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British occupation of Manila

The British occupation of Manila was an episode in colonial history of the Philippines when the Kingdom of Great Britain occupied the Spanish colonial capital of Manila and the nearby port of Cavite for eighteen months, from the 6th October 1762 to the first week of April 1764. The occupation was an extension of the larger Seven Years' War between Britain and France, which Spain had recently entered on the side of the French.

British occupation of Manila
1762–1764
"The Attack of Manilla, October 1762", depicting the British capture of Manila
StatusOccupation of Manila by the
Kingdom of Great Britain
CapitalManila,
Bacolor, Pampanga (Spanish Philippine colonial government retains control outside of Manila and Cavite)
Common languagesSpanish and Tagalog
Religion
Roman Catholicism
Monarch 
• 1760–1820
George III
Governor-General 
• 1762–1764
Dawsonne Drake
Historical eraSpanish colonial rule
6 October 1762
31 May 1764
CurrencySpanish dollar
Preceded by
Succeeded by

The British wanted to use Manila as an entrepôt for trade in the region, particularly with China.[1] In addition, the Spanish agreed to deliver a ransom to the British in exchange for the city being spared from any further sacking.[2] The resistance from the provisional Spanish colonial government established by members of the Royal Audience of Manila led by Lieutenant Governor Simón de Anda y Salazar and their Filipino troops prevented British forces from expanding their control of the territory beyond the neighbouring towns of Manila and Cavite.[3]: 57 

Background edit

At the time, Britain and France were belligerents in what was later termed the Seven Years' War but Spain remained neutral despite diplomatic approaches from both sides. The war began badly for the British but as it progressed the tide of the war turned strongly in their favour and the neutral Spanish government became alarmed that the string of major French losses was transforming the British into a major threat to Spanish overseas interests. France successfully negotiated a treaty with Spain known as the Family Compact which was signed on 15 August 1761. By an ancillary secret convention, Spain committed to making preparations for war against Britain.[3]: 9  Britain first declared war against Spain on 4 January 1762, and on 18 January 1762, Spain issued their own declaration of war against Britain.[4]

On 6 January 1762, the British Cabinet led by Prime Minister John Stuart, agreed to attack Havana in the West Indies, and approved Colonel William Draper's scheme for taking Manila with his forces, which were already in the East Indies.[5] Draper was commanding officer of the 79th Regiment of Foot, which was then stationed at Madras in British India. Weeks later, King George III of Great Britain signed the instructions which permitted Draper to implement his scheme, emphasising that by taking advantage of the 'existing war with Spain', Britain might be able to assure her post-war mercantile expansion. Manila was one of the most important trading cities in Asia during this period, and the East India Company wished to extend its influence in the archipelago.[3]: 8  As a result, there was an expectation that the commerce of Spain would suffer a 'crippling blow'.[3]: 14 

Upon arriving in India, Draper's brevet rank became brigadier general.[3]: 12–15  A secret committee of the East India Company agreed to provide a civil governor for the administration of the Islands, and in July 1762, they appointed Dawsonne Drake for the post.[6]

British conquest of Manila edit

On 24 September 1762,[7] a British fleet of eight ships of the line, three frigates, and four store ships with a force of 6,839 regulars, sailors and marines, sailed into Manila Bay from Madras.[3]: 9  The expedition, led by William Draper and Samuel Cornish, captured Manila, "the greatest Spanish fortress in the western Pacific".[3]: 1, 7, endcover 

The Spanish defeat at Manila was in part due to the neglect of the city's military preparedness and poor military leadership during the battle. This had come about because the former Governor-General of the Philippines, Pedro Manuel de Arandia, had died in 1759 and his replacement, Francisco de la Torre, had not arrived due to the British capture of Havana in Spanish Cuba. In the interim, the Spanish Crown appointed the militarily inexperienced Mexican-born Archbishop of Manila Manuel Rojo del Río y Vieyra as a temporary Lieutenant Governor. As a result, many military mistakes were made by the defenders of the city.[3]: 33 

On 5 October 1762 (4 October local calendar), the night before the fall of the walled city of Manila, the Spanish military persuaded Rojo to summon a council of war. Several times the Archbishop wished to capitulate, but was prevented. That same day with very heavy battery fire, the British had successfully breached the walls of the bastion of San Diego. The pioneers had emptied the water in the ditch, dismounted the cannons of that bastion and the two adjoining bastions, San Andes and San Eugeno. In addition they set fire to parts of the town, and drove the Spanish forces from the walls. At dawn of 6 October, British forces attacked the breach and took the fortifications, meeting little resistance.[3]: 48–51 

During the siege, the Spanish lost three officers, two sergeants, 50 troops of the line, and 30 militiamen, besides many wounded. Among the Filipino troops, there were 300 killed and 400 wounded. The British suffered 147 killed and wounded,[8][9] of whom sixteen were officers. The British fleet expended more than 20,000 cannonballs and 5,000 bombs during their bombardment.[10]

Occupation edit

Once Manila was captured, "the soldiers turned to pillage." Rojo wrote that the sack actually lasted thirty hours or more, although he laid the blame on the Spanish, Chinese and Filipino denizens of Manila, as much as upon the marauding soldiers.[3]: 52–53  Rojo described the events in his journal.

"The city was given over the pillage, which was cruel and lasted for forty hours, without excepting the churches, the archbishopric, and a part of the palace. Although the captain-general (Simon de Anda y Salazar) objected at the end of the twenty-four hours, the pillage really continued, in spite of the orders of the British general (Draper) for it to cease. Rojo himself killed with his own hands a [Spanish] soldier he found transgressing his orders, and had three hanged."[3]: 52–53 

Drake then demanded a ransom from the Spanish authorities in exchange for agreeing to stop his troops from any further acts of pillage. Rojo agreed to the ransom, which amounted to four million Spanish dollars. By the time the British left, only a quarter of the ransom was paid, and the matter quietly dropped.[11]

 
Map of the British conquest of Manila in 1762.[12]

On 2 November 1762, Dawsonne Drake, an official of the East India Company, assumed office as the Governor of Manila. He was assisted by a council of four, consisting of John L. Smith, Claud Russel, Henry Brooke and Samuel Johnson. When after several attempts, Drake realised that he was not obtaining as many financial assets as he expected, he formed a war council which he termed the "Chottry Court". Drake imprisoned several Manilans on charges known "only known to himself", according to Captain Thomas Backhouse, who denounced Drake's court as a sham.[13] The British expedition was further rewarded after the capture of the Spanish treasure ship Filipina, carrying American silver from Acapulco, and in a battle off Cavite the Santísima Trinidad which carried a cargo of Chinese porcelain. The cargo of the Trinidad alone was valued at $1.5 million and the ship at $3 million.[3]: 75–76 

Spanish resistance edit

 
Sign at Fort Santiago, Manila, marking the departure point of Simón de Anda y Salazar.
 
Map showing the chronological advance of British troops from Manila toward parts of Northern Luzon.[12]

In the meantime, the Royal Audience of Manila had organised a war council and dispatched Oidor Don Simón de Anda y Salazar to the provincial town of Bulacan to organise continued resistance to the British.[3]: 48–49  The Real Audiencia also appointed Anda as Lieutenant Governor and Visitor-General.[3]: 58 [14] That night, Anda took a substantial portion of the treasury and official records with him, departing Fort Santiago through the postern of Our Lady of Solitude, to a boat on the Pasig River, and then to Bulacan. He moved headquarters from Bulacan to Bacolor, Pampanga, which was more secure, and quickly obtained the powerful support of the Augustinians. On 8 October 1762, Anda wrote to Rojo informing him that he had assumed the position of Governor and Capitan-General under the statutes of the Council of the Indies which allowed for the devolution of authority from the Governor to the Audiencia in cases of riot or invasion by foreign forces, as was the case presently. Anda, being the highest member of the Audiencia not under British control, assumed all powers and demanded the royal seal. Rojo declined to surrender it and refused to recognise Anda as Governor-General.[3]: 58–59 

The surrender agreement between Archbishop Rojo and the British military guaranteed the Catholic Church and its episcopal government, secured private property, and granted the citizens of the former Spanish colony the rights of peaceful travel and of trade as British subjects. Under British control, the Philippines would continue to be governed by the Real Audiencia, the expenses of which were to be paid by Spain.[3]: 54  Anda refused to recognise any of the agreements signed by Rojo as valid, claiming that the Archbishop had been made to sign them under duress, and therefore, according to the statutes of the Council of the Indies, they were invalid. He also refused to negotiate with the British until he was addressed as the legitimate Governor-General of the Philippines, returning to the British the letters that were not addressed to that effect. All of these initiatives were later approved by Charles III, who rewarded him and other members of the Audiencia, such as José Basco y Vargas, who had fought against the British. Anda eventually raised an army which amounted to over 10,000 combatants, most of them volunteer Filipinos, and although they lacked enough muskets to go around, they were successful in keeping the British largely confined to Manila and Cavite.

On 26 November, Captain Backhouse dispersed Anda's troops from Pasig and soon after, established a post, manned by lascars and sepoys so they could ensure their control of Laguna de Bay. Then on 19 January, the following year, the British sent an expedition commanded by Captain Sleigh against Bulacan which was reinforced by 400 Chinese civilians after Anda had ordered their executions for aiding the British. "In Bulacan alone 180 Chinese had been murdered in cold blood [by the Spanish] or had hanged themselves in fear." The British took Malolos on 22 January, but failed to advance upon Anda in Pampanga and withdrew from there on 7 February. In the spring of 1763, Backhouse undertook another expedition against Anda, advancing as far as Batangas.[3]: 64–65, 67–68, 85–87 

Cornish and the East Indies Squadron departed in early 1763, leaving two frigates behind, HMS Falmouth and HMS Seaford. On 24 July, news arrived of the cessation of fighting and on 26 August a preliminary draft of the Peace of Paris. The treaty stated that "All conquests not known about at the time of the signing of the treaty were to be returned to the original owners." The impasse continued in Manila however, as the British order to withdraw would not arrive for another six months, and Anda reinforced his blockade of the city. "During the final winter of the British occupation all pretence of cooperation amongst the British leaders was abandoned."[3]: 72, 90–92 

Final months edit

The Seven Years' War ended with the signing of the Treaty of Paris on 10 February 1763. At the time of the signing, the signatories were not aware that Manila had been captured by the British, and consequently, it fell under the general provision that all other lands not otherwise provided for be returned to the Spanish Crown.[3]: 109  After Archbishop Rojo died in January 1764, the British military finally recognised Simón de Anda y Salazar as the legitimate Governor of the Philippines, sending him a letter addressed to the "Real Audiencia Gobernadora y Capitanía General", after which Anda agreed to an armistice on the condition that the British forces withdraw from Manila by March. However, the British finally received their orders to withdraw in early March, and by mid-March the overdue Spanish governor for the Philippines, Brigadier Don Francisco de la Torre, finally arrived. This Spanish governor brought with him orders from London for Brereton and Backhouse to eventually hand over Manila to himself.[3]: 98–100  Drake departed Manila on 29 March 1764, and the Manila Council elected Alexander Dalrymple Provisional Deputy Governor. The British ended the occupation by embarking from Manila and Cavite in the first week of April 1764. The 79th Regiment finally arrived in Madras on 25 May 1765.[3]: 104–106, 108 

Aftermath edit

 
Postern of Our Lady of Solitude inside the Fort Santiago at Manila, through which on 5 October 1762, Lieutenant Governor Simón de Anda y Salazar escaped the British bombardment during the conquest of Manila.

Diego Silang, who was emboldened by Spanish vulnerability, was promised military assistance by the British if he began a revolt against the Spanish in the Ilocos Region, but such aid never materialised. Silang was later assassinated by his own friends, and the revolt was aborted after his wife, who had taken over the leadership, was captured and executed by the Spanish along with the remaining rebel forces.[15] Sultan Azim ud-Din I of Sulu, who had signed a treaty of alliance with the British after they had freed him from Fort Santiago in Manila, where he had been imprisoned accused of treason, was also taken with the evacuating forces, in the hope that he could be of help to the aspirations of the East India Company in the Sultanate of Sulu.[16] As British forces suffered increasing frustration and the unity of the commanders broke down, a number of Indian sepoys deserted and settled down in Pasig, Taytay, and Cainta.[17]

The conflict over payment by Spain of the outstanding part of the ransom promised by Rojo in the terms of surrender, and compensation by Britain for the excesses committed by Drake in Manila, continued in Europe for years afterwards.[3]: 110–115  The capture of the Spanish treasure galleons Santissima Trinidad and the Filipina made the expedition and the occupation rewarding more to the British government than the East India Company as well as representing a severe loss to Spain.[18][19] However, the British failure to extend control beyond Manila and Cavite made their occupation's continuation unviable: Captain Backhouse reported to the Secretary of War in London, "the enemy [Spanish] are in full possession of the country".[13]: v. 20 

The British had accepted the written surrender of the Philippines from Archbishop Rojo on 30 October 1762,[3]: 54  but the Royal Audience of Manila had already appointed Simón de Anda y Salazar as the new Governor-General as provided for under the statutes of the Council of the Indies, as was pointed out by Anda and retrospectively confirmed by King Charles III of Spain, in his re-appointment of both Anda and Basco. It was not the first time that the Audiencia had assumed responsibility for the defence of the Philippines in the absence of a higher authority; in 1646, during the Battles of La Naval de Manila, it temporarily assumed the government and maintained the defence of the Philippines against a Dutch attack. As Francisco Leandro Viana, who was in Manila during the 18-month occupation, explained to King Charles III in 1765, "the English conquest of the Philippines was just an imagined one, as the English never owned any land beyond the range of the cannons in Manila."[20]

The old Spanish maps Alexander Dalrymple took from Manila gave the British information about the Pacific, encouraging the quest for Terra Australis Incognita.

See also edit

Citations edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Danley & Speelman pp. 463-464.
  2. ^ Draper 2006, p. 101.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Tracy, Nicholas (1995). Manila Ransomed. University of Exeter Press. ISBN 0-8598-9426-6.
  4. ^ Fish 2003, p. 2
  5. ^ Fish 2003, p. 3
  6. ^ Cornish, Samuel (1761). Cornish to Council at Fort St. George. Public Record Office (PRO), Admiralty Papers.
  7. ^ British naval calendar date
  8. ^ Leebrick, Karl Clayton (2007). The English expedition to Manila and the Philippine Islands in the year 1762. University of California, Berkeley. p. 52.
  9. ^ Blair, Emma Helen (2008). The Philippine Islands, 1493-1803. BiblioBazaar. p. 18. ISBN 978-0-559-25329-4.
  10. ^ B. Rodríguez, Eulogio (2003). The contribution of the Basque men to the Philippines. Donostia-San Sebastián: Jean-Claude Larronde ed. lit. pp. 535–538. ISBN 84-8419-931-2.
  11. ^ When Britain Ruled the Philippines. Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse. 2003. ISBN 1-4107-1069-6.
  12. ^ a b Presidential Communications Development and Strategic Planning Office. . Presidential Museum and Library. Republic of the Philippines. Archived from the original on 20 October 2014. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  13. ^ a b Backhouse, Thomas (1765). The Secretary at War to Mr. Secretary Conway. London: British Library. pp. v. 40.
  14. ^ Fish 2003, p. 126
  15. ^ Zaide, Gregorio F, Philippine History and Government, National Bookstore, Manila, 1984
  16. ^ Fish 2003, pp. 132–133.
  17. ^ Fish 2003, p. 158
  18. ^ Routledge, David (1979). Diego Silang and the Origins of Philippine Nationalism - Issue 5 of Monograph series. Philippine Center for Advanced Studies, University of the Philippines. pp. 17–18.
  19. ^ Draper 2006, p. 116.
  20. ^ Viana, Francisco Leandro (1765). Manifiesto del Fiscal Viana. Sevilla: Archivo General de Indias. pp. V. 718.

References edit

  • Danley, Mark; Speelman, Patrick (2012). The Seven Years' War: Global Views History of Warfare. Brill. ISBN 9789004236448.
  • Fish, Shirley (2003), When Britain ruled the Philippines, 1762-1764: the story of the 18th century British invasion of the Philippines during the Seven Years War, 1stBooks Library, ISBN 978-1-4107-1069-7
  • Draper, James (2006). Pitt's 'Gallant Conqueror': The Turbulent Life of Lieutenant General William Draper. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 9781845111779.

Additional sources edit

  • Borschberg, P. (2004), Chinese Merchants, Catholic Clerics and Spanish Colonists in British-Occupied Manila, 1762-1764 in "Maritime China in Transition, 1750-1850", ed. by Wang Gungwu and Ng Chin Keong, Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, pp. 355–372.
  • Tracy, Nicholas (1995) Manila Ransomed: The British Assault on Manila in the Seven Years War. (University of Exeter Press). ISBN 9780859894265

Further reading edit

  • Emma Helen Blair, ed. (1907). The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 Volume XLIX, 1762-1765. Translated by James Alexander Robertson. The Arthur H. Clark Company. (other formats available)
  • Emma Helen Blair, ed. (1907). The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 Volume L, 1762-1765. Translated by James Alexander Robertson. The Arthur H. Clark Company. (other formats available)

External links edit

british, occupation, manila, episode, colonial, history, philippines, when, kingdom, great, britain, occupied, spanish, colonial, capital, manila, nearby, port, cavite, eighteen, months, from, october, 1762, first, week, april, 1764, occupation, extension, lar. The British occupation of Manila was an episode in colonial history of the Philippines when the Kingdom of Great Britain occupied the Spanish colonial capital of Manila and the nearby port of Cavite for eighteen months from the 6th October 1762 to the first week of April 1764 The occupation was an extension of the larger Seven Years War between Britain and France which Spain had recently entered on the side of the French British occupation of Manila1762 1764Flag of the British East India Company The Attack of Manilla October 1762 depicting the British capture of ManilaStatusOccupation of Manila by theKingdom of Great BritainCapitalManila Bacolor Pampanga Spanish Philippine colonial government retains control outside of Manila and Cavite Common languagesSpanish and TagalogReligionRoman CatholicismMonarch 1760 1820George IIIGovernor General 1762 1764Dawsonne DrakeHistorical eraSpanish colonial rule Battle of Manila6 October 1762 Treaty of Paris31 May 1764CurrencySpanish dollarPreceded by Succeeded bySpanish East Indies Spanish East Indies The British wanted to use Manila as an entrepot for trade in the region particularly with China 1 In addition the Spanish agreed to deliver a ransom to the British in exchange for the city being spared from any further sacking 2 The resistance from the provisional Spanish colonial government established by members of the Royal Audience of Manila led by Lieutenant Governor Simon de Anda y Salazar and their Filipino troops prevented British forces from expanding their control of the territory beyond the neighbouring towns of Manila and Cavite 3 57 Contents 1 Background 1 1 British conquest of Manila 2 Occupation 2 1 Spanish resistance 2 2 Final months 3 Aftermath 4 See also 5 Citations 5 1 Citations 5 2 References 5 3 Additional sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksBackground editAt the time Britain and France were belligerents in what was later termed the Seven Years War but Spain remained neutral despite diplomatic approaches from both sides The war began badly for the British but as it progressed the tide of the war turned strongly in their favour and the neutral Spanish government became alarmed that the string of major French losses was transforming the British into a major threat to Spanish overseas interests France successfully negotiated a treaty with Spain known as the Family Compact which was signed on 15 August 1761 By an ancillary secret convention Spain committed to making preparations for war against Britain 3 9 Britain first declared war against Spain on 4 January 1762 and on 18 January 1762 Spain issued their own declaration of war against Britain 4 On 6 January 1762 the British Cabinet led by Prime Minister John Stuart agreed to attack Havana in the West Indies and approved Colonel William Draper s scheme for taking Manila with his forces which were already in the East Indies 5 Draper was commanding officer of the 79th Regiment of Foot which was then stationed at Madras in British India Weeks later King George III of Great Britain signed the instructions which permitted Draper to implement his scheme emphasising that by taking advantage of the existing war with Spain Britain might be able to assure her post war mercantile expansion Manila was one of the most important trading cities in Asia during this period and the East India Company wished to extend its influence in the archipelago 3 8 As a result there was an expectation that the commerce of Spain would suffer a crippling blow 3 14 Upon arriving in India Draper s brevet rank became brigadier general 3 12 15 A secret committee of the East India Company agreed to provide a civil governor for the administration of the Islands and in July 1762 they appointed Dawsonne Drake for the post 6 British conquest of Manila edit Main article Battle of Manila 1762 On 24 September 1762 7 a British fleet of eight ships of the line three frigates and four store ships with a force of 6 839 regulars sailors and marines sailed into Manila Bay from Madras 3 9 The expedition led by William Draper and Samuel Cornish captured Manila the greatest Spanish fortress in the western Pacific 3 1 7 endcover The Spanish defeat at Manila was in part due to the neglect of the city s military preparedness and poor military leadership during the battle This had come about because the former Governor General of the Philippines Pedro Manuel de Arandia had died in 1759 and his replacement Francisco de la Torre had not arrived due to the British capture of Havana in Spanish Cuba In the interim the Spanish Crown appointed the militarily inexperienced Mexican born Archbishop of Manila Manuel Rojo del Rio y Vieyra as a temporary Lieutenant Governor As a result many military mistakes were made by the defenders of the city 3 33 On 5 October 1762 4 October local calendar the night before the fall of the walled city of Manila the Spanish military persuaded Rojo to summon a council of war Several times the Archbishop wished to capitulate but was prevented That same day with very heavy battery fire the British had successfully breached the walls of the bastion of San Diego The pioneers had emptied the water in the ditch dismounted the cannons of that bastion and the two adjoining bastions San Andes and San Eugeno In addition they set fire to parts of the town and drove the Spanish forces from the walls At dawn of 6 October British forces attacked the breach and took the fortifications meeting little resistance 3 48 51 During the siege the Spanish lost three officers two sergeants 50 troops of the line and 30 militiamen besides many wounded Among the Filipino troops there were 300 killed and 400 wounded The British suffered 147 killed and wounded 8 9 of whom sixteen were officers The British fleet expended more than 20 000 cannonballs and 5 000 bombs during their bombardment 10 Occupation editOnce Manila was captured the soldiers turned to pillage Rojo wrote that the sack actually lasted thirty hours or more although he laid the blame on the Spanish Chinese and Filipino denizens of Manila as much as upon the marauding soldiers 3 52 53 Rojo described the events in his journal The city was given over the pillage which was cruel and lasted for forty hours without excepting the churches the archbishopric and a part of the palace Although the captain general Simon de Anda y Salazar objected at the end of the twenty four hours the pillage really continued in spite of the orders of the British general Draper for it to cease Rojo himself killed with his own hands a Spanish soldier he found transgressing his orders and had three hanged 3 52 53 Drake then demanded a ransom from the Spanish authorities in exchange for agreeing to stop his troops from any further acts of pillage Rojo agreed to the ransom which amounted to four million Spanish dollars By the time the British left only a quarter of the ransom was paid and the matter quietly dropped 11 nbsp Map of the British conquest of Manila in 1762 12 On 2 November 1762 Dawsonne Drake an official of the East India Company assumed office as the Governor of Manila He was assisted by a council of four consisting of John L Smith Claud Russel Henry Brooke and Samuel Johnson When after several attempts Drake realised that he was not obtaining as many financial assets as he expected he formed a war council which he termed the Chottry Court Drake imprisoned several Manilans on charges known only known to himself according to Captain Thomas Backhouse who denounced Drake s court as a sham 13 The British expedition was further rewarded after the capture of the Spanish treasure ship Filipina carrying American silver from Acapulco and in a battle off Cavite the Santisima Trinidad which carried a cargo of Chinese porcelain The cargo of the Trinidad alone was valued at 1 5 million and the ship at 3 million 3 75 76 Spanish resistance edit nbsp Sign at Fort Santiago Manila marking the departure point of Simon de Anda y Salazar nbsp Map showing the chronological advance of British troops from Manila toward parts of Northern Luzon 12 In the meantime the Royal Audience of Manila had organised a war council and dispatched Oidor Don Simon de Anda y Salazar to the provincial town of Bulacan to organise continued resistance to the British 3 48 49 The Real Audiencia also appointed Anda as Lieutenant Governor and Visitor General 3 58 14 That night Anda took a substantial portion of the treasury and official records with him departing Fort Santiago through the postern of Our Lady of Solitude to a boat on the Pasig River and then to Bulacan He moved headquarters from Bulacan to Bacolor Pampanga which was more secure and quickly obtained the powerful support of the Augustinians On 8 October 1762 Anda wrote to Rojo informing him that he had assumed the position of Governor and Capitan General under the statutes of the Council of the Indies which allowed for the devolution of authority from the Governor to the Audiencia in cases of riot or invasion by foreign forces as was the case presently Anda being the highest member of the Audiencia not under British control assumed all powers and demanded the royal seal Rojo declined to surrender it and refused to recognise Anda as Governor General 3 58 59 The surrender agreement between Archbishop Rojo and the British military guaranteed the Catholic Church and its episcopal government secured private property and granted the citizens of the former Spanish colony the rights of peaceful travel and of trade as British subjects Under British control the Philippines would continue to be governed by the Real Audiencia the expenses of which were to be paid by Spain 3 54 Anda refused to recognise any of the agreements signed by Rojo as valid claiming that the Archbishop had been made to sign them under duress and therefore according to the statutes of the Council of the Indies they were invalid He also refused to negotiate with the British until he was addressed as the legitimate Governor General of the Philippines returning to the British the letters that were not addressed to that effect All of these initiatives were later approved by Charles III who rewarded him and other members of the Audiencia such as Jose Basco y Vargas who had fought against the British Anda eventually raised an army which amounted to over 10 000 combatants most of them volunteer Filipinos and although they lacked enough muskets to go around they were successful in keeping the British largely confined to Manila and Cavite On 26 November Captain Backhouse dispersed Anda s troops from Pasig and soon after established a post manned by lascars and sepoys so they could ensure their control of Laguna de Bay Then on 19 January the following year the British sent an expedition commanded by Captain Sleigh against Bulacan which was reinforced by 400 Chinese civilians after Anda had ordered their executions for aiding the British In Bulacan alone 180 Chinese had been murdered in cold blood by the Spanish or had hanged themselves in fear The British took Malolos on 22 January but failed to advance upon Anda in Pampanga and withdrew from there on 7 February In the spring of 1763 Backhouse undertook another expedition against Anda advancing as far as Batangas 3 64 65 67 68 85 87 Cornish and the East Indies Squadron departed in early 1763 leaving two frigates behind HMS Falmouth and HMS Seaford On 24 July news arrived of the cessation of fighting and on 26 August a preliminary draft of the Peace of Paris The treaty stated that All conquests not known about at the time of the signing of the treaty were to be returned to the original owners The impasse continued in Manila however as the British order to withdraw would not arrive for another six months and Anda reinforced his blockade of the city During the final winter of the British occupation all pretence of cooperation amongst the British leaders was abandoned 3 72 90 92 Final months edit The Seven Years War ended with the signing of the Treaty of Paris on 10 February 1763 At the time of the signing the signatories were not aware that Manila had been captured by the British and consequently it fell under the general provision that all other lands not otherwise provided for be returned to the Spanish Crown 3 109 After Archbishop Rojo died in January 1764 the British military finally recognised Simon de Anda y Salazar as the legitimate Governor of the Philippines sending him a letter addressed to the Real Audiencia Gobernadora y Capitania General after which Anda agreed to an armistice on the condition that the British forces withdraw from Manila by March However the British finally received their orders to withdraw in early March and by mid March the overdue Spanish governor for the Philippines Brigadier Don Francisco de la Torre finally arrived This Spanish governor brought with him orders from London for Brereton and Backhouse to eventually hand over Manila to himself 3 98 100 Drake departed Manila on 29 March 1764 and the Manila Council elected Alexander Dalrymple Provisional Deputy Governor The British ended the occupation by embarking from Manila and Cavite in the first week of April 1764 The 79th Regiment finally arrived in Madras on 25 May 1765 3 104 106 108 Aftermath edit nbsp Postern of Our Lady of Solitude inside the Fort Santiago at Manila through which on 5 October 1762 Lieutenant Governor Simon de Anda y Salazar escaped the British bombardment during the conquest of Manila Diego Silang who was emboldened by Spanish vulnerability was promised military assistance by the British if he began a revolt against the Spanish in the Ilocos Region but such aid never materialised Silang was later assassinated by his own friends and the revolt was aborted after his wife who had taken over the leadership was captured and executed by the Spanish along with the remaining rebel forces 15 Sultan Azim ud Din I of Sulu who had signed a treaty of alliance with the British after they had freed him from Fort Santiago in Manila where he had been imprisoned accused of treason was also taken with the evacuating forces in the hope that he could be of help to the aspirations of the East India Company in the Sultanate of Sulu 16 As British forces suffered increasing frustration and the unity of the commanders broke down a number of Indian sepoys deserted and settled down in Pasig Taytay and Cainta 17 The conflict over payment by Spain of the outstanding part of the ransom promised by Rojo in the terms of surrender and compensation by Britain for the excesses committed by Drake in Manila continued in Europe for years afterwards 3 110 115 The capture of the Spanish treasure galleons Santissima Trinidad and the Filipina made the expedition and the occupation rewarding more to the British government than the East India Company as well as representing a severe loss to Spain 18 19 However the British failure to extend control beyond Manila and Cavite made their occupation s continuation unviable Captain Backhouse reported to the Secretary of War in London the enemy Spanish are in full possession of the country 13 v 20 The British had accepted the written surrender of the Philippines from Archbishop Rojo on 30 October 1762 3 54 but the Royal Audience of Manila had already appointed Simon de Anda y Salazar as the new Governor General as provided for under the statutes of the Council of the Indies as was pointed out by Anda and retrospectively confirmed by King Charles III of Spain in his re appointment of both Anda and Basco It was not the first time that the Audiencia had assumed responsibility for the defence of the Philippines in the absence of a higher authority in 1646 during the Battles of La Naval de Manila it temporarily assumed the government and maintained the defence of the Philippines against a Dutch attack As Francisco Leandro Viana who was in Manila during the 18 month occupation explained to King Charles III in 1765 the English conquest of the Philippines was just an imagined one as the English never owned any land beyond the range of the cannons in Manila 20 The old Spanish maps Alexander Dalrymple took from Manila gave the British information about the Pacific encouraging the quest for Terra Australis Incognita See also editGreat Britain in the Seven Years War Siege of HavanaCitations editCitations edit Danley amp Speelman pp 463 464 Draper 2006 p 101 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Tracy Nicholas 1995 Manila Ransomed University of Exeter Press ISBN 0 8598 9426 6 Fish 2003 p 2 Fish 2003 p 3 Cornish Samuel 1761 Cornish to Council at Fort St George Public Record Office PRO Admiralty Papers British naval calendar date Leebrick Karl Clayton 2007 The English expedition to Manila and the Philippine Islands in the year 1762 University of California Berkeley p 52 Blair Emma Helen 2008 The Philippine Islands 1493 1803 BiblioBazaar p 18 ISBN 978 0 559 25329 4 B Rodriguez Eulogio 2003 The contribution of the Basque men to the Philippines Donostia San Sebastian Jean Claude Larronde ed lit pp 535 538 ISBN 84 8419 931 2 When Britain Ruled the Philippines Bloomington IN AuthorHouse 2003 ISBN 1 4107 1069 6 a b Presidential Communications Development and Strategic Planning Office The British Conquest of Manila Presidential Museum and Library Republic of the Philippines Archived from the original on 20 October 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2014 a b Backhouse Thomas 1765 The Secretary at War to Mr Secretary Conway London British Library pp v 40 Fish 2003 p 126 Zaide Gregorio F Philippine History and Government National Bookstore Manila 1984 Fish 2003 pp 132 133 Fish 2003 p 158 Routledge David 1979 Diego Silang and the Origins of Philippine Nationalism Issue 5 of Monograph series Philippine Center for Advanced Studies University of the Philippines pp 17 18 Draper 2006 p 116 Viana Francisco Leandro 1765 Manifiesto del Fiscal Viana Sevilla Archivo General de Indias pp V 718 References edit Danley Mark Speelman Patrick 2012 The Seven Years War Global Views History of Warfare Brill ISBN 9789004236448 Fish Shirley 2003 When Britain ruled the Philippines 1762 1764 the story of the 18th century British invasion of the Philippines during the Seven Years War 1stBooks Library ISBN 978 1 4107 1069 7 Draper James 2006 Pitt s Gallant Conqueror The Turbulent Life of Lieutenant General William Draper I B Tauris ISBN 9781845111779 Additional sources edit Borschberg P 2004 Chinese Merchants Catholic Clerics and Spanish Colonists in British Occupied Manila 1762 1764 in Maritime China in Transition 1750 1850 ed by Wang Gungwu and Ng Chin Keong Wiesbaden Harrassowitz pp 355 372 Tracy Nicholas 1995 Manila Ransomed The British Assault on Manila in the Seven Years War University of Exeter Press ISBN 9780859894265Further reading editEmma Helen Blair ed 1907 The Philippine Islands 1493 1898 Volume XLIX 1762 1765 Translated by James Alexander Robertson The Arthur H Clark Company other formats available Emma Helen Blair ed 1907 The Philippine Islands 1493 1898 Volume L 1762 1765 Translated by James Alexander Robertson The Arthur H Clark Company other formats available External links editBritish Occupation of Manila article on the website of the Presidential Museum and Library Republic of the Philippines Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title British occupation of Manila amp oldid 1197033168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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