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Andrés Bonifacio

Andrés Bonifacio y de Castro (Tagalog: [anˈdɾes (anˈdɾez-) bonɪˈfaʃo], Spanish: [anˈdɾez βoniˈfaθjo];[2] November 30, 1863 – May 10, 1897) was a Filipino Freemason and revolutionary leader. He is often called "The Father of the Philippine Revolution", and considered one of the national heroes of the Philippines.[3][4][5] He was one of the founders and later the Kataastaasang Pangulo (Supreme President, Presidente Supremo in Spanish, often shortened by contemporaries and historians to just Supremo)[6] of the Kataastaasan, Kagalanggalangang Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan or more commonly known as the "Katipunan", a movement which sought the independence of the Philippines from Spanish colonial rule and started the Tagalog Revolution.[7][8][5] With the onset of the Revolution, Bonifacio reorganized the Katipunan into a revolutionary government, with himself as President (Pangulo) of a nation-state called "Haring Bayang Katagalugan" ("Sovereign Nation of the Tagalog People" or "Sovereign Tagalog Nation"), also "Republika ng Katagaluguan" ("Tagalog Republic", Republica Tagala in Spanish), where in "Tagalog" referred to all those born in the Philippine islands and not merely the Tagalog ethnic group.[9][10] Hence, some historians have argued that he should be considered the First President of the Tagalogs instead of the Philippines; that is why he is not included in the current official line of succession.[9][10]

Andrés Bonifacio
Portrait photograph, c. 1896
Unofficial President of the Sovereign Tagalog Nation
President of the Philippines (unofficial)
In office
August 24, 1896 – March 22 or May 10, 1897
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byOffice abolished
Emilio Aguinaldo (as President of Tejeros Revolutionary Government)
Supremo of Katipunan
In office
November, 1895 – May 10, 1897
Preceded byRomán Basa
Succeeded byOrganization defunct
Personal details
Born
Andrés Bonifacio y de Castro

(1863-11-30)November 30, 1863[1]
Tondo, Manila,[1] Captaincy General of the Philippines, Spanish Empire
DiedMay 10, 1897(1897-05-10) (aged 33)
Maragondon, Cavite, Captaincy General of the Philippines, Spanish Empire
Cause of deathExecution
Political partyLa Liga Filipina
Katipunan
Spouse(s)
Monica
(died)

(m. 1893)
Children1
EducationSelf-educated
Signature
NicknameMaypagasa
Military service
Allegiance Katipunan
Tagalog Republic
Katipunan (Magdiwang)
Years of service1896–1897
Battles/warsPhilippine Revolution

Early life and education

Andrés Bonifacio y de Castro was born on November 30, 1863, in Tondo, Manila,[11] and was the first of six children of Catalina de Castro, a Spanish Mestiza, and Santiago Bonifacio,[12] an Alcalde[13] of Tondo, a Chinese mestizo.[4][14] His parents named him after Saint Andrew the Apostle, whose feast day falls on his birth date.[15] He learned the alphabet through his aunt. He was later enrolled in Guillermo Osmeña's private school,[16][17] and learned English while employed as a clerk-messenger by a British firm.[18] Some sources assert that he was orphaned at an early age,[19][20] but, considering the existence of an 1881 record that has Bonifacio's parents listed as living in Tondo, it is disputed by others.[21] To support his family financially, Bonifacio made canes and paper fans which he and his young siblings sold (after they were orphaned, according to the traditional view).[22] He also made posters for business firms. This became their thriving family business that continued when the men of the family, namely Andres, Ciriaco, Procopio, and Troadio, were employed with private and government companies, which provided them with decent living conditions.[23]

In his late teens, he worked as a mandatario (agent) for the British trading firm Fleming and Company,[24] where he rose to become a corredor (broker) of tar, rattan and other goods. He later transferred to Fressell and Company, a German trading firm, where he worked as a bodeguero (storehouse keeper) responsible for warehouse inventory. He was also a theater actor and often played the role of Bernardo Carpio, a fictional character in Tagalog folklore.[25]

Not finishing his formal education, Bonifacio turned to self-education by reading books. He read books about the French Revolution, biographies of the presidents of the United States, books about contemporary Philippine penal and civil codes, and novels such as Victor Hugo's Les Misérables, Eugène Sue's Le Juif errant and José Rizal's Noli Me Tángere and El filibusterismo. Aside from Tagalog and Spanish, he could speak and understand English, which he learned while working at J.M. Fleming and Co.[26][self-published source?]

Marriages

Bonifacio's first wife, Monica (surname unknown), was his neighbor in Palomar, Tondo.[27] She died of leprosy[28][29] and they had no recorded children.

In 1892, Bonifacio, a 29-year-old widower, met the 18-year-old Gregoria de Jesús[30] through his friend Teodoro Plata, who was her cousin. Gregoria, also called Oriang, was the daughter of a prominent citizen and landowner from Caloocan.[31] Gregoria's parents did not agree at first to their relationship, for Andrés was a Freemason, and Freemasons were at that time considered enemies of the Catholic Church.[32] Her parents eventually acquiesced, and Andrés and Gregoria were married in a Catholic ceremony at Binondo Church in March 1893 or 1894. The couple also were married through Katipunan rites in a friend's house in Santa Cruz, Manila on the same day of their church wedding.[33]

They had one son, born in early 1896,[34] who died of smallpox in infancy.[29][35]

Early political activism

In 1892, Bonifacio was one of the founding members[36] of José Rizal's La Liga Filipina,[37] an organization which called for political reforms in Spain's colonial government of the Philippines.[38] However, La Liga disbanded[39] after only one meeting, for Rizal was arrested and deported to Dapitan in the Western Mindanao region.[40][41] Bonifacio, Apolinario Mabini and others revived La Liga[42] in Rizal's absence and Bonifacio was active at organizing local chapters in Manila. He would become the chief propagandist of the revived Liga.[41]

La Liga Filipina contributed moral and financial support to the Propaganda Movement of Filipino reformists in Spain.[43]

Katipunan

On the night of July 7, 1892, the day after Rizal's deportation was announced, Bonifacio and others officially "founded" the Katipunan, or in full, Kataas-taasan, Kagalang-galang na Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan ("Highest and Most Respected Society of the Country's Children"; Bayan can also denote community, people, and nation).[44] The secret society sought independence from Spain through armed revolt.[45][46] It was influenced by Freemasonry through its rituals and organization, and several members including Bonifacio were also Freemasons.[47] Within the society Bonifacio used the pseudonym May pag-asa ("There is Hope").[48] Newly found documents though suggest that Katipunan has already been existing as early as January 1892.[49][50][51]

For a time, Bonifacio worked with both the Katipunan and La Liga Filipina. La Liga eventually split because some members like Bonifacio lost hope for peaceful reform and stopped their monetary aid.[47] The more conservative members, mostly wealthy members, who still believed in peaceful reforms set up the Cuerpo de Compromisarios, which pledged continued support to the reformists in Spain. The radicals were subsumed into the Katipunan.[45] From Manila, the Katipunan expanded to several provinces, including Batangas, Laguna, Cavite, Bulacan, Pampanga, and Nueva Ecija.[52] Most of its members, called Katipuneros, came from the lower and middle classes, and many of its local leaders were prominent figures in their municipalities.[53] At first exclusively male, membership was later extended to females, with Bonifacio's wife Gregoria de Jesús as a leading member.[54]

From the beginning, Bonifacio was one of the chief Katipunan officers, although he did not become its Presidente Supremo (Supreme President)[55] until 1895. He was the third head of the Katipunan after Deodato Arellano and Román Basa. Prior to this, he served as the society's comptroller and then as its 'fiscal' (advocate/procurator).[56][57] The society had its own laws, bureaucratic structure and elective leadership. For each province involved, the Katipunan Supreme Council coordinated with provincial councils in charge of public administration and military affairs, and with local councils in charge of affairs on the district or barrio level.[58][59]

Within the society, Bonifacio developed a strong friendship with Emilio Jacinto, who served as his adviser and confidant, as well as a member of the Supreme Council. Bonifacio adopted Jacinto's Kartilya primer as the official teachings of the society in place of his own Decalogue, which he judged as inferior. Bonifacio, Jacinto and Pío Valenzuela collaborated on the society's organ, Kalayaan (Freedom), which had only one printed issue. Bonifacio wrote several pieces for the paper, including the poem Pag-ibig sa Tinubúang Lupà (approx. "Love for One's Homeland[60]) under the pseudonym Agapito Bagumbayan. The publication of Kalayaan in March 1896 led to a great increase in the society's membership. The Katipunan movement spread throughout Luzon, to Panay in the Visayas and even as far as Mindanao.[61] From less than 300 members in January 1896,[52] it had 30,000 to 40,000 by August 1896.[61]

The rapid increase in Katipunan activity drew the suspicion of the Spanish authorities. By early 1896, Spanish intelligence was aware of the existence of a seditious secret society, and suspects were kept under surveillance and arrests were made. On May 3, Bonifacio held a general assembly of Katipunan leaders in Pasig, where they debated when to start the revolution. While some officers, especially Bonifacio, believed a revolution was inevitable, some members, especially Santiago Alvarez and Emilio Aguinaldo both of Cavite, expressed reservations and disagreement regarding the planned revolt due to lack of firearms. The consensus was to consult José Rizal in Dapitan before launching armed action, so Bonifacio sent Pío Valenzuela to Rizal. Rizal turned out to be against the revolution, believing it to be premature. He recommended more preparation, but suggested that, in the event the revolution did break out, they should seek the leadership of Antonio Luna, who was widely regarded as a brilliant military leader.[62]

Philippine Revolution

Start of the uprising

The Spanish authorities confirmed the existence of the Katipunan on August 19, 1896. Hundreds of Filipino suspects, both innocent and guilty, were arrested and imprisoned for treason.[63] José Rizal (José Protasio Rizal Mercado y Realonda) was then on his way to Cuba to serve as a doctor in the Spanish colonial army in exchange for his release from Dapitan.[64][65] When the news broke, Bonifacio first tried to convince Rizal, quarantined aboard a ship in Manila Bay, to escape and join the imminent revolt. Bonifacio, Emilio Jacinto and Guillermo Masangkay [nl] disguised themselves as sailors and went to the pier where Rizal's ship was anchored. Jacinto personally met with Rizal, who rejected their rescue offer.[66] Rizal himself was later arrested, tried and executed.[64]

Eluding an intensive manhunt, Bonifacio called thousands of Katipunan members to a mass gathering in Caloocan, where they decided to start their uprising. The event, marked by the tearing of cedulas (personal identity documents) was later called the "Cry of Balintawak" or "Cry of Pugad Lawin"; the exact location and date of the Cry are disputed.[67][68] The Supreme Council of the Katipunan declared a nationwide armed revolution against Spain and called for a simultaneous coordinated attack on the capital Manila on August 29. Bonifacio appointed generals to lead rebel forces to Manila. Other Katipunan councils were also informed of their plans. Before hostilities erupted, Bonifacio reorganized the Katipunan into an open de facto revolutionary government with him as Supremo of the rebel army and the Supreme Council as his cabinet.[58][69][70] On August 28, Bonifacio issued the following general proclamation:

This manifesto is for all of you. It is absolutely necessary for us to stop at the earliest possible time the nameless oppositions being perpetrated on the sons of the country who are now suffering the brutal punishment and tortures in jails, and because of this please let all the brethren know that on Saturday, the 29th of the current month, the revolution shall commence according to our agreement. For this purpose, it is necessary for all towns to rise simultaneously and attack Manila at the same time. Anybody who obstructs this sacred ideal of the people will be considered a traitor and an enemy, except if he is ill; or is not physically fit, in which case he shall be tried according to the regulations we have put in force. Mount of Liberty, 28 August 1896 – ANDRÉS BONIFACIO[7][71]

On August 30, 1896, Bonifacio personally led an attack on San Juan del Monte to capture the town's powder magazine and water station (which supplied Manila). The defending Spaniards, outnumbered, fought a delaying battle until reinforcements arrived. Once reinforced, the Spaniards drove Bonifacio's forces back with heavy casualties. Bonifacio and his troops regrouped near Marikina, San Mateo and Montalban.[72] Elsewhere, fighting between rebels and Spanish forces occurred in Mandaluyong, Sampaloc, Santa Ana, Pandacan, Pateros, Marikina, Caloocan,[73] Makati and Taguig.[72] The conventional view among Filipino historians is that the planned general Katipunan offensive on Manila was aborted in favor of Bonifacio's attack on San Juan del Monte,[72][74] which sparked a general state of rebellion in the area.[75] However, more recent studies have advanced the view that the planned offensive did push through and the rebel attacks were integrated; according to this view, Bonifacio's San Juan del Monte battle was only a part of a bigger whole – an unrecognized "Battle for Manila".[73][76] Despite his reverses, Bonifacio was not completely defeated and was still considered a threat. Further, the revolt had spread to the surrounding provinces by the end of August.[73][76]

Haring Bayang Katagalugan

Influenced by Freemasonry, the Katipunan had been organized with "its own laws, bureaucratic structure and elective leadership".[9] For each province it involved, the Supreme Council coordinated provincial councils[10] which were in charge of "public administration and military affairs on the supra-municipal or quasi-provincial level"[9] and local councils,[10] in charge of affairs "on the district or barrio level".[9] In the last days of August, the Katipunan members met in Caloocan and decided to start their revolt[9] (the event was later called the "Cry of Balintawak" or "Cry of Pugad Lawin"; the exact location and date are disputed). A day after the Cry, the Supreme Council of the Katipunan held elections, with the following results:[9][10]

Position Name
President Andrés Bonifacio
Secretary of War Teodoro Plata
Secretary of State Emilio Jacinto
Secretary of the Interior Aguedo del Rosario
Secretary of Justice Briccio Pantas
Secretary of Finance Enrique Pacheco

The above was divulged to the Spanish by the Katipunan member Pío Valenzuela while in captivity.[9][10] Teodoro Agoncillo thus wrote:

Immediately before the outbreak of the revolution, therefore, Bonifacio organized the Katipunan into a government revolving around a ‘cabinet’ composed of men of his confidence.[77]

Milagros C. Guerrero and others have described Bonifacio as "effectively" the commander-in-chief of the revolutionaries. They assert:

As commander-in-chief, Bonifacio supervised the planning of military strategies and the preparation of orders, manifests and decrees, adjudicated offenses against the nation, as well as mediated in political disputes. He directed generals and positioned troops in the fronts. On the basis of command responsibility, all victories and defeats all over the archipelago during his term of office should be attributed to Bonifacio.[9]

One name for Bonifacio's concept of the Philippine nation-state appears in surviving Katipunan documents: Haring Bayang Katagalugan ("Sovereign Nation of Katagalugan", or "Sovereign Tagalog Nation") – sometimes shortened into Haring Bayan ("Sovereign Nation"). Bayan may be rendered as "nation" or "people". Bonifacio is named as the president of the "Tagalog Republic" in an issue of the Spanish periodical La Ilustración Española y Americana published in February 1897 ("Andrés Bonifacio – Titulado "Presidente" de la República Tagala"). Another name for Bonifacio's government was Repúblika ng Katagalugan (another form of "Tagalog Republic") as evidenced by a picture of a rebel seal published in the same periodical the next month.[9][10]

Official letters and one appointment paper of Bonifacio addressed to Emilio Jacinto reveal Bonifacio's various titles and designations, as follows:[9][10]

  • President of the Supreme Council
  • Supreme President
  • President of the Sovereign Nation of Katagalugan / Sovereign Tagalog Nation
  • President of the Sovereign Nation, Founder of the Katipunan, Initiator of the Revolution
  • Office of the Supreme President, Government of the Revolution

Later, in November 1896, while encamped at Balara, Bonifacio commissioned Julio Nakpil to compose a national anthem. Nakpil produced a hymn called Marangal na Dalit ng Katagalugan ("Honorable Hymn of the Tagalog Nation/People").[78]

Eventually, an 1897 power struggle in Cavite led to command of the revolution shifting to Emilio Aguinaldo at the Tejeros Convention, where a new government was formed. Bonifacio was executed after he refused to recognize the new government. The Aguinaldo-headed Philippine Republic (Spanish: República Filipina), usually considered the "First Philippine Republic", was formally established in 1899, after a succession of revolutionary and dictatorial governments (e.g. the Tejeros government, the Biak-na-Bato Republic) also headed by Aguinaldo.

Campaigns around Manila

By December 1896, the Spanish government recognized three major centers of rebellion: Cavite (under Mariano Alvarez, Emilio Aguinaldo and others), Bulacan (under Mariano Llanera) and Morong (under Bonifacio). The revolt was most successful in Cavite,[79] which mostly fell under rebel control by September–October 1896.[80]

While Cavite is traditionally regarded as the "Heartland of the Philippine Revolution", Manila and its surrounding municipalities bore the brunt of the Spanish military campaign, becoming a no man's land. Rebels in the area were generally engaged in hit-and-run guerrilla warfare against Spanish positions in Manila, Morong, Nueva Ecija and Pampanga.[80] From Morong, Bonifacio served as tactician for rebel guerrillas and issued commands to areas other than his personal sector,[58] though his reputation suffered when he lost battles he personally led.[81]

From September to October 1896, Bonifacio supervised the establishment of Katipunan mountain and hill bases like Balara in Marikina, Pantayanin in Antipolo, Ugong in Pasig and Tungko in Bulacan. Bonifacio appointing generals for these areas, or approving selections the troops themselves made.[55]

On November 7, 1896, Bonifacio led an assault on San Mateo, Marikina and Montalban. The Spanish were forced to retreat, leaving these areas to the rebels, except for the municipal hall of San Mateo where some Spanish troops had barricaded. While Bonifacio's troops laid siege to the hall, other Katipunan forces set up defensive lines along the nearby Langka (or Nangka) river against Spanish reinforcements coming from the direction of Marikina. After three days, Spanish counterattacks broke through the Nangka river lines. The Spanish troops thus recaptured the rebel positions and surprised Bonifacio in San Mateo, who ordered a general retreat to Balara.[55] They were pursued, and Bonifacio was nearly killed shielding Emilio Jacinto from a Spanish bullet which grazed his collar.[72]

Bonifacio in Cavite

In late 1896, Bonifacio, as the recognized overall leader of the revolution, was invited to Cavite province by rebel leaders to mediate between them and unify their efforts. There were two Katipunan provincial chapters in Cavite that became rival factions: the Magdalo, headed by Emilio Aguinaldo's cousin Baldomero Aguinaldo, and the Magdiwang, headed by Mariano Álvarez, uncle of Bonifacio's wife. Leaders of both factions came from the upper class, in contrast to Bonifacio, who came from the lower middle class. After initial successes, Emilio Aguinaldo issued a manifesto in the name of the Magdalo ruling council which proclaimed a provisional and revolutionary government – despite the existence of the Katipunan government. Emilio Aguinaldo in particular had won fame for victories in the province.[82] The Magdalo and Magdiwang clashed over authority and jurisdiction and did not help each other in battle. After multiple letters were sent to Bonifacio urging him to come, in December 1896 he traveled to Cavite accompanied by his wife, his brothers Procopio and Ciriaco, and some troops, including Emilio Jacinto, Bonifacio's secretary and right-hand man. Jacinto was said to be against Bonifacio's expedition to Cavite.

Upon his arrival at Cavite, friction grew between Bonifacio and the Magdalo leaders. Apolinario Mabini, who later served as Emilio Aguinaldo's adviser, writes that at this point the Magdalo leaders "already paid little heed to his authority and orders."[83] Bonifacio was partial to the Magdiwang, perhaps due to his kinship ties with Mariano Álvarez,[84] or more importantly, due to their stronger recognition of his authority.[85] When Aguinaldo and Edilberto Evangelista went to receive Bonifacio at Zapote, they were irritated with what they regarded as his attitude of superiority. In his memoirs Aguinaldo wrote that Bonifacio acted "as if he were a king".[86][87] Another time, Bonifacio ordered the arrest of one Katipunan general from Laguna named Vicente Fernandez, who was accompanying the Magdalo leaders in paying their respect to Bonifacio, for failing to support his attack in Manila, but the other Magdalo leaders refused to surrender him. Townspeople in Noveleta (a Magdiwang town) acclaimed Bonifacio as the ruler of the Philippines, to the chagrin of the Magdalo leaders, (Bonifacio replied: "Long live Philippine liberty!").[87] Aguinaldo disputed with Bonifacio over strategic troop placements and blamed him for the capture of the town of Silang.[86] The Spanish, through Jesuit Superior Pio Pi, wrote to Aguinaldo about the possibility of peace negotiations.[86] When Bonifacio found out, he and the Magdiwang council rejected the proposed peace talks. Bonifacio was also angered that the Spanish considered Aguinaldo the "chief of the rebellion" instead of him.[86] However, Aguinaldo continued to arrange negotiations which never took place.[88] Bonifacio believed Aguinaldo was willing to surrender the revolution.[88]

Bonifacio was also subject to rumors that he had stolen Katipunan funds, his sister was the mistress of a priest, and he was an agent provocateur paid by friars to foment unrest. Also circulated were anonymous letters which told the people of Cavite not to idolize Bonifacio because he was a Mason, a mere Manila employee, allegedly an atheist, and uneducated. According to these letters, Bonifacio did not deserve the title of Supremo since only God was supreme. This last allegation was made despite the fact that Supremo was meant to be used in conjunction with Presidente, i.e. Presidente Supremo (Supreme President, Kataas-taasang Pangulo) to distinguish the president of the Katipunan Supreme Council from council presidents of subordinate Katipunan chapters like the Magdalo and Magdiwang; in other words, while Mariano Álvarez was the Magdiwang president, and Baldomero Aguinaldo was the Magdalo president, Bonifacio was the Supreme President.[85] Bonifacio suspected the rumor-mongering to be the work of the Magdalo leader Daniel Tirona. He confronted Tirona, whose airy reply provoked Bonifacio to such anger that he drew a gun and would have shot Tirona if others had not intervened.[89][90]

On December 31, Bonifacio and the Magdalo and Magdiwang leaders held a meeting in Imus, ostensibly to determine the leadership of Cavite in order to end the rivalry between the two factions. The issue of whether the Katipunan should be replaced by a revolutionary government was brought up by the Magdalo, and this eclipsed the rivalry issue. The Magdalo argued that the Katipunan, as a secret society, should have ceased to exist once the Revolution was underway. They also held that Cavite should not be divided. Bonifacio and the Magdiwang contended that the Katipunan served as their revolutionary government since it had its own constitution, laws, and provincial and municipal governments. Edilberto Evangelista presented a draft constitution for the proposed government to Bonifacio but he rejected it as it was too similar to the Spanish Maura Law. Upon the event of restructuring, Bonifacio was given carte blanche to appoint a committee tasked with setting up a new government; he would also be in charge of this committee. He tasked Emilio Aguinaldo to record the minutes of the meeting and requested for it to establish this authority, but these were never done and never provided.[91][92]

The Tejeros Convention

On March 22, 1897, the revolutionary leaders held an important meeting in a Friar Estate Residence at Tejeros to resume their discussions regarding the escalating tension between the Magdalo and Magdiwang forces; And also to settle once-and-for-all the issue of governance within the Katipunan through an election.[93] Amidst implications on whether the government of the "Katipunan" should be established as a monarchy or as a republic, Bonifacio maintained that it should be established as a republic. According to him, they were all in opposition to the King of Spain, and all of the government's members of any given rank should serve under the principle of liberty, equality, and fraternity, upon which republicanism was founded.[55][6] Despite Bonifacio's concern on the lack of officials and representatives from other provinces, he was obliged to proceed with the election.[94]

Before the election began, he asked that the results be respected by everyone, and all agreed. The Magdalo faction voted their own Emilio Aguinaldo President in absentia, as he was involved in the battle of Perez Dasmariñas, which was then ongoing.[93][95][96] The resulting revolutionary government established at Tejeros, calling itself the Republica de Filipinas (Republic of the Philippines) around a month later, was later superseded by a number of reorganized revolutionary governments also headed by Aguinaldo. These included the Republica de Filipinas of November 1897, commonly known today as the "Republic of Biak-na-Bato", the Hong Kong Junta government-in-exile, the dictatorial government under which Philippine independence was proclaimed on June 12, 1898, and the revolutionary government now commonly known as the First Philippine Republic or "Malolos Republic", inaugurated on January 23, 1899[97] as the Republica Filipina (Philippine Republic). The 1899 government is now officially considered to be the true "first" Republic of the Philippines, with the present-day government of the Philippines thus being the "fifth" Republic.

Bonifacio received the second-highest number of votes for president. Though it was suggested that he be automatically be awarded the Vice Presidency, no one seconded the motion and the Election continued. Mariano Trías of the Magdiwang was elected vice president. Bonifacio was the last to be elected, as Director of the Interior. Daniel Tirona, protested Bonifacio being appointed as Director of the Interior on the grounds that the position should not be occupied by a person without a lawyer's diploma. Tirona suggested a prominent lawyer for the position such as Jose del Rosario. Insulted and angered, Bonifacio demanded an apology, since the voters had agreed to respect the election results. Tirona ignored Bonifacio's demand for apology which drove Bonifacio to draw his gun and again he nearly shot Tirona, who hid among the people, but he was restrained by Artemio Ricarte of the Magdiwang, who had been elected Captain-General.[98] Bonifacio declared: "In my capacity as chairman of this convention, and as Presidente Supremo of the Most Venerable Katipunan of the Sons of the People, which association is known and acknowledged by all, I hereby declare null and void all matters approved in this meeting."[99] He then promptly left the premises.[98][100]

After the Tejeros Convention

On March 23, 1897, the day after the Tejeros convention, Aguinaldo surreptitiously took his oath of office as president in a chapel officiated by a Catholic priest Cenon Villafranca who was under the authority of the Pope in Rome.[101]: 109  According to Gen. Santiago Alvarez, guards were posted outside with strict instructions not to let in any unwanted partisan from the Magdiwang faction while the oath-taking took place.[102] Artemio Ricarte also took his office "with great reluctance" and made a declaration that he found the Tejeros elections "dirty or shady" and "not been in conformity with the true will of the people."[103]

Meanwhile, Bonifacio met with his remaining supporters and drew up the Acta de Tejeros, wherein they gave their reasons for not accepting the election results. Bonifacio alleged the election was fraudulent due to cheating and accused Aguinaldo of treason for his negotiations with the Spanish.[104] In their memoirs Santiago Álvarez (son of Mariano) and Gregoria de Jesús both alleged that many ballots were already filled out before being distributed, and Guillermo Masangkay contended there were more ballots prepared than voters present. Álvarez writes that Bonifacio had been warned by a Cavite leader Diego Mojica of the rigged ballots before the votes were canvassed, but he had done nothing.[55][105] The Acta de Tejeros was signed by Bonifacio and 44 others, including Artemio Ricarte, Mariano Alvarez and Pascual Alvarez. Then, in a later meeting on April 19 in Naic, another document, the Naic Military Agreement, was drawn up which declared that its 41 signatories, "... having discovered the treason committed by certain officers who have been sowing discord and conniving with the Spaniards [and other offensive acts]", had "agreed to deliver the people from this grave danger" by raising an army corps "by persuasion or force" under the command of General Pio del Pilar. The document's 41 signatories included Bonifacio, Ricarte and del Pilar.[106][107] The meeting was interrupted by Aguinaldo and del Pilar. Mariano Noriel and others present then promptly returned to Aguinaldo's fold.[86][108] Aguinaldo attempted to persuade Bonifacio to cooperate with his government, but Bonifacio refused and proceeded to Indang, Cavite planning to get out of Cavite and proceed back to Morong.[109]

In late April, Aguinaldo fully assumed the presidential office after consolidating his position among the Cavite elite – most of Bonifacio's Magdiwang supporters shifting allegiance to Aguinaldo.[110] Aguinaldo's government then ordered the arrest of Bonifacio, who was then moving out of Cavite.[111][112]

Trial and death

 
The Bonifacio shrine at the foot of Mount Nagpatong and Mount Buntis in Maragondon, Cavite where it is believed he was executed, on May 10, 1897.

In April 1897, Aguinaldo ordered the arrest of Bonifacio after he received a letter alleging that Bonifacio had burned down a village and ordered the burning of the church of Indang after townspeople refused to give him provisions. Many of the principal men of Indang, among them Severino de las Alas, presented Emilio Aguinaldo with several complaints against Bonifacio that the Supremo's men stole carabaos (water buffaloes) and other work animals by force and butchered them for food. On April 25, a party of Aguinaldo's men led by Colonel Agapito Bonzón and Major José Ignacio "Intsik" Paua caught up with Bonifacio at his camp in barrio Limbon, Indang. The unsuspecting Bonifacio received them cordially. Early the next day, Bonzón and Paua attacked Bonifacio's camp. Bonifacio was surprised and refused to fight against "fellow Tagalogs", ordering his men to hold their fire, but shots were nevertheless exchanged. Bonifacio was shot in the arm by Bonzón, and Paua stabbed him in the neck but was prevented from striking further by one of Bonifacio's men, who offered to die in Bonifacio's place. Andrés's brother Ciriaco was shot dead, while his other brother Procopio was beaten, and his wife Gregoria may have been raped by Bonzón. From Indang, a half-starved and wounded Bonifacio was carried by hammock to Naic, which had become President Aguinaldo's headquarters.[113]

Bonifacio's party was brought to Naic initially and then to Maragondon, Cavite, where he and Procopio stood trial on May 5, 1897, on charges of sedition and treason against Aguinaldo's government and conspiracy to murder Aguinaldo.[110][114] The jury was composed entirely of Aguinaldo's men and even Bonifacio's defence lawyer himself declared his client's guilt. Bonifacio was barred from confronting the state witness on the charge of conspiracy to murder on the grounds that the latter had been killed in battle. However, after the trial the witness was seen alive with the prosecutors.[115][116]

The Bonifacio brothers were found guilty, despite insufficient evidence, and were recommended to be executed. Aguinaldo commuted the sentence to deportation on May 8, 1897, but Pío del Pilar and Mariano Noriel persuaded him to withdraw the order for the sake of preserving unity. In this they were seconded by Mamerto Natividád and other bona fide supporters of Aguinaldo.[117] The Bonifacio brothers were executed on May 10, 1897, in the mountains of Maragondon.[117][118] Apolinario Mabini wrote that Bonifacio's death demoralized many rebels from Manila, Laguna and Batangas who had come to help those in Cavite, and caused them to quit.[83] In other areas, Bonifacio's close associates like Emilio Jacinto and Macario Sakay continued the Katipunan and never recognized Aguinaldo's authority.[78]

Historical controversies

The historical assessment of Bonifacio involves several controversial points. His death is alternately viewed as a justified execution for treason, and a "legal murder" fueled by politics. Some historians consider him to be the rightful first President of the Philippines instead of Aguinaldo. Some historians have also advocated that Bonifacio share or even take the place of José Rizal as the (foremost) Philippine national hero. The purported discovery of Bonifacio's remains has also been questioned.

Trial and execution

Historians have condemned the trial of the Bonifacio brothers as unjust. The jury was entirely composed of Aguinaldo's men; Bonifacio's defense lawyer acted more like a prosecutor as he himself declared Bonifacio's guilt and instead appealed for less punishment; and Bonifacio was not allowed to confront the state witness for the charge of conspiracy on the grounds that the latter had been killed in battle, but later the witness was seen with the prosecutors.[119][120]

Teodoro Agoncillo writes that Bonifacio's declaration of authority in opposition to Aguinaldo posed a danger to the revolution, because a split in the rebel forces would result in almost certain defeat by their united and well-armed Spanish foe.[117] In contrast, Renato Constantino contends that Bonifacio was neither a danger to the revolution in general for he still planned to fight the Spanish, nor to the revolution in Cavite since he was leaving; but Bonifacio was definitely a threat to the Cavite leaders who wanted control of the Revolution, so he was eliminated. Constantino contrasts Bonifacio who had no record of compromise with the Spanish with the Cavite leaders who did compromise, resulting in the Pact of Biak-na-Bato whereas the revolution was officially halted and its leaders exiled, though many Filipinos continued to fight especially Katipunan leaders used to be close to Bonifacio (Aguinaldo eventually, unofficially allied with the United States, did return to take charge of the revolution during the Spanish–American War).[121]

Historians have also discussed the motives of the Cavite government to replace Bonifacio, and whether it had the right to do so. The Magdalo provincial council which helped establish a republican government led by one of their own was only one of many such councils in the pre-existing Katipunan government.[122][123] Therefore, Constantino and Alejo Villanueva write that Aguinaldo and his faction may be considered counter-revolutionary as well – as guilty of violating Bonifacio's constituted authority just as they considered Bonifacio to violate theirs.[122][124] Aguinaldo's own adviser and official Apolinario Mabini writes that he was "primarily answerable for insubordination against the head of the Katipunan of which he was a member".[83] Aguinaldo's authority was not immediately recognized by all rebels. If Bonifacio had escaped Cavite, he would have had the right as the Katipunan leader to prosecute Aguinaldo for treason instead of the other way around.[125] Constantino and Villanueva also interpret the Tejeros Convention as the culmination of a movement by members of the upper class represented by Aguinaldo to wrest power from Bonifacio who represented the middle and lower classes.[124][126] Regionalism among the Cavite rebels, dubbed "Cavitismo" by Constantino, has also been put forward as motivation for the replacement of Bonifacio.[127][128][129] Mabini considered the execution as criminal and "assassination...the first victory of personal ambition over true patriotism."[130] He also noted that "All the electors [at the Tejeros Convention] were friends of Don Emilio Aguinaldo and Don Mariano Trías, who were united, while Bonifacio, although he had established his integrity, was looked upon with distrust only because he was not a native of the province: this explains his resentment."[83]

Writing retrospectively in 1948, Aguinaldo explained that he initially commuted the sentence of death but rescinded his commutation at the urging of Generals Mariano Noriel and General Pio del Pilar.[131]

There are differing accounts of Bonifacio's manner of execution. The commanding officer of the execution party, Lazaro Macapagal, said in two separate accounts that the Bonifacio brothers were shot to death, which is the orthodox interpretation. Macapagal's second account has Bonifacio attempting to escape after his brother is shot, but he is also killed while running away. Macapagal writes that they buried the brothers in shallow graves dug with bayonets and marked by twigs.[132]

However, another account states that after his brother was shot, Bonifacio was stabbed and hacked to death. This was allegedly done while he lay prone in a hammock in which he was carried to the site, being too weak to walk.[85] This version was maintained by Guillermo Masangkay, who claimed to have gotten this information from one of Macapagal's men.[132] Also, one account used to corroborate this version is of an alleged eyewitness, a farmer who claimed he saw five men hacking a man in a hammock.[85] Historian Milagros Guerrero also says Bonifacio was bayoneted, and that the brothers were left unburied.[133] After bones said to be Bonifacio's – including a fractured skull – were discovered in 1918, Masangkay claimed the forensic evidence supported his version of events.[132] Writer Adrian Cristobal notes that accounts of Bonifacio's captivity and trial state he was very weak due to his wounds being left untreated; he thus doubts that Bonifacio was strong enough to make a last dash for freedom as Macapagal claimed.[85] Historian Ambeth Ocampo, who doubts the Bonifacio bones were authentic, thus also doubts the possibility of Bonifacio's death by this manner.[132]

Bonifacio as first Philippine President

Some historians such as Milagros Guerrero, Emmanuel Encarnación, Ramón Villegas and Michael Charleston Chua have pushed for the recognition of Bonifacio as the first President of the Philippines instead of Aguinaldo, the officially recognized one. This view emphasizes that Bonifacio was not just the leader of the Katipunan as a revolutionary secret society, as traditional historiography has emphasized, but that he also established and headed a revolutionary government through the Katipunan from 1896 to 1897, before a revolutionary government headed by Aguinaldo was first formed at the Tejeros Convention. Guerrero writes that Bonifacio had a concept of the Philippine nation called Haring Bayang Katagalugan ("Sovereign Tagalog Nation") which was displaced by Aguinaldo's concept of Filipinas. In documents predating Tejeros and the First Philippine Republic of 1899, Bonifacio is called the president of the "Sovereign [Tagalog] Nation" and the "Tagalog Republic".[58][69][85][134]

The term Tagalog historically refers to an ethnic group, their language, and script. Historians have thus viewed Bonifacio's concept of the Philippine nation as restricted to the Tagalog-speaking regions of Luzon, as compared to Aguinaldo's view of Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao (comprising the modern Philippines).

In their memoirs, Emilio Aguinaldo and other Magdalo people claim Bonifacio became the head of the Magdiwang, receiving the title Harì ng Bayan ("King of the Nation") with Mariano Álvarez as his second-in-command.[86][135][6] Historians such as Carlos Quirino and Michael Charleston Chua suggest these claims stem from a misunderstanding or misrepresentation of Bonifacio's neologism Haring Bayan ("Sovereign Nation") as referring to Bonifacio himself instead of his concept of the nation, as was in truth reflected in his title Pangulo ng Haring Bayang Katagalugan ("President of the Sovereign Tagalog Nation"), sometimes shortened to Pangulo ng Haring Bayan ("President of the Sovereign Nation").[136][6] Santiago Álvarez (son of Mariano) distinguishes between the Magdiwang government and the Katipunan Supreme Council headed by Bonifacio.[55]

According to historian Chua, the "first President" issue has been confounded by over a century of Philippine historiography most often referring to Bonifacio as "The Supremo" and taking it to mean "The Supreme Leader", thus ultimately taking him to have had dictatorial or monarchist ambitions as opposed to the later democratic and republican Philippine Presidents, when in fact "Supremo" was only a contraction of Spanish Presidente Supremo - a translation of Bonifacio's actual title as head of the Katipunan in Tagalog, Kataas-taasang Pangulo (Supreme President) - and based on surviving documents, Bonifacio generally did not call himself by the plain term "Supremo" despite other people's usage, but instead styled himself "Pangulo", i.e. President.[6] Chua further writes:

...even inside the Katipunan, Bonifacio struggled to make people understand his concept of the Haring Bayan not as an individual or a King, but as something else... Haring Bayan really meant the King, or the power, is the people (Haring Bayan), which is basically "The Sovereign Nation"... So when he signed himself as Pangulo ng Haring Bayan past 24 August 1896, that means he intended to be president of a national revolutionary government which aimed to be a democracy.[6]

Bonifacio as national hero

 
Andrés Bonifacio Monument in Caloocan is considered the most symbolic of all the monuments in the country, even grander than Motto Stella. It is sculpted by National Artist Guillermo Tolentino.

José Rizal is generally considered the foremost of the national heroes of the Philippines and often "the" national hero, albeit not in law, but Bonifacio has been suggested as a more worthy candidate on the grounds of having started the Philippine Revolution.[113] Teodoro Agoncillo notes that the Philippine national hero, unlike those of other countries, is not "the leader of its liberation forces".[137] Renato Constantino writes that Rizal is a "United States-sponsored hero" who was promoted as the greatest Filipino hero during the American colonial period of the Philippines – after Aguinaldo lost the Philippine–American War. The United States promoted Rizal, who was taken to represent peaceful political advocacy, instead of more radical figures whose ideas could inspire resistance against American rule.[138] Specifically, Rizal was selected over Bonifacio who was viewed as "too radical" and Apolinario Mabini who was "unregenerate."[139]

Historian Ambeth Ocampo gives the opinion that arguing for Bonifacio as the "better" hero on the grounds that he, not Rizal, began the Philippine Revolution, is moot since Rizal inspired Bonifacio, the Katipunan, and the Revolution. Even prior to his banishment to Dapitan, Rizal was already regarded by the Filipino people as a national hero, having been elected as honorary president by the Katipunan.[113] Other historians also detail that Bonifacio was a follower of Rizal's La Liga Filipina. León María Guerrero notes that while Rizal did not give his blessing to the Katipunan because he believed the time was premature, he did not condemn the aim of independence per se.[140] Teodoro Agoncillo gives the opinion that Bonifacio should not replace Rizal as national hero, but they should be honored "side by side".[137]

Despite popular recognition of Rizal as "the Philippine national hero", the title itself has no explicit legal definition in present Philippine law. Rizal and Bonifacio, however, are given the implied recognition of being national heroes because they are commemorated annually nationwideRizal Day on December 30 and Bonifacio Day on November 30.[141] According to the website of the National Center for Culture and the Arts:

Despite the lack of any official declaration explicitly proclaiming them as national heroes, [Rizal and Bonifacio] remain admired and revered for their roles in Philippine history. Heroes, according to historians, should not be legislated.

Their appreciation should be better left to academics. Acclamation for heroes, they felt, would be recognition enough.[141]

Bonifacio's bones

In 1918, the American colonial government of the Philippines mounted a search for Bonifacio's remains in Maragondon. A group consisting of government officials, former rebels, and a man reputed to be Bonifacio's servant found bones which they claimed were Bonifacio's in a sugarcane field on March 17. The bones were placed in an urn and put into the care of the National Library of the Philippines. They were housed at the Library's headquarters in the Legislative Building in Ermita, Manila, together with some of Bonifacio's papers and personal belongings. The authenticity of the bones was much disputed at the time and has been challenged as late as 2001 by Ambeth Ocampo. When Emilio Aguinaldo ran for President of the Commonwealth of the Philippines in 1935, his opponent Manuel L. Quezon (the eventual victor) invoked the memory of Bonifacio against him, the bones being the result of Bonifacio's execution by the revolutionary government headed by Aguinaldo. During World War II, the Philippines was invaded by Japan beginning on December 8, 1941. The bones were lost due to the widespread destruction and looting during the Allied capture of Manila in February 1945.[132][142][143]

List of works

  • "Mi abanico" (circa. 1870s)
  • "Katapusang Hibik ng Pilipinas"
  • "Ang Dapat Mabatid ng Mga Tagalog" (1896)
  • "Pag-ibig sa Tinubuang Lupa" (1896)

Portrayal in the media

Notes

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References

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  • Aguinaldo, Emilio (1964), Mga gunita ng himagsikan, Manila.
  • Sagmit; et al. (2007), The Filipino Moving Onward 5' 2007 Ed., Rex Bookstore, Inc., ISBN 978-971-23-4154-0, from the original on June 29, 2016, retrieved November 28, 2015.
  • Álvarez, Santiago (1992), Malay, Paula Carolina S. (ed.), The Katipunan and the Revolution: Memoirs of a General, Ateneo de Manila University Press, ISBN 971-550-077-3.
  • Cristobal, Adrian (2005) [1997], The Tragedy of the Revolution, University of the Philippines Press, ISBN 971-542-471-6.
  • Borromeo-Buehler, Soledad Masangkay (1998), The Cry of Balintawak: a contrived controversy, Ateneo de Manila University Press, ISBN 978-971-550-278-8.
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  • Delmendo, Sharon (2000), "Pax Americana and the Pacific Theater", in Tolentino, Roland (ed.), Geopolitics of the visible: essays on Philippine film cultures, Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, ISBN 971-550-358-6, from the original on November 28, 2020, retrieved November 28, 2015.
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  • Rodao García, Florentino; Rodriguez, Felice Noelle; Conference, Asociación Española de Estudios del PacíFico (2001), The Philippine Revolution of 1896:Ordinary Lives in Extraordinary Times, Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press, ISBN 971-550-386-1, from the original on October 20, 2018, retrieved October 1, 2020.
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  • Mabini, Apolinario (1969), "CHAPTER VIII: First Stage of the Revolution", in Guerrero, Leon Ma. (ed.), The Philippine Revolution, National Historical Commission, from the original on December 16, 2016, retrieved July 18, 2009.
  • Morallos, Chando P. (1998), Treasures of the National Library, Manila: Quiapo Printing, ISBN 971-556-018-0.
  • Nakpil, Julio (1997) [1964], Alzona, Encarnacion (ed.), Julio Nakpil and the Philippine Revolution: With the Autobiography of Gregoria de Jesus, Quezon City: Academic Publishing Corporation, ISBN 971-707-048-2, from the original on June 17, 2016, retrieved November 28, 2015.
  • Ocampo, Ambeth (2001), Bones of Contention: The Bonifacio Lectures, Anvil Publishing, Inc., ISBN 971-27-1151-X.
  • Ocampo, Ambeth (June 1, 2016). "Rediscovering PH through Filipiniana". INQUIRER.net. INQUIRER.net. from the original on June 7, 2019. Retrieved June 7, 2019. ... [Joel S.] Regala went to the archives and found the 1881 records on Andres Bonifacio! Reproduced in the book [In the Blood] is the page where you find the parents of the hero: Santiago Bonifacio (aged 39) and Catalina de Castro (aged 36).... This small bit off information disproves the textbook story that Andres and his siblings were orphaned young..
  • Ocampo, Ambeth (1999), Rizal Without the Overcoat (Expanded ed.), Anvil Publishing, Inc., ISBN 971-27-0920-5.
  • Quirino, Carlos (1969), The Young Aguinaldo: From Kawit to Biyak-na-Bato, Manila.
  • Ronquillo, Carlos (1996), Isagani Medina (ed.), Ilang talata tungkol sa paghihimagsik nang 1896–1897, Quezon City: University of the Philippines Press.
  • Salazar, Zeus (1994), Agosto 29–30, 1896: Ang pagsalakay ni Bonifacio sa Maynila, Quezon City: Miranda Bookstore.
  • Villanueva, Alejo (1989), Bonifacio's Unfinished Revolution, Quezon City: New Day Publishers, ISBN 9789711004040, retrieved August 18, 2019
  • Zaide, Gregorio (1984), Philippine History and Government, National Bookstore Printing Press.
  • Zaide, Sonia M. (1999), The Philippines: A Unique Nation, All-Nations Publishing, ISBN 978-971-642-071-5, from the original on November 19, 2016, retrieved November 12, 2016

External links

  • Works by or about Andrés Bonifacio at Internet Archive
  • Works by Andrés Bonifacio at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Andres Bonifacio: 1863–1897. United States Library of Congress
  • Full text and online collection of court documents in Spanish and old Tagalog with regards to the Andres and Procopio Bonifacio trial.
  • English translation of the historical court documents and testimonies in the trial and execution of Andres and Procopio Bonifacio processed by
  • Summary and full text of an article written by Andrés Bonifacio in the Katipunan newspaper Kalayaan posted in
  • "Transcript of the Trial of Andres Bonifacio". malacanang.gov.ph. Retrieved November 17, 2019.
  • "Aguinaldo 'confession' letters on Bonifacio execution fetch P5 million at auction". ABS-CBN News (with image of a typewritten account amended in Emilio Aguinaldo’s handwriting). February 23, 2019.
Political offices
New office Unofficial President of the Sovereign Tagalog Nation
August 24, 1896 – March 10 or 22, 1897
Succeeded byas President of the Philippines

andrés, bonifacio, this, article, about, person, andres, bonifacio, other, uses, bonifacio, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, bonifacio, second, maternal, family, name, castro, castro, tagalog, anˈdɾes, anˈdɾez, bonɪˈfaʃo, spanish, anˈdɾez, βoniˈf. This article is about the person Andres Bonifacio For other uses see Bonifacio In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Bonifacio and the second or maternal family name is de Castro Andres Bonifacio y de Castro Tagalog anˈdɾes anˈdɾez bonɪˈfaʃo Spanish anˈdɾez boniˈfa8jo 2 November 30 1863 May 10 1897 was a Filipino Freemason and revolutionary leader He is often called The Father of the Philippine Revolution and considered one of the national heroes of the Philippines 3 4 5 He was one of the founders and later the Kataastaasang Pangulo Supreme President Presidente Supremo in Spanish often shortened by contemporaries and historians to just Supremo 6 of the Kataastaasan Kagalanggalangang Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan or more commonly known as the Katipunan a movement which sought the independence of the Philippines from Spanish colonial rule and started the Tagalog Revolution 7 8 5 With the onset of the Revolution Bonifacio reorganized the Katipunan into a revolutionary government with himself as President Pangulo of a nation state called Haring Bayang Katagalugan Sovereign Nation of the Tagalog People or Sovereign Tagalog Nation also Republika ng Katagaluguan Tagalog Republic Republica Tagala in Spanish where in Tagalog referred to all those born in the Philippine islands and not merely the Tagalog ethnic group 9 10 Hence some historians have argued that he should be considered the First President of the Tagalogs instead of the Philippines that is why he is not included in the current official line of succession 9 10 Andres BonifacioPortrait photograph c 1896Unofficial President of the Sovereign Tagalog NationPresident of the Philippines unofficial In office August 24 1896 March 22 or May 10 1897Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byOffice abolished Emilio Aguinaldo as President of Tejeros Revolutionary Government Supremo of KatipunanIn office November 1895 May 10 1897Preceded byRoman BasaSucceeded byOrganization defunctPersonal detailsBornAndres Bonifacio y de Castro 1863 11 30 November 30 1863 1 Tondo Manila 1 Captaincy General of the Philippines Spanish EmpireDiedMay 10 1897 1897 05 10 aged 33 Maragondon Cavite Captaincy General of the Philippines Spanish EmpireCause of deathExecutionPolitical partyLa Liga FilipinaKatipunanSpouse s Monica died wbr Gregoria de Jesus m 1893 wbr Children1EducationSelf educatedSignatureNicknameMaypagasaMilitary serviceAllegianceKatipunan Tagalog Republic Katipunan Magdiwang Years of service1896 1897Battles warsPhilippine Revolution Cry of Pugad Lawin Battle of Manila 1896 Battle of San Juan del Monte Battle of Pasong Tamo Battle of San Mateo and Montalban Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Marriages 3 Early political activism 4 Katipunan 5 Philippine Revolution 5 1 Start of the uprising 5 2 Haring Bayang Katagalugan 5 3 Campaigns around Manila 5 4 Bonifacio in Cavite 5 5 The Tejeros Convention 6 After the Tejeros Convention 7 Trial and death 8 Historical controversies 8 1 Trial and execution 8 2 Bonifacio as first Philippine President 8 3 Bonifacio as national hero 8 4 Bonifacio s bones 9 List of works 10 Portrayal in the media 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksEarly life and education EditAndres Bonifacio y de Castro was born on November 30 1863 in Tondo Manila 11 and was the first of six children of Catalina de Castro a Spanish Mestiza and Santiago Bonifacio 12 an Alcalde 13 of Tondo a Chinese mestizo 4 14 His parents named him after Saint Andrew the Apostle whose feast day falls on his birth date 15 He learned the alphabet through his aunt He was later enrolled in Guillermo Osmena s private school 16 17 and learned English while employed as a clerk messenger by a British firm 18 Some sources assert that he was orphaned at an early age 19 20 but considering the existence of an 1881 record that has Bonifacio s parents listed as living in Tondo it is disputed by others 21 To support his family financially Bonifacio made canes and paper fans which he and his young siblings sold after they were orphaned according to the traditional view 22 He also made posters for business firms This became their thriving family business that continued when the men of the family namely Andres Ciriaco Procopio and Troadio were employed with private and government companies which provided them with decent living conditions 23 In his late teens he worked as a mandatario agent for the British trading firm Fleming and Company 24 where he rose to become a corredor broker of tar rattan and other goods He later transferred to Fressell and Company a German trading firm where he worked as a bodeguero storehouse keeper responsible for warehouse inventory He was also a theater actor and often played the role of Bernardo Carpio a fictional character in Tagalog folklore 25 Not finishing his formal education Bonifacio turned to self education by reading books He read books about the French Revolution biographies of the presidents of the United States books about contemporary Philippine penal and civil codes and novels such as Victor Hugo s Les Miserables Eugene Sue s Le Juif errant and Jose Rizal s Noli Me Tangere and El filibusterismo Aside from Tagalog and Spanish he could speak and understand English which he learned while working at J M Fleming and Co 26 self published source Marriages EditBonifacio s first wife Monica surname unknown was his neighbor in Palomar Tondo 27 She died of leprosy 28 29 and they had no recorded children In 1892 Bonifacio a 29 year old widower met the 18 year old Gregoria de Jesus 30 through his friend Teodoro Plata who was her cousin Gregoria also called Oriang was the daughter of a prominent citizen and landowner from Caloocan 31 Gregoria s parents did not agree at first to their relationship for Andres was a Freemason and Freemasons were at that time considered enemies of the Catholic Church 32 Her parents eventually acquiesced and Andres and Gregoria were married in a Catholic ceremony at Binondo Church in March 1893 or 1894 The couple also were married through Katipunan rites in a friend s house in Santa Cruz Manila on the same day of their church wedding 33 They had one son born in early 1896 34 who died of smallpox in infancy 29 35 Early political activism EditMain article La Liga Filipina In 1892 Bonifacio was one of the founding members 36 of Jose Rizal s La Liga Filipina 37 an organization which called for political reforms in Spain s colonial government of the Philippines 38 However La Liga disbanded 39 after only one meeting for Rizal was arrested and deported to Dapitan in the Western Mindanao region 40 41 Bonifacio Apolinario Mabini and others revived La Liga 42 in Rizal s absence and Bonifacio was active at organizing local chapters in Manila He would become the chief propagandist of the revived Liga 41 La Liga Filipina contributed moral and financial support to the Propaganda Movement of Filipino reformists in Spain 43 Katipunan EditMain article Katipunan On the night of July 7 1892 the day after Rizal s deportation was announced Bonifacio and others officially founded the Katipunan or in full Kataas taasan Kagalang galang na Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan Highest and Most Respected Society of the Country s Children Bayan can also denote community people and nation 44 The secret society sought independence from Spain through armed revolt 45 46 It was influenced by Freemasonry through its rituals and organization and several members including Bonifacio were also Freemasons 47 Within the society Bonifacio used the pseudonym May pag asa There is Hope 48 Newly found documents though suggest that Katipunan has already been existing as early as January 1892 49 50 51 For a time Bonifacio worked with both the Katipunan and La Liga Filipina La Liga eventually split because some members like Bonifacio lost hope for peaceful reform and stopped their monetary aid 47 The more conservative members mostly wealthy members who still believed in peaceful reforms set up the Cuerpo de Compromisarios which pledged continued support to the reformists in Spain The radicals were subsumed into the Katipunan 45 From Manila the Katipunan expanded to several provinces including Batangas Laguna Cavite Bulacan Pampanga and Nueva Ecija 52 Most of its members called Katipuneros came from the lower and middle classes and many of its local leaders were prominent figures in their municipalities 53 At first exclusively male membership was later extended to females with Bonifacio s wife Gregoria de Jesus as a leading member 54 From the beginning Bonifacio was one of the chief Katipunan officers although he did not become its Presidente Supremo Supreme President 55 until 1895 He was the third head of the Katipunan after Deodato Arellano and Roman Basa Prior to this he served as the society s comptroller and then as its fiscal advocate procurator 56 57 The society had its own laws bureaucratic structure and elective leadership For each province involved the Katipunan Supreme Council coordinated with provincial councils in charge of public administration and military affairs and with local councils in charge of affairs on the district or barrio level 58 59 Within the society Bonifacio developed a strong friendship with Emilio Jacinto who served as his adviser and confidant as well as a member of the Supreme Council Bonifacio adopted Jacinto s Kartilya primer as the official teachings of the society in place of his own Decalogue which he judged as inferior Bonifacio Jacinto and Pio Valenzuela collaborated on the society s organ Kalayaan Freedom which had only one printed issue Bonifacio wrote several pieces for the paper including the poem Pag ibig sa Tinubuang Lupa approx Love for One s Homeland 60 under the pseudonym Agapito Bagumbayan The publication of Kalayaan in March 1896 led to a great increase in the society s membership The Katipunan movement spread throughout Luzon to Panay in the Visayas and even as far as Mindanao 61 From less than 300 members in January 1896 52 it had 30 000 to 40 000 by August 1896 61 The rapid increase in Katipunan activity drew the suspicion of the Spanish authorities By early 1896 Spanish intelligence was aware of the existence of a seditious secret society and suspects were kept under surveillance and arrests were made On May 3 Bonifacio held a general assembly of Katipunan leaders in Pasig where they debated when to start the revolution While some officers especially Bonifacio believed a revolution was inevitable some members especially Santiago Alvarez and Emilio Aguinaldo both of Cavite expressed reservations and disagreement regarding the planned revolt due to lack of firearms The consensus was to consult Jose Rizal in Dapitan before launching armed action so Bonifacio sent Pio Valenzuela to Rizal Rizal turned out to be against the revolution believing it to be premature He recommended more preparation but suggested that in the event the revolution did break out they should seek the leadership of Antonio Luna who was widely regarded as a brilliant military leader 62 Philippine Revolution EditMain article Philippine Revolution Start of the uprising Edit The Spanish authorities confirmed the existence of the Katipunan on August 19 1896 Hundreds of Filipino suspects both innocent and guilty were arrested and imprisoned for treason 63 Jose Rizal Jose Protasio Rizal Mercado y Realonda was then on his way to Cuba to serve as a doctor in the Spanish colonial army in exchange for his release from Dapitan 64 65 When the news broke Bonifacio first tried to convince Rizal quarantined aboard a ship in Manila Bay to escape and join the imminent revolt Bonifacio Emilio Jacinto and Guillermo Masangkay nl disguised themselves as sailors and went to the pier where Rizal s ship was anchored Jacinto personally met with Rizal who rejected their rescue offer 66 Rizal himself was later arrested tried and executed 64 Eluding an intensive manhunt Bonifacio called thousands of Katipunan members to a mass gathering in Caloocan where they decided to start their uprising The event marked by the tearing of cedulas personal identity documents was later called the Cry of Balintawak or Cry of Pugad Lawin the exact location and date of the Cry are disputed 67 68 The Supreme Council of the Katipunan declared a nationwide armed revolution against Spain and called for a simultaneous coordinated attack on the capital Manila on August 29 Bonifacio appointed generals to lead rebel forces to Manila Other Katipunan councils were also informed of their plans Before hostilities erupted Bonifacio reorganized the Katipunan into an open de facto revolutionary government with him as Supremo of the rebel army and the Supreme Council as his cabinet 58 69 70 On August 28 Bonifacio issued the following general proclamation This manifesto is for all of you It is absolutely necessary for us to stop at the earliest possible time the nameless oppositions being perpetrated on the sons of the country who are now suffering the brutal punishment and tortures in jails and because of this please let all the brethren know that on Saturday the 29th of the current month the revolution shall commence according to our agreement For this purpose it is necessary for all towns to rise simultaneously and attack Manila at the same time Anybody who obstructs this sacred ideal of the people will be considered a traitor and an enemy except if he is ill or is not physically fit in which case he shall be tried according to the regulations we have put in force Mount of Liberty 28 August 1896 ANDRES BONIFACIO 7 71 On August 30 1896 Bonifacio personally led an attack on San Juan del Monte to capture the town s powder magazine and water station which supplied Manila The defending Spaniards outnumbered fought a delaying battle until reinforcements arrived Once reinforced the Spaniards drove Bonifacio s forces back with heavy casualties Bonifacio and his troops regrouped near Marikina San Mateo and Montalban 72 Elsewhere fighting between rebels and Spanish forces occurred in Mandaluyong Sampaloc Santa Ana Pandacan Pateros Marikina Caloocan 73 Makati and Taguig 72 The conventional view among Filipino historians is that the planned general Katipunan offensive on Manila was aborted in favor of Bonifacio s attack on San Juan del Monte 72 74 which sparked a general state of rebellion in the area 75 However more recent studies have advanced the view that the planned offensive did push through and the rebel attacks were integrated according to this view Bonifacio s San Juan del Monte battle was only a part of a bigger whole an unrecognized Battle for Manila 73 76 Despite his reverses Bonifacio was not completely defeated and was still considered a threat Further the revolt had spread to the surrounding provinces by the end of August 73 76 Haring Bayang Katagalugan Edit Influenced by Freemasonry the Katipunan had been organized with its own laws bureaucratic structure and elective leadership 9 For each province it involved the Supreme Council coordinated provincial councils 10 which were in charge of public administration and military affairs on the supra municipal or quasi provincial level 9 and local councils 10 in charge of affairs on the district or barrio level 9 In the last days of August the Katipunan members met in Caloocan and decided to start their revolt 9 the event was later called the Cry of Balintawak or Cry of Pugad Lawin the exact location and date are disputed A day after the Cry the Supreme Council of the Katipunan held elections with the following results 9 10 Position NamePresident Andres BonifacioSecretary of War Teodoro PlataSecretary of State Emilio JacintoSecretary of the Interior Aguedo del RosarioSecretary of Justice Briccio PantasSecretary of Finance Enrique PachecoThe above was divulged to the Spanish by the Katipunan member Pio Valenzuela while in captivity 9 10 Teodoro Agoncillo thus wrote Immediately before the outbreak of the revolution therefore Bonifacio organized the Katipunan into a government revolving around a cabinet composed of men of his confidence 77 Milagros C Guerrero and others have described Bonifacio as effectively the commander in chief of the revolutionaries They assert As commander in chief Bonifacio supervised the planning of military strategies and the preparation of orders manifests and decrees adjudicated offenses against the nation as well as mediated in political disputes He directed generals and positioned troops in the fronts On the basis of command responsibility all victories and defeats all over the archipelago during his term of office should be attributed to Bonifacio 9 One name for Bonifacio s concept of the Philippine nation state appears in surviving Katipunan documents Haring Bayang Katagalugan Sovereign Nation of Katagalugan or Sovereign Tagalog Nation sometimes shortened into Haring Bayan Sovereign Nation Bayan may be rendered as nation or people Bonifacio is named as the president of the Tagalog Republic in an issue of the Spanish periodical La Ilustracion Espanola y Americana published in February 1897 Andres Bonifacio Titulado Presidente de la Republica Tagala Another name for Bonifacio s government was Republika ng Katagalugan another form of Tagalog Republic as evidenced by a picture of a rebel seal published in the same periodical the next month 9 10 Official letters and one appointment paper of Bonifacio addressed to Emilio Jacinto reveal Bonifacio s various titles and designations as follows 9 10 President of the Supreme Council Supreme President President of the Sovereign Nation of Katagalugan Sovereign Tagalog Nation President of the Sovereign Nation Founder of the Katipunan Initiator of the Revolution Office of the Supreme President Government of the RevolutionLater in November 1896 while encamped at Balara Bonifacio commissioned Julio Nakpil to compose a national anthem Nakpil produced a hymn called Marangal na Dalit ng Katagalugan Honorable Hymn of the Tagalog Nation People 78 Eventually an 1897 power struggle in Cavite led to command of the revolution shifting to Emilio Aguinaldo at the Tejeros Convention where a new government was formed Bonifacio was executed after he refused to recognize the new government The Aguinaldo headed Philippine Republic Spanish Republica Filipina usually considered the First Philippine Republic was formally established in 1899 after a succession of revolutionary and dictatorial governments e g the Tejeros government the Biak na Bato Republic also headed by Aguinaldo Campaigns around Manila Edit By December 1896 the Spanish government recognized three major centers of rebellion Cavite under Mariano Alvarez Emilio Aguinaldo and others Bulacan under Mariano Llanera and Morong under Bonifacio The revolt was most successful in Cavite 79 which mostly fell under rebel control by September October 1896 80 While Cavite is traditionally regarded as the Heartland of the Philippine Revolution Manila and its surrounding municipalities bore the brunt of the Spanish military campaign becoming a no man s land Rebels in the area were generally engaged in hit and run guerrilla warfare against Spanish positions in Manila Morong Nueva Ecija and Pampanga 80 From Morong Bonifacio served as tactician for rebel guerrillas and issued commands to areas other than his personal sector 58 though his reputation suffered when he lost battles he personally led 81 From September to October 1896 Bonifacio supervised the establishment of Katipunan mountain and hill bases like Balara in Marikina Pantayanin in Antipolo Ugong in Pasig and Tungko in Bulacan Bonifacio appointing generals for these areas or approving selections the troops themselves made 55 On November 7 1896 Bonifacio led an assault on San Mateo Marikina and Montalban The Spanish were forced to retreat leaving these areas to the rebels except for the municipal hall of San Mateo where some Spanish troops had barricaded While Bonifacio s troops laid siege to the hall other Katipunan forces set up defensive lines along the nearby Langka or Nangka river against Spanish reinforcements coming from the direction of Marikina After three days Spanish counterattacks broke through the Nangka river lines The Spanish troops thus recaptured the rebel positions and surprised Bonifacio in San Mateo who ordered a general retreat to Balara 55 They were pursued and Bonifacio was nearly killed shielding Emilio Jacinto from a Spanish bullet which grazed his collar 72 Bonifacio in Cavite Edit In late 1896 Bonifacio as the recognized overall leader of the revolution was invited to Cavite province by rebel leaders to mediate between them and unify their efforts There were two Katipunan provincial chapters in Cavite that became rival factions the Magdalo headed by Emilio Aguinaldo s cousin Baldomero Aguinaldo and the Magdiwang headed by Mariano Alvarez uncle of Bonifacio s wife Leaders of both factions came from the upper class in contrast to Bonifacio who came from the lower middle class After initial successes Emilio Aguinaldo issued a manifesto in the name of the Magdalo ruling council which proclaimed a provisional and revolutionary government despite the existence of the Katipunan government Emilio Aguinaldo in particular had won fame for victories in the province 82 The Magdalo and Magdiwang clashed over authority and jurisdiction and did not help each other in battle After multiple letters were sent to Bonifacio urging him to come in December 1896 he traveled to Cavite accompanied by his wife his brothers Procopio and Ciriaco and some troops including Emilio Jacinto Bonifacio s secretary and right hand man Jacinto was said to be against Bonifacio s expedition to Cavite Upon his arrival at Cavite friction grew between Bonifacio and the Magdalo leaders Apolinario Mabini who later served as Emilio Aguinaldo s adviser writes that at this point the Magdalo leaders already paid little heed to his authority and orders 83 Bonifacio was partial to the Magdiwang perhaps due to his kinship ties with Mariano Alvarez 84 or more importantly due to their stronger recognition of his authority 85 When Aguinaldo and Edilberto Evangelista went to receive Bonifacio at Zapote they were irritated with what they regarded as his attitude of superiority In his memoirs Aguinaldo wrote that Bonifacio acted as if he were a king 86 87 Another time Bonifacio ordered the arrest of one Katipunan general from Laguna named Vicente Fernandez who was accompanying the Magdalo leaders in paying their respect to Bonifacio for failing to support his attack in Manila but the other Magdalo leaders refused to surrender him Townspeople in Noveleta a Magdiwang town acclaimed Bonifacio as the ruler of the Philippines to the chagrin of the Magdalo leaders Bonifacio replied Long live Philippine liberty 87 Aguinaldo disputed with Bonifacio over strategic troop placements and blamed him for the capture of the town of Silang 86 The Spanish through Jesuit Superior Pio Pi wrote to Aguinaldo about the possibility of peace negotiations 86 When Bonifacio found out he and the Magdiwang council rejected the proposed peace talks Bonifacio was also angered that the Spanish considered Aguinaldo the chief of the rebellion instead of him 86 However Aguinaldo continued to arrange negotiations which never took place 88 Bonifacio believed Aguinaldo was willing to surrender the revolution 88 Bonifacio was also subject to rumors that he had stolen Katipunan funds his sister was the mistress of a priest and he was an agent provocateur paid by friars to foment unrest Also circulated were anonymous letters which told the people of Cavite not to idolize Bonifacio because he was a Mason a mere Manila employee allegedly an atheist and uneducated According to these letters Bonifacio did not deserve the title of Supremo since only God was supreme This last allegation was made despite the fact that Supremo was meant to be used in conjunction with Presidente i e Presidente Supremo Supreme President Kataas taasang Pangulo to distinguish the president of the Katipunan Supreme Council from council presidents of subordinate Katipunan chapters like the Magdalo and Magdiwang in other words while Mariano Alvarez was the Magdiwang president and Baldomero Aguinaldo was the Magdalo president Bonifacio was the Supreme President 85 Bonifacio suspected the rumor mongering to be the work of the Magdalo leader Daniel Tirona He confronted Tirona whose airy reply provoked Bonifacio to such anger that he drew a gun and would have shot Tirona if others had not intervened 89 90 On December 31 Bonifacio and the Magdalo and Magdiwang leaders held a meeting in Imus ostensibly to determine the leadership of Cavite in order to end the rivalry between the two factions The issue of whether the Katipunan should be replaced by a revolutionary government was brought up by the Magdalo and this eclipsed the rivalry issue The Magdalo argued that the Katipunan as a secret society should have ceased to exist once the Revolution was underway They also held that Cavite should not be divided Bonifacio and the Magdiwang contended that the Katipunan served as their revolutionary government since it had its own constitution laws and provincial and municipal governments Edilberto Evangelista presented a draft constitution for the proposed government to Bonifacio but he rejected it as it was too similar to the Spanish Maura Law Upon the event of restructuring Bonifacio was given carte blanche to appoint a committee tasked with setting up a new government he would also be in charge of this committee He tasked Emilio Aguinaldo to record the minutes of the meeting and requested for it to establish this authority but these were never done and never provided 91 92 The Tejeros Convention Edit Main article Tejeros Convention On March 22 1897 the revolutionary leaders held an important meeting in a Friar Estate Residence at Tejeros to resume their discussions regarding the escalating tension between the Magdalo and Magdiwang forces And also to settle once and for all the issue of governance within the Katipunan through an election 93 Amidst implications on whether the government of the Katipunan should be established as a monarchy or as a republic Bonifacio maintained that it should be established as a republic According to him they were all in opposition to the King of Spain and all of the government s members of any given rank should serve under the principle of liberty equality and fraternity upon which republicanism was founded 55 6 Despite Bonifacio s concern on the lack of officials and representatives from other provinces he was obliged to proceed with the election 94 Before the election began he asked that the results be respected by everyone and all agreed The Magdalo faction voted their own Emilio Aguinaldo President in absentia as he was involved in the battle of Perez Dasmarinas which was then ongoing 93 95 96 The resulting revolutionary government established at Tejeros calling itself the Republica de Filipinas Republic of the Philippines around a month later was later superseded by a number of reorganized revolutionary governments also headed by Aguinaldo These included the Republica de Filipinas of November 1897 commonly known today as the Republic of Biak na Bato the Hong Kong Junta government in exile the dictatorial government under which Philippine independence was proclaimed on June 12 1898 and the revolutionary government now commonly known as the First Philippine Republic or Malolos Republic inaugurated on January 23 1899 97 as the Republica Filipina Philippine Republic The 1899 government is now officially considered to be the true first Republic of the Philippines with the present day government of the Philippines thus being the fifth Republic Bonifacio received the second highest number of votes for president Though it was suggested that he be automatically be awarded the Vice Presidency no one seconded the motion and the Election continued Mariano Trias of the Magdiwang was elected vice president Bonifacio was the last to be elected as Director of the Interior Daniel Tirona protested Bonifacio being appointed as Director of the Interior on the grounds that the position should not be occupied by a person without a lawyer s diploma Tirona suggested a prominent lawyer for the position such as Jose del Rosario Insulted and angered Bonifacio demanded an apology since the voters had agreed to respect the election results Tirona ignored Bonifacio s demand for apology which drove Bonifacio to draw his gun and again he nearly shot Tirona who hid among the people but he was restrained by Artemio Ricarte of the Magdiwang who had been elected Captain General 98 Bonifacio declared In my capacity as chairman of this convention and as Presidente Supremo of the Most Venerable Katipunan of the Sons of the People which association is known and acknowledged by all I hereby declare null and void all matters approved in this meeting 99 He then promptly left the premises 98 100 After the Tejeros Convention EditOn March 23 1897 the day after the Tejeros convention Aguinaldo surreptitiously took his oath of office as president in a chapel officiated by a Catholic priest Cenon Villafranca who was under the authority of the Pope in Rome 101 109 According to Gen Santiago Alvarez guards were posted outside with strict instructions not to let in any unwanted partisan from the Magdiwang faction while the oath taking took place 102 Artemio Ricarte also took his office with great reluctance and made a declaration that he found the Tejeros elections dirty or shady and not been in conformity with the true will of the people 103 Meanwhile Bonifacio met with his remaining supporters and drew up the Acta de Tejeros wherein they gave their reasons for not accepting the election results Bonifacio alleged the election was fraudulent due to cheating and accused Aguinaldo of treason for his negotiations with the Spanish 104 In their memoirs Santiago Alvarez son of Mariano and Gregoria de Jesus both alleged that many ballots were already filled out before being distributed and Guillermo Masangkay contended there were more ballots prepared than voters present Alvarez writes that Bonifacio had been warned by a Cavite leader Diego Mojica of the rigged ballots before the votes were canvassed but he had done nothing 55 105 The Acta de Tejeros was signed by Bonifacio and 44 others including Artemio Ricarte Mariano Alvarez and Pascual Alvarez Then in a later meeting on April 19 in Naic another document the Naic Military Agreement was drawn up which declared that its 41 signatories having discovered the treason committed by certain officers who have been sowing discord and conniving with the Spaniards and other offensive acts had agreed to deliver the people from this grave danger by raising an army corps by persuasion or force under the command of General Pio del Pilar The document s 41 signatories included Bonifacio Ricarte and del Pilar 106 107 The meeting was interrupted by Aguinaldo and del Pilar Mariano Noriel and others present then promptly returned to Aguinaldo s fold 86 108 Aguinaldo attempted to persuade Bonifacio to cooperate with his government but Bonifacio refused and proceeded to Indang Cavite planning to get out of Cavite and proceed back to Morong 109 In late April Aguinaldo fully assumed the presidential office after consolidating his position among the Cavite elite most of Bonifacio s Magdiwang supporters shifting allegiance to Aguinaldo 110 Aguinaldo s government then ordered the arrest of Bonifacio who was then moving out of Cavite 111 112 Trial and death Edit The Bonifacio shrine at the foot of Mount Nagpatong and Mount Buntis in Maragondon Cavite where it is believed he was executed on May 10 1897 In April 1897 Aguinaldo ordered the arrest of Bonifacio after he received a letter alleging that Bonifacio had burned down a village and ordered the burning of the church of Indang after townspeople refused to give him provisions Many of the principal men of Indang among them Severino de las Alas presented Emilio Aguinaldo with several complaints against Bonifacio that the Supremo s men stole carabaos water buffaloes and other work animals by force and butchered them for food On April 25 a party of Aguinaldo s men led by Colonel Agapito Bonzon and Major Jose Ignacio Intsik Paua caught up with Bonifacio at his camp in barrio Limbon Indang The unsuspecting Bonifacio received them cordially Early the next day Bonzon and Paua attacked Bonifacio s camp Bonifacio was surprised and refused to fight against fellow Tagalogs ordering his men to hold their fire but shots were nevertheless exchanged Bonifacio was shot in the arm by Bonzon and Paua stabbed him in the neck but was prevented from striking further by one of Bonifacio s men who offered to die in Bonifacio s place Andres s brother Ciriaco was shot dead while his other brother Procopio was beaten and his wife Gregoria may have been raped by Bonzon From Indang a half starved and wounded Bonifacio was carried by hammock to Naic which had become President Aguinaldo s headquarters 113 Bonifacio s party was brought to Naic initially and then to Maragondon Cavite where he and Procopio stood trial on May 5 1897 on charges of sedition and treason against Aguinaldo s government and conspiracy to murder Aguinaldo 110 114 The jury was composed entirely of Aguinaldo s men and even Bonifacio s defence lawyer himself declared his client s guilt Bonifacio was barred from confronting the state witness on the charge of conspiracy to murder on the grounds that the latter had been killed in battle However after the trial the witness was seen alive with the prosecutors 115 116 The Bonifacio brothers were found guilty despite insufficient evidence and were recommended to be executed Aguinaldo commuted the sentence to deportation on May 8 1897 but Pio del Pilar and Mariano Noriel persuaded him to withdraw the order for the sake of preserving unity In this they were seconded by Mamerto Natividad and other bona fide supporters of Aguinaldo 117 The Bonifacio brothers were executed on May 10 1897 in the mountains of Maragondon 117 118 Apolinario Mabini wrote that Bonifacio s death demoralized many rebels from Manila Laguna and Batangas who had come to help those in Cavite and caused them to quit 83 In other areas Bonifacio s close associates like Emilio Jacinto and Macario Sakay continued the Katipunan and never recognized Aguinaldo s authority 78 Historical controversies EditThe historical assessment of Bonifacio involves several controversial points His death is alternately viewed as a justified execution for treason and a legal murder fueled by politics Some historians consider him to be the rightful first President of the Philippines instead of Aguinaldo Some historians have also advocated that Bonifacio share or even take the place of Jose Rizal as the foremost Philippine national hero The purported discovery of Bonifacio s remains has also been questioned Trial and execution Edit Historians have condemned the trial of the Bonifacio brothers as unjust The jury was entirely composed of Aguinaldo s men Bonifacio s defense lawyer acted more like a prosecutor as he himself declared Bonifacio s guilt and instead appealed for less punishment and Bonifacio was not allowed to confront the state witness for the charge of conspiracy on the grounds that the latter had been killed in battle but later the witness was seen with the prosecutors 119 120 Teodoro Agoncillo writes that Bonifacio s declaration of authority in opposition to Aguinaldo posed a danger to the revolution because a split in the rebel forces would result in almost certain defeat by their united and well armed Spanish foe 117 In contrast Renato Constantino contends that Bonifacio was neither a danger to the revolution in general for he still planned to fight the Spanish nor to the revolution in Cavite since he was leaving but Bonifacio was definitely a threat to the Cavite leaders who wanted control of the Revolution so he was eliminated Constantino contrasts Bonifacio who had no record of compromise with the Spanish with the Cavite leaders who did compromise resulting in the Pact of Biak na Bato whereas the revolution was officially halted and its leaders exiled though many Filipinos continued to fight especially Katipunan leaders used to be close to Bonifacio Aguinaldo eventually unofficially allied with the United States did return to take charge of the revolution during the Spanish American War 121 Historians have also discussed the motives of the Cavite government to replace Bonifacio and whether it had the right to do so The Magdalo provincial council which helped establish a republican government led by one of their own was only one of many such councils in the pre existing Katipunan government 122 123 Therefore Constantino and Alejo Villanueva write that Aguinaldo and his faction may be considered counter revolutionary as well as guilty of violating Bonifacio s constituted authority just as they considered Bonifacio to violate theirs 122 124 Aguinaldo s own adviser and official Apolinario Mabini writes that he was primarily answerable for insubordination against the head of the Katipunan of which he was a member 83 Aguinaldo s authority was not immediately recognized by all rebels If Bonifacio had escaped Cavite he would have had the right as the Katipunan leader to prosecute Aguinaldo for treason instead of the other way around 125 Constantino and Villanueva also interpret the Tejeros Convention as the culmination of a movement by members of the upper class represented by Aguinaldo to wrest power from Bonifacio who represented the middle and lower classes 124 126 Regionalism among the Cavite rebels dubbed Cavitismo by Constantino has also been put forward as motivation for the replacement of Bonifacio 127 128 129 Mabini considered the execution as criminal and assassination the first victory of personal ambition over true patriotism 130 He also noted that All the electors at the Tejeros Convention were friends of Don Emilio Aguinaldo and Don Mariano Trias who were united while Bonifacio although he had established his integrity was looked upon with distrust only because he was not a native of the province this explains his resentment 83 Writing retrospectively in 1948 Aguinaldo explained that he initially commuted the sentence of death but rescinded his commutation at the urging of Generals Mariano Noriel and General Pio del Pilar 131 There are differing accounts of Bonifacio s manner of execution The commanding officer of the execution party Lazaro Macapagal said in two separate accounts that the Bonifacio brothers were shot to death which is the orthodox interpretation Macapagal s second account has Bonifacio attempting to escape after his brother is shot but he is also killed while running away Macapagal writes that they buried the brothers in shallow graves dug with bayonets and marked by twigs 132 However another account states that after his brother was shot Bonifacio was stabbed and hacked to death This was allegedly done while he lay prone in a hammock in which he was carried to the site being too weak to walk 85 This version was maintained by Guillermo Masangkay who claimed to have gotten this information from one of Macapagal s men 132 Also one account used to corroborate this version is of an alleged eyewitness a farmer who claimed he saw five men hacking a man in a hammock 85 Historian Milagros Guerrero also says Bonifacio was bayoneted and that the brothers were left unburied 133 After bones said to be Bonifacio s including a fractured skull were discovered in 1918 Masangkay claimed the forensic evidence supported his version of events 132 Writer Adrian Cristobal notes that accounts of Bonifacio s captivity and trial state he was very weak due to his wounds being left untreated he thus doubts that Bonifacio was strong enough to make a last dash for freedom as Macapagal claimed 85 Historian Ambeth Ocampo who doubts the Bonifacio bones were authentic thus also doubts the possibility of Bonifacio s death by this manner 132 Bonifacio as first Philippine President Edit See also List of unofficial presidents of the Philippines Some historians such as Milagros Guerrero Emmanuel Encarnacion Ramon Villegas and Michael Charleston Chua have pushed for the recognition of Bonifacio as the first President of the Philippines instead of Aguinaldo the officially recognized one This view emphasizes that Bonifacio was not just the leader of the Katipunan as a revolutionary secret society as traditional historiography has emphasized but that he also established and headed a revolutionary government through the Katipunan from 1896 to 1897 before a revolutionary government headed by Aguinaldo was first formed at the Tejeros Convention Guerrero writes that Bonifacio had a concept of the Philippine nation called Haring Bayang Katagalugan Sovereign Tagalog Nation which was displaced by Aguinaldo s concept of Filipinas In documents predating Tejeros and the First Philippine Republic of 1899 Bonifacio is called the president of the Sovereign Tagalog Nation and the Tagalog Republic 58 69 85 134 The term Tagalog historically refers to an ethnic group their language and script Historians have thus viewed Bonifacio s concept of the Philippine nation as restricted to the Tagalog speaking regions of Luzon as compared to Aguinaldo s view of Luzon Visayas and Mindanao comprising the modern Philippines In their memoirs Emilio Aguinaldo and other Magdalo people claim Bonifacio became the head of the Magdiwang receiving the title Hari ng Bayan King of the Nation with Mariano Alvarez as his second in command 86 135 6 Historians such as Carlos Quirino and Michael Charleston Chua suggest these claims stem from a misunderstanding or misrepresentation of Bonifacio s neologism Haring Bayan Sovereign Nation as referring to Bonifacio himself instead of his concept of the nation as was in truth reflected in his title Pangulo ng Haring Bayang Katagalugan President of the Sovereign Tagalog Nation sometimes shortened to Pangulo ng Haring Bayan President of the Sovereign Nation 136 6 Santiago Alvarez son of Mariano distinguishes between the Magdiwang government and the Katipunan Supreme Council headed by Bonifacio 55 According to historian Chua the first President issue has been confounded by over a century of Philippine historiography most often referring to Bonifacio as The Supremo and taking it to mean The Supreme Leader thus ultimately taking him to have had dictatorial or monarchist ambitions as opposed to the later democratic and republican Philippine Presidents when in fact Supremo was only a contraction of Spanish Presidente Supremo a translation of Bonifacio s actual title as head of the Katipunan in Tagalog Kataas taasang Pangulo Supreme President and based on surviving documents Bonifacio generally did not call himself by the plain term Supremo despite other people s usage but instead styled himself Pangulo i e President 6 Chua further writes even inside the Katipunan Bonifacio struggled to make people understand his concept of the Haring Bayan not as an individual or a King but as something else Haring Bayan really meant the King or the power is the people Haring Bayan which is basically The Sovereign Nation So when he signed himself as Pangulo ng Haring Bayan past 24 August 1896 that means he intended to be president of a national revolutionary government which aimed to be a democracy 6 Bonifacio as national hero Edit See also National hero of the Philippines Andres Bonifacio Monument in Caloocan is considered the most symbolic of all the monuments in the country even grander than Motto Stella It is sculpted by National Artist Guillermo Tolentino Jose Rizal is generally considered the foremost of the national heroes of the Philippines and often the national hero albeit not in law but Bonifacio has been suggested as a more worthy candidate on the grounds of having started the Philippine Revolution 113 Teodoro Agoncillo notes that the Philippine national hero unlike those of other countries is not the leader of its liberation forces 137 Renato Constantino writes that Rizal is a United States sponsored hero who was promoted as the greatest Filipino hero during the American colonial period of the Philippines after Aguinaldo lost the Philippine American War The United States promoted Rizal who was taken to represent peaceful political advocacy instead of more radical figures whose ideas could inspire resistance against American rule 138 Specifically Rizal was selected over Bonifacio who was viewed as too radical and Apolinario Mabini who was unregenerate 139 Historian Ambeth Ocampo gives the opinion that arguing for Bonifacio as the better hero on the grounds that he not Rizal began the Philippine Revolution is moot since Rizal inspired Bonifacio the Katipunan and the Revolution Even prior to his banishment to Dapitan Rizal was already regarded by the Filipino people as a national hero having been elected as honorary president by the Katipunan 113 Other historians also detail that Bonifacio was a follower of Rizal s La Liga Filipina Leon Maria Guerrero notes that while Rizal did not give his blessing to the Katipunan because he believed the time was premature he did not condemn the aim of independence per se 140 Teodoro Agoncillo gives the opinion that Bonifacio should not replace Rizal as national hero but they should be honored side by side 137 Despite popular recognition of Rizal as the Philippine national hero the title itself has no explicit legal definition in present Philippine law Rizal and Bonifacio however are given the implied recognition of being national heroes because they are commemorated annually nationwide Rizal Day on December 30 and Bonifacio Day on November 30 141 According to the website of the National Center for Culture and the Arts Despite the lack of any official declaration explicitly proclaiming them as national heroes Rizal and Bonifacio remain admired and revered for their roles in Philippine history Heroes according to historians should not be legislated Their appreciation should be better left to academics Acclamation for heroes they felt would be recognition enough 141 Bonifacio s bones Edit In 1918 the American colonial government of the Philippines mounted a search for Bonifacio s remains in Maragondon A group consisting of government officials former rebels and a man reputed to be Bonifacio s servant found bones which they claimed were Bonifacio s in a sugarcane field on March 17 The bones were placed in an urn and put into the care of the National Library of the Philippines They were housed at the Library s headquarters in the Legislative Building in Ermita Manila together with some of Bonifacio s papers and personal belongings The authenticity of the bones was much disputed at the time and has been challenged as late as 2001 by Ambeth Ocampo When Emilio Aguinaldo ran for President of the Commonwealth of the Philippines in 1935 his opponent Manuel L Quezon the eventual victor invoked the memory of Bonifacio against him the bones being the result of Bonifacio s execution by the revolutionary government headed by Aguinaldo During World War II the Philippines was invaded by Japan beginning on December 8 1941 The bones were lost due to the widespread destruction and looting during the Allied capture of Manila in February 1945 132 142 143 List of works EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Mi abanico circa 1870s Katapusang Hibik ng Pilipinas Ang Dapat Mabatid ng Mga Tagalog 1896 Pag ibig sa Tinubuang Lupa 1896 Portrayal in the media EditPortrayed by Julio Diaz in the film Bayani 1992 and the unrelated TV series Bayani 1995 144 Portrayed by Gardo Versoza in the film Jose Rizal 1998 144 Portrayed by Alfred Vargas in the film The Trial of Andres Bonifacio 2010 and in the film Supremo 2012 144 Portrayed by Mark Anthony Fernandez in GMA Lupang Hinirang music video in 2010 144 Portrayed by Cesar Montano in the film El Presidente 2012 144 Portrayed by Jolo Revilla in the TV series Indio 2013 144 Portrayed by Sid Lucero in the TV series Katipunan 2013 and Ilustrado 2014 144 Portrayed by Robin Padilla in the film Bonifacio Ang Unang Pangulo 2014 144 Portrayed by Nico Antonio in the film Heneral Luna 2015 144 Portrayed by Jhong Hilario in the film Unli Life 2018 144 Notes Edit a b Keat Gin Ooi 2004 Southeast Asia A Historical Encyclopedia from Angkor Wat to East Timor ABC CLIO p 240 ISBN 978 1 57607 770 2 Archived from the original on May 10 2016 Retrieved April 9 2019 In isolation his given name and last name are pronounced anˈdɾes and boniˈfa8jo respectively The Spanish pronunciation of Bonifacio in both Latin America and the United States is boniˈfasjo Filipinos honor Father of Philippine Revolution Philippine News Agency November 30 2018 Archived from the original on January 1 2019 Retrieved December 31 2018 a b Arcilla Jose S 1997 Who is Andres Bonifacio Philippine Studies 45 4 570 577 ISSN 0031 7837 JSTOR 42634247 a b Selection and Proclamation of National Heroes and Laws Honoring Filipino Historical Figures PDF Reference and Research Bureau Legislative Research Service House of Congress Archived from the original PDF on June 4 2011 a b c d e f Chua Michael Charleston B November 30 2018 Bonifacio did not call himself Supremo ABS CBN Retrieved June 26 2021 a b Agoncillo 1996 p 41 Agoncillo 1990 p 146 a b c d e f g h i j k Guererro Milagros Encarnacion Emmanuel Villegas Ramon 1996 Andres Bonifacio and the 1896 Revolution Sulyap Kultura National Commission for Culture and the Arts 1 2 3 12 Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved December 7 2008 a b c d e f g h Guererro Milagros Schumacher John SJ 1998 Reform and Revolution Kasaysayan The History of the Filipino People Vol 5 Asia Publishing Company Limited ISBN 962 258 228 1 Tucker Spencer 2009 The Encyclopedia of the Spanish American and Philippine American Wars A Political Social and Military History ABC CLIO p 65 ISBN 9781851099511 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 Duka Cecilio D 2008 Struggle for Freedom 2008 Ed Rex Bookstore Inc p 131 ISBN 9789712350450 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 Philippine Historical Association 1999 Philippine presidents 100 years Philippine Historical Association in cooperation with New Day Publishers p 8 ISBN 9789711010263 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 Catalina De Castro In Biographical Summaries of Notable People myheritage com Archived from the original on May 16 2018 Retrieved February 25 2018 8 things you might not know about Andres Bonifacio GMA News November 30 2020 Retrieved January 11 2023 Nobles Arsenio F 1964 Philippine Journal of Education p 211 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 Archipelago Bureau of National and Foreign Information Department of Public Information 1975 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 The Filipino Moving Onward 5 2007 Ed Rex Bookstore Inc p 49 ISBN 978 971 23 4154 0 archived from the original on June 29 2016 retrieved November 28 2015 Capili Maria Angelica A 2008 Bantayog Discovering Manila through its Monuments Foreign Service Institute p 34 ISBN 978 971 552 075 1 archived from the original on November 28 2020 retrieved June 7 2019 Turning Points I Rex Bookstore Inc 2007 p 26 ISBN 978 971 23 4538 8 archived from the original on August 5 2020 retrieved June 7 2019 Ocampo 2016 Carballo Bibsy M December 15 2014 Bonifacio Ang Unang Pangulo philstar com PhilStar Global Archived from the original on August 18 2019 Retrieved August 18 2019 Ventura Sylvia Mendez 2001 Supremo The Story of Andres Bonifacio Tahanan Books for Young Readers ISBN 9789716300918 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 18 2019 Villanueva 1989 p 30 Ventura Sylvia Mendez 2001 Supremo The Story of Andres Bonifacio Tahanan Books for Young Readers ISBN 9789716300918 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved October 1 2020 Almeda A L T 2018 Origin The Almeda Family Story Lulu com ISBN 9781387930081 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 self published source Szczepanski Kallie Biography of Andres Bonifacio Filipino Revolutionary Leader ThoughtCo Archived from the original on October 4 2019 Retrieved August 18 2019 De Ocampo Esteban A 1966 The Life and Achievements of Bonifacio p 8 a b Ocampo Ambeth R Walking tour of Bonifacio s Manila opinion inquirer net Archived from the original on August 19 2019 Retrieved August 19 2019 Ventura Sylvia Mendez 2001 Supremo The Story of Andres Bonifacio Tahanan Books for Young Readers p 38 ISBN 9789716300918 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 Andres Bonifacio and the Katipunan National Historical Commission of the Philippines National Historical Commission of the Philippines September 4 2012 Archived from the original on January 28 2020 Retrieved August 18 2019 Laus Emiliano L 1951 Brief Biographies of the Ten Most Outstanding Filipino National Leaders National Print Company p 14 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 Andres Bonifacio Filipino political leader Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on September 21 2018 Retrieved August 18 2019 Abueva Jose Veloso 1998 Pagbubuo Ng Bansa at Republika Ng Pilipinas University of the Philippines Press p 381 ISBN 9789715422154 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 Lizares Luci December 1 2016 Andres Bonifacio beyond the textbooks Sunstar Archived from the original on August 19 2019 Retrieved August 19 2019 July 3 1892 Dr Jose Rizal founded the La Liga Filipina The Kahimyang Project November 8 2011 Archived from the original on August 19 2019 Retrieved August 19 2019 Capino Diosdado G Gonzalez Maria Minerva A Pineda Filipinas E 1977 Rizal s Life Works and Writings Their Impact on Our National Identity Goodwill Trading Co Inc pp 38 39 ISBN 9789711108908 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 Capino Diosdado G Gonzalez Maria Minerva A Pineda Filipinas E 1977 Rizal s Life Works and Writings Their Impact on Our National Identity Goodwill Trading Co Inc pp 36 38 ISBN 9789711108908 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 Guillermo Artemio R 2012 Historical Dictionary of the Philippines Scarecrow Press ISBN 9780810872462 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved October 1 2020 Institut Kajian Dasar Malaysia 1996 Jose Rizal and the Asian renaissance Institut Kajian Dasar p 23 ISBN 9789838840514 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 a b Francia Luis H 2013 History of the Philippines From Indios Bravos to Filipinos Abrams ISBN 9781468315455 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 Tarver H Micheal Slape Emily eds 2016 The Spanish Empire A Historical Encyclopedia 2 volumes A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 9781610694223 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved October 1 2020 Sagmit Rosario S Mendoza Maria Lourdes Sagmit The Filipino Moving Onward 5 2007 Ed Rex Bookstore Inc ISBN 9789712341540 Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved August 19 2019 Guerrero 1998 p 132 a b Constantino 1975 pp 158 159 Agoncillo 1990 p 149 a b Guerrero 1998 p 149 Agoncillo 1996 p 216 Richardson Jim Katipunan Documents and Studies kasaysayan kkk info Archived from the original on December 21 2014 Retrieved May 22 2015 Richardson Jim 2013 The Light of Liberty Documents and Studies on the Katipunan 1892 1897 Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 675 5 Archived from the original on May 9 2016 Retrieved November 28 2015 Nery John December 2 2013 The most important book of our time Philippine Daily Inquirer Archived from the original on October 11 2015 Retrieved May 22 2015 a b Agoncillo 1990 p 166 Guerrero 1998 p 151 Agoncillo 1990 p 163 a b c d e f Alvarez 1992 Agoncillo 1990 p 152 Guerrero 1998 p 150 a b c d Guerrero 1996a pp 3 12 Guerrero 1998 pp 149 150 Pag ibig sa Tinubuang Lupa Archived December 21 2007 at the Wayback Machine Philippine Revolution Web Center Site a b Constantino 1975 p 175 Guerrero 1998 pp 160 164 Constantino 1975 p 176 a b Constantino 1975 p 177 Guerrero 1998 pp 143 164 Borromeo Buehler 1998 pp 29 30 Borromeo Buehler 1998 Guerrero 1996b pp 13 22 a b Guerrero 1998 pp 166 167 Agoncillo 1996 pp 152 153 Salazar 1994 p 107 a b c d Agoncillo 1990 p 173 a b c Salazar 1994 Zaide 1984 Salazar 1994 p 104 a b Guerrero 1998 p 173 Agoncillo 1990 p page needed a b Nakpil 1964 Constantino 1975 p 179 a b Guerrero 1998 pp 175 176 Constantino 1975 p 180 Constantino 1975 pp 178 181 a b c d Mabini 1969 Garcia amp Rodriguez 2001 a b c d e f Cristobal 2005 a b c d e f Aguinaldo 1964 a b Constantino 1975 pp 181 182 a b Guerrero 1998 p 190 Constantino 1975 p 182 Guerrero 1998 p 187 190 Constantino 1975 pp 182 184 Guerrero 1998 pp 187 191 a b Constantino 1975 p 184 Constantino 1975 pp 185 186 Guerrero 1998 pp 191 193 Linn 2000 pp 4 5 Constantino 1975 p 224 a b Agoncillo 1990 p 178 Alvarez 1992 p 87 Original Filipino text p 322 Ako sa pagka Pangulo nitong Kapulungan at sa pagka Presidente Supremo ng K K K ng mga A N B na kilala at talastas ng lahat ipinahahayag kong lansag at walang kabuluhan ang lahat ng bagay na pinagkayarian at pinagtibay sa Pulong na ito Constantino 1975 p 185 Alvarez S V 1992 Recalling the Revolution Madison Center for Southeast Asia Studies University of Wisconsin Madison ISBN 1 881261 05 0 Alvarez 1992 Artemio Ricarte Declaration dated March 24 1897 Katipunan Archived from the original on August 19 2011 Constantino 1975 pp 188 Guerrero 1998 p 192 Agoncillo 1990 pp 171 172 Zaide 1999 pp 248 249 Zaide 1999 p 247 Philippine History Module based Learning I 2002 Ed Rex Bookstore Inc p 138 ISBN 978 971 23 3449 8 a b Guerrero 1998 p 194 Agoncillo 1990 pp 178 180 Guerrero 1998 p 193 a b c Ocampo 1999 Agoncillo 1990 p 180 Guerrero 1998 pp 194 196 Constantino 1975 pp 189 191 a b c Agoncillo 1990 pp 180 181 Constantino 1975 p 191 Constantino 1975 pp 190 191 Villanueva 1989 pp 60 64 Constantino 1975 pp 190 206 a b Villanueva 1989 pp 62 63 Constantino 1975 pp 188 190 191 a b Constantino 1975 p 190 Villanueva 1989 pp 61 64 Villanueva 1989 pp 58 64 Constantino 1975 pp 183 185 Guerrero 1998 p 189 Villanueva 1989 pp 58 59 Mabini Apolinario 1969 The Philippine revolution Manila Republic of the Philippines National Historical Commission Aguinaldo Emilio 1948 General Emilio Aguinaldo s Confession in Tagalog Archived from the original on May 27 2008 a b c d e Ocampo 2001 Guerrero 1998 p 196 La Ilustracion Espanola y Americana Ano 1897 Vol I permanent dead link Museo Oriental de Valladolid Site Ronquillo 1996 Quirino 1969 a b Agoncillo 1990 p 160 Constantino 1980 pp 125 145 Friend 1965 p 15 Leon Ma Guerrero The First Filipino as quoted in Nick Joaquin s Anatomy of the Anti Hero http joserizal info Reflections joaquin htm Archived August 28 2004 at the Wayback Machine a b National Commission for Culture and the Arts Selection and Proclamation of National heroes and Law Honoring Filipino Historical Figures Archived from the original on April 18 2015 Retrieved March 22 2010 Morallos 1998 Philippine Revolution Archived July 23 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on August 1 2009 a b c d e f g h i j Godinez Bong November 30 2020 IN PHOTOS Actors who portrayed Andres 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Masangkay 1998 The Cry of Balintawak a contrived controversy Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 278 8 Constantino Renato 1980 1970 Veneration without Understanding Dissent and Counter consciousness Quezon City Malaya Books pp 125 145 Constantino Renato 1975 The Philippines A Past Revisited Quezon City Tala Publishing Services ISBN 971 8958 00 2 archived from the original on November 13 2020 retrieved October 1 2020 Delmendo Sharon 2000 Pax Americana and the Pacific Theater in Tolentino Roland ed Geopolitics of the visible essays on Philippine film cultures Quezon City Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 971 550 358 6 archived from the original on November 28 2020 retrieved November 28 2015 Friend Theodore 1965 1928 Between Two Empires The Ordeal of the Philippines 1929 1946 Yale University Press archived from the original on June 5 2013 retrieved November 28 2015 Rodao Garcia Florentino Rodriguez Felice Noelle Conference Asociacion Espanola de Estudios del PaciFico 2001 The Philippine Revolution of 1896 Ordinary Lives in Extraordinary Times Quezon City Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 971 550 386 1 archived from the original on October 20 2018 retrieved October 1 2020 Guerrero Milagros Encarnacion Emmanuel Villegas Ramon 1996 Andres Bonifacio and the 1896 Revolution Sulyap Kultura National Commission for Culture and the Arts 1 2 3 12 archived from the original on April 2 2015 retrieved December 7 2008 Guerrero Milagros Encarnacion Emmanuel Villegas Ramon 1997 Balintawak the Cry for a Nationwide Revolution Sulyap Kultura National Commission for Culture and the Arts 1 2 13 22 Guerrero Milagros Schumacher S J John 1998 Reform and Revolution Kasaysayan The History of the Filipino People vol 5 Asia Publishing Company Limited ISBN 962 258 228 1 Linn Brian McAllister 2000 The U S Army and Counterinsurgency in the Philippine War 1899 1902 University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0 8078 4948 0 Mabini Apolinario 1969 CHAPTER VIII First Stage of the Revolution in Guerrero Leon Ma ed The Philippine Revolution National Historical Commission archived from the original on December 16 2016 retrieved July 18 2009 Morallos Chando P 1998 Treasures of the National Library Manila Quiapo Printing ISBN 971 556 018 0 Nakpil Julio 1997 1964 Alzona Encarnacion ed Julio Nakpil and the Philippine Revolution With the Autobiography of Gregoria de Jesus Quezon City Academic Publishing Corporation ISBN 971 707 048 2 archived from the original on June 17 2016 retrieved November 28 2015 Ocampo Ambeth 2001 Bones of Contention The Bonifacio Lectures Anvil Publishing Inc ISBN 971 27 1151 X Ocampo Ambeth June 1 2016 Rediscovering PH through Filipiniana INQUIRER net INQUIRER net Archived from the original on June 7 2019 Retrieved June 7 2019 Joel S Regala went to the archives and found the 1881 records on Andres Bonifacio Reproduced in the book In the Blood is the page where you find the parents of the hero Santiago Bonifacio aged 39 and Catalina de Castro aged 36 This small bit off information disproves the textbook story that Andres and his siblings were orphaned young Ocampo Ambeth 1999 Rizal Without the Overcoat Expanded ed Anvil Publishing Inc ISBN 971 27 0920 5 Quirino Carlos 1969 The Young Aguinaldo From Kawit to Biyak na Bato Manila Ronquillo Carlos 1996 Isagani Medina ed Ilang talata tungkol sa paghihimagsik nang 1896 1897 Quezon City University of the Philippines Press Salazar Zeus 1994 Agosto 29 30 1896 Ang pagsalakay ni Bonifacio sa Maynila Quezon City Miranda Bookstore Villanueva Alejo 1989 Bonifacio s Unfinished Revolution Quezon City New Day Publishers ISBN 9789711004040 retrieved August 18 2019 Zaide Gregorio 1984 Philippine History and Government National Bookstore Printing Press Zaide Sonia M 1999 The Philippines A Unique Nation All Nations Publishing ISBN 978 971 642 071 5 archived from the original on November 19 2016 retrieved November 12 2016External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Andres Bonifacio Wikimedia Commons has media related to Andres Bonifacio Wikisource has original works by or about Andres Bonifacio Works by or about Andres Bonifacio at Internet Archive Works by Andres Bonifacio at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Andres Bonifacio 1863 1897 United States Library of Congress The Records of the Court Martial of Andres and Procopio Bonifacio Full text and online collection of court documents in Spanish and old Tagalog with regards to the Andres and Procopio Bonifacio trial The Court Martial of Andres Bonifacio English translation of the historical court documents and testimonies in the trial and execution of Andres and Procopio Bonifacio processed by Filipiniana net Ang Dapat Mabatid ng mga Tagalog Summary and full text of an article written by Andres Bonifacio in the Katipunan newspaper Kalayaan posted in Filipiniana net Transcript of the Trial of Andres Bonifacio malacanang gov ph Retrieved November 17 2019 Aguinaldo confession letters on Bonifacio execution fetch P5 million at auction ABS CBN News with image of a typewritten account amended in Emilio Aguinaldo s handwriting February 23 2019 Political officesNew office Unofficial President of the Sovereign Tagalog NationAugust 24 1896 March 10 or 22 1897 Succeeded byEmilio Aguinaldoas President of the Philippines Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andres Bonifacio amp oldid 1133110118, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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