist</p>
<p>In Guinobatan, Albay hailed Simeon Ola, the man who would lead the Bicolanos fight for<br />
their freedom. He was born on September 2, 1865 to Vicente Ola and Apolonia Arboleda.</p>
<p>Ola was highly regarded in Guinobatan, being the teniente de cuadrillos and a trusted<br />
confidant of Father Carlos Cabido, the parish priest of his town. These positions helped him carry<br />
out his revolutionary works – recruiting men and acquiring firearms for the revolutionary army.<br />
He connived with the jail warden in his town, Sergeant Loame, to free about 93 prisoners. The<br />
prisoners soon joined his army.</p>
<p>In April 1898, he fought in the battle of Camalig. General Vito Belarmino, the Zone<br />
Commander of the Revolutionary Forces in the Bicol Region, designated him the rank of a Captain.<br />
Fully committed to the cause of the revolution, he also raised funds amounting to P42, 000.00,<br />
which he turned over to General Mariano Trias, Secretary of Finance of the Revolutionary<br />
Government.</p>
<p>On January 23, 1900, he was promoted Major after he successfully effected an ambush and<br />
captured three American soldiers: Dubose, Fred Hunter and Russel. In February that same year,<br />
his troops fought against the Americans in Arimbay, Legaspi. His cousin Jose Arboleda perished in<br />
the bloody battle.</p>
<p>American soldiers’ mighty firepower and combat training did not dampen his spirit; he<br />
continued to fight so that his men were encouraged and more men joined his army. With the army<br />
of Colonel Engracio Orence, he fought valiantly in the battle of Binogsacan in Guinobatan, Albay.<br />
His army rested for over a month in July 1901 when he accompanied General Belarmino to Manila.<br />
He resumed his campaign in August by raiding the town of Oas, Albay. On August 12, 1902, he<br />
ambushed the American detachment at Macabugos, Ligao.</p>
<p>Ola became a marked man to the Americans. Although his troops were easily repulsed<br />
during battles, the Americans took him seriously. From March to October 1903, the Americans set<br />
up the reconcentration system as a means to stop Ola’s activities. Because of the damage it caused<br />
even to the innocent civilians, they turned into negotiations. They sent Ramon Santos and Major<br />
Jesse S. Garwood of the Constabulary as emissaries to negotiate for his surrender, which he<br />
politely refused. Instead, he carried on his battle. On July 15, 1903, he ambushed the 31st<br />
Philippine Scout Garrison under the command of Sergeant Nicolas Napoli in Joveliar, Albay.</p>
<p>The persistent effort of the peace panel and his battle weary men made Ola realized that he<br />
could never win the war. He became open to the agreement set by Colonel Harry H. Bandholtz, the<br />
Assistant Commander of the Constabulary in Lucena, Tayabas, for his surrender. The agreement<br />
included general amnesty, fair treatment and justice to his comrades in arms. On September 25,<br />
1903 the negotiating panel composed of Ramon Santos, Eligio Arboleda, Epifanio Orozco, Frank L.<br />
Pyle, John Paegelow, J.B. Allison and Joseph Rogers went to his camp in Malagnaton, Mapaco,<br />
Guinobatan. Eventually, Ola surrendered to Governor Bette and Colonel Bandholtz.</p>
<p>Charged with sedition, Judges Adam Carson and James Blount presided over his case. He<br />
was sentenced of 30 years imprisonment on November 10. 1903. Fortunately, he was granted<br />
executive clemency so he was released from prison on October 8, 1904. In 1910, he entered politics<br />
and won as town mayor of Guinobatan, which he served until 1913. He was again elected to the<br />
same position in 1916. He served the term until 1919.</p>
<p>Simeon Ola died on February 14, 1952 and was interred at the Roman Catholic Cemetery of<br />
Guinobatan.</p>
<p>References:</p>
<p>Agoncillo, Teodoro A. History of the Filipino People. 8th ed. Quezon City: Garotech,  1990.</p>
<p>Eminent Filipinos. Manila: National Historical Commission, 1970.</p>
<p>Quirino, Carlos.  Who’s who in Philippine History.  Manila: Tahanan Books, 1995.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><span class='embed-youtube' style='text-align:center; display: block;'><iframe class='youtube-player' type='text/html' width='640' height='390' src='https://www.youtube.com/embed/sMtidP2w_3c?version=3&#038;rel=1&#038;fs=1&#038;showsearch=0&#038;showinfo=1&#038;iv_load_policy=1&#038;wmode=transparent' frameborder='0'></iframe></span></p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Simeón-Ola-y-Arboleda-mandirigmaa.org_.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1926" alt="Simeón Ola y Arboleda mandirigmaa.org" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Simeón-Ola-y-Arboleda-mandirigmaa.org_.jpg" width="400" height="300" /></a></p>
<div>
<table border="0">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="center"></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
</div>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=739</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Emilio Aguinaldo filmed with actor Douglas Fairbanks, Philippines, 1931</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=1993</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=1993#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Aug 2013 22:06:27 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[American Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Books & Film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine American War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Regional History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Videos]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=1993</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Emilio Aguinaldo filmed with actor Douglas Fairbanks, Philippines, 1931 In 1931 Douglas Fairbanks went on a trip to Asia, and made a comic travelogue entitled &#8220;Around the World in 80 Minutes&#8221;. The clip from the Philippines included a short speech in Spanish by Emilio Aguinaldo. Fairbanks was a movie producer and actor in silent films. [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Emilio Aguinaldo filmed with actor Douglas Fairbanks, Philippines, 1931</h3>
<p><span class='embed-youtube' style='text-align:center; display: block;'><iframe class='youtube-player' type='text/html' width='640' height='390' src='https://www.youtube.com/embed/QJyqxWhQ38o?version=3&#038;rel=1&#038;fs=1&#038;showsearch=0&#038;showinfo=1&#038;iv_load_policy=1&#038;wmode=transparent' frameborder='0'></iframe></span></p>
<p>In 1931 Douglas Fairbanks went on a trip to Asia, and made a comic travelogue entitled &#8220;Around the World in 80 Minutes&#8221;. The clip from the Philippines included a short speech in Spanish by Emilio Aguinaldo.</p>
<p>Fairbanks was a movie producer and actor in silent films. He co-founded the American film studio United Artists and hosted the first Oscars Ceremony in 1929.</p>
<p>La calidad del audio deja mucho que desear, pero me parece que el Sr. Aguinaldo dijo:<br />
&#8220;Os participo de que he dado la bienvenida a nuestro gran actor (?Douglas Fairbanks) de America. Por la misma razón espero que esta visita que nos ha dignado dicho gran actor,(???), estrechará más la armonía entre americanos y filipinos&#8221;</p>
<p>Una traducción literal: I have given welcome to our great actor, Douglas Fairbanks, from America. For the same reason, I hope that this visit by this great actor, who has humbled himself to us, will develop greater harmony between Americans and Filipinos.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/Emilio-Aguinaldo-and-Douglas-Fairbanks-his-Cavite-home-March-26-19311.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1996" alt="Emilio Aguinaldo and Douglas Fairbanks his Cavite home March 26 1931" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/Emilio-Aguinaldo-and-Douglas-Fairbanks-his-Cavite-home-March-26-19311.jpg" width="500" height="650" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/emilio-aginaldo-katipunero.jpg"><img class="alignnone  wp-image-1989" alt="emilio aginaldo katipunero" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/emilio-aginaldo-katipunero.jpg" width="408" height="310" /></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=1993</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Sino pumatay kay Antonio Luna? &#8211; Philippine TV Show Crime Klasik &#8211; Episode #301 &#8211; June 8, 2012</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=2036</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=2036#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Jul 2013 04:57:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[American Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[DVDs/Magazines/TV]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine American War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=2036</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Sino pumatay kay Antonio Luna? &#8211; Philippine TV Show Crime Klasik &#8211; Episode #301 &#8211; June 8, 2012 &#160; &#160; Isa sa pinakamatapang at pinakamatalinong Heneral na lumaban sa mananakop si General Antonio Luna. Pero hindi tulad ng ibang bayani, sa kamay raw ng kapwa Pilipino natapos ang kaniyang buhay. Paano nabago nito ang ating [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Sino pumatay kay Antonio Luna? &#8211; Philippine TV Show Crime Klasik &#8211; Episode #301 &#8211; June 8, 2012</h3>
<p><span class='embed-youtube' style='text-align:center; display: block;'><iframe class='youtube-player' type='text/html' width='640' height='390' src='https://www.youtube.com/embed/JvBeckZI9Jo?version=3&#038;rel=1&#038;fs=1&#038;showsearch=0&#038;showinfo=1&#038;iv_load_policy=1&#038;wmode=transparent' frameborder='0'></iframe></span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Isa sa pinakamatapang at pinakamatalinong Heneral na lumaban sa mananakop si General Antonio Luna.<br />
Pero hindi tulad ng ibang bayani, sa kamay raw ng kapwa Pilipino natapos ang kaniyang buhay.<br />
Paano nabago nito ang ating kasaysayan?</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Was it Aguinaldo who had Antonio Luna killed? Go back in time and know the history of Antonio Luna here in Crime Klasik.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>More on Crime Klasik: <a title="https://www.facebook.com/CrimeKlasik" href="https://www.facebook.com/CrimeKlasik" target="_blank">https://www.facebook.com/CrimeKlasik</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/General-Antonio-Luna.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-2037" alt="General Antonio Luna" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/General-Antonio-Luna.jpg" width="421" height="465" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/Antonio-Luna.jpg"><img class="alignnone  wp-image-2038" alt="Antonio Luna" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/Antonio-Luna.jpg" width="421" height="576" /></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=2036</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Imprinting Andres Bonifacio: The Iconization from Portrait to Peso by The Malacañan Palace Library</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=1815</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=1815#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 09 Jun 2013 19:48:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Regional History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=1815</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Imprinting Andres Bonifacio: The Iconization from Portrait to Peso by The Malacañan Palace Library &#160; The face of the Philippine revolution is evasive, just like the freedom that eluded the man known as its leader. &#160; The only known photograph of Andres Bonifacio is housed in the Archivo General de Indias in Seville, Spain. Some [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Imprinting Andres Bonifacio: The Iconization from Portrait to Peso by The Malacañan Palace Library</h3>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The face of the Philippine revolution is evasive, just like the freedom that eluded the man known as its leader.</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/Andres_Bonifacio_photo.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1816" title="Andres_Bonifacio_photo" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/Andres_Bonifacio_photo.jpg" alt="" width="290" height="398" /></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The only known photograph of Andres  Bonifacio is housed in the Archivo General de Indias in Seville, Spain.  Some say that it was taken during his second wedding to Gregoria de  Jesus in Katipunan ceremonial rites. It is dated 1896 from Chofre y Cia  (precursor to today’s Cacho Hermanos printing firm), a prominent  printing press and pioneer of lithographic printing in the country,  based in Manila. The faded photograph, instead of being a precise  representation of a specific historical figure, instead becomes a kind  of Rorschach <a id="_GPLITA_0" title="Click to Continue &gt; by CouponDropDown" href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/2942-imprinting-andres-bonifacio-the-iconization-from-portrait-to-peso/#">test</a>,  liable to conflicting impressions. Does the picture show the President  of the Supreme Council of the Katipunan as a bourgeois everyman with  nondescript, almost forgettable features? Or does it portray a dour  piercing glare perpetually frozen in time, revealing a determined leader  deep in contemplation, whose mind is clouded with thoughts of waging an  armed struggle against a colonial power?</p>
<p>Perhaps a less subjective and more  fruitful avenue for investigation is to compare and contrast this  earliest documented image with those that have referred to it, or even  paid a curious homage to it, by substantially altering his faded  features.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/Agoncillo-book.jpg"><img title="The Revolt of the Masses" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/Agoncillo-book-222x300.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>This undated image of Bonifacio offers  the closest resemblance to the Chofre y Cia version. As attested to by  National Scientist Teodoro A. Agoncillo and the National Historical  Commission of the Philippines, it is the image that depicts the  well-known attribution of Bonifacio being of sangley (or Chinese)  descent. While nearly identical in composition with the original, this  second image shows him with a refined–even weak–chin, almond-shaped  eyes, a less defined brow, and even modified hair. The blurring of his  features, perhaps the result of the image being timeworn, offers little  room for interjection.</p>
<p>In contrast, the next image <a id="_GPLITA_2" title="Click to Continue &gt; by CouponDropDown" href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/2942-imprinting-andres-bonifacio-the-iconization-from-portrait-to-peso/#">dating</a> from a February 8, 1897 issue of <em>La Ilustración Española y Americana</em>,  a Spanish-American weekly publication, features a heavily altered  representation of Bonifacio at odds with the earlier depiction from  Chofre y Cia.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/La-Ilustracion-Espanola-y-Americana..jpg"><img title="La Ilustración Española y Americana" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/La-Ilustracion-Espanola-y-Americana..jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>This modification catered to the  Castilian idea of racial superiority, and to the waning Spanish Empire’s  shock–perhaps even awe?–over what they must have viewed at the time as  indio impudence. Hence the Bonifacio in this engraving is given a more  pronounced set of features–a more prominent, almost ruthless jawline,  deep-set eyes, a heavy, furrowed brow and a proud yet incongruously  vacant stare. Far from the unassuming demeanor previously evidenced,  there is an aura of unshakable, even obstinate, determination  surrounding the revolutionary leader who remained resolute until his  last breath. Notice also that for the first (although it would not be  the last) time, he is formally clad in what appears to be a three-piece  suit with a white bowtie–hardly the dress one would expect, given his  allegedly humble beginnings.</p>
<p>Given its printing, this is arguably the  first depiction of Bonifacio to be circulated en masse. The same image  appeared in Ramon Reyes Lala’s <em>The Philippine Islands</em>, which was published in 1899 by an American publishing house for distribution in the Philippines.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/From-Kasaysayan-book1.jpg"><img title="El Renacimiento Filipino" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/From-Kasaysayan-book1-698x1024.jpg" alt="" width="234" height="344" /></a></p>
<p>The records of both the Filipinas  Heritage Library and the Lopez Museum reveal a third, separate image of  Bonifacio which appears in the December 7, 1910 issue of <em>El Renacimiento Filipino</em>, a Filipino publication during the early years of the American occupation.</p>
<p>El Renacimiento Filipino portrays an  idealized Bonifacio, taking even greater liberties with the Chofre y Cia  portrait. There is both gentrification and romanticization at work  here. His <a id="_GPLITA_1" title="Click to Continue &gt; by CouponDropDown" href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/2942-imprinting-andres-bonifacio-the-iconization-from-portrait-to-peso/#">receding hairline</a> draws attention to his wide forehead–pointing to cultural assumptions  of the time that a broad brow denotes a powerful intellect–and his full  lips are almost pouting. His cheekbones are more prominent and his eyes  are given a curious, lidded, dreamy, even feminine emphasis, imbuing him  with an air of otherworldly reserve–he appears unruffled and somber,  almost languid: more poet than firebrand.</p>
<p>It is difficult to imagine him as the  Bonifacio admired, even idolized, by his countrymen for stirring battle  cries and bold military tactics. He is clothed in a similar fashion to  the <em>La Ilustración Española y Americana</em> portrait: with a  significant deviation that would leave a telltale mark on succeeded  images derived from this one. Gone is the white tie (itself an artistic  assumption when the original image merely hinted at the possibility of  some sort of neckwear), and in its stead, there is a sober black cravat  and even a corsage on the buttonhole of his coat.</p>
<p>Here the transformation of photograph to  engraving takes an even more curious turn; as succeeding  interpretations in turn find reinterpretation at the hands of one artist  in two media; with each interpretation in turn becoming iconic in its  own right.</p>
<p>For it was from contemporary history textbooks such as <em>The Philippine Islands</em> that the future National Artist for Sculpture, Guillermo Tolentino, based his illustration, <em>Filipinos Ilustres</em>, which was completed sometime in 1911. Severino Reyes, upon seeing the image, agreed to have it lithographed and published in <em>Liwayway</em>, of which he was the editor at the time, under the name <em>Grupo de Filipinos Ilustres</em>.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/tumblr_mdsispzyDO1rppiioo1_r1_500.jpg"><img title="Filipino Ilustres" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/tumblr_mdsispzyDO1rppiioo1_r1_500.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>Grouping prominent Filipinos together as  if posing for a formal studio portrait with the Partido Nacionalista  emblem hanging above the group (though other versions do not have the  seal), resonated with the public; the illustration was once a regular  fixture in most homes in the first decades of the twentieth century. A  stern, serious Bonifacio, with wide eyes and a straight nose, is seated  between Jose Rizal and Marcelo H. del Pilar.</p>
<p><em>Filipinos Ilustres</em> would inspire other depictions from around the same period–notably, Manuel Artigas’ <em>Andres Bonifacio y el Katipunan</em>.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/From-Inventing-A-Hero-book.jpg"><img title="Artigas" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/From-Inventing-A-Hero-book-181x300.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>The Artigas image is decidedly patrician  in both dress and mien, with larger but still almond-shaped eyes but  with a slightly more aquiline nose, complemented by prominent cheekbones  and a defined jaw. Already far-removed from the original, this  gentrified and respectable portrait almost betrays Bonifacio’s class  background and visually thrusts him into the exclusive club of  ilustrados–the reformists who sought change from above instead of  slashing revolution.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/20-1.jpg"><img title="20 peso bill" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/20-1-300x125.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/202.jpg"><img title="20-peso bill (back)" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/202-300x123.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>The first depiction of Bonifacio on  Philippine banknotes (part of the English series of currency issued by  the Central Bank of the Philippines from 1949 to 1969 and printed by the  British printing company Thomas De La Rue &amp; Co. Ltd.) mirrored both  the Artigas rendition and a sculpture by Ramon Martinez. The  twenty-peso bill had both Bonifacio and Emilio Jacinto on the obverse.  On the reverse is a near-photographic depiction of Martinez’ Balintawak  monument, which was unveiled on September 3, 1911. Though he originally  intended to commemorate the fallen heroes of the 1896 Revolution in  general, this soon became the image of one particular man, Bonifacio,  that lingered in the minds of many.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/vinzon.jpg"><img title="Martinez monument" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/vinzon-239x300.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>It is almost as if, in the face of  conflicting representations, the engravers of the banknote decided to  avoid controversy by simply depicting both. For here, the gentrified  Bonifacio appears, while the increasingly more iconic–yet ironically not  actual (because the statue was never explicitly intended to portray  Bonifacio)– sculpture is portrayed on the reverse of the banknote.</p>
<p>However, it would be the <em>El Renacimiento Filipino</em> adulteration, despite its provenance, that would be lent credibility  throughout the years with its use in Philippine currency, starting with  banknotes issued under the Pilipino series, in circulation from 1969 to  1973.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/5-peso-pilipino-o.jpg"><img title="5-peso bill (Pilipino)" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/5-peso-pilipino-o-300x121.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>The Bagong Lipunan series of President  Ferdinand E. Marcos, which was in circulation from 1973 to 1985, would  follow this design with simple alterations.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/ABL.jpg"><img title="5-peso bill (Bagong Lipunan)" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/ABL-300x120.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>This would likewise be featured  alongside the portrait of Apolinario Mabini on the ten-peso bill  released in 1997, which the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas has since  demonetized.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/10peso.jpg"><img title="10-peso" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/10peso-300x123.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>Bonifacio’s image undergoes another  re-imagining altogether in Philippine coinage–following conventions  established, this time in sculpture, by Guillermo Tolentino.</p>
<p>There was, however, a re-ordering of the  hierarchy of heroes. While Rizal was enshrined as the foremost hero by  the construction of the Rizal Monument, the second (in scale and  artistic ambition) grander monument was that of Bonifacio in 1933. In  contrast, there were no monuments dedicated to Emilio Aguinaldo, very  much alive, mired as he was in the partisan politics of the 1920s. The  era of monumentalism for Aguinaldo would begin only in the 1960s, with <a href="http://www.gov.ph/republic-day/">the transfer of Independence Day to June 12 in 1962</a>,  the renaming of Camp Murphy to Camp Aguinaldo in 1965, and Aguinaldo’s  donation of his mansion to the Filipino People shortly before his death.  President Marcos consciously adopted the Malolos Republic–with its  unicameral legislature and strong presidency– as the historical  antecedent for his regime, <a href="http://www.gov.ph/about/gov/the-legislative-branch/">inaugurating the Interim Batasan Pambansa on June 12, 1978</a>;  and transferring the start of official terms to June 30 from Rizal Day  (which had been the date since 1941). The looming centennial of the  Proclamation of Independence kept the spotlight on Aguinaldo, and with  it, the promotion of Aguinaldo in the hierarchy of banknotes: formerly  it had been Rizal on the basic unit of currency, the Peso, followed by  Bonifacio on two pesos. With the abolition of the two peso coin,  Bonifacio was reduced in rank, so to speak, to share the ten peso  banknote while Aguinaldo was promoted, so to speak, to the five peso  coin.</p>
<p>In 1983, Emilio Aguinaldo replaced  Bonifacio on the five-peso bill, and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas  minted a unique, octagonal two-peso coin featuring Bonifacio. This was  in circulation from 1983 to 1990, re-released in a smaller, circular  form from 1991 to 1994. Bonifacio is more stern and masculine in  profile, with a kerchief knotted around his neck.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/25.jpg"><img title="2-peso coin (1983)" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/25.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/andresbonifacio.jpg"><img title="2-peso coin (1991)" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/andresbonifacio-300x300.jpg" alt="" width="194" height="194" /></a></p>
<p>The current bimetallic 10-peso coin, first minted in 2000, is similar in design to the 10-peso bill with Bonifacio and Mabini.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/Php_coin_10_obv.png"><img title="10-peso coin (2000)" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/Php_coin_10_obv.png" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>The image on the coins is most likely  sourced from the 45-foot tall bronze monument that bears his name in the  City of Caloocan, sculpted by Guillermo Tolentino, who was already  middle-aged by this time–the second time the artist had featured  Bonifacio in his art.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/Caloocan.jpg"><img title="Caloocan monument" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/Caloocan.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>Here, at what was once the entrance to  Manila before the era of the expressway, stands a calm Bonifacio,  dressed in an embroidered Barong Tagalog and knotted kerchief, with a  bolo in one hand, a revolver in the other, surrounded by Jacinto and two  other Katipuneros, symbolizing the Cry of Pugad Lawin.</p>
<p>Tolentino’s work was the culmination of  extensive research and consultations not just with Bonifacio’s living  contemporaries, but also with the occult through seances and  espiritistas. The artist also based his sculpture on Bonifacio’s sister  Espiridiona.</p>
<p>The Bonifacio of Tolentino was done in  the classical sense, expressing almost no emotion–a cool, calculating,  even serene leader in the midst of battle. Napoleon Abueva, a student of  Guillermo Tolentino, offers an alternative interpretation: that  Bonifacio’s quiet dignity and confidence evokes the resilient spirit of  Filipinos.</p>
<p>The monument itself was a purely  Filipino project from start to finish, proposed by Bonifacio’s fellow  revolutionary leader Guillermo Masangkay in the Philippine Legislature,  and funded by Act No. 2760 s. 1918, which also enacted Bonifacio Day as a  national holiday. Inaugurated on Bonifacio’s birthday in November 30,  1933, it presaged the transition to independence.</p>
<p>This is in stark contrast to the  aforementioned Martinez monument in Balintawak, which was transferred to  Vinzons Hall in the University of the Philippines Diliman campus in  1968. Here, a lone figure stands barefoot with his arms outstretched,  mouth open in a silent cry to arms. In one hand, a bolo, in the other,  the flag of the Katipunan. He is clothed in red pants and an unbuttoned  camisa chino.</p>
<p>This image of Bonifacio would endure in  popular consciousness, appearing in even the unlikeliest of places, such  as in cigarette boxes.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/img08254.jpg"><img title="Martinez monument - cigarette" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/img08254-300x231.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>National Artist for Painting Carlos V. Francisco seemingly strikes a balance between both renditions in his famous mural <em>Filipino Struggles Through History</em>,  1964. While the fiery revolutionary in camisa chino and rolled-up red  pants resemble the monument that previously stood in Balintawak, he also  holds a bolo and a revolver, reflecting the research undertaken by  Tolentino.</p>
<p>Amidst the bustling environs of  Divisoria in Manila, another side of the President of the Supreme  Council is given prominence–poring over a piece of parchment, here is  the Bonifacio who wrote impassioned manifestos that rallied the masses.  The Katipunan flag waves in the background.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/tutuban.jpg"><img title="Tutuban monument" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/tutuban-300x225.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>Discrepancies abound even in the  commemorative memorabilia released for the Bonifacio centenary in 1963.  While the Philippine Postal Corporation evoked the defiant Katipunero of  Ramon Martinez’s creation, the BSP chose to follow the serene figure of  Tolentino’s monument. Notice that on the stamps marking Bonifacio’s  Centenary, he is in what is considered the trademark, though hardly  definitive, Katipunero attire; while the coin shows him clad in a suit  and tie.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/bonifacio_birth_centenary.jpg"><img title="1963 centenary stamp" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/bonifacio_birth_centenary-300x237.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/img08132-1.jpg"><img title="1963 centenary coin" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/img08132-1-300x169.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>Commemorative memorabilia were likewise  released for his death centenary in 1997. The stamps would now feature  the various monuments that have been erected to pay tribute to  Bonifacio–the calm Bonifacio of Tolentino’s creation, the fiery  Bonifacio in Martinez’s sculpture and the pensive Bonifacio that stands  in Tutuban.</p>
<p><a href="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/bonifacio-stamp.jpg"><img title="Bonifacio stamp" src="http://malacanang.gov.ph/wp-content/uploads/bonifacio-stamp-300x179.jpg" alt="" /></a></p>
<p>Written accounts are similarly  inconclusive when it comes to the physical characteristics of  Bonifacio–none of his contemporaries nor the historians who specialized  in the study of the Katipunan are able to provide a concrete description  of Bonifacio.</p>
<p>Through the multiple visualizations and  renditions of Bonifacio, we may never truly know how he looked. But  revolutions are waged not by faces–rather, by the faceless hundreds and  thousands who took up arms with the notable and the noted. In death, a  definitive image of Bonifacio remains elusive, which presents a  concluding irony: that the man unfortunate in battle, achieved his true  glory not through the sword, but the pen, through the manifestos and  letters that ignited revolutionary ardor, sustaining the revolution in  times of adversity, and, regardless of the eventual means for achieving  independence, lives on in the hearts and minds of every Filipino who has  read the words of Maypagasa–Bonifacio’s nom-de-guerre, which  encapsulated in one word, what he himself sought to represent and  inspire in his countrymen.</p>
<p>_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _</p>
<p>Source: http://malacanang.gov.ph/2942-imprinting-andres-bonifacio-the-iconization-from-portrait-to-peso/</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=1815</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Movie: Supremo (2012), Andres Bonifacio as husband, brother, soldier and hero</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=1703</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=1703#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 16 Aug 2012 20:55:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books & Film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine American War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=1703</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#160; &#160; About Andres Bonifacio&#8217;s Biopic Description Andres Bonifacio as husband, brother, soldier and hero Release date August 2012 Genre Epic Drama Studio Alternative Vision Cinema and Strawdogs Studio Productions Plot outline Manila, year 1896. The cry for independence from the tyranny of Spain peals louder than ever. Andres Bonifacio, leader of the rebel movement [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class='embed-youtube' style='text-align:center; display: block;'><iframe class='youtube-player' type='text/html' width='640' height='390' src='https://www.youtube.com/embed/oHQ34CKnkIM?version=3&#038;rel=1&#038;fs=1&#038;showsearch=0&#038;showinfo=1&#038;iv_load_policy=1&#038;wmode=transparent' frameborder='0'></iframe></span></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>About<br />
Andres Bonifacio&#8217;s Biopic</p>
<p>Description<br />
Andres Bonifacio as husband, brother, soldier and hero</p>
<p>Release date</p>
<p>August 2012</p>
<p>Genre</p>
<p>Epic Drama</p>
<p>Studio</p>
<p>Alternative Vision Cinema and Strawdogs Studio Productions</p>
<p>Plot outline</p>
<p>Manila, year 1896. The cry for independence from the tyranny of Spain peals louder than ever. Andres Bonifacio, leader of the rebel movement the Katipunan, leads his men to war. Though ill-equipped and untried in the field of battle, the Katipuneros launch an offensive against a vastly superior Spanish military.</p>
<p>What follows is a series of events that will test the nation&#8217;s brave sons, and an aftermath that will separate the genuine patriots from mere participants.</p>
<p>Starring</p>
<p>Alfred Vargas, Mon Confiado, Nicco Manalo, Alex Vincent Medina, Edmon Romawac, Shielbert Manuel, Lehner Mendoza, Manu Respall, Jeff Fernandez, Banjo Romero, Alex Cabodil, Nica Naval and Hermie Concepcion</p>
<p>Directed by</p>
<p>Richard V. Somes</p>
<p>Written By</p>
<p>Jimmy Flores</p>
<p>Produced by</p>
<p>PM Vargas, Alfred Vargas, Riza Montelibano, Mai Montelibano and Ellen Ilagan</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Supremo (2012) Full Trailer</p>
<p>Director: Richard V. Somes</p>
<p>Starring:<br />
Alfred Vargas</p>
<p>Mon Confiado<br />
Hermie Concepcion<br />
Nicco Manalo<br />
Alex Vincent Medina<br />
Nica Naval<br />
Edmon Romawag<br />
Shielbert Manuel<br />
Lehner Mendoza<br />
Jeff Fernandez<br />
Banjo Romero<br />
Mano Respall<br />
Alex Cabodil</p>
<p>Production Manager: Darryl De la Cruz<br />
Sound Engineer Jedd Chriss Dumaguina<br />
Musical Scorer: Von De Guzman<br />
Editors: Carlo Francisco Manatad + Joris Fernandez<br />
Director of Photography: Alex Espartero<br />
Production Designers: Erin John Martir + Adrian Torres<br />
Screenplay: Jimmy Flores<br />
Associate Producer: Ellen Ilagan + Maimai Montelibano<br />
Line Producer: Riza Montelibano<br />
Executive Producers: PM Vargas + Alfred Vargas</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a title="https://www.facebook.com/pages/Supremo/407515249292352" href="https://www.facebook.com/pages/Supremo/407515249292352" target="_blank">http://www.facebook.com/pages/Supremo/407515249292352</a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-1708" title="supremo movie 2012 katipunan pilipinas supremo movie 2012 katipunan pilipinas" alt="supremo movie 2012 katipunan pilipinas supremo movie 2012 katipunan pilipinas supremo movie 2012 katipunan pilipinas supremo movie 2012 katipunan pilipinas supremo movie 2012 katipunan pilipinas supremo movie 2012 katipunan pilipinas" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/supremo-movie-2012-300x199.jpg" width="300" height="199" /></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=1703</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Rajah Sulaiman III, Last Muslim King of Manila (1558 &#8211; 1575) &#8211; Written in Tagalog by Jose N. Sevilla and Tolentino in the early 1920&#8242;s</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=923</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=923#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Jul 2011 18:30:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pre Colonial Philippines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=923</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Rajah Suliman, Last Muslim King of Manila Rajah Sulaiman III (1558 &#8211; 1575) was the last native Muslim king of Manila, now the site of the capital of the Philippines, Manila. He was one of three chieftains, along with Rajah Rajah Lakandula and Adults, to have played a significant role in the Spanish conquests of [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Rajah Suliman, Last Muslim King of Manila</h2>
<p><strong>Rajah Sulaiman III</strong> (1558 &#8211; 1575) was the last native Muslim king of Manila, now the site of the capital of the Philippines, Manila.   He was one of three chieftains, along with Rajah Rajah Lakandula and  Adults, to have played a significant role in the Spanish conquests of  the kingdoms of the Manila Bay-Pasig River area, first by Martín de  Goiti, and Juan de Salcedo in 1570; and later by Miguel Lopez de Legazpi  in 1571</p>
<p>The following biography of Rajah Soliman was written in Tagalog by Jose N.  Sevilla and Tolentino in the early 1920s:</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>TALAMBUHAY NI RAHA SOLIMAN</p>
<p>Bago nagíng̃ Rahá si Solimán, ay nagíng̃ katulong̃ muna sa pang̃ang̃asiwà ng̃ mg̃a súliranin dito sa Maynilà, ni Raháng̃ Matandâ.</p>
<p>Si Lakán Dulà na nanánahanan sa Tundó ay siyá niyáng̃ kasama.  Itó ay nang̃ kapanáhunan ni Raháng̃ Matandâ nang̃ taóng̃ 1570.   Noón ay isáng̃ pulutóng̃ nang̃ mg̃a sasakyáng̃ kastilà na pinamumunuan  ni Martin de Goití at Juan de Salcedo ang̃ dumaong̃ sa luók ng̃ Maynilà.  Niyaóng̃ unang̃ datíng̃ dito niná Goití ay dî sila nakalunsád pagdaka.  Ang̃ Maynilà, ay may matitibay na mg̃a muóg at sila&#8217;y pinaputukán at sinagupà.</p>
<p>Nabalitaan niláng isá sa mg̃a makapang̃yarihan doón ay si Solimán,  kaya&#8217;t nagpadalá sina Goití rito ng̃ sugò na nagsásaysáy na silá&#8217;y dî  naparito upáng̃ makidigmâ kundî upáng̃ makipagkásundô, at ang̃ ganitó&#8217;y  tinugón sa pamamagitan ng̃ sugò, na ang̃ Hari sa Maynilà ay nagnanasà  ng̃ makipagkaibigan sa mg̃a kastilà.</p>
<p>Pagtang̃gáp ni Goití ng̃ paklí ni Solimán ay nasók siyá at ang̃  kanyáng̃ mg̃a tao sa ilog ng̃ Pasig at silá&#8217;y lumunsád sa isáng̃ baybáy  na itinakdâ ng̃ Harì.   Sinalubong̃ silá ni Raháng Matandâ at nakipagkamáy sa kanilá,  pagkaliban ng̃ iláng̃ sandali ay dumatíng si Rahá Solimán at  nakipágkamáy din ng̃uni&#8217;t nagpasubalì ng̃ gayari: «Kamí ay nagnánasang̃  makipagkaibigan sa mg̃a kastilà samantalang̃ silá&#8217;y mabuti sa amin;  ng̃uni&#8217;t mahíhirapan silá ng̃ gaya ng̃ hirap na tiniís na ng̃ ibá,  kailán ma&#8217;t nasain niláng̃ kami&#8217;y alisán ng̃ puri».</p>
<p>Pagkaraán ng̃ iláng̃ araw si Goití ay nagkulang̃ sa pagkakáibigan sa  pagpapaputók ng̃ kaniláng̃ kanyón, at si Rahá Solimán ay napilitang̃  magbago ng̃ kilos.  Ipinawasák nitó ang̃ mg̃a sasakyán nina Goití at ipinapuksâ ang̃ kanyáng̃ mg̃a kawal.</p>
<p>Nápakabuti ang̃ pagtatang̃gól sa mg̃a kutà at dî nagawâ nang̃ mg̃a  kastilà ang̃ makapasok agád, ng̃uni&#8217;t nang̃ mang̃asalantà ang̃ mg̃a tao  ni Solimán at maubos na ang̃ mg̃a punlô ay napipilan din.   At nang̃ makuha ng̃ mg̃a kastilà ang̃ Maynilà ay sinalakay ang̃ bahay  ni Solimán at dito&#8217;y nátagpuán nilá ang̃ isáng̃ mainam na gusali,  maiinam na kasang̃kapang̃ sigay, mg̃a damit na mariring̃al na  nagkakahalagá ng̃ may 23.000 piso.</p>
<p>Hindî nagtaksíl kailán man si Solimán, gaya ng̃ ipinararatang̃ sa kanyá ng̃ mg̃a kastilà.   Siyá&#8217;y tumupád lamáng̃ sa kanyáng̃ dakilang̃ katung̃kulan na makibaka  sa sino mang̃ magnánasang̃ sumirà ng̃ kanyáng̃ kapuriháng̃ pagkaharì, at  yáyamang̃ ang̃ mg̃a kastilà ay siyáng̃ nagpasimulâ ng̃ pagbabaka, ay  siyá ay nagtang̃gól lamang̃ at natalo, ng̃uni&#8217;t hindî kailán man  nagtaksíl.</p>
<p>Ang̃ kanyáng̃ pagibig sa sariling̃ Lupà ay nagudyók sa kanyáng̃ makibaka at siyá ay nakibaka dahil doón.</p>
<p>Kung̃ saán mákikitang̃ ang pagguhò ng̃ kaharian ni Solimàn ay utang̃ sa  kagahaman ng̃ isáng̃ lahing̃ mang̃aalipin; sa isáng̃ pámahalaáng̃  pinagágaláw ng̃ lakás ng̃ lakás at di ng̃ lakás ng̃ katuwiran.</p>
<p>Kawawang̃ bayang̃ maliliít na linúlupig at ginágahasà ng̃ malalakíng bansâ.</p>
<p>Ang̃ daigdíg ay patung̃o sa pagunlád, at buhat niyaóng̃ 1914 na  gahasain ang̃ Belhika, ang malalakíng̃ Bansâ ay nagsasapì at  ipinagtang̃gól ang̃ katwiran ng̃ maliliít na bayan.  Panibagong̃ kilos sa daigdíg na bung̃a ng̃ mayamang̃ diwà ng̃ dakilang̃ Wilson sa kaamerikahan.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-927" title="mandirigma.org" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/btngsoli1.jpg" alt="kapisanang mandirigma" width="196" height="412" /></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=923</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Apolinario &#8216;Lumpo&#8217; Mabini y Maranan &#8211; Conscience  of the Philippine Revolution (July 23, 1864 — May 13, 1903)</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=806</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=806#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Jun 2011 04:16:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine American War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=806</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Apolinario Mabini Hero of the Philippine Revolution Conscience  of the Philippine Revolution the Sublime Paralytic key adviser of Emilio Aguinaldo proposed the first constitution of the Philippine Republic born July 22, 1864 Barrio Talaga, Tanawan Batangas to Inocencio Mabini, Dionisia Maranan died May 13, 1903 It was immediately before the proclamation of independence that a [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-811" title="kali arnis eskrima escrima philippines" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/mabini-3.jpg" alt="kali arnis eskrima escrima philippines kali arnis eskrima escrima philippines" width="245" height="311" /></p>
<p><strong>Apolinario Mabini</strong></p>
<p><strong>Hero of the Philippine Revolution</strong><strong> </strong></p>
<p>Conscience  of the Philippine Revolution<br />
the Sublime Paralytic<br />
key adviser of Emilio Aguinaldo<br />
proposed the first constitution of the Philippine Republic<br />
born July 22, 1864 Barrio Talaga, Tanawan Batangas to Inocencio Mabini, Dionisia Maranan<br />
died May 13, 1903</p>
<p>It was immediately before the proclamation of independence that a young man was brought before Aguinaldo as his adviser. He was Apolinario Mabini. Born of very poor parents, Inocencio Mabini and Dionisia Maranan, in Talaga, Tanawan, Batangas. Mabini studied in a school in Tanawan, then conducted by a certain Simplicio Avelino. Much later, he transferred to a school conducted by the famous pedagogue, Father Valerio Malabanan. He continued his studies at the San Juan de Letran and at the University of Sto. Tomas where he received his law degree in 1894.</p>
<p>His dream to defend the poor led him to forsake the priesthood, which his mother wanted him to take. Early in 1896, he contracted an illness, probably infantile paralysis, that led to the paralysis of his lower limbs. When the revolution broke out the same year, the Spanish authorities, suspecting that he was somehow involved in the disturbance, arrested him. The fact, however, that he could not move his lower limbs showed the Spaniards that they had made a mistake. He was released and sent to the San Juan de Dios Hospital.</p>
<p>Mabini, it must be noted, was not entirely free from nationalistic association, for he was a member of Rizal&#8217;s La Liga Filipina and worked secretly for the introduction of reforms in the administration of government. In 1898, while vacationing in Los Baños, Aguinaldo sent for him. It took hundreds of men taking turns at carrying the hammock he was in to bring Mabini to Kawit. Aguinaldo, upon seeing Mabini&#8217;s physical condition, thought that he must have made a mistake in calling for him to help him in his work. What could a man in such a condition do to help him?</p>
<p>But when Mabini spoke, Aguinaldo&#8217;s doubts vanished. There was firmness in the sick man&#8217;s voice, and Aguinaldo decided to make him his trusted adviser. From then on, it was Mabini who stood behind Aguinaldo. Envious enemies called him the &#8220;Dark Chamber of the President&#8221;, but his admirers called him the &#8220;Brains of the Revolution&#8221;.</p>
<p>History of the Filipino People. Teodoro A. Agoncillo</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&#8212;</p>
<p>Apolinario Mabini</p>
<p>Born of a poor family, Apolinario Mabini was always studious. He was always sad and silent and liked to sit alone to meditate.</p>
<p>Mabini studied at San Juan de Letran where he got his Bachelor of Arts degree and Professor of Latin. He also finished Law. He was a spokesman of the Congress, and a notary public.</p>
<p>In early 1896, he contracted a severe fever which paralyzed him for the rest of his life. He was later called the Sublime Paralytic.</p>
<p>Mabini was most active in the revolution in 1898, when he became the chief adviser of Gen. Aguinaldo during the revolution. He drafted decrees and proposed a constitution for the Philippine Republic. He made the plans for the revolutionary government.</p>
<p>In 1899, he was captured by the Americans but was later set free. In 1901, he was exiled to Guam but returned to the Philippines in 1903 after agreeing to take an oath of allegiance to the US. He took his oath on February 26, 1903 before the Collector of Customs.</p>
<p>On May 13, 1903, he died of cholera in Manila.</p>
<p>Excerpts from Talambuhay ng mga Bayani by Rene Alba</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&#8212;</p>
<p><strong>Apolinario &#8216;Lumpo&#8217; Mabini y Maranan (July 23, 1864 — May 13, 1903)</strong></p>
<p>Apolinario &#8216;Lumpo&#8217; Mabini y Maranan (July 23, 1864 — May 13, 1903) was a Filipino political philosopher and revolutionary who wrote a constitutional plan for the first Philippine republic of 1899-1901, and served as its first prime minister in 1899. In Philippine history texts, he is often referred to as &#8220;the Sublime Paralytic&#8221;, and as &#8220;the Brains of the Revolution.&#8221; To his enemies and detractors, he is referred to as the &#8220;Dark Chamber of the President.&#8221;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Early life of Apolinario Mabini</strong></p>
<p>Mabini was born on July 23, 1864 in Barangay Talaga in Tanauan, Batangas. He was the second of eight children of Dionisia Maranan, a vendor in the Tanauan market, and Inocencio Mabini, an unlettered peasant.</p>
<p>Mabini began informal studies under his maternal grandfather, who was the village teacher. Because he demonstrated uncommon intelligence, he was transferred to a regular school owned by Simplicio Avelino, where he worked as a houseboy, and also took odd jobs from a local tailor &#8211; all in exchange for free board and lodging. He later transferred to a school conducted by the Fray Valerio Malabanan, whose fame as an educator merited a mention in José Rizal&#8217;s novel El Filibusterismo.</p>
<p>In 1881 Mabini received a scholarship to go to the Colegio de San Juan de Letran in Manila. An anecdote about his stay there says that a professor there decided to pick on him because his shabby clothing clearly showed he was poor. Mabini amazed the professor by answering a series of very difficult questions with ease. His studies at Letran were periodically interrupted by a chronic lack of funds, and he earned money for his board and lodging by teaching children.</p>
<p>Mabini&#8217;s mother had wanted him to take up the priesthood, but his desire to defend the poor made him decide to take up Law instead. A year after receiving his Bachilles en Artes with highest honors and the title Professor of Latin from Letran, he moved on to the University of Santo Tomas, where he received his law degree in 1894.</p>
<p><strong>The 1896 Revolution</strong></p>
<p>Believing that the Reform Movement still had a chance to achieve success, Mabini did not immediately support the revolution of 1896. When José Rizal was executed in December that year, however, he changed his mind and gave the revolution his wholehearted support.</p>
<p>In 1898, while vacationing in Los Baños, Laguna, Emilio Aguinaldo sent for him. It took hundreds of men taking turns carrying his hammock to portage Mabini to Kawit. Aguinaldo, upon seeing Mabini&#8217;s physical condition, must have entertained second thoughts in calling for his help.</p>
<p>Mabini was most active in the revolution in 1898, when he served as the chief adviser for General Aguinaldo. He drafted decrees and crafted the first ever constitution in Asia for the First Philippine Republic, including the framework of the revolutionary government which was implemented in Malolos in 1899.</p>
<p><strong>Later life and death</strong></p>
<p>He also joined the fraternity of Freemasonry.</p>
<p>On December 10, 1899, he was captured by Americans at Cuyapo, Nueva Ecija, but was later set free. In 1901, he was exiled to Guam, along with scores of revolutionists Americans referred to as &#8216;insurrectos&#8217; and who refused to swear fealty to imperialist America. When Brig. Gen. Arthur C. MacArthur, Jr. was asked to explain by the US Senate why Mabini had to be explained, the following was cabled:</p>
<p>“     Mabini deported: a most active agitator; persistently and defiantly refusing amnesty, and maintaining correspondence with insurgents in the field while living in Manila, Luzon&#8230;     ”</p>
<p>Mabini returned home to the Philippines in 1903 after agreeing to take the oath of allegiance to the United States on February 26, 1903 before the Collector of Customs. On the day he sailed, he issued this statement to the press:</p>
<p>“     After two long years I am returning, so to speak, completely disoriented and, what is worse, almost overcome by disease and sufferings. Nevertheless, I hope, after some time of rest and study, still to be of some use, unless I have returned to the Islands for the sole purpose of dying.      ”</p>
<p>To the chagrin of the American colonial officials, however, Mabini resumed his patriotic work of agitating for independence for the Philippines soon after he was back home from exile. On May 13, 1903 Mabini died of cholera in Manila, at the age of 38.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-812" title="kali arnis eskrima escrima philippines" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/mabini-captured.jpg" alt="kali arnis eskrima escrima philippines" width="403" height="227" /></p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-813" title="kali arnis eskrima escrima philippines" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/mabini-2.jpg" alt="kali arnis eskrima escrima philippines kali arnis eskrima escrima philippines" width="400" height="356" /></p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-814" title="kali arnis eskrima escrima philippines" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/mabini-4.jpg" alt="kali arnis eskrima escrima philippines kali arnis eskrima escrima philippines" width="398" height="480" /></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=806</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Katipunero: Emilio Jacinto. The “Brains of the Katipunan.” (15 December 1875 – 16 April 1899).</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=749</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=749#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Jun 2011 18:14:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=749</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#160; Katipunero: Emilio Jacinto. Revolutionary and writer. Emilio Jacinto y Dizon was considered as one of the greatest military genius during his time. He was very close to Andres Bonifacio. Like Bonifacio, Emilio also comes from a poor family. He was born in Trozo, Manila on December 15,1875. His parents were Mariano Jacinto and Josefa [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img src="http://www.trueknowledge.com/images/thumbs/180/250/Emilio_jacinto_PG.jpg" alt="http://www.trueknowledge.com/images/thumbs/180/250/Emilio_jacinto_PG.jpg" width="275" height="334" /></p>
<p><strong>Katipunero: Emilio Jacinto. Revolutionary and writer.</strong></p>
<p><strong> </strong></p>
<p>Emilio Jacinto y Dizon was considered as one of the greatest military genius during his time. He was very close to Andres Bonifacio. Like Bonifacio, Emilio also comes from a poor family. He was born in Trozo, Manila on December 15,1875. His parents were Mariano Jacinto and Josefa Dizon.</p>
<p>Despite being orphaned, he managed to send himself to Colegio de San Juan de Letran. He was also able to study law at the University of Santo Tomas although he was not able to finish it because his Spanish classmates often abused him.</p>
<p>Emilio was only 19 when he joined the Katipunan. He was known as the brains of the Katipunan when it comes to military matters. His book entitled Kartilya was the one used by the Katipuneros as their guide in fighting the Spanish colonizers. It contained the constitution and by-laws ofthe Katipunan.</p>
<p>Reading books was one of Emilio&#8217;s greatest passions. One of his favorite books was the one about the French Revolution. He also has in his collection a book on how to make gunpowder and dynamite. He also learned quite a few things about the art of war, military strategies and ways of making weapons of war.</p>
<p>&#8212;</p>
<p>Emilio Jacinto – Utak ng Katipunan</p>
<p>Si Emilio Jacinto ay anak nila Mariano Jacinto at Josefa Dizon. Namatay agad ang kanyang ama ilang sandali lamang matapos na siya ay isilang na nagtulak sa kanyang ina na ipaampon si Emilio sa kanyang tiyuhin na si Don Jose Dizon upang magkaroon ng magandang buhay.</p>
<p>Si Emilio ay bihasa sa pagsasalita ng Tagalog at Kastila pero mas gusto niya ang Kastila. Siya ay nag-aral sa Kolehiyo ng San Juan de Letran at nang maglaon ay lumipat sa Pamantasan ng Sto. Tomas para mag-aral ng batas. Hindi niya natapos ang kurso at sa edad na 20 ay sumapi siya sa isang sikretong samahan na ang pangalan ay Katipunan.</p>
<p>Nang mamatay si Bonifacio, ipinagpatuloy ni Jacinto ang paglaban sa mga Kastila bagamat hindi siya sumali sa puwersa ni Aguinaldo. Namatay si Emilio Jacinto sa sakit na malaria noong Abril 16, 1899 sa Majayjay, Laguna sa edad na 23.</p>
<p>Dr. Jose Rizal and Marcelo H. Del Pilar inspired him to be a good writer during his time. He used Dimes Haw as his pen name. He also wrote A la Patria, which he based from Dr. Jose Rizal&#8217;s Mi Ultimo Adios.</p>
<p>He was seriously injured in one bloody encounter that resulted to his death on April 16,1899 in Majayjay, Laguna at a young age of 24.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.freewebs.com/philippineamericanwar/Emilio%20Jacintp%20dies%20better%20pic.jpg" alt="http://www.freewebs.com/philippineamericanwar/Emilio%20Jacintp%20dies%20better%20pic.jpg" width="463" height="309" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>Known  as the &#8220;Brains of the Katipunan&#8221;, Emilio Jacinto was born in Trozo,  Tondo, Manila, on Dec 15,1875. He was the son of Mariano Jacinto and  Josefa Dizon. He was fluent in both Spanish and Tagalog, but he spoke  more in Spanish. He studied in the Universidad de Santo Tomas, but did not finish college and at 20 joined the Katipunan.  Because he was very brilliant, he became the advisor on fiscal matters  and secretary to Andres Bonifacio. He also edited and wrote for the  Katipunan newspaper &#8220;Kalayaan&#8221;&#8211;Freedom in Tagalog. He wrote in the newspaper under the pen name Dimasilaw, and in the Katipunan he was called Pingkian. Emilio Jacinto was the author of the Kartilya ng Katipunan. After Andres Bonifacio&#8217;s death, he continued fighting the Spaniards.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.panix.com/%7Eclay/currency/PH-137d.jpg" alt="http://www.panix.com/~clay/currency/PH-137d.jpg" width="457" height="386" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img src="http://images.cliofilipinas.multiply.com/image/1/photos/upload/300x300/SShDcAoKCpEAABH2iD81/pic55.jpg?et=qdYO98R62qps9v4Kz2Pl6Q&amp;nmid=0" alt="http://images.cliofilipinas.multiply.com/image/1/photos/upload/300x300/SShDcAoKCpEAABH2iD81/pic55.jpg?et=qdYO98R62qps9v4Kz2Pl6Q&amp;nmid=0" width="457" height="659" /></p>
<p><em>The appointment paper of Emilio Jacinto as commander-in-chief of the revolutionary forces north of Manila,  signed by Andres Bonifacio as “Pangulo ng Haring Bayang Katagalugan.”  The letterhead cites Bonifacio as having founded the Katipunan and  initiated the revolution. (ENE Collection)</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=749</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Pirate Limahong Invades the Philippines, 1574</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=366</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=366#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 05 Feb 2011 18:18:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Regional History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=366</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Limahong Limahong, Lim Hong or also called Lin Feng (simplified Chinese: 林风; traditional Chinese: 林風; pinyin: Lín Fēng; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lîm-Hong) was a notorious Chinese pirate and warlord who invaded the northern Philippine Islands in 1574. He built up a reputation for his constant raids to ports in Guangdong, Fujian and southern China. He is noted [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-633" title="limahong_1" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/limahong_1.jpg" alt="guro dino flores lameco ilustrisimo kali arnis eskrima escrima fma filipino martial arts" width="441" height="343" /></p>
<p><strong>Limahong</strong></p>
<p>Limahong, Lim Hong or also called Lin Feng (simplified Chinese: 林风; traditional Chinese: 林風; pinyin: Lín Fēng; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lîm-Hong) was a notorious Chinese pirate and warlord who invaded the northern Philippine Islands in 1574. He built up a reputation for his constant raids to ports in Guangdong, Fujian and southern China. He is noted to have twice attempted, and failed, to overthrow the Spanish city of Manila in 1574.</p>
<p><strong>Birth and origins</strong></p>
<p>Born Dim Mhon to a parents with questionable morals in the city of Tru Cheo (Teochew) in the province of Cuy Tan (called Catim by the Portuguese during the middle of the 16th century). Known to be called Limahong. Exposed to vices, he resorted to criminal activities, including robbery, at an early age. He met and became a protege of an old pirate, Tial-lao. When Tial-lao died, Lim became his heir, inheriting the old pirate&#8217;s fleet and around 2,000 pirates. His activities and attacks on ports and ships throughout southern China increased and a warrant was issued by the authorities to capture him alive and send him to the city of Tay Bin. He was married to Nataracy.</p>
<p>He shifted his activities to piracy on the high seas and out of reach of China&#8217;s power. He was able to accumulate up to 40 ships, whereupon he once again raided cities and ports in southern China. Limahong attacked a city occupied by Vinh To Quiam, another pirate, but Vinh was able to escape along with 5 of Limahong&#8217;s ships. However, Limahong was able to capture 55 of Vinh&#8217;s fleet and thus increased his own to 95 ships. He was now a veritable king of the high seas of southern China.</p>
<p>In late 1573, he gathered an army of 3,000 Chinese warriors, renegades and vagabonds and fled to the island of Luzon. There, he and his band of outlaws sought refuge, established their own kingdom and waged war with the Spaniards.</p>
<p>By this time, a force of 40,000 soldiers and 135 ships was sent by the Chinese to kill and capture Limahong. Limahong and his troops first arrived in Ilocos Sur in early 1574 where they quarrelled with the Spanish commander, Juan de Salcedo. After a brief struggle with the Spanish army, his troops were driven away from the city. The pirates then chanced upon merchant ships from Manila doing trade with the Chinese, and learned from 2 captured ships that Manila was a new and relatively unprotected Spanish settlement. From this information and the knowledge that China had a no-war policy with its neighbors during that time, he decided to capture Manila and establish himself as ruler of his would-be kingdom and stronghold.</p>
<p><strong>Limahong In Parañaque (Don Galo)</strong></p>
<p>It was November 29, 1574. The inhabitants of the town of Parañaque, a royal encomienda, was under heavy attack from the forces of the notorious Chinese pirate, Limahong, who were on their way to Intramuros, the seat of Spanish rule in the Philippines. Folk accounts have it that the inhabitants were at first disorganized, until a man from a barrio, by the name of Galo, came forward and took command. Under his able leadership, and with the arrival of Spanish forces led by Captain Juan de Salcedo from Ilocos, Limahong was repulsed and the occupation of the town was prevented.</p>
<p>The stiff resistance of the barrio residents shocked the Chinese pirate, who thought that capturing Manila would be easy. What Limahong did not expect was that the defenders of the community, that would later be known as Dongalo, dispite being ill-equipped, would fight to the end, so much so that the sea in front of the barrio turned red with their blood.</p>
<p><strong>The battle became known as the &#8220;Red Sea Incident&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>The Paraqueños not only saved their town, but they contributed decisively to Limahong&#8217;s abandoning his plans to conquer the area. In appreciation for Galo&#8217;s leadership and heroic deeds, the Spanish authorities granted him the title of &#8220;Don&#8221;. The barrio later on was named after him. Thus, Don Galo or Dongalo.</p>
<p><strong>Limahong In Pangasinan</strong></p>
<p>Foiled at Manila to establish a kingdom of his own, Limahong set sail for the Lingayen Gulf, to settle in Pangasinan province. As a rich place and far enough from the reach of the Spaniards and the Chinese emperor, Limahong resolved to stay here and to make himself master of the region.</p>
<p>Near the mouth of the Agno River about four miles from the sea he built a fort consisting of an outer palisade of palm logs, and an inner enclosure of palm planks which sheltered his palace. He also built pagodas and dwelling places preparatory for permanent settlement.</p>
<p>Limahong announced to the people that he had conquered the Spaniards and that he had come to rule over them as their king. They were commanded to pay tributes to him.</p>
<p>Thereupon, great terror and fright filled all the neighboring villages, and all of them, with no exception, received Limahong as king, and they obeyed him and paid him tributes. To make matters worse for the natives, he seized their principal chiefs and held them as hostages.</p>
<p>The Spaniards could not tolerate the presence of this Chinese corsair in their neighborhood. A scout ship had been sent by Governor Lavezares to follow the pirate fleet and it soon returned and reported where it had gone. An expedition of 256 Spaniards and about 2,500 Filipino troops, including the Rajah Lakandula of Tondo and his sons, set sail in 59 vessels for Lingayen on the 23rd of March, 1575.</p>
<p>In Pangasinan, the motley army was swelled by the addition of some companies of Pangasinan soldiers. They crossed the bar of the Agno River on the 30th of March, 1574, their presence unsuspected by the Chinese.</p>
<p>Captain Juan de Salcedo had been appointed Field Marshal in place of Martin de Goiti. He was assisted by Captain Lorenzo Chacon, Pedro de Chavez, and Gabriel de Rivera (sic). Salcedo noted on entering the river, a narrow place where the channel could easily be blocked. He stayed there in order to prevent the escape of the pirates. He ordered Captain Gabriel de Rivera and his company of 28 men to march immediately by land, and Captains Pedro de Chavez and Lorenzo Chacon to sail with 9 small boats and 80 men to ascend the river and to capture Chinese vessels with the Spanish fleet. The time was to be appointed so that both the land and the sea forces would arrive at the fort at the same instant, and make assault at the same time, so that they might be better successful in their purpose. Salcedo was to remain behind with all the rest of the forces to await the opportunity of furnishing aid in any emergency.</p>
<p>The river detachment met 35 vessels of the Chinese fleet sailing out to collect provisions. They were entirely unaware of the presence of the enemy in the vicinity, and when the Spaniards opened fire with their arquebuses, the pirates turned and fled grounding the ships at the river bank near the fort and then jumping overboard to escape the Spaniards, whom they outnumbered ten to one.</p>
<p><strong>Destruction of the Chinese Fleet</strong></p>
<p>The balance of the Chinese fleet which was just farther up the river was tied up near the river bank with only the crews on board. When these sailors saw their comrades fleeing for their lives, they followed, and the entire fleet was abandoned to the Spaniards. During the melee, one of the vessels caught fire and before anything could be done, the Chinese fleet of over 60 vessels was already in flames.</p>
<p>The land party on the other hand, had forced an entrance into the back side of the port, capturing more than seventy women whom they found within the palisade, besides killing more than one hundred Chinese. Shortly after the Spaniards gained entrance, the fort was put into flames, whether by Chinese or by native auxiliaries could not be determined.</p>
<p>The river party joined in the attack on the fort. But the flames blowing into the faces of the attackers make progress difficult. The inner fort remained inviolate. The attackers stayed and blockaded the inner fort with an aim to starve the Chinese occupants inside. But thirst instead set in among them as the only water available in the fort was only from a small brackish well. Many of them left their ranks to collect loot and slaves.</p>
<p><strong>A Beleaguered Fort</strong></p>
<p>Limahong with his men constructed some boats inside the fort out of the half burnt remnants of his fleet which his men had brought into the fort at night without being detected by the Spaniards. The Chinese had made good use of the blockade also which lasted for three months by repairing the breaches on the walls and the damage of the fire which almost gutted his inner fort.</p>
<p>Under such circumstances, Salcedo&#8217;s effort to blockade the Chinese fort seemed fruitless. A Council of War was called to plan other means to expel the Chinese from their fort. It was decided that the Spanish force should retire to an island in the river to make their blockade more effective.</p>
<p>The Chinese were exactly opposite the island, that is, they were north of it, in the words of Francisco de Sande. But what is more interesting is the fact that the island was within cannon shot of the fort; and one morning the Chinese trained the captured cannon Vigilantib on the camp and shattered the leg of standard bearer of Salcedo.</p>
<p><strong>The Elusive Limahong: His Escape</strong></p>
<p>The blockade seemed to be fruitless. Neither side would take the risk of decisive operations and the war degenerated into skirmishes between small bodies of Spaniards and some parties of Chinese going out for provisions to cut wood.</p>
<p>During this period, the pirate Limahong began the construction of thirty vessels within the fort, and as all his soldiers were good workmen, the project was completed on August 4, 1575.</p>
<p>At noon, on the same day, he set sail for his country after having been besieged within the fortification for over four months. This development took the Spaniards by surprise. They were astonished to see Limahong sailing out of fort through a channel which was unknown to them. It was believed and is still current among the natives of the locality, that Limahong constructed this channel with the utmost secrecy without either the land or sea force hearing it.</p>
<p>As a last effort to cut down Limahong, the ingenious Salcedo ordered his soldiers to drive stakes into the bed of the river where Limahong&#8217;s ships were sure to pass. While on both banks of the river he had his men concealed ready to subject the pirates to a blinding fire.</p>
<p>Limahong finally arrived at the particular spot where the stakes were driven. Here, amidst blinding fires, Limahong had ropes fastened about the shoulders of his men and at the point of the sword, they were forced to go overboard. Then wrapping arms and legs about the stakes to act as human grappling hooks, the Chinese began their ugly job of pulling the stakes.</p>
<p>Thus, the unhappy wretches in the water, in addition to being almost pulled limb to limb in an effort to dislodge the stakes, were subjected to the fires of the Spanish arms. With great difficulty, enough stakes were removed and the pirate ships escaped to the China Sea passing through the mouth of the Agno River between Lingayen and Labrador. Limahong slipped, and made a wild dash for liberty out into the China Sea toward his former lair, reaching the island of Tocaotican &#8220;where he had sought refuge, dying of melancholy because of his reverses.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>A Belated &#8220;Visitor&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>Shortly after the escape of Limahong from Pangasinan, Captain Omoncon, who was commissioned by his emperor to capture Limahong dead or alive, arrived in Philippine waters and encountered the Spanish soldiers at Bolinao, Pangasinan.</p>
<p>Upon being informed that Limahong escaped from Pangasinan in unworthy vessels out into the stormy China Sea with a slim chance to survive, he was very much overjoyed. From Pangasinan, Captain Omoncon went to Manila accompanied by Field Marshal Salcedo where the former was dined and entertained.</p>
<p>To cap it all, the governor ordered Salcedo and the soldiers to deliver to Captain Omoncon all Chinese pirates captured in Pangasinan, binding himself to pay to the soldiers to whom such belonged the appraised value of the captives.</p>
<p>This done, he ordered everything necessary for the voyage to be fully prepared, which was done within a few days. In return for all this kindness, Captain Omoncon agreed to take along with him to China some Augustinian fathers to spread Roman Catholicism. He finally departed with the fathers amidst the salvo of good-will and friendship.</p>
<p><strong>Limahong&#8217;s Legacy to Pangasinan</strong></p>
<p>Today, many of the native Pangasinenses possess some tint of Chinese blood in their veins, and they are still distinguishable by their oblique eyes and light yellow complexion. Many citizens of Lingayen and other towns in this part of the province and along the Agno River are of Chinese ancestry.</p>
<p>References and further reading</p>
<p>* Gambe, Annabelle R., Overseas Chinese Entrepreneurship and Capitalist Development in Southeast Asia (Munster, Hamburg and London: Lit Verlag, 1999).<br />
* Stearn, Duncan, Chronology of South-East Asian History 1400-1996 (Dee Why, NSW: The Mitraphab Centre Pty Ltd., 1997).<br />
* “La Relación del suceso de la venida del tirano chino del gobernador Guido de Lavezares (1575): Épica española en Asia en el siglo XVI:” Edición, transcripción y notas (incluye facsimil del manuscrito original), Juan Francisco Maura. Lemir (Departamento de Filología Hispánica de la Universidad de Valencia), &lt;http://parnaseo.uv.es/Lemir/Textos/Maura/Index.htm&gt; 2004.<br />
* Morga , Antonio de. (2004). The Project Gutenberg Edition Book : History of the Philippine Islands &#8211; 1521 to the beginning of the XVII century. Volume 1 and 2.<br />
* Blair , Emma H. (2004). The Philippine Islands, 1493 &#8211; 1898 . Volume VI</p>
<p>From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia</p>
<p>Limahong Descendants in Batangas:</p>
<p>http://www.limjoco.net/lim_ah_hong.html</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-634" title="limahong_3" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/limahong_3.png" alt="guro dino flores lameco ilustrisimo kali arnis eskrima escrima fma filipino martial arts" width="448" height="220" /></p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-635" title="limahong_2" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/limahong_2.jpg" alt="guro dino flores lameco ilustrisimo kali arnis eskrima escrima fma filipino martial arts" width="450" height="350" /></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=366</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Katipunan General Gregorio del Pilar, (1875-1899) &#8211; One of the youngest Generals in the Philippine Revolutionary Forces</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=325</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=325#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 04 Feb 2011 23:49:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine American War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=325</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Gregorio del Pilar November 14, 1875(1875-11-14) – December 2, 1899(1899-12-02) (aged 24) Nickname:&#8221;Goyong&#8221;, &#8220;Boy General&#8221; Place of birth: Bulacan, Bulacan, Philippines Place of death: Tirad Pass, Ilocos Sur, Philippines Allegiance:  First Philippine Republic Service/Branch: Philippine Revolutionary Army Battles/Wars: Philippine Revolution, Philippine-American War Battle of Quingua, Battle of Tirad Pass Gregorio del Pilar y Sempio (November [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-326" title="arnis eskrima escrima katipunan" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/orig-209x300.jpg" alt="arnis eskrima escrima" width="209" height="300" /></p>
<p><strong>Gregorio del Pilar</strong></p>
<p>November 14, 1875(1875-11-14) – December 2, 1899(1899-12-02) (aged 24)</p>
<p>Nickname:&#8221;Goyong&#8221;, &#8220;Boy General&#8221;<br />
Place of birth: Bulacan, Bulacan, Philippines<br />
Place of death: Tirad Pass, Ilocos Sur, Philippines<br />
Allegiance:  First Philippine Republic<br />
Service/Branch: Philippine Revolutionary Army<br />
Battles/Wars: Philippine Revolution, Philippine-American War<br />
Battle of Quingua, Battle of Tirad Pass</p>
<p>Gregorio del Pilar y Sempio (November 14, 1875—December 2, 1899) was one of the youngest generals in the Philippine Revolutionary Forces during the Philippine Revolution and the Philippine-American War. He is most known for his role and death at the Battle of Tirad Pass. Because of his youth, he was called the &#8220;Boy General.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Early life and education</strong></p>
<p>Born on November 14, 1875 to Fernando H. del Pilar and Felipa Sempio of Bulacan, Bulacan, del Pilar was the nephew of propagandist Marcelo H. del Pilar and Toribio H. del Pilar, who was exiled to Guam for his involvement in the 1872 Cavite Mutiny.</p>
<p>&#8220;Goryo&#8221;, as he was casually known, studied at the Ateneo Municipal de Manila, where he received his Bachelor’s degree in 1896, at the age of 20. When the Philippine Revolution against Spanish rule broke out in August under the leadership of Andres Bonifacio, del Pilar joined the insurgency. He distinguished himself as a field commander while fighting Spanish garrisons in Bulacan.</p>
<p><strong>Military career</strong></p>
<p>He later joined General Emilio Aguinaldo, who had gained control of the movement, in Hong Kong after the truce at Biak-na-Bato. During the Spanish American War, Aguinaldo returned to the Philippines and established the government of the First Philippine Republic. He appointed del Pilar section leader of the revolutionary forces in Bulacan and Nueva Ecija. On June 1, del Pilar landed in Bulacan with rifles purchased in Hong Kong, quickly laying siege on the Spanish forces in the province. When the Spaniards surrendered to del Pilar, he brought his men to Caloocan, Manila to support the other troops battling the Spaniards there.</p>
<p>When the Philippine-American War broke-out on February 1899, del Pilar led his troops to a short victory over Major Franklin Bell in the first phase of the Battle of Quingua on April 23, 1899, in which his forces repelled a cavalry charge and killed the highly respected Colonel John M. Stotsenburg,[1] after whom Clark Air Base was originally named (Fort Stotsenburg).[2]</p>
<p><strong>Death</strong></p>
<p>Gregorio del Pilar circa 1899<br />
Main article: Battle of Tirad Pass</p>
<p>On December 2, 1899, del Pilar led 60 Filipino soldiers of Aguinaldo&#8217;s rear guard in the Battle of Tirad Pass against the &#8220;Texas Regiment&#8221;, the 33rd Infantry Regiment of the United States led by Peyton C. March. A delaying action to cover Aguinaldo&#8217;s retreat, the five-hour standoff resulted in Del Pilar&#8217;s death due to a shot to the neck (at the height or end of the fighting, depending on eyewitness accounts). Del Pilar&#8217;s body was later despoiled and looted by the victorious American soldiers.</p>
<p>Del Pilar&#8217;s body lay unburied for days, exposed to the elements. While retracing the trail, an American officer, Lt. Dennis P. Quinlan, gave the body a traditional U.S. military burial. Upon del Pilar&#8217;s tombstone, Quinlan inscribed, &#8220;An Officer and a Gentleman&#8221;.</p>
<p>In 1930, del Pilar&#8217;s body was exhumed and was identified by the gold tooth and braces he had installed while in exile in Hong Kong.</p>
<p><strong>Documentary</strong></p>
<p>His life was shown in the Philippine TV news show Case Unclosed as its 13th episode.</p>
<p><strong>Memorials</strong></p>
<p>* Fort Del Pilar, home of the Philippine Military Academy in Baguio, is named after him.<br />
* In 1944, the Japanese-sponsored Philippine republic of President Jose P. Laurel issued the Tirad Pass Medal commemorating the battle and del Pilar&#8217;s sacrifice. A bust of General del Pilar occupies the center of the obverse (front) side of the medal. The Tirad Pass Medal was the only award issued to recognize service to the Laurel government during the Japanese occupation.<br />
* In 1955, the municipality of Concepcion in Ilocos Sur was renamed in his honor.<br />
* In 1995, his life was featured in the movie &#8220;Tirad Pass: The Last Stand of General Gregorio del Pilar&#8221; starring Romnick Sarmienta.</p>
<p>From Wikipedia</p>
<div id="attachment_327" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 310px"><img class="size-medium wp-image-327" title="Gregorio del Pilar and Other Filipino army officers probably in Bacolor, Pampanga 1898" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/Gregorio-del-Pilar-and-Other-Filipino-army-officers-probably-in-Bacolor-Pampanga-1898-300x213.jpg" alt="mandirigma research organization arnis" width="300" height="213" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Gregorio del Pilar and Other Filipino army officers probably in Bacolor, Pampanga 1898.</p></div>
<div id="attachment_328" class="wp-caption alignnone" style="width: 185px"><img class="size-medium wp-image-328" title="Mandirigma.org" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/piopilar-175x300.jpg" alt="General Gregorio del Pilar on Horseback." width="175" height="300" /><p class="wp-caption-text">General Gregorio del Pilar on Horseback.</p></div>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=325</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Macario Sakay: Tulisán or Patriot? by Paul Flores</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=302</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=302#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 04 Feb 2011 08:14:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine American War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine Revolution]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Katipunan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ilustrisimo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[kali arnis eskrima]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Katastaasang Kagalanggalangang Katipuanan ng mga Anak ng Bayan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lameco]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Macario Sakay]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mandirigma.org]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippine-American War]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Philippinen Revolution]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=302</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Macario Sakay: Tulisán or Patriot? by Paul Flores © 1996 by Paul Flores and PHGLA All rights reserved Contrary to popular belief, Philippine resistance to American rule did not end with the capture of Emilio Aguinaldo in 1901. There were numerous resistance forces fighting for Philippine independence until the year 1910. One of these forces [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Macario Sakay: Tulisán or Patriot?<br />
by Paul Flores<br />
© 1996 by Paul Flores and PHGLA<br />
All rights reserved</p>
<p>Contrary to popular belief, Philippine resistance to American rule did not end with the capture of Emilio Aguinaldo in 1901. There were numerous resistance forces fighting for Philippine independence until the year 1910. One of these forces was led by Macario Sakay who established the Tagalog Republic.<br />
Born in 1870 in Tondo, Macario Sakay had a working-class background. He started out as an apprentice in a calesa manufacturing shop. He was also a tailor, a barber, and an actor in comedias and moro-moros. His participation in Tagalog dramas exposed him to the world of love, courage, and discipline.<br />
In 1894, Sakay joined the Dapitan, Manila branch of the Katipunan. Due to his exemplary work, he became head of the branch. His nightly activities as an actor in comedias camouflaged his involvement with the Katipunan. Sakay assisted in the operation of the Katipunan press. During the early days of the Katipunan, Sakay worked with Andres Bonifacio and Emilio Jacinto. He fought side by side with Bonifacio in the hills of Morong (now Rizal) Province.<br />
During the initial stages of the Filipino-American war, Sakay was jailed for his seditious activities. He had been caught forming several Katipunan chapters and preaching its ideals from town to town.</p>
<p>Republika ng Katagalugan<br />
Released in 1902 as the result of an amnesty, Sakay established with a group of other Katipuneros the Republika ng Katagalugan in the mountains of Southern Luzon.</p>
<p>Sakay held the presidency and was also called &#8220;Generalisimo.&#8221; Francisco Carreon was the vice-president and handled Sakay&#8217;s correspondence. Julian Montalan was the overall supervisor for military operations. Cornelio Felizardo took charge of the northern part of Cavite (Pasay-Bacoor) while Lucio de Vega controlled the rest of the province. Aniceto Oruga operated in the lake towns of Batangas. Leon Villafuerte headed Bulacan while Benito Natividad patrolled Tanauan, Batangas.</p>
<p>In April 1904, Sakay issued a manifesto stating that the Filipinos had a fundamental right to fight for Philippine independence. The American occupiers had already made support for independence, even through words, a crime. Sakay also declared that they were true revolutionaries and had their own constitution and an established government. They also had a flag. There were several other revolutionary manifestos written by the Tagalog Republic that would tend to disprove the U.S. government&#8217;s claim that they were bandits.</p>
<p>The Tagalog Republic&#8217;s constitution was largely based on the early Katipunan creed of Bonifacio. For Sakay, the new Katipunan was simply a continuation of Bonifacio&#8217;s revolutionary struggle for independence.</p>
<p>Guerilla tactics<br />
In late 1904, Sakay and his men took military offensive against the enemy. They were successful in seizing ammunition and firearms in their raids in Cavite and Batangas. Disguised in Philippine Constabulary uniforms, they captured the U.S. military garrison in Parañaque and ran away with a large amount of revolvers, carbines, and ammunition. Sakay&#8217;s men often employed these uniforms to confuse the enemy.</p>
<p>Using guerrilla warfare, Sakay would look for a chance to use a large number of his men against a small band of the enemy. They usually attacked at night when most of the enemy was looking for relaxation. Sakay severely punished and often liquidated suspected collaborators.</p>
<p>The Tagalog Republic enjoyed the support of the Filipino masses in the areas of Morong, Laguna, Batangas, and Cavite. Lower class people and those living in barrios contributed food, money, and other supplies to the movement. The people also helped Sakay&#8217;s men evade military checkpoints. They collected information on the whereabouts of the American troops and passed them on. Muchachos working for the Americans stole ammunition and guns for the use of Sakay&#8217;s men.</p>
<p>Unable to suppress the growth of the Tagalog Republic, the Philippine Constabulary and the U.S. Army started to employ &#8220;hamletting&#8221; or reconcentration in areas where Sakay received strong assistance. The towns of Taal, Tanauan, Santo Tomas, and Nasugbu in the province of Batangas were reconcentrated. This cruel but effective counter-insurgency technique proved disastrous for the Filipino masses. The forced movement and reconcentration of a large number of people caused the outbreak of diseases such as cholera and dysentery. Food was scarce in the camps, resulting in numerous deaths.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, search and destroy missions operated relentlessly in an attempt to suppress Sakay&#8217;s forces. Muslims from Jolo were brought in to fight the guerrillas. Bloodhounds from California were imported to pursue them. The writ of habeas corpus was suspended in Cavite and Batangas to strengthen counter-insurgency efforts. With support cut off, the continuous American military offensive caused the Tagalog Republic to weaken.</p>
<p>Fall of Sakay<br />
While all of these were going on, the American leader of the Philippine Constabulary, Col. Harry H. Bandholtz, conceived a plan to deceive Sakay and his men. He would later be quoted as saying that the technique involved &#8220;playing upon the emotional and sentimental part of the Filipino character.&#8221;</p>
<p>In mid-1905, the American governor-general of the Philippines, Henry Ide, sent an ilustrado named Dominador Gomez to talk to Sakay. Gomez presented a letter from the American governor. The written statement promised that if Sakay surrendered, he and his men wouldn&#8217;t be punished or jailed. Moreover, Gomez assured Sakay that a Philippine Assembly comprising of Filipinos will be formed to serve as the &#8220;gate of kalayaan.&#8221;</p>
<p>Sakay took the bait, went down from the mountains, and surrendered on July 14, 1906.</p>
<p>On July 17, Sakay and his staff were invited to attend a dance hosted by the acting governor of Cavite. Just before midnight, they were surrounded, disarmed, and arrested by American officers who were strategically deployed in the crowd. Sakay and his men were brought to the Bilibid Prison. They were tried and convicted as bandits.</p>
<p>During the trial, Gomez was not around to produce the letter from the American governor-general. He didn&#8217;t even show up and the letter had mysteriously disappeared.</p>
<p>Sakay was hanged on September 13, 1907. Before he died, he uttered, &#8220;Filipinas, farewell! Long live the Republic and may our independence be born in the future!&#8221;</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/sakay.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-303" title="sakay" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/sakay-300x233.jpg" alt="eskrima kali arnis" width="300" height="233" /></a></p>
<p>L to R: seated, Julian Montalan, Francisco Carreon, Macario Sakay, Leon Villafuerte; standing, Benito Natividad, Lucio de Vega.</p>
<p>Sakay and many of his followers favored long hair, certainly something strange for his era. This affectation may have been exploited by the Americans in their efforts to portray Sakay and his men as wild bandits preying on the simple folk of the countryside. Even today, many in the Tagalog area (most of whom have never heard of Macario Sakay) refer to a man with long hair as &#8220;someone who looks like Sakay.&#8221; This is, perhaps, a testimony to the effectiveness of the American propaganda campaign.</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-304" title="anting2 anting anting" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/anting2.gif" alt="anting anting" width="220" height="263" /></p>
<p>This vest with all its religious figures and Latin phrases belonged to Macario Sakay. It was his anting-anting and protected him from bullets and other hazards of war.</p>
<p>Many Filipinos who participated in the fight against Spain and the United States used anting-antings of all types for personal protection.</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-thumbnail wp-image-305" title="sakflag-1" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/sakflag-1-150x150.gif" alt="" width="150" height="150" /></p>
<p>This is the author&#8217;s impression of what Sakay&#8217;s Republika ng Katagalugan flag must have looked like. There are no available pictures of the flag; this reconstruction was based on a written description.</p>
<p>Further reading:</p>
<p>1. Abad, Antonio K. General Macario L. Sakay: Was he a bandit or a patriot? Manila: J.B. Feliciano &amp; Sons, 1955.<br />
2. Constantino, Renato. The Philippines: A past revisited. Quezon City: Tala Publishing,1975.<br />
3. Ileto, Reynaldo C. Pasyon and revolution: Popular movements in the Philippines, 1840-1910. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, 1979.</p>
<p>(This article was originally presented by the author to PHGLA on 8/12/95.)</p>
<p>To cite:<br />
Flores, Paul. &#8220;Macario Sakay: Tulisán or Patriot?&#8221; in Hector Santos, ed., Philippine Centennial Series; at http://www.bibingka.com/phg/sakay/. US, 24 August 1996.</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/sakay-flaf.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-488" title="mandirigma.org lameco ilustrisimo dino flores" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/sakay-flaf-236x300.jpg" alt="mandirigma.org lameco ilustrisimo" width="236" height="300" /></a></p>
<p>Flag Illustration from http://www.watawat.net/</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=302</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Datu Lapu-Lapu/Kolipulako (1491-1542)</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=256</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=256#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 28 Jan 2011 12:39:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Masters and Guros]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pre Colonial Philippines]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Regional History]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=256</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Datu Lapu-Lapu/Kolipulako (1491-1542) Lapu-Lapu is considered one of the greatest figures of ancient Philippine history. Although the first thing that usually comes to mind when the name of Lapu-Lapu is mentioned is the fact that his battle with Magellan led to Magellan&#8217;s death, Lapu-Lapu was not honored because of that. Rather, he is honored because [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-257" title="lapulapu" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/lapulapu-257x300.jpg" alt="arnis kali eskrima lameco ilustrisimo" width="257" height="300" /></p>
<p><strong>Datu Lapu-Lapu/Kolipulako (1491-1542)</strong></p>
<p>Lapu-Lapu is considered one of the greatest figures of ancient Philippine history. Although the first thing that usually comes to mind when the name of Lapu-Lapu is mentioned is the fact that his battle with Magellan led to Magellan&#8217;s death, Lapu-Lapu was not honored because of that. Rather, he is honored because he was among the first to reject submission to a foreign power even though Raja Humabon, ruler of the neighboring island of Cebu, and other chiefs recognized the king of Spain as their ruler and agreed to pay tribute.</p>
<p>Chief Lapu-Lapu&#8217;s (1491-1542) other name is Kolipulako. The hero of Mactan and conqueror of Magellan, is described as stern, proud, intelligent, unyielding. He waged continuous war against the powerful ruler of Cebu, then a very much greater kingdom than his little island of Maktang. Of him, President Gullas of the University of the Visayas writes:</p>
<p>Lapu-Lapu is a good example of determination and willingness to work well. He learned how to ride on a horseback and on carabao proficiently at the age of six years; knew how to read and write at seven; boxed well at nine; became a champion swimmer, boxer and wrestler at eighteen; beat the Bornean marauders and pirates twice at twenty&#8217;. In the lives of men who have almost become legendary one finds it diffucult to separate fact from fiction. This must be true in the case of the material quoted above.</p>
<p>History has it that Mactan Island although small was a thriving community when the great Magellan was in Cebu. The brave Spanish navigator and soldier, upon learning that some inhabitants on this tiny island across Cebu refused to recognize the King of Spain, burned one of the villages. Lapu-Lapu was one of he native leaders who refused to acknowledge the sovereignty of Spain over the Islands.</p>
<p>When Magellan, with three boatloads of Spaniards and twenty boatloads of Cebuanos, went to Mactan to help a friendly chief, Lapu-Lapu and his men armed with native fighting elements, wooden shields, bows and arrows, lances, met them. The invading Spaniards and Cebuanos were driven back to their boats, but their brace leader, Magellan, met death in the hands of Lapu-Lapu. On what is believed to be the exact spot where Magellan fell and died, now stands an imposing monument in honor of the gallant explorer.</p>
<p>In the well-kept plaza of Opon, one of the two towns on Mactan Island, stands today an inspiring monument in honor of Lapu-Lapu, considered the first Filipino to have repelled European aggression.</p>
<p>The battle between Mactan Island Chieftain Lapu-Lapu and the Foreign aggressor Ferdinand Magellan occurred in April 27, 1521. It depicts the hero holding a bolo in one hand and a pestle on the other. Said weapons were believed to have been used during his combat with Magellan. This monument stands as a reminder of Filipino bravery.</p>
<p>The historic battle for Mactan (Kadaugan sa Mactan) is re-enacted each year on the beach at Magellan Bay by amateur actors, providing a sponsor can be found. The Tourist Office should be able to provide you with up-to-date information.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/dino-flores-lapu-lapu.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-524" title="dino flores lapu lapu" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/dino-flores-lapu-lapu.jpg" alt="kali arnis eskrima mandirigma.org" width="301" height="400" /></a></p>
<p>Lapu Lapu Comic by Francisco V. Coching</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/lapu-lapu.jpg"><br />
</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=256</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Novel: Noli Me Tangere by José Rizal. First Published in Berlin, Germany 1887</title>
		<link>https://mandirigma.org/?p=673</link>
		<comments>https://mandirigma.org/?p=673#respond</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 May 2006 04:52:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>MO1</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books & Film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[General]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Historic Figures]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Spanish Occupation]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://mandirigma.org/?p=673</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#160; Noli Me Tangere is a novel by Filipino polymath José Rizal and first published in 1887 in Berlin, Germany. Early English translations used titles like An Eagle Flight and The Social Cancer, but more recent translations have been published using the original Latin title. Though originally written in Spanish, it is more commonly published [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-674" title="lameco eskrima, backyard eskrima, sulite" alt="kali ilustrisimo, backyard eskrima, ricketts" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/Noli_Me_Tangere.jpg" width="317" height="505" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Noli Me Tangere is a novel by Filipino polymath José Rizal and first published in 1887 in Berlin, Germany. Early English translations used titles like An Eagle Flight and The Social Cancer, but more recent translations have been published using the original Latin title.</p>
<p>Though originally written in Spanish, it is more commonly published and read in the Philippines in either English or Filipino. Together with its sequel (El Filibusterismo), the reading of Noli is obligatory for high school students all throughout the archipelago.</p>
<p>References for the novel</p>
<p>Jose Rizal, a Filipino nationalist and medical doctor, conceived the idea of writing a novel that would expose the ills of Philippine society after reading Harriet Beecher Stowe&#8217;s Uncle Tom&#8217;s Cabin. He preferred that the prospective novel express the way Filipino culture was backward, anti-progress, anti-intellectual, and not conducive to the ideas of the Age of Enlightenment. He was then a student of medicine in the Universidad Central de Madrid.</p>
<p>In a reunion of Filipinos at the house of his friend Pedro A. Paterno in Madrid on 2 January 1884, Rizal proposed the writing of a novel about the Philippines written by a group of Filipinos. His proposal was unanimously approved by the Filipinos present at the party, among whom were Pedro, Maximino and Antonio Paterno, Graciano López Jaena, Evaristo Aguirre, Eduardo de Lete, Julio Llorente and Valentin Ventura. However, this project did not materialize. The people who agreed to help Rizal with the novel did not write anything. Initially, the novel was planned to cover and describe all phases of Filipino life, but almost everybody wanted to write about women. Rizal even saw his companions spend more time gambling and flirting with Spanish women. Because of this, he pulled out of the plan of co-writing with others and decided to draft the novel alone.</p>
<p>Plot</p>
<p>Having completed his studies in Europe, young Juan Crisóstomo Ibarra y Magsalin came back to the Philippines after a 7-year absence. In his honor, Don Santiago de los Santos, a family friend commonly known as Captain Tiago, threw a get-together party, which was attended by friars and other prominent figures. One of the guests, former San Diego curate Fray Dámaso Vardolagas belittled and slandered Ibarra. Ibarra brushed off the insults and took no offense; he instead politely excused himself and left the party because of an allegedly important task.</p>
<p>The next day, Ibarra visits María Clara, his betrothed, the beautiful daughter of Captain Tiago and affluent resident of Binondo. Their long-standing love was clearly manifested in this meeting, and María Clara cannot help but reread the letters her sweetheart had written her before he went to Europe. Before Ibarra left for San Diego, Lieutenant Guevara, a Civil Guard, reveals to him the incidents preceding the death of his father, Don Rafael Ibarra, a rich hacendero of the town.</p>
<p>According to Guevara, Don Rafael was unjustly accused of being a heretic, in addition to being a subservient — an allegation brought forth by Dámaso because of Don Rafael&#8217;s non-participation in the Sacraments, such as Confession and Mass. Dámaso&#8217;s animosity against Ibarra&#8217;s father is aggravated by another incident when Don Rafael helped out on a fight between a tax collector and a child fighting, and the former&#8217;s death was blamed on him, although it was not deliberate. Suddenly, all of those who thought ill of him surfaced with additional complaints. He was imprisoned, and just when the matter was almost settled, he died of sickness in jail. Still not content with what he had done, Dámaso arranged for Don Rafael&#8217;s corpse to be dug up from the Catholic church and brought to a Chinese cemetery, because he thought it inappropriate to allow a heretic a Catholic burial ground. Unfortunately, it was raining and because of the bothersome weight of the body, the undertakers decide to throw the corpse into a nearby lake.</p>
<p>Revenge was not in Ibarra&#8217;s plans, instead he carried through his father&#8217;s plan of putting up a school, since he believed that education would pave the way to his country&#8217;s progress (all over the novel the author refers to both Spain and the Philippines as two different countries, which form part of a same nation or family, being Spain the mother and the Philippines the daughter). During the inauguration of the school, Ibarra would have been killed in a sabotage had Elías — a mysterious man who had warned Ibarra earlier of a plot to assassinate him — not saved him. Instead the hired killer met an unfortunate incident and died. The sequence of events proved to be too traumatic for María Clara who got seriously ill but was luckily cured by the medicine Ibarra sent.</p>
<p>After the inauguration, Ibarra hosted a luncheon during which Dámaso, gate-crashing the luncheon, again insulted him. Ibarra ignored the priest&#8217;s insolence, but when the latter slandered the memory of his dead father, he was no longer able to restrain himself and lunged at Dámaso, prepared to stab him for his impudence. As a consequence, Dámaso excommunicated Ibarra, taking this opportunity to persuade the already-hesitant Tiago to forbid his daughter from marrying Ibarra. The friar wished María Clara to marry Linares, a Peninsular who had just arrived from Spain.</p>
<p>With the help of the Governor-General, Ibarra&#8217;s excommunication was nullified and the Archbishop decided to accept him as a member of the Church once again. But, as fate would have it, some incident of which Ibarra had known nothing about was blamed on him, and he is wrongly arrested and imprisoned. The accusation against him was then overruled because during the litigation that followed, nobody could testify that he was indeed involved. Unfortunately, his letter to María Clara somehow got into the hands of the jury and is manipulated such that it then became evidence against him by the parish priest, Fray Salví. With Machiavellian precision, Salví framed Ibarra and ruined his life just so he could stop him from marrying María Clara and making the latter his concubine.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, in Capitan Tiago&#8217;s residence, a party was being held to announce the upcoming wedding of María Clara and Linares. Ibarra, with the help of Elías, took this opportunity to escape from prison. Before leaving, Ibarra spoke to María Clara and accused her of betraying him, thinking that she gave the letter he wrote her to the jury. María Clara explained that she would never conspire against him, but that she was forced to surrender Ibarra&#8217;s letter to Father Salvi, in exchange for the letters written by her mother even before she, María Clara, was born. The letters were from her mother, Pía Alba, to Dámaso alluding to their unborn child; and that María Clara was therefore not Captain Tiago&#8217;s biological daughter, but Dámaso&#8217;s.</p>
<p>Afterwards, Ibarra and Elías fled by boat. Elías instructed Ibarra to lie down, covering him with grass to conceal his presence. As luck would have it, they were spotted by their enemies. Elías, thinking he could outsmart them, jumped into the water. The guards rained shots on him, all the while not knowing that they were aiming at the wrong man.</p>
<p>María Clara, thinking that Ibarra had been killed in the shooting incident, was greatly overcome with grief. Robbed of hope and severely disillusioned, she asked Dámaso to confine her into a nunnery. Dámaso reluctantly agreed when she threatened to take her own life, demanding, &#8220;the nunnery or death!&#8221;[2] Unbeknownst to her, Ibarra was still alive and able to escape. It was Elías who had taken the shots.</p>
<p>It was Christmas Eve when Elías woke up in the forest fatally wounded, as it is here where he instructed Ibarra to meet him. Instead, Elías found the altar boy Basilio cradling his already-dead mother, Sisa. The latter lost her mind when she learned that her two sons, Crispín and Basilio, were chased out of the convent by the sacristan mayor on suspicions of stealing sacred objects. (The truth is that, it was the sacristan mayor who stole the objects and only pinned the blame on the two boys. The said sacristan mayor actually killed Crispín while interrogating him on the supposed location of the sacred objects. It was implied that the body was never found and the incident was covered-up by Salví).</p>
<p>Elías, convinced that he would die soon, instructs Basilio to build a funeral pyre and burn his and Sisa&#8217;s bodies to ashes. He tells Basilio that, if nobody reaches the place, he come back later on and dig for he will find gold. He also tells him (Basilio) to take the gold he finds and go to school. In his dying breath, he instructed Basilio to continue dreaming about freedom for his motherland with the words:</p>
<p>“     I shall die without seeing the dawn break upon my homeland. You, who shall see it, salute it! Do not forget those who have fallen during the night.&#8221;     ”</p>
<p>Elías died thereafter.</p>
<p>In the epilogue, it was explained that Tiago became addicted to opium and was seen to frequent the opium house in Binondo to satiate his addiction. María Clara became a nun where Salví, who has lusted over her from the beginning of the novel, regularly used her to fulfill his lust. One stormy evening, a beautiful crazy woman was seen at the top of the convent crying and cursing the heavens for the fate it has handed her. While the woman was never identified, it is suggested that the said woman was María Clara.</p>
<p>Publication history</p>
<p>Rizal finished the novel on December 1886. At first, according to one of Rizal&#8217;s biographers, Rizal feared the novel might not be printed, and that it would remain unread. He was struggling with financial constraints at the time and thought it would be hard to pursue printing the novel. A financial aid came from a friend named Máximo Viola. Rizal at first, however, hesitated but Viola insisted and ended up lending Rizal P300 for 2,000 copies; Noli was eventually printed in Berlin, Germany. The printing was finished earlier than the estimated five months. Viola arrived in Berlin in December 1886, and by March 21, 1887, Rizal had sent a copy of the novel to his friend Blumentritt.[3]</p>
<p>On August 21, 2007, a 480-page then-latest English version of Noli Me Tangere was released to major Australian book stores. The Australian edition of the novel was published by Penguin Books Classics, to represent the publication&#8217;s &#8220;commitment to publish the major literary classics of the world&#8221;.[4] American writer Harold Augenbraum, who first read the Noli in 1992, translated the novel. A writer well-acquainted with translating other Hispanophone literary works, Augenbraum proposed to translate the novel after being asked for his next assignment in the publishing company. Intrigued by the novel and knowing more about it, Penguin nixed their plan of adapting existing English versions and instead translated it on their own.[4]</p>
<p>Reaction and legacy</p>
<p>Noli Me Tangere was Rizal&#8217;s first novel. He was 26 years old at the time of its publication.</p>
<p>This novel and its sequel, El filibusterismo (nicknamed El Fili), were banned in some parts of the Philippines because of their portrayal of corruption and abuse by the country&#8217;s Spanish government and clergy. Copies of the book were smuggled in nevertheless, and when Rizal returned to the Philippines after completing medical studies, he quickly ran afoul of the local government. A few days after his arrival, Governor-General Emilio Terrero summoned Rizal to the Malacañang Palace and told him of the charge that Noli Me Tangere contained subversive statements. After a discussion, the Governor General was appeased but still unable to offer resistance against the pressure of the Church against the book. The persecution can be discerned from Rizal&#8217;s letter to Leitmeritz:<br />
“     My book made a lot of noise; everywhere, I am asked about it. They wanted to anathematize me ['to excommunicate me'] because of it&#8230; I am considered a German spy, an agent of Bismarck, they say I am a Protestant, a freemason, a sorcerer, a damned soul and evil. It is whispered that I want to draw plans, that I have a foreign passport and that I wander through the streets by night&#8230;     ”</p>
<p>Rizal was exiled to Dapitan, then later arrested for &#8220;inciting rebellion&#8221; based largely on his writings. Rizal was executed in Manila on December 30, 1896 at the age of thirty-five.</p>
<p>Rizal depicted nationality by emphasizing the qualities of Filipinos: the devotion of a Filipina and her influence on a man&#8217;s life, the deep sense of gratitude, and the solid common sense of the Filipinos under the Spanish regime.</p>
<p>The work was instrumental in creating a unified Filipino national identity and consciousness, as many natives previously identified with their respective regions. It lampooned, caricatured and exposed various elements in colonial society. Two characters in particular have become classics in Filipino culture: Maria Clara, who has become a personification of the ideal Filipina woman, loving and unwavering in her loyalty to her spouse; and the priest Father Dámaso, who reflects the covert fathering of illegitimate children by members of the Spanish clergy.</p>
<p>The book indirectly influenced a revolution, even though the author actually advocated direct representation to the Spanish government and a larger role for the Philippines within Spain&#8217;s political affairs. In 1956, the Congress of the Philippines passed the Republic Act 1425, more popularly known as the Rizal Law, which all levels of Philippine schools to teach the novel as part of their curriculum. Noli Me Tangere is being taught to third year secondary school students, while its sequel El filibusterismo is being taught for fourth year secondary school students. The novels are incorporated to their study and survey of Philippine literature.</p>
<p>Major characters</p>
<p>Ibarra</p>
<p>Juan Crisóstomo Ibarra y Magsalin, commonly referred to the novel as Ibarra or Crisóstomo, is the protagonist in the story. Son of a Filipino businessman, Don Rafael Ibarra, he studied in Europe for seven years.  Ibarra is also María Clara&#8217;s fiancé. Several sources claim that Ibarra is also Rizal&#8217;s reflection: both studied in Europe and both persons believe in the same ideas. Upon his return, Ibarra requested the local government of San Diego to construct a public school to promote education in the town.</p>
<p>In the sequel of Noli, El filibusterismo, Ibarra returned with different character and name: he called himself as Simoun, the English mestizo.</p>
<p>María Clara<br />
María Clara de los Santos y Alba, commonly referred to as María Clara, is Ibarra&#8217;s fiancée. She was raised by Capitán Tiago, Binundok&#8217;s cabeza de barangay and is the most beautiful and widely celebrated girl in San Diego.  In the later parts of the novel, María Clara&#8217;s identity was revealed as an illegitimate daughter of Father Dámaso, former parish curate of the town, and Doña Pía Alba, wife of Capitán Tiago. In the end she entered local covenant for nuns Beaterio de Santa Clara. In the epilogue dealing with the fate of the characters, Rizal stated that it is unknown if María Clara is still living within the walls of the covenant or she is already dead.</p>
<p>The character of María Clara was patterned after Leonor Rivera, Rizal&#8217;s first cousin and childhood sweetheart.</p>
<p>Capitán Tiago</p>
<p>Don Santiago de los Santos, known by his nickname Tiago and political title Capitán Tiago is a Filipino businessman and the cabeza de barangay or head of barangay of the town of Binundok. He is also the known father of María Clara.</p>
<p>In the novel, it is said that Capitán Tiago is the richest man in the region of Binondo and he possessed real properties in Pampanga and Laguna de Bay. He is also said to be a good Catholic, friend of the Spanish government and was considered as a Spanish by colonialists. Capitán Tiago never attended school, so he became a domestic helper of a Dominican friar who taught him informal education. He married Pía Alba from Santa Cruz.</p>
<p>Padre Dámaso</p>
<p>Dámaso Verdolagas, or Padre Dámaso is a Franciscan friar and the former parish curate of San Diego. He is best known as a notorious character who speaks with harsh words and has been a cruel priest during his stay in the town.  He is the real father of María Clara and an enemy of Crisóstomo&#8217;s father, Rafael Ibarra.  Later, he and María Clara had bitter arguments whether she would marry Alfonso Linares or go to a convent.[13] At the end of the novel, he is again re-assigned to a distant town and is found dead one day.</p>
<p>In popular culture, when a priest was said to be like Padre Dámaso, it means that he is a cruel but respectable individual. When one says a child is &#8220;anak ni Padre Damaso&#8221; (child of Padre Dámaso), it means that the child&#8217;s father&#8217;s identity is unknown.</p>
<p>Elías</p>
<p>Elías is Ibarra&#8217;s mysterious friend and ally. Elías made his first appearance as a pilot during a picnic of Ibarra and María Clara and her friends.[14] He wants to revolutionize the country and to be freed from Spanish oppression.</p>
<p>The 50th chapter of the novel explores the past of Elías and history of his family. In the past, Ibarra&#8217;s great-grandfather condemned Elías&#8217; grandfather of burning a warehouse which led into misfortune for Elías&#8217; family. His father was refused to be married by his mother because his father&#8217;s past and family lineage was discovered by his mother&#8217;s family. In the long run, Elías and his twin sister was raised by their maternal grandfather. When they were teenagers, their distant relatives called them hijos de bastardo or illegitimate children. One day, his sister disappeared which led him to search for her. His search led him into different places, and finally, he became a fugitive and subversive.</p>
<p>Filosofo Tacio</p>
<p>Filosofo Tacio, known by his Filipinized name Pilosopo Tasyo is another major character in the story. Seeking for reforms from the government, he expresses his ideals in paper written in a cryptographic alphabet similar from hieroglyphs and Coptic figures hoping &#8220;that the future generations may be able to decipher it&#8221; and realized the abuse and oppression done by the conquerors.</p>
<p>His full name is only known as Don Anastacio. The educated inhabitants of San Diego labeled him as Filosofo Tacio (Tacio the Sage) while others called him as Tacio el Loco (Insane Tacio) due to his exceptional talent for reasoning.</p>
<p>Doña Victorina</p>
<p>Doña Victorina de Espadaña, commonly known as Doña Victorina, is an ambitious Filipina who classifies herself as a Spanish and mimics Spanish ladies by putting on heavy make-up.[12] The novel narrates Doña Victorina&#8217;s younger days: she had lots of admirers, but she didn&#8217;t choose any of them because nobody was a Spaniard. Later on, she met and married Don Tiburcio de Espadaña, an official of the customs bureau who is about ten years her junior.  However, their marriage is childless.</p>
<p>Her husband assumes the title of medical doctor even though he never attended medical school; using fake documents and certificates, Tiburcio practices illegal medicine. Tiburcio&#8217;s usage of the title Dr. consequently makes Victorina assume the title Dra. (doctora, female doctor). Apparently, she uses the whole name Doña Victorina de los Reyes de de Espadaña, with double de to emphasize her marriage surname.  She seems to feel that this awkward titling makes her more &#8220;sophisticated.&#8221;</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-675" title="lameco eskrima, escrima, Sulite" alt="kali ilustrisimo" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/JoseRizal-1.jpg" width="434" height="564" /></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-677" title="lameco eskrima, lameco eskrima, lameco eskrima" alt="lameco eskrima, lameco eskrima, lameco eskrima" src="http://mandirigma.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/rizal-luna-fencing.jpg" width="459" height="333" /></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>https://mandirigma.org/?feed=rss2&#038;p=673</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
