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Philippine Revolution

The Philippine Revolution (Spanish: Revolución Filipina); (Filipino: Himagsikang Pilipino / Rebolusyong Pilipino, called the Tagalog War (Spanish: Guerra Tagala) by the Spanish,[4] was a revolution, a civil war and subsequent conflict fought between the people and insurgents of the Philippines and the Spanish colonial authorities of the Spanish East Indies, under the Spanish Empire (Kingdom of Spain).

Philippine Revolution
Revolución Filipina
Himagsikang Pilipino
Rebolusyong Pilipino
Part of Decolonisation of Asia
Clockwise from top left: Surviving Spanish troops in Barcelona after the Siege of Baler, Filipino soldiers during the near end of the Revolution, Filipino negotiators for the Pact of Biak-na-Bato, Painting of the Battle of Zapote Bridge, and the Malolos Congress
DateAugust 24, 1896 – June 12, 1898
Location
Result

Filipino victory

Belligerents

1896–1897
Katipunan

1896–1897
Spanish Empire

1898
Filipino Revolutionaries

 United States

Diplomatic support:
 German Empire[1]

1898
Spanish Empire

Province of La Pampanga

Commanders and leaders

Supremo:
Andrés Bonifacio 
(1896–1897)
President:
Emilio Aguinaldo
(1897–1898)
Early leaders:
(until 1897)
Román Basa 
Teodoro Plata 
Ladislao Diwa
Emilio Jacinto
Gregoria de Jesús
Julio Nakpil
Macario Sakay
Mariano Álvarez
Later leaders:
(until 1898)
Mariano Trías
Santiago Álvarez
Baldomero Aguinaldo
Miguel Malvar
Artemio Ricarte
Pío del Pilar
Tomás Mascardo
Gregorio del Pilar
Francisco Macabulos
Manuel Tinio
Teresa Magbanua
Pantaleón Villegas
Arcadio Maxilom
Aniceto Lacson

George Dewey
Wesley Merritt
Queen Regent:
Maria Christina
Governor-Generals:
Ramón Blanco
(1896)
Camilo de Polavieja
(1896–1897)
Fernando Primo de Rivera
(1897–1898)
Basilio Augustín
(1898)
Fermin Jáudenes
(1898)
Diego de los Ríos
(1898)
Other leaders:
José Olaguer Feliú
Ernesto de Aguirre
Bernardo Echaluce
Antonio Zabala 
José de Lachambre
Jose Marina
Ricardo Monet
Francisco Castilla
Francisco Galbis
Nicholas Jaramillo
Leopoldo García Peña

José Canovas y Vallejo
Strength
100,000[2][3] by 1896 12,700–17,700 before the Revolution, around 55,000 (30,000 Spanish; 25,000 Kapampangans and other natives) by 1898
Casualties and losses
Heavy; official casualties are unknown Heavy; official casualties are unknown
Notes

The Philippine Revolution began in August 1896, when the Spanish authorities discovered the Katipunan, an anti-colonial secret organization. The Katipunan, led by Andrés Bonifacio, began to influence much of the Philippines taking full advantage of Spanish failures against Cuban nationalists in 1895 and declaring Spain a weakened empire. During a mass gathering in Caloocan, the leaders of the Katipunan organized into a revolutionary government, named the newly established government "Haring Bayang Katagalugan", and openly declared a nationwide armed revolution.[5] Bonifacio called for an attack on the capital city of Manila. This attack failed; however, the surrounding provinces began to revolt. In particular, rebels in Cavite led by Mariano Álvarez and Baldomero Aguinaldo (who were leaders from two different factions of the Katipunan) won early major victories. A power struggle among the revolutionaries led to a schism among Katipunan leadership followed by Bonifacio's execution in 1897, with command having shifted to Emilio Aguinaldo, who led the newly formed revolutionary government. That year, revolutionaries and the Spanish signed the Pact of Biak-na-Bato, which temporarily reduced hostilities. Filipino revolutionary officers exiled themselves to Hong Kong. However, the hostilities never completely ceased.[6]

On April 21, 1898, after the sinking of the USS Maine in Havana Harbor and prior to its declaration of war on April 25, the United States launched a naval blockade of the Spanish colonial island of Cuba, off its southern coast of the peninsula of Florida. This was the first military action of the Spanish–American War of 1898.[7] On May 1, the U.S. Navy's Asiatic Squadron, under Commodore George Dewey, decisively defeated the Spanish Navy in the Battle of Manila Bay, effectively seizing control of Manila. On May 19, Aguinaldo, unofficially allied with the United States, returned to the Philippines and resumed attacks against the Spaniards. By June, the rebels had gained control of nearly all of the Philippines, with the exception of Manila. On June 12, Aguinaldo issued the Philippine Declaration of Independence.[8] Although this signified the end date of the revolution, neither Spain nor the United States recognized Philippine independence.[9]

The Spanish rule of the Philippines officially ended with the Treaty of Paris of 1898, which also ended the Spanish–American War. In the treaty, Spain ceded control of the Philippines and other territories to the United States.[6] There was an uneasy peace around Manila, with the American forces controlling the city and the weaker Philippines forces surrounding them.

On February 4, 1899, in the Battle of Manila, fighting broke out between the Filipino and American forces, beginning the Philippine–American War. Aguinaldo immediately ordered "that peace and friendly relations with the Americans be broken and that the latter be treated as enemies".[10] In June 1899, the nascent First Philippine Republic formally declared war against the United States,[11][12] in which the Americans prevailed.

The Philippines would not become an internationally recognized independent state until 1946.

Summary

The main influx of revolutionary ideas came at the start of the 19th century when the Philippines was opened for world trade. In 1809, the first British firms were established in Manila, followed by a royal decree in 1834 which officially opened the city to world trade. The Philippines had been governed from Mexico since 1565,[13] with colonial administrative costs sustained by subsidies from the galleon trade. Increased competition with foreign traders brought the galleon trade to an end in 1815. After it recognised Mexican independence in 1821, Spain was forced to govern the Philippines directly from Madrid and to find new sources of revenue to pay for the colonial administration.[14] At this point, post-French Revolution ideas entered the country through literature, which resulted in the rise of an enlightened principalía class in the society.

The 1868 Spanish Revolution brought the autocratic rule of Queen Isabella II to an end. The autocratic government was replaced by a liberal government led by General Francisco Serrano.[15] In 1869, Serrano appointed Carlos María de la Torre as the 91st governor-general. The leadership of de la Torre introduced the idea of liberalism to the Philippines.[15]

The election of Amadeo of Savoy to the throne of Spain led to the replacement of de la Torre in 1871.[16] In 1872, the government of the succeeding governor-general, Rafael de Izquierdo, experienced the uprising of Filipino soldiers at the Fort San Felipe arsenal in Cavite el Viejo. Seven days after the mutiny, many people were arrested and tried. Three of these were secular priests: José Burgos, Mariano Gomez and friar Jacinto Zamora, who were hanged by Spanish authorities in Bagumbayan.[17] Their execution had a profound effect on many Filipinos; José Rizal, the national hero, would dedicate his novel El filibusterismo to their memory.[18]

Many Filipinos who were arrested for possible rebellion were deported to Spanish penal colonies.[19] Some of them, however, managed to escape to Hong Kong, Yokohama, Singapore, Paris, London, Vienna, Berlin, and some parts of Spain. These people met fellow Filipino students and other exiles who had escaped from penal colonies. Bound together by common fate, they established an organization known as the Propaganda Movement. These émigrés used their writings primarily to condemn Spanish abuses and seek reforms to the colonial government.

José Rizal's novels, Noli Me Tángere (Touch Me Not, 1887) and El Filibusterismo (The Filibuster, 1891), exposed Spanish abuses in sociopolitical and religious aspects. The publication of his first novel brought the infamous agrarian conflict in his hometown of Calamba, Laguna in 1888, when Dominican haciendas fell into trouble of submitting government taxes. In 1892, after his return from the Americas, Rizal established La Liga Filipina (The Filipino League), a Filipino association organized to seek reforms in the colonial government. When the Spaniards learned that Rizal was in the Philippines, they arrested and deported him a few days after the Liga was established.

Upon hearing that Rizal had been deported to Dapitan, Liga member Andrés Bonifacio and his fellows established a secret organization named Katipunan in a house located in Tondo, Manila, while more conservative members led by Domingo Franco and Numeriano Adriano would later establish the Cuerpo de Compromisarios. The Katipunan obtained overwhelming number of members and attracted the lowly classes. In June 1896, Bonifacio sent an emissary to Dapitan to obtain Rizal's support, but Rizal refused to participate in an armed revolution. On August 19, 1896, Katipunan was discovered by a Spanish friar, which resulted in the start of the Philippine Revolution.

The revolution initially flared up in Central Luzon. The armed resistance eventually spread throughout the Southern Tagalog region, particularly in Cavite province, where towns were gradually liberated during the early months of the uprising. In 1896 and 1897, successive conventions at Imus and Tejeros decided the new republic's fate. In November 1897, the Republic of Biak-na-Bato was established, and the insurgent government promulgated a constitution. On May 1, 1898, the Battle of Manila Bay took place as part of the Spanish–American War. On May 24, Emilio Aguinaldo, who had returned from voluntary exile on May 19, announced in Cavite, "...I return to assume command of all the forces for the attainment of our lofty aspirations, establishing a dictatorial government which will set forth decrees under my sole responsibility, ...".[20] On June 12, Aguinaldo proclaimed Philippine independence.[21] On June 18, Aguinaldo issued a decree proclaiming a Dictatorial Government led by himself.[22] On June 23, Aguinaldo issued another decree, which replaced the Dictatorial Government with a Revolutionary Government.[23] In 1898, between June and September 10, the Malolos Congress elections were held by the Revolutionary Government, resulting in Emilio Aguinaldo being elected as President of the Philippines. On February 2, 1899, hostilities broke out between U.S. and Filipino forces.[24] The Malolos Constitution was adopted in a session convened on September 15, 1898. It was promulgated on January 21, 1899, creating the First Philippine Republic with Aguinaldo as President. On June 12, 1899, Aguinaldo promulgated a declaration of war against the U.S., beginning the Philippine–American War. U.S. forces captured Aguinaldo on March 23, 1901, and he swore allegiance to the U.S. on April 1. On July 4, 1902, U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt proclaimed a complete pardon and amnesty for all Filipinos who had participated in the conflict, effectively ending the war.[25][26]

Background

Origins

 
Map of the Philippines at the end of the 19th century.

The Philippine Revolution was an accumulation of ideas and exposition to the international community, which led to the start of nationalistic endeavors. The rise of Filipino nationalism was slow, but inevitable. Abuses by the Spanish government, military and clergy prevalent during three centuries of colonial rule, and the exposure of these abuses by the "ilustrados" in the late 19th century, paved the way for a united Filipino people.[27][28] However, the growth of nationalism was slow because of the difficulty in social and economic intercourse among the Filipinos. In a dated letter written by the Filipino writer José P. Rizal to Father Vicente García of Ateneo Municipal de Manila, Rizal states that:[29]

There is, then, in the Philippines, a progress or improvement which is individual, but there is no national progress.

— January 17, 1891

Opening of Manila to world trade

 
A sketch of a Spanish galleon during Manila-Acapulco Trade.

Before the opening of Manila to foreign trade, the Spanish authorities discouraged foreign merchants from residing in the colony and engaging in business.[30] The royal decree of February 2, 1800, prohibited foreigners from living in the Philippines.[31] as did the royal decrees of 1807 and 1816.[31] In 1823, Governor-General Mariano Ricafort promulgated an edict prohibiting foreign merchants from engaging in retail trade and visiting the provinces for the purpose of trading. It was reissued by Governor-General Luis Lardizábal in 1840.[32] A royal decree issued in 1844 prohibited foreigners from traveling to the provinces under any pretext whatsoever, and in 1857, several anti-foreigner laws were renewed.[33]

With the wide acceptance of laissez-faire doctrines in the later part of the 18th century, Spain relaxed its mercantilist policies. The British capture and occupation of Manila in 1762–1764 made Spain realize the impossibility of isolating the colony from world intercourse and commerce.[34] In 1789, foreign vessels were given permission to transport Asian goods to the port of Manila.[35] Even before the 1780s, many foreign ships, including Yankee clipper ships, had visited Manila regardless of anti-foreigner regulations. In 1790, Governor-General Félix Berenguer de Marquina recommended that the King of Spain open Manila to world commerce.[36] Furthermore, the bankruptcy of the Royal Company of the Philippines (Real Compaña de Filipinas) catapulted the Spanish king to open Manila to world trade. In a royal decree issued on September 6, 1834, the privileges of the company were revoked and the port of Manila was opened to trade.[37]

Economic surveys, port openings and admission of foreign firms

Shortly after the opening of Manila to world trade, the Spanish merchants began to lose their commercial supremacy in the Philippines. In 1834, restrictions against foreign traders were relaxed when Manila became an open port. By the end of 1859, there were 15 foreign firms in Manila. Seven of these were British, three were American, two were French, two were Swiss and one was German.[38]

In 1834, some American merchants settled in Manila and invested heavily in business. Two American business firms were established—the Russell, Sturgis & Company and the Peele, Hubbell & Company. These became two of the leading business firms. At first, Americans had an edge over their British competitors, because they offered high prices for Philippine exports such as hemp, sugar, and tobacco.[39]

American trade supremacy did not last long. In the face of stiff British competition, they gradually lost their control over the Philippine business market. This decline was due to lack of support from the U.S. government and lack of U.S. trade bases in the Orient.[39] In 1875, Russell, Sturgis & Company went into bankruptcy, followed by Peele, Hubbell & Company in 1887. Soon after, British merchants, including James Adam Smith, Lawrence H. Bell and Robert P. Wood, dominated the financial sector in Manila.[39]

In 1842, alarmed by the domination of foreign merchants in the economy of Manila, the Spanish government sent Sinibaldo de Mas, a Spanish diplomat, to the Philippines in order to conduct an economic survey of the Philippines and submit recommendations.[40] After an intensive investigation of colonial affairs in the Philippines, Mas submitted his official report to the Crown. The report, Informe sobre el estado de las Islas Filipinas en 1842, was published at Madrid in 1843. Mas recommended the following: opening of more ports to promote foreign trade, encouragement of Chinese immigration to stimulate agricultural development, and abolition of the tobacco monopoly.[41]

In response to Sinibaldo de Mas's recommendations, more ports were opened by Spain. The ports of Sual, Pangasinan, Iloilo and Zamboanga were opened in 1855, Cebu was opened in 1860, and both Legazpi and Tacloban were opened in 1873.[42]

Enlightenment
 
Leaders of the reform movement in Spain: José Rizal, Marcelo H. del Pilar and Mariano Ponce. Photo was taken in Spain in 1890.
 
Ilustrados in Madrid, c.1890; Standing clockwise from left: Vicente Francisco, Cajigas, José Abreu, Mariano Abella, Dominador Gómez, Francisco Tongio Liongson, Flaviano Cordecruz, a Tuazon from Malabon, Alejandro Yance de Lara, Lauro Dimayuga, Marcelo H. del Pilar, Gregorio Aguilera, José Rizal, José Alejandrino, Baldomero Roxas, Moises Salvador, Modesto Reyes, Gaudencio Juanengo, Pablo Rianzares Bautista; Seated from left: Dr. Santamaria, Candido Morada, Damaso Ponce, Ariston Bautista, Pedro Serrano Lactao, and Teodoro Sandiko

Before the start of the Philippine Revolution, Filipino society was subdivided into social classifications that were based on the economic status of a person. Background, ancestry, and economic status played a huge role in determining standing in the social hierarchy.

The Spanish people as well as Native descendants of precolonial nobility belonged to the upper class, and they were further subdivided into more classes: the peninsulares, the creoles, and the Principalía. The peninsulares were people who were Spanish-born, but lived in the Philippines. The creoles, or criollo people, were Spaniards who were born in the colonies. The principalía was a hereditary class of local Indios who descended from precolonial datus, rajah and nobility, and were granted special rights and privileges such as positions in local government and the right to vote, though they were lower than the peninsulares and insulares in social standing. Many members of the Philippine Revolution belonged to the principalía class, like José Rizal. Although the peninsulares and the creoles enjoyed the same social power, as they both belonged to the upper class, the peninsulares considered themselves as socially superior to the creoles and the native principalía.[43]

The lowest of the two classes was the masses, or Indios. This class included all poor commoners, peasants and laborers. Unlike the principalía class, where the members enjoyed high public offices and recommendations from the King of Spain, the masses only enjoyed a few civil rights and privileges. The highest political office that they could possibly hold was the gobernadorcillo, or the town executive. The members of Katipunan, the secret organization that would trigger the revolution, mainly consisted of the masses.[43]

Material prosperity at the start of 19th century produced an enlightened middle class in the Philippines, consisting of well-to-do farmers, teachers, lawyers, physicians, writers, and government employees. Many of them were able to buy and read books originally withheld from the lowly Filipino class. They discussed political problems and sought government reforms, and eventually, they were able to send their children to colleges and universities in Manila and abroad, particularly to Madrid. The material progress was primarily due to the opening of the Manila ports to world trade.[44]

The leading intellectuals of the country came from the enlightened middle class. They later called themselves the Ilustrados, which means "erudite ones". They also considered themselves to be the intelligentsia branch of the Filipino society. From the Ilustrados rose the prominent members of the Propaganda Movement, who stirred the very first flames of the revolution.[45]

Liberalism (1868–1874)

In 1868, a revolution overthrew the autocratic monarchy of Queen Isabella II of Spain, which was replaced by a civil and liberal government with Republican principles led by Francisco Serrano.[46]: 107 

The next year, Serrano appointed Carlos María de la Torre, a member of the Spanish Army, as the 91st Governor-General of the Philippines. Filipino and Spanish liberals residing in the country welcomed him with a banquet at the Malacañan Palace on June 23, 1869. On the night of July 12, 1869, Filipino leaders, priests and students gathered and serenaded de la Torre at Malacañan Palace to express their appreciation for his liberal policies. The serenade was led by prominent residents of Manila, including José Cabezas de Herrera (the Civil Governor of Manila), José Burgos, Maximo Paterno, Manuel Genato, Joaquín Pardo de Tavera, Ángel Garchitorena, Andrés Nieto and Jacóbo Zóbel y Zangroniz.

An Assembly of Reformists, the Junta General de Reformas, was established in Manila. It consisted of five Filipinos, eleven Spanish civilians and five Spanish friars.[46]: 362–363  They had the ability to vote on reforms, subject to ratification by the Home Government.[46]: 363  However, none of the reforms were put into effect, due to the friars fearing that the reforms would diminish their influence. The Assembly ceased to exist after the 1874 Restoration.[46]: 363 

Rise of Filipino nationalism

In 1776, the first major challenge to monarchy in centuries occurred in the American Colonies. Although the American Revolution succeeded, it was in a relatively isolated area. In 1789, however, the French Revolution began to change the political landscape of Europe, as it ended absolute monarchy in France. The power passed from the king to the people through representation in parliament. People in other European countries began asking for representation, as well. In the Philippines, this idea spread through the writings of criollo writers, such as Luis Rodríguez Varela, who called himself "Conde Filipino" (Earl of the Philippines).[47] This was the first time that a colonist called himself a Filipino rather than a Spanish subject. With the increasing economic and political stability in the Philippines, the middle class began demanding that the churches in the Philippines be nationalized through a process known as Secularization. In this process, control of Philippine parishes were to be passed from the religious orders to the secular priests, particularly Philippine-born priests. The religious orders, or friars, reacted negatively and a political struggle between the friars and secular priests began.

The 19th century was also a new era for Europe. Church power was declining, and friars began coming to the Philippines, ending hopes that the friars would relinquish their posts. With the opening of the Suez Canal, the voyage between Spain and the Philippines was made shorter. More peninsulares (Spaniards born in Spain) began pouring into the colony and started to occupy the various government positions traditionally held by the criollos (Spaniards born in the Philippines). In the 300 years of colonial rule, the criollos had been accustomed to being semi-autonomous with the governor-general, who was the only Spaniard (peninsulares) government official. The criollos demanded representation in the Spanish Cortes where they could express their grievances. This, together with the secularization issues, gave rise to the Criollo insurgencies.

Criollo insurgencies

 
Priests Mariano Gómez, Jacinto Zamora, and José Burgos (L-R, remembered in Philippine history as Gomburza)

In the late 18th century, Criollo (or Insulares, "islanders", as they were locally called) writers began spreading the ideals of the French Revolution in the Philippines. At the same time, a royal decree ordered the secularization of Philippine churches, and many parishes were turned over to Philippine-born priests. Halfway through the process, it was aborted due to the return of the Jesuits. The religious orders began retaking Philippine parishes. One instance that enraged the Insulares was the Franciscan takeover of Antipolo, the richest parish in the islands, which had been under the control of Philippine-born priests. In the early 19th century, Fathers Pedro Peláez and Mariano Gomez began organizing activities which demanded that control of Philippine parishes be returned to the Filipino seculars. Father Peláez, who was Archbishop of the Manila Cathedral, died in an earthquake, while Father Gómez retired to private life. The next generation of Insular activists included Father José Burgos, who organized the student rallies in the University of Santo Tomas. On the political front, Insular activists included Joaquín Pardo de Tavera and Jacobo Zobel. The unrest escalated into a large insurgency in 1823 when Andres Novales, a creole captain, declared the Philippines to be independent from Spain and crowned himself Emperor of the Philippines.[47] In January 1872, the Insular uprisings began when soldiers and workers of the Cavite Arsenal of Fort San Felipe mutinied. They were led by sergeant Ferdinand La Madrid, a Spanish mestizo. The soldiers mistook the fireworks in Quiapo, which were being fired for the feast of St. Sebastian, as the signal to start a long-planned national uprising. The colonial government used the incident to spread a reign of terror and to eliminate subversive political and church figures. Among these were priests Mariano Gomez, José Burgos, and Jacinto Zamora, who were executed by garrote on February 18, 1872. They are remembered in Philippine history as Gomburza.[47]

Organizations

La Solidaridad, La Liga Filipina and the Propaganda Movement

 
A copy of La Solidaridad (Solidarity)

The Cavite Mutiny of 1872, and the subsequent deportation of criollos and mestizos to the Mariana Islands and Europe, created a colony of Filipino expatriates in Europe, particularly in Madrid. In Madrid, Marcelo H. del Pilar, Mariano Ponce, Eduardo de Lete, and Antonio Luna founded La Solidaridad, a newspaper that pressed for reforms in the Philippines and spread ideas of revolution.[46]: 363  This effort is known as the Propaganda Movement, and the result was the founding of secret societies in villages.[46]: 363  Among the pioneering editors of the paper were Graciano López Jaena, Marcelo H. del Pilar, and José Rizal. The editors of La Solidaridad also included leading Spanish liberals, such as Miguel Morayta.[48] The Propaganda Movement in Europe resulted in the Spanish legislature passing some reforms for the islands, but the colonial government did not implement them. After being published from 1889 to 1895, La Solidaridad began to run out of funds, and it had not accomplished concrete changes in the Philippines. José Rizal decided to return to the Philippines, where he founded La Liga Filipina, the Manila chapter of the Propaganda Movement.

Only days after its founding, Rizal was arrested by colonial authorities and deported to Dapitan, and the Liga was soon disbanded.[48] Ideological differences had contributed to its dissolution. Conservative upper-class members favoring reform, under the leadership of Apolinario Mabini, set up the Cuerpo de Compromisarios, which attempted to revive La Solidaridad in Europe. Other, more radical members belonging to the middle and lower classes, led by Andrés Bonifacio, set up the Katipunan alongside the revived Liga.

The goals of the Propaganda Movement included legal equality of Filipinos and Spaniards, restoration of Philippine representation in the Spanish Cortes, "Filipinization" of the Catholic parishes, and the granting of individual liberties to Filipinos, such as freedom of speech, freedom of press, freedom of assembly, and freedom to petition for grievances.[49]

Katipunan

Katipunan
Participant at the Philippine Revolution
 
Background
EventsVarious revolts and uprisings
Factions
See Factions

Magdiwang (Noveleta)
Magdalo (Kawit / Cavite el Viejo)
Haligue (Imus)
Gargano (Bakood)
Mapagtiis (San Francisco de Malabon)
Magwagi (Naic)
Pangwagi (Tanza)
Walang-tinag (Indang)
Katuwa-tuwa (Ternate)
Magtagumpay (Maragondon)
Naghapay (Bailen)

Key organizationsPropaganda Movement
La Liga Filipina
ObjectsNoli Me Tángere
El filibusterismo
La Solidaridad
Organization
LeadersAndrés Bonifacio
Emilio Aguinaldo
Ladislao Diwa
Gregoria de Jesús
Teodoro Plata
Román Basa
Deodato Arellano
Valentín Díaz
José Dizon
Pio del Pilar
Members

Melchora Aquino
Pío Valenzuela
Emilio Jacinto
Macario Sakay
Gregorio del Pilar
Candido Tirona
Mariano Noriel
Teresa Magbanua
Paciano Rizal
Artemio Ricarte
Daniel Tirona
José Santiago
Manuel Tinio
Aniceto Lacson
León Kilat
Arcadio Maxilom

others

Andrés Bonifacio, Deodato Arellano, Ladislao Diwa, Teodoro Plata, and Valentín Díaz founded the Katipunan (in full, Kataas-taasang, Kagalang-galangang Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan,[50] "Supreme and Venerable Society of the Children of the Nation") in Manila on July 7, 1892. The organization, advocating independence through armed revolt against Spain, was influenced by the rituals and organization of Freemasonry; Bonifacio and other leading members were also Freemasons.

From Manila, the Katipunan expanded into several provinces, including Batangas, Laguna, Cavite, Bulacan, Pampanga, Tarlac, Nueva Ecija, Ilocos Sur, Ilocos Norte, Pangasinan, Bicol, and Mindanao. Most of the members, called Katipuneros, came from the lower and middle classes. The Katipunan had "its own laws, bureaucratic structure and elective leadership".[5] The Katipunan Supreme Council (Kataas-taasang Kapulungan, of which Bonifacio was a member, and eventually head) coordinated provincial councils (Sangguniang Bayan).[6] The provincial councils were in charge of "public administration and military affairs on the supra-municipal or quasi-provincial level".[5] Local councils (Panguluhang Bayan)[6] were in charge of affairs "on the district or barrio level."[5] By 1895, Bonifacio was the supreme leader (Supremo) or supreme president (Presidente Supremo)[51][52] of the Katipunan and was the head of its Supreme Council. Some historians estimate that there were between 30,000 and 400,000 members by 1896; other historians argue that there were only a few hundred to a few thousand members.[53]

History

Course of the Revolution

 
Bonifacio's Katipunan battle flag.
 
Monument for the 1896 Revolution in University of the Philippines Diliman.

The existence of the Katipunan eventually became known to the colonial authorities through Teodoro Patiño, who revealed it to the Spaniard La Font, general manager of the printing shop Diario de Manila.[51]: 29–31  Patiño was engaged in a bitter dispute over pay with a co-worker, Katipunero member Apolonio de la Cruz, and exposed the Katipunan in revenge.[54]: 30–31  La Font led a Spanish police lieutenant to the shop and to the desk of Apolonio, where they "found Katipunan paraphernalia such as a rubber stamp, a little book, ledgers, membership oaths signed in blood, and a membership roster of the Maghiganti chapter of the Katipunan."[54]: 31 

As with the Terror of 1872, colonial authorities made several arrests and used torture to identify other Katipunan members.[54]: 31  Despite having no involvement in the secessionist movement, many of them were executed, notably Don Francisco Roxas. Bonifacio had forged their signatures in Katipunan documents, hoping that they would be forced to support the revolution.

On August 24, 1896, Bonifacio called Katipunan members to a mass gathering in Caloocan, where the group decided to start a nationwide armed revolution against Spain.[5][54]: 34–35  The event included a mass tearing of cedulas (community tax certificates) accompanied by patriotic cries. The exact date and location are disputed, but two possibilities have been officially endorsed by the Philippine government: August 26 in Balintawak and later, August 23 in Pugad Lawin. Thus, the event is called the "Cry of Pugad Lawin" or "Cry of Balintawak". However, the issue is further complicated by other possible dates such as August 24 and 25 and other locations such as Kangkong, Bahay Toro and Pasong Tamo. Furthermore, at the time, "Balintawak" referred not only to a specific place, but also a general area that included some of the proposed sites, such as Kangkong.[55][56]

Upon the discovery of the Katipunan, Bonifacio called all Katipunan councils to a meeting in Balintawak[57] or Kangkong[54][58] to discuss their situation. According to historian Teodoro Agoncillo, the meeting occurred on August 19;[57] however, revolutionary leader Santiago Álvarez stated that it occurred on August 22.[54][58]

On August 21, Katipuneros were already congregating in Balintawak[57] in Caloocan.[54][58] Late in the evening, amidst heavy rain, the rebels moved to Kangkong in Caloocan, and arrived there past midnight.[54][58] As a precaution, the rebels moved to Bahay Toro[54] or Pugad Lawin[55] on August 23. Agoncillo places the Cry and tearing of certificates at the house of Juan Ramos, which was in Pugad Lawin.[55] Alvarez writes that they met at the house of Melchora Aquino (known as "Tandang Sora", and mother of Juan Ramos) in Bahay Toro on that date.[54][58] Agoncillo places Aquino's house in Pasong Tamo and the meeting there on August 24.[59] The rebels continued to congregate, and by August 24, there were over a thousand.[54][58]

 

On August 24, it was decided to notify the Katipunan councils of the surrounding towns that an attack on the capital Manila was planned for August 29.[54][58][59] Bonifacio appointed generals to lead rebel forces in Manila. Before hostilities erupted, Bonifacio also reorganized the Katipunan into an open revolutionary government, with himself as president and the Supreme Council of the Katipunan as his cabinet.[6][54]

On the morning of August 25, the rebels came under attack by a Spanish civil guard unit, with the rebels having greater numbers but the Spanish being better armed. The forces disengaged after a brief skirmish and some casualties on both sides.[54][58][59]

Another skirmish took place on August 26, which sent the rebels retreating toward Balara. At noon, Bonifacio and some of his men briefly rested in Diliman. In the afternoon, civil guards sent to Caloocan to investigate attacks on Chinese merchants— done by bandits who had attached themselves to the rebels—came across a group of Katipuneros and briefly engaged them.[46]: 367  The commander of the guards, Lieutenant Ros, reported the encounter to the authorities, and the report drove Governor-General Ramón Blanco to prepare for coming hostilities.[54][58] General Blanco had about 10,000 Spanish regulars and the gunboats Isla de Cuba and Isla de Luzon by the end of November.[46]: 365 

From August 27 to 28, Bonifacio moved from Balara to Mt. Balabak in Hagdang Bato, Mandaluyong. There, he held meetings to finalize plans for the Manila attack the following day. 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[58]

The conventional view among Filipino historians is that Bonifacio did not carry out the planned Katipunan attack on Manila the following day and instead attacked a powder magazine at San Juan del Monte.[60][61] However, more recent studies have advanced the view that the planned attack did occur; according to this view, Bonifacio's battle at San Juan del Monte (now called the "Battle of Pinaglabanan") was only a part of a bigger "battle for Manila" hitherto unrecognized as such.[6][58]

Hostilities in the area started on the evening of August 29, when hundreds of rebels attacked the Civil Guard garrison in Pasig, just as hundreds of other rebels personally led by Bonifacio were amassing in San Juan del Monte, which they attacked at about 4 a.m. on the 30th.[46]: 368  Bonifacio planned to capture the San Juan del Monte powder magazine[46]: 368  along with a water station which supplied Manila. The Spaniards, outnumbered, fought a delaying battle until reinforcements arrived. Once reinforced, the Spaniards drove Bonifacio's forces back with heavy casualties. Elsewhere, rebels attacked Mandaluyong, Sampaloc, Sta. Ana, Pandacan, Pateros, Marikina, and Caloocan,[58] as well as Makati and Taguig.[60] Balintawak in Caloocan saw intense fighting. Rebel troops tended to gravitate towards fighting in San Juan del Monte and Sampaloc.[58] South of Manila, a thousand-strong rebel force attacked a small force of civil guards. In Pandacan, Katipuneros attacked the parish church, making the parish priest run for his life.[60]

After their defeat in Battle of San Juan del Monte, Bonifacio's troops regrouped near Marikina, San Mateo and Montalban, where they proceeded to attack these areas. They captured the areas, but were driven back by Spanish counterattacks, and Bonifacio eventually ordered a retreat to Balara. On the way, Bonifacio was nearly killed shielding Emilio Jacinto from a Spanish bullet that grazed his collar.[60] Despite his retreat, Bonifacio was not completely defeated and was still considered to be a threat.[6][58]

South of Manila, the towns of San Francisco de Malabon, Noveleta and Kawit in Cavite rebelled a few days after.[60] In Nueva Ecija, north of Manila, rebels in San Isidro, led by Mariano Llanera, attacked the Spanish garrison on September 2–4, but they were repulsed.[62]

By August 30, the revolt had spread to eight provinces. On that date, Governor-General Ramón Blanco declared a "state of war" in these provinces and placed them under martial law.[46]: 368  These provinces were Manila, Bulacan, Cavite, Pampanga, Tarlac, Laguna, Batangas, and Nueva Ecija.[47][60][63] They would later be represented as the eight rays of the sun in the Filipino flag.

The rebels had few firearms; they were mostly armed with bolo knives and bamboo spears. The lack of guns has been proposed as a possible reason why the Manila attack allegedly never succeeded.[60] Also, the Katipunan leaders from Cavite had earlier expressed reservations about starting an uprising due to their lack of firearms and preparation. As a result, they did not send troops to Manila, but instead attacked garrisons in their own locales. Some historians have argued that the Katipunan defeat in the Manila area was (partly) the fault of the Cavite rebels due to their absence, as their presence would have proved crucial.[6][58] In their memoirs, Cavite rebel leaders justified their absence in Manila by claiming Bonifacio failed to execute pre-arranged signals to begin the uprising, such as setting balloons loose and extinguishing the lights at the Luneta park. However, these claims have been dismissed as "historical mythology"; as reasoned by historians, if they were really waiting for signals before marching on Manila, they would have arrived "too late for the fray". Bonifacio's command for a simultaneous attack is interpreted as evidence that such signals were never arranged.[6][58] Other factors for the Katipunan defeat include the capture of Bonifacio's battle plans by Spanish intelligence. The Spanish concentrated their forces in the Manila area while pulling out troops in other provinces (which proved beneficial for rebels in other areas, particularly Cavite). The authorities also transferred a regiment of 500 native troops to Marawi, Mindanao, where the soldiers later rebelled.[6][58]

Final statement and execution of José Rizal

 
Rizal's execution in what was then Bagumbayan.

When the revolution broke out, Rizal was in Cavite, awaiting the monthly mailboat to Spain. He had volunteered, and been accepted, for medical service in the Cuban War of Independence. The mailboat left on September 3 and arrived in Barcelona, which was under martial law, on October 3, 1896. After a brief confinement at Montjuich prison, Rizal was told by Captain-General Eulogio Despujol that he would not be going on to Cuba, but would be sent back to the Philippines instead. Upon his return, he was imprisoned in Fort Santiago.

While incarcerated, Rizal petitioned Governor-General Ramón Blanco for permission to make a statement on the rebellion.[64] His petition was granted, and Rizal wrote the Manifesto á Algunos Filipinos, wherein he decried the use of his name "as a war-cry among certain people who were up in arms",[65] stated that "for reforms to bear fruit, they must come from above, since those that come from below will be irregular and uncertain shocks",[66] and affirmed that he "condemn[s], this absurd, savage insurrection".[66] However, the text was suppressed on the recommendation of the Judge-Advocate General.[66]

Revolution in Cavite

 
Emilio Aguinaldo as a field marshal during the battle.

By December, there were three major centers of rebellion: Cavite (under Mariano Alvarez, Baldomero Aguinaldo and others), Bulacan (under Mariano Llanera) and Morong (now part of Rizal, under Bonifacio). Bonifacio served as tactician for the rebel guerillas, though his prestige suffered when he lost battles that he personally led.[6]

Meanwhile, in Cavite, Katipuneros under Mariano Álvarez, Bonifacio's uncle by marriage, and Baldomero Aguinaldo of Cavite El Viejo (modern Kawit), won early victories. The Magdalo council commissioned Edilberto Evangelista, an engineer, to plan the defense and logistics of the revolution in Cavite. His first victory was in the Battle of Imus on September 1, 1896, defeating the Spanish forces under General Ernesto Aguirre with the aid of Jose Tagle. The Cavite revolutionaries, particularly Emilio Aguinaldo, won prestige through defeating Spanish troops in "set piece" battles, while other rebels like Bonifacio and Llanera were engaged in guerrilla warfare. Aguinaldo, speaking for the Magdalo ruling council, issued a manifesto proclaiming a provisional and revolutionary government after his early successes, despite the existence of Bonifacio's Katipunan government.[67]

The Katipunan in Cavite was divided into two councils: the Magdiwang (led by Alvarez) and the Magdalo (led by Baldomero Aguinaldo, Emilio's cousin). At first, these two Katipunan councils cooperated with each other in the battlefield, as in the battles of Binakayan and Dalahican, where they won their first major victory over the Spaniards. However, rivalries between command and territory soon developed, and they refused to cooperate with each other in battle.

To unite the Katipunan in Cavite, the Magdiwang, through Artemio Ricarte and Pío del Pilar, called Bonifacio, who was fighting in Morong (present-day Rizal) province to mediate between the factions. Perhaps due to his kinship ties with their leader, Bonifacio was seen as partial to the Magdiwang.[68]

It was not long before the issue of leadership was debated. The Magdiwang faction recognized Bonifacio as supreme leader, being the head of the Katipunan. The Magdalo faction agitated for Emilio Aguinaldo to be the movement's head because of his successes in the battlefield compared to Bonifacio's record of personal defeats. Meanwhile, the Spanish troops, now under the command of the new Governor-General Camilo de Polavieja, steadily gained ground.

Tejeros Convention

On December 31, an assembly was convened in Imus to settle the leadership dispute. The Magdalo insisted on the establishment of revolutionary government to replace the Katipunan. The Magdiwang favored retention of the Katipunan, arguing that it was already a government in itself. The assembly dispersed without a consensus.[69]

On March 22, 1897, another meeting was held in Tejeros. It called for the election of officers for the revolutionary government, which was in need of united military forces, as there was a pending Spanish offensive against the Magdalo faction. The Magdiwang faction allied with Bonifacio and prepared and hosted the election, as most of the Magdalo faction was occupied by battle preparations. Bonifacio chaired the election and stated that the election results were to be respected. When the voting ended, Bonifacio had lost and the leadership turned over to Aguinaldo, who was away fighting in Pasong Santol. Bonifacio also lost other positions to members of his Magdiwang faction. Instead, he was elected as Director of the Interior, but his qualifications were questioned by a Magdalo, Daniel Tirona. Bonifacio felt insulted and would have shot Tirona if Artemio Ricarte had not intervened. Invoking his position of Supremo of the Katipunan, Bonifacio declared the election void and stomped out in anger.[70] Aguinaldo took his oath of office as president the next day in Santa Cruz de Malabon (present-day Tanza) in Cavite, as did the rest of the officers, except for Bonifacio.[71]

Execution of Bonifacio

Bonifacio moved his headquarters to Naic after the fall of Imus.[51]: 112  In Naic, Bonifacio and his officers created the Naic Military Agreement, establishing a rival government to the newly constituted government of Aguinaldo. It rejected the election at Tejeros and asserted that Bonifacio was the leader of the revolution. It also ordered that Filipino men be forced to enlist in Bonifacio's army. The agreement eventually called for a coup d' état against the established government. When Limbon in Indang, a town in Cavite, refused to supply provisions, Bonifacio ordered it to be burned.[51]: 117  When Aguinaldo learned about the Naic Military Agreement and the reports of abuse, he ordered the arrest of Bonifacio and his soldiers (without Bonifacio's knowledge) on April 27, 1897.[51]: 120  Colonel Agapito Bonzon met with Bonifacio in Limbon and attacked him the next day. Bonifacio and his brother Procopio were wounded, while their brother Ciriaco was killed on April 28.[51]: 121  They were taken to Naic to stand trial.[51]: 124 

The Consejo de Guerra (War Council) sentenced Andrés and Procopio to death on May 10, 1897, for committing sedition and treason.[56] Aguinaldo supported deportation of Andrés and Procopio rather than execution,[51]: 140  but withdrew his decision as a result of pressure from Pío del Pilar and other officers of the revolution.

On May 10, Major Lázaro Makapagal, upon orders from General Mariano Noriel, executed the Bonifacio brothers[51]: 143  at the foothills of Mount Buntis,[56] near Maragondon. Andrés and Procopio were buried in a shallow grave, marked only with twigs.

The Battle of Kakarong de Sili

 
Inang Filipina Shrine
 
Panorama of the Park and the Shrine
 
Facade

The battle of Kakarong de Sili took place on January 1, 1897. Pandi, Bulacan, played a vital and historical role in the fight for Philippine independence. Pandi is historically known for the Real de Kakarong de Sili Shrine – Inang Filipina Shrine, the site where the bloodiest revolution in Bulacan took place, where more than 3,000 Katipunero revolutionaries died. Likewise, it is on this site where the 'Republic of Real de Kakarong de Sili' of 1896, one of the first Philippine revolutionary republics, was established. It was also in Kakarong de Sili that the Kakarong Republic[72] was organized shortly after the Cry of Pugad Lawin (referred to as "The Cry of Balintawak") by about 6,000 Katipuneros from various towns of Bulacan, headed by Brigadier General Eusebio Roque (better known as "Maestrong Sebio or Dimabungo").[73]

Kakarong Republic

History and researchers,[who?] as well as records of the National Historical Commission tell that the Kakarong Republic was the first truly organized revolutionary government established in the country to overthrow the Spaniards, antedating even the famous Malolos Republic and the Biak-na-Bato Republic. In recognition thereof, these three "Republics" established in Bulacan have been incorporated in the provincial seal. The Kakarong Republic, established in late 1896, grew out of the local Katipunan chapter in the town of Pandi, Bulacan, called the Balangay Dimas-Alang.

According to available records, including the biography of General Gregorio del Pilar, entitled "Life and Death of a Boy General" (written by Teodoro Kalaw, former director of the National Library of the Philippines), a fort was constructed at Kakarong de Sili that was like a miniature city. It had streets, an independent police force, a military band, a military arsenal with factories for bolos and artillery, and repair shops for rifles and cartridges. The Kakarong Republic had a complete set of officials, with Canuto Villanueva as Supreme Chief and Captain General of the military forces, and Eusebio Roque, also known by his nom-de-guerre "Maestrong Sebio", then head of the Katipunan local organization, as Brigadier General of the Army of the Republic. The fort was attacked and completely destroyed on January 1, 1897, by a large Spanish force headed by General José Olaguer Feliú.[74] General Gregorio del Pilar was only a lieutenant at that time, and the Battle of Kakarong de Sili was his first "baptism of fire". This was where he was first wounded and escaped to Manatal, a nearby barangay.

In memory of the 1,200 Katipuneros who perished in the battle, the Kakarong Lodge No. 168 of the Legionarios del Trabajo erected a monument of the Inang Filipina Shrine (Mother Philippines Shrine) in 1924 in the barrio of Kakarong in Pandi, Bulacan. The actual site of the Battle of Kakarong de Sili is now a part of the barangay of Real de Kakarong. Emilio Aguinaldo visited this ground in his late fifties.

Biak-na-Bato

 
The flag used by the Republic of Biak-na-Bato.

Augmented by new recruits from Spain, government troops recaptured several towns in Cavite, taking Imus on March 25, 1897.[51]: 110  The head of the Spanish expeditionary force, General José de Lacambre, then offered amnesty to all who would surrender and accept Spanish authority.[51]: 111  In May 1897, the Spanish captured Maragondon, forcing the Government of the Philippine Republic to move to Mt. Buntis.[51]: 146  By June, the Spanish had taken Mendez Nunez, Amadeo, Alfonso, Bailen and Magallanes with little resistance.[51]: 149  The Spanish planned war, including the concentration of rebel relatives and friends in camps.[51]: 222 

As argued by Apolinario Mabini and others, the succession of defeats for the rebels could be attributed to discontent that resulted from Andrés Bonifacio's death. Mabini wrote:

This tragedy smothered the enthusiasm for the revolutionary cause, and hastened the failure of the insurrection in Cavite, because many from Manila, Laguna and Batangas, who were fighting for the province (of Cavite), were demoralized and quit...[75]

In other areas, some of Bonifacio's associates, such as Emilio Jacinto and Macario Sakay, never subjected their military commands to Emilio Aguinaldo's authority.

Aguinaldo and his men retreated northward, from one town to the next, until they finally settled in Biak-na-Bato, in the town of San Miguel de Mayumo in Bulacan. Here they established what became known as the Republic of Biak-na-Bato, with a constitution drafted by Isabelo Artacho and Felix Ferrer, based on the first Cuban Constitution.[76]

The new Spanish Governor-General Fernando Primo de Rivera, declaring "I can take Biak-na-Bato. Any army can capture it. But I cannot end the rebellion",[77] proffered peace to the revolutionaries. A lawyer named Pedro Paterno volunteered to be negotiator between the two sides. For four months, he traveled between Manila and Biak-na-Bato. His hard work finally bore fruit when, on December 14 to 15, 1897, the Pact of Biak-na-Bato was signed. Consisting of three documents, it called for the following agenda:[78]

  • The surrender of all weapons of the revolutionaries.
  • Amnesty for those who participated in the revolution.
  • Exile for the revolutionary leadership.
  • Payment by the Spanish government of $400,000 (Mexican peso) to the revolutionaries in three installments: $200,000 (Mexican peso) upon leaving the country, $100,000 (Mexican peso) upon the surrender of at least 700 firearms, and another $200,000 (Mexican peso) upon the declaration of general amnesty.[79]

Aguinaldo and eighteen other top officials of the revolution, including Mariano Llanera, Tomás Mascardo, Benito Natividad, Gregorio del Pilar, and Vicente Lukban left Biak-na-Bato on December 24, 1897, for exile in Hong Kong.

Second Phase of the revolution

In the Philippines

Not all the revolutionary generals complied with the treaty. One, General Francisco Macabulos, established a Central Executive Committee to serve as the interim government until a more suitable one was created. Armed conflicts resumed, this time coming from almost every province in the Philippines. The colonial authorities, on the other hand, continued the arrest and torture of those suspected of committing banditry.

In exile

Aguinaldo and his party arrived in Hong Kong with MXN$400,000.[a] The funds were deposited in bank account controlled by Aguinaldo. The exiles were convinced that the Spaniards would never give the rest of the money promised. After their arrival, Isabelo Artacho, a revolutionary who had not been exiled, arrived in Hong Kong and demanded the funds as payment for his services, threatening legal action which would tie up the funds. On advice from Felipe Agoncillo, Aguinaldo and two aides fled under false names to Singapore. There, Aguinaldo met clandestinely with U.S. Consul E. Spencer Pratt, learned that war had been declared between the U.S. and Spain.[80]

Spanish–American War

The failure of Spain to engage in active social reforms in Cuba as demanded by the United States government was the basic cause for the Spanish–American War. American attention was focused on the issue after the mysterious explosion that sank the American battleship Maine on February 15, 1898, in Havana Harbor. As public political pressure from the Democratic Party and certain industrialists built up for war, the U.S. Congress forced the reluctant Republican president William McKinley to issue an ultimatum to Spain on April 19, 1898. Spain found it had no diplomatic support in Europe, but nevertheless declared war; the U.S. followed on April 25 with its own declaration of war.[81][82]

Theodore Roosevelt, who was at that time Assistant Secretary of the Navy, ordered Commodore George Dewey, commanding the Asiatic Squadron of the United States Navy: "Order the squadron ...to Hong Kong. Keep full of coal. In the event of declaration of war Spain, your duty will be to see that the Spanish squadron does not leave the Asiatic coast, and then offensive operations in Philippine Islands." Dewey's squadron departed on April 27 for the Philippines, reaching Manila Bay on the evening of April 30.[83]

On April 27, Commodore George Dewey sailed for Manila with a fleet of nine U.S. ships. Upon arriving on May 1, Dewey encountered a fleet of nine Spanish ships commanded by Admiral Patricio Montojo. The subsequent Battle of Manila Bay only lasted for a few hours, and ending with no loss of life among the American forces. While the naval victory was decisive, the small fleet lacked the numbers needed to capture Manila. The U.S. squadron took control of the arsenal and navy yard at Cavite. Dewey cabled Washington, stating that although he controlled Manila Bay, he needed 5,000 additional men to seize Manila itself. The fleet remained in Manila Bay while reinforcements were sent from the United States.[84][85]

Preparation for land-based operations and Aguinaldo's return

The unexpected rapidity and completeness of Dewey's victory in the first engagement of the war prompted the McKinley administration to make the decision to capture Manila from the Spanish. The United States Army began to assemble the Eighth Army Corps—a military unit which would consist of 10,844 soldiers under the command of Major General Wesley Merritt—in preparation for deployment to the Philippines.[84]

On May 7, 1898, USS McCulloch, an American dispatch boat, arrived in Hong Kong from Manila, bringing reports of Dewey's victory in the Battle of Manila Bay. Emilio Aguinaldo had recently returned there from Singapore expecting to be transported to Manila by the Americans, but McCulloch had no orders regarding this. McCulloch again arrived in Hong Kong on May 15 bearing such orders and departed Hong Kong with Aguinaldo aboard on May 17, arriving in Manila Bay on May 19.[86] Several revolutionaries, as well as Filipino soldiers employed by the Spanish army, crossed over to Aguinaldo's command.

Aguinaldo arrived on May 19 and, after a brief meeting with Dewey, resumed revolutionary activities against the Spanish. On May 24, Aguinaldo issued a proclamation in which he assumed command of all Philippine forces and announced his intention to establish a dictatorial government with himself as dictator, saying that he would resign in favor of a duly elected president.[87]

In the Battle of Alapan on May 28, 1898, Aguinaldo raided the last remaining stronghold of the Spanish Empire in Cavite with fresh reinforcements of about 12,000 men. This battle eventually liberated Cavite from Spanish colonial control and led to the first time the modern flag of the Philippines being unfurled in victory.

Public jubilation marked Aguinaldo's return. Many Filipino enlisted men deserted local Spanish army units to join Aguinaldo's command and the Philippine Revolution against Spain resumed. Soon, many cities such as Imus, Bacoor, Parañaque, Las Piñas, Morong, Macabebe and San Fernando, as well as some entire provinces such as Laguna, Batangas, Bulacan, Nueva Ecija, Bataan, Tayabas (now Quezon), and the Camarines provinces, were liberated by the Filipinos and the port of Dalahican in Cavite was secured.[88]

The first contingent of American troops arrived on June 30 under the command of Brigadier General Thomas McArthur Anderson, commander of the Eighth Corps' 2nd Division (U.S. brigade and division numbers of the era were not unique throughout the army). General Anderson wrote to Aguinaldo, requesting his cooperation in military operations against the Spanish forces.[89] Aguinaldo responded, thanking General Anderson for his amicable sentiments, but saying nothing about military cooperation. General Anderson did not renew the request.[89]

The 2nd Brigade and the 2nd Division of the Eighth Corps arrived on July 17, under the command of Brigadier General Francis V. Greene. Major General Wesley Merritt (the Commander in Chief of the Philippine Expedition) and his staff arrived at Cavite on July 25. The 1st Brigade of the corps' 2nd Division arrived on July 30, under the command of Brigadier General Arthur MacArthur.[90]

Declaration of Independence

By June 1898, the island of Luzon, except for Manila and the port of Cavite, was under Filipino control, after General Monet's retreat to Manila with his remaining force of 600 men and 80 wounded.[46]: 445  The revolutionaries were laying siege to Manila and cutting off its food and water supply. With most of the archipelago under his control, Aguinaldo decided it was time to establish a Philippine government. When Aguinaldo arrived from Hong Kong, he had brought with him a copy of a plan drawn by Mariano Ponce, calling for the establishment of a revolutionary government. Upon the advice of Ambrosio Rianzares Bautista, however, an autocratic regime was established on May 24, with Aguinaldo as dictator.

It was under this dictatorship[citation needed] On June 12, 1898, Aguinaldo proclaimed the independence of the Philippines at his house in Cavite El Viejo.[91][92] Ambrosio Rianzares Bautista wrote the Philippine Declaration of Independence, and read this document in Spanish that day at Aguinaldo's house.[21] The first Filipino flag was again unfurled and the national anthem was played for the first time.[citation needed] On June 18, Aguinaldo issued a decree formally establishing his dictatorial government.[22] Apolinario Mabini, Aguinaldo's closest adviser, opposed Aguinaldo's decision to establish an autocracy. He instead urged Aguinaldo to create a revolutionary government. Aguinaldo refused to do so; however, Mabini was eventually able to convince him.[citation needed] On June 23, Aguinaldo issued another decree, this time replacing the dictatorial government with a revolutionary government (and naming himself as president).[23][93]

Writing retrospectively in 1899, Aguinaldo claimed that U.S. Consul E. Spencer Pratt had verbally assured him that "the United States would at least recognize the independence of the Philippines under the protection of the United States Navy".[94] In an April 28 message from Pratt to U.S. Secretary of State William R. Day, there was no mention of independence, or of any conditions on which Aguinaldo was to cooperate. In a July 28 communication, Pratt stated that no promises had been made to Aguinaldo regarding U.S. policy, with the concept aimed at facilitating the occupation and administration of the Philippines, while preventing a possible conflict of action.[95][96] On June 16, Day cabled Pratt with instructions to avoid unauthorized negotiations, along with a reminder that Pratt had no authority to enter into arrangements on behalf of the U.S. government.[97] Filipino scholar Maximo Kalaw wrote in 1927: "A few of the principal facts, however, seem quite clear. Aguinaldo was not made to understand that, in consideration of Filipino cooperation, the United States would extend its sovereignty over the Islands, and thus in place of the old Spanish master a new one would step in. The truth was that nobody at the time ever thought that the end of the war would result in the retention of the Philippines by the United States."[98]

On July 15, Aguinaldo issued three organic decrees assuming civil authority of the Philippines.[99] American generals suspected Aguinaldo was attempting to take Manila without American assistance, had restricted supplies to American forces, and was secretly negotiating with Spanish authorities while informing them of American troop movements.[100][101][102] Aguinaldo warned that American troops should not disembark in places conquered by the Filipinos without first communicating in writing, and did not offer his full service to arriving American forces.[103]

Capture of Manila

By June, U.S. and Filipino forces had taken control of most of the islands, except for the walled city of Intramuros. Admiral Dewey and General Merritt were able to work out a bloodless solution with acting governor-general Fermín Jáudenes. The negotiating parties made a secret agreement to stage a mock battle in which the Spanish forces would be defeated by the American forces, but the Filipino forces would not be allowed to enter the city. This plan minimized the risk of unnecessary casualties on all sides, while the Spanish would also avoid the shame of possibly having to surrender Intramuros to the Filipino forces.[104]

On the evening of August 12, the Americans notified Aguinaldo to forbid the insurgents under his command from entering Manila without American permission.[105][106] On August 13, unaware of the peace protocol signing,[105][107][108][109] U.S. forces assaulted and captured the Spanish positions in Manila. While the plan was for a mock battle and simple surrender, the insurgents made an independent attack of their own, which led to confrontations with the Spanish in which some American soldiers were killed and wounded.[105][110] The Spanish formally surrendered Manila to U.S. forces.[111] There was some looting by Insurgent forces in portions of the city they occupied.[112] Aguinaldo demanded joint occupation of the city,[113] however U.S. commanders pressed Aguinaldo to withdraw his forces from Manila.[114]

On August 12, 1898, The New York Times reported that a peace protocol had been signed in Washington that afternoon between the U.S. and Spain, suspending hostilities between the two nations.[115] The full text of the protocol was not made public until November 5, but Article III read: "The United States will occupy and hold the City, Bay, and Harbor of Manila, pending the conclusion of a treaty of peace, which shall determine the control, disposition, and government of the Philippines."[116][117] After conclusion of this agreement, U.S. President McKinley proclaimed a suspension of hostilities with Spain.[118] General Merritt received news of the August 12 peace protocol on August 16, three days after the surrender of Manila.[119] Admiral Dewey and General Merritt were informed by a telegram dated August 17 that the president of the United States had directed that the United States should have full control over Manila, with no joint occupation permissible.[113] After further negotiations, insurgent forces withdrew from the city on September 15.[120]

This battle marked the end of Filipino-American collaboration, as the American action of preventing Filipino forces from entering the captured city of Manila was deeply resented by the Filipinos.[121]

U.S. military government

On August 14, 1898, two days after the capture of Manila, the U.S. established a military government in the Philippines, with General Merritt acting as military governor.[122] During military rule (1898–1902), the U.S. military commander governed the Philippines under the authority of the U.S. president as commander-in-chief of the United States Armed Forces. After the appointment of a civil governor-general, the procedure developed that as parts of the country were pacified and placed firmly under American control, responsibility for the area would be passed to the civilian.

General Merritt was succeeded by General Otis as military governor, who in turn was succeeded by General MacArthur. Major General Adna Chaffee was the final military governor. The position of military governor was abolished in July 1902, after which the civil governor-general became the sole executive authority in the Philippines.[123][124]

Under the military government, an American-style school system was introduced, initially with soldiers as teachers; civil and criminal courts were reestablished, including a supreme court;[125] and local governments were established in towns and provinces. The first local election was conducted by General Harold W. Lawton on May 7, 1899, in Baliuag, Bulacan.[126]

First Philippine Republic

 
Map of the Philippines during the inauguration of the First Philippine Republic.

Elections were held by the revolutionary government between June and September 10, resulting in the seating of a legislature known as the Malolos Congress.[127] This followed the recommendations of the decree that established the revolutionary government, and the Congreso Revolucionario (Revolutionary Congress) was assembled at Barasoain Church in Malolos, Bulacan on September 15.[46]: 469  All of the delegates to the congress were from the ilustrado class. Mabini objected to the call for a constitutional assembly; when he did not succeed, he drafted a constitution of his own, which also failed. A draft by an ilustrado lawyer, Felipe Calderón y Roca, was instead presented, and this became the framework upon which the assembly drafted the first constitution, the Malolos Constitution. On November 29, the assembly, now popularly called the Malolos Congress, finished the draft. However, Aguinaldo, who always placed Mabini in high esteem and heeded most of his advice, refused to sign the draft when the latter objected. On January 21, 1899, after some modifications were made to suit Mabini's arguments, the constitution was finally approved by the Congress and signed by Aguinaldo. Two days later, the Philippine Republic (also called the First Republic and Malolos Republic) was established in Malolos with Emilio Aguinaldo as president.[46]: 486 

Spanish–American War ends

 
Felipe Agoncillo was the Filipino representative to the negotiations in Paris that led to the Treaty of Paris (1898), ending the Spanish–American War. He has been referred to as the "outstanding first Filipino diplomat."

While the initial instructions of the American commission undertaking peace negotiators with Spain was to seek only Luzon and Guam, which could serve as harbours and communication links,[128] President McKinley later wired instructions to demand the entire archipelago.[129] The resultant Treaty of Paris, signed in December 1898, formally ended the Spanish–American War. Its provisions included the cession of the archipelago to the United States, for which $20 million would be paid as compensation.[130][131][132] This agreement was clarified through the 1900 Treaty of Washington, which stated that Spanish territories in the archipelago which lay outside the geographical boundaries noted in the Treaty of Paris were also ceded to the U.S.[133]

On December 21, 1898, President McKinley proclaimed a policy of benevolent assimilation with regards to the Philippines. This was announced in the Philippines on January 4, 1899. Under this policy, the Philippines was to come under the sovereignty of the United States, with American forces instructed to declare themselves as friends rather than invaders.[134]

Philippine–American War

On February 4, 1899, hostilities between Filipino and American forces began when an American sentry patrolling between Filipino and American lines shot a Filipino soldier. The Filipino forces returned fire, thus igniting a second battle for Manila. Aguinaldo sent a ranking member of his staff to Ellwell Otis, the U.S. military commander, with the message that the firing had been against his orders. According to Aguinaldo, Otis replied, "The fighting, having begun, must go on to the grim end."[135] The Philippines declared war against the United States on June 2, 1899, with Pedro Paterno, President of the Congress of the First Philippine Republic, issuing a Proclamation of War.[12]

As the First Philippine Republic was never recognized as a sovereign state, and the United States never formally declared war, the conflict was not concluded by a treaty. On July 2, 1902, the United States Secretary of War telegraphed that since the insurrection against the United States had ended and provincial civil governments had been established throughout most of the Philippine archipelago, the office of military governor was terminated.[136] On July 4, Theodore Roosevelt, who had succeeded to the U.S. presidency after the assassination of William McKinley, proclaimed an amnesty to those who had participated in the conflict.[136][137] On April 9, 2002, Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo proclaimed that the Philippine–American War had ended on April 16, 1902, with the surrender of General Miguel Malvar,[138] and declared the centennial anniversary of that date as a national working holiday and as a special non-working holiday in the Province of Batangas and in the cities of Batangas, Lipa and Tanauan.[139]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The funds were denominated in Mexican dollars, which were worth at the time to about 50 US cents — equivalent to about $16.29 today.

References

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  96. ^ Worcester 1914, p. 21Ch.2
  97. ^ Halstead 1898, p. 311Ch.28
  98. ^ Kalaw 1927, pp. cc=philamer, rgn=full%20text, idno=afj2233.0001.001, didno=AFJ2233.0001.001, view=image, seq=120, page=root, size=s, frm=frameset 100Ch.5
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  100. ^ Worcester 1914, p. 60
  101. ^ Worcester 1914, p. 61
  102. ^ Worcester 1914, p. 63Ch.3
  103. ^ Halstead 1898, p. 97Ch.10
  104. ^ Karnow 1990, p. 123
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  113. ^ a b Worcester 1914, p. 69Ch.3
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  117. ^ "Protocol of Peace : Embodying the Terms of a Basis for the Establishment of Peace Between the Two Countries". August 12, 1898.
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  120. ^ Worcester 1914, p. 121Ch.3
  121. ^ Lacsamana 2006, p. 126
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  130. ^ Kalaw 1927, pp. 430–445Appendix D
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  136. ^ a b Worcester 1914, p. 293.
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  • Don Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy. "True Version of the Philippine Revolution". Authorama Public Domain Books. Retrieved November 16, 2007. (page 1 of 20 linked web pages)
  • Hisona, Harold T. . Philippine Almanac. Archived from the original on March 21, 2012. Retrieved August 27, 2011.
  • Coats, Steven D. (2006). "Gathering at the Golden Gate: Mobilizing for War in the Philippines, 1898". Combat studies Institute Press. (Ch. I–IV), (Ch. V–VIII).
  • The Philippine Revolution by Apolinario Mabini
  • Centennial Site: The Katipunan
  • covers the Revolution in Cebu (archived from on October 26, 2009)
  • (archived from the original on October 13, 2007)

philippine, revolution, spanish, revolución, filipina, filipino, himagsikang, pilipino, rebolusyong, pilipino, called, tagalog, spanish, guerra, tagala, spanish, revolution, civil, subsequent, conflict, fought, between, people, insurgents, philippines, spanish. The Philippine Revolution Spanish Revolucion Filipina Filipino Himagsikang Pilipino Rebolusyong Pilipino called the Tagalog War Spanish Guerra Tagala by the Spanish 4 was a revolution a civil war and subsequent conflict fought between the people and insurgents of the Philippines and the Spanish colonial authorities of the Spanish East Indies under the Spanish Empire Kingdom of Spain Philippine RevolutionRevolucion FilipinaHimagsikang PilipinoRebolusyong PilipinoPart of Decolonisation of AsiaClockwise from top left Surviving Spanish troops in Barcelona after the Siege of Baler Filipino soldiers during the near end of the Revolution Filipino negotiators for the Pact of Biak na Bato Painting of the Battle of Zapote Bridge and the Malolos CongressDateAugust 24 1896 June 12 1898LocationPhilippinesResultFilipino victory Expulsion of the Spanish colonial government Declaration of Philippine Independence 1898 Establishment of the First Philippine Republic 1899 Belligerents1896 1897 Katipunan Sovereign Tagalog Nation until March 1897 Tejeros Government March November 1897 Republic of Biak na Bato November December 1897 1896 1897 Spanish Empire Spanish East Indies Province of La Pampanga1898 Filipino Revolutionaries Central Executive Committee April May Dictatorial Government May June Revolutionary Government from June 1898 United States Diplomatic support German Empire 1 1898 Spanish Empire Spanish East IndiesProvince of La Pampanga Spanish Cuba Spanish Puerto RicoCommanders and leadersSupremo Andres Bonifacio 1896 1897 President Emilio Aguinaldo 1897 1898 Early leaders until 1897 Roman Basa Teodoro Plata Ladislao Diwa Emilio Jacinto Gregoria de Jesus Julio Nakpil Macario Sakay Mariano AlvarezLater leaders until 1898 Mariano Trias Santiago AlvarezBaldomero Aguinaldo Miguel Malvar Artemio Ricarte Pio del Pilar Tomas Mascardo Gregorio del Pilar Francisco Macabulos Manuel Tinio Teresa Magbanua Pantaleon Villegas Arcadio Maxilom Aniceto Lacson George Dewey Wesley MerrittQueen Regent Maria ChristinaGovernor Generals Ramon Blanco 1896 Camilo de Polavieja 1896 1897 Fernando Primo de Rivera 1897 1898 Basilio Augustin 1898 Fermin Jaudenes 1898 Diego de los Rios 1898 Other leaders Jose Olaguer Feliu Ernesto de Aguirre Bernardo Echaluce Antonio Zabala Jose de Lachambre Jose Marina Ricardo Monet Francisco Castilla Francisco Galbis Nicholas Jaramillo Leopoldo Garcia Pena Jose Canovas y VallejoStrength100 000 2 3 by 189612 700 17 700 before the Revolution around 55 000 30 000 Spanish 25 000 Kapampangans and other natives by 1898Casualties and lossesHeavy official casualties are unknownHeavy official casualties are unknownNotes The Philippine Revolution began in August 1896 when the Spanish authorities discovered the Katipunan an anti colonial secret organization The Katipunan led by Andres Bonifacio began to influence much of the Philippines taking full advantage of Spanish failures against Cuban nationalists in 1895 and declaring Spain a weakened empire During a mass gathering in Caloocan the leaders of the Katipunan organized into a revolutionary government named the newly established government Haring Bayang Katagalugan and openly declared a nationwide armed revolution 5 Bonifacio called for an attack on the capital city of Manila This attack failed however the surrounding provinces began to revolt In particular rebels in Cavite led by Mariano Alvarez and Baldomero Aguinaldo who were leaders from two different factions of the Katipunan won early major victories A power struggle among the revolutionaries led to a schism among Katipunan leadership followed by Bonifacio s execution in 1897 with command having shifted to Emilio Aguinaldo who led the newly formed revolutionary government That year revolutionaries and the Spanish signed the Pact of Biak na Bato which temporarily reduced hostilities Filipino revolutionary officers exiled themselves to Hong Kong However the hostilities never completely ceased 6 On April 21 1898 after the sinking of the USS Maine in Havana Harbor and prior to its declaration of war on April 25 the United States launched a naval blockade of the Spanish colonial island of Cuba off its southern coast of the peninsula of Florida This was the first military action of the Spanish American War of 1898 7 On May 1 the U S Navy s Asiatic Squadron under Commodore George Dewey decisively defeated the Spanish Navy in the Battle of Manila Bay effectively seizing control of Manila On May 19 Aguinaldo unofficially allied with the United States returned to the Philippines and resumed attacks against the Spaniards By June the rebels had gained control of nearly all of the Philippines with the exception of Manila On June 12 Aguinaldo issued the Philippine Declaration of Independence 8 Although this signified the end date of the revolution neither Spain nor the United States recognized Philippine independence 9 The Spanish rule of the Philippines officially ended with the Treaty of Paris of 1898 which also ended the Spanish American War In the treaty Spain ceded control of the Philippines and other territories to the United States 6 There was an uneasy peace around Manila with the American forces controlling the city and the weaker Philippines forces surrounding them On February 4 1899 in the Battle of Manila fighting broke out between the Filipino and American forces beginning the Philippine American War Aguinaldo immediately ordered that peace and friendly relations with the Americans be broken and that the latter be treated as enemies 10 In June 1899 the nascent First Philippine Republic formally declared war against the United States 11 12 in which the Americans prevailed The Philippines would not become an internationally recognized independent state until 1946 Contents 1 Summary 2 Background 2 1 Origins 2 1 1 Opening of Manila to world trade 2 1 1 1 Economic surveys port openings and admission of foreign firms 2 1 1 2 Enlightenment 2 1 2 Liberalism 1868 1874 2 1 3 Rise of Filipino nationalism 2 1 4 Criollo insurgencies 3 Organizations 3 1 La Solidaridad La Liga Filipina and the Propaganda Movement 3 2 Katipunan 4 History 4 1 Course of the Revolution 4 1 1 Final statement and execution of Jose Rizal 4 1 2 Revolution in Cavite 4 1 3 Tejeros Convention 4 1 4 Execution of Bonifacio 4 1 5 The Battle of Kakarong de Sili 4 1 6 Kakarong Republic 4 1 7 Biak na Bato 4 1 8 Second Phase of the revolution 4 1 8 1 In the Philippines 4 1 8 2 In exile 4 2 Spanish American War 4 2 1 Preparation for land based operations and Aguinaldo s return 4 2 2 Declaration of Independence 4 2 3 Capture of Manila 4 2 4 U S military government 4 2 5 First Philippine Republic 4 2 6 Spanish American War ends 4 3 Philippine American War 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksSummary EditThe main influx of revolutionary ideas came at the start of the 19th century when the Philippines was opened for world trade In 1809 the first British firms were established in Manila followed by a royal decree in 1834 which officially opened the city to world trade The Philippines had been governed from Mexico since 1565 13 with colonial administrative costs sustained by subsidies from the galleon trade Increased competition with foreign traders brought the galleon trade to an end in 1815 After it recognised Mexican independence in 1821 Spain was forced to govern the Philippines directly from Madrid and to find new sources of revenue to pay for the colonial administration 14 At this point post French Revolution ideas entered the country through literature which resulted in the rise of an enlightened principalia class in the society The 1868 Spanish Revolution brought the autocratic rule of Queen Isabella II to an end The autocratic government was replaced by a liberal government led by General Francisco Serrano 15 In 1869 Serrano appointed Carlos Maria de la Torre as the 91st governor general The leadership of de la Torre introduced the idea of liberalism to the Philippines 15 The election of Amadeo of Savoy to the throne of Spain led to the replacement of de la Torre in 1871 16 In 1872 the government of the succeeding governor general Rafael de Izquierdo experienced the uprising of Filipino soldiers at the Fort San Felipe arsenal in Cavite el Viejo Seven days after the mutiny many people were arrested and tried Three of these were secular priests Jose Burgos Mariano Gomez and friar Jacinto Zamora who were hanged by Spanish authorities in Bagumbayan 17 Their execution had a profound effect on many Filipinos Jose Rizal the national hero would dedicate his novel El filibusterismo to their memory 18 Many Filipinos who were arrested for possible rebellion were deported to Spanish penal colonies 19 Some of them however managed to escape to Hong Kong Yokohama Singapore Paris London Vienna Berlin and some parts of Spain These people met fellow Filipino students and other exiles who had escaped from penal colonies Bound together by common fate they established an organization known as the Propaganda Movement These emigres used their writings primarily to condemn Spanish abuses and seek reforms to the colonial government Jose Rizal s novels Noli Me Tangere Touch Me Not 1887 and El Filibusterismo The Filibuster 1891 exposed Spanish abuses in sociopolitical and religious aspects The publication of his first novel brought the infamous agrarian conflict in his hometown of Calamba Laguna in 1888 when Dominican haciendas fell into trouble of submitting government taxes In 1892 after his return from the Americas Rizal established La Liga Filipina The Filipino League a Filipino association organized to seek reforms in the colonial government When the Spaniards learned that Rizal was in the Philippines they arrested and deported him a few days after the Liga was established Upon hearing that Rizal had been deported to Dapitan Liga member Andres Bonifacio and his fellows established a secret organization named Katipunan in a house located in Tondo Manila while more conservative members led by Domingo Franco and Numeriano Adriano would later establish the Cuerpo de Compromisarios The Katipunan obtained overwhelming number of members and attracted the lowly classes In June 1896 Bonifacio sent an emissary to Dapitan to obtain Rizal s support but Rizal refused to participate in an armed revolution On August 19 1896 Katipunan was discovered by a Spanish friar which resulted in the start of the Philippine Revolution The revolution initially flared up in Central Luzon The armed resistance eventually spread throughout the Southern Tagalog region particularly in Cavite province where towns were gradually liberated during the early months of the uprising In 1896 and 1897 successive conventions at Imus and Tejeros decided the new republic s fate In November 1897 the Republic of Biak na Bato was established and the insurgent government promulgated a constitution On May 1 1898 the Battle of Manila Bay took place as part of the Spanish American War On May 24 Emilio Aguinaldo who had returned from voluntary exile on May 19 announced in Cavite I return to assume command of all the forces for the attainment of our lofty aspirations establishing a dictatorial government which will set forth decrees under my sole responsibility 20 On June 12 Aguinaldo proclaimed Philippine independence 21 On June 18 Aguinaldo issued a decree proclaiming a Dictatorial Government led by himself 22 On June 23 Aguinaldo issued another decree which replaced the Dictatorial Government with a Revolutionary Government 23 In 1898 between June and September 10 the Malolos Congress elections were held by the Revolutionary Government resulting in Emilio Aguinaldo being elected as President of the Philippines On February 2 1899 hostilities broke out between U S and Filipino forces 24 The Malolos Constitution was adopted in a session convened on September 15 1898 It was promulgated on January 21 1899 creating the First Philippine Republic with Aguinaldo as President On June 12 1899 Aguinaldo promulgated a declaration of war against the U S beginning the Philippine American War U S forces captured Aguinaldo on March 23 1901 and he swore allegiance to the U S on April 1 On July 4 1902 U S President Theodore Roosevelt proclaimed a complete pardon and amnesty for all Filipinos who had participated in the conflict effectively ending the war 25 26 Background EditOrigins Edit Map of the Philippines at the end of the 19th century The Philippine Revolution was an accumulation of ideas and exposition to the international community which led to the start of nationalistic endeavors The rise of Filipino nationalism was slow but inevitable Abuses by the Spanish government military and clergy prevalent during three centuries of colonial rule and the exposure of these abuses by the ilustrados in the late 19th century paved the way for a united Filipino people 27 28 However the growth of nationalism was slow because of the difficulty in social and economic intercourse among the Filipinos In a dated letter written by the Filipino writer Jose P Rizal to Father Vicente Garcia of Ateneo Municipal de Manila Rizal states that 29 There is then in the Philippines a progress or improvement which is individual but there is no national progress January 17 1891 Opening of Manila to world trade Edit A sketch of a Spanish galleon during Manila Acapulco Trade Before the opening of Manila to foreign trade the Spanish authorities discouraged foreign merchants from residing in the colony and engaging in business 30 The royal decree of February 2 1800 prohibited foreigners from living in the Philippines 31 as did the royal decrees of 1807 and 1816 31 In 1823 Governor General Mariano Ricafort promulgated an edict prohibiting foreign merchants from engaging in retail trade and visiting the provinces for the purpose of trading It was reissued by Governor General Luis Lardizabal in 1840 32 A royal decree issued in 1844 prohibited foreigners from traveling to the provinces under any pretext whatsoever and in 1857 several anti foreigner laws were renewed 33 With the wide acceptance of laissez faire doctrines in the later part of the 18th century Spain relaxed its mercantilist policies The British capture and occupation of Manila in 1762 1764 made Spain realize the impossibility of isolating the colony from world intercourse and commerce 34 In 1789 foreign vessels were given permission to transport Asian goods to the port of Manila 35 Even before the 1780s many foreign ships including Yankee clipper ships had visited Manila regardless of anti foreigner regulations In 1790 Governor General Felix Berenguer de Marquina recommended that the King of Spain open Manila to world commerce 36 Furthermore the bankruptcy of the Royal Company of the Philippines Real Compana de Filipinas catapulted the Spanish king to open Manila to world trade In a royal decree issued on September 6 1834 the privileges of the company were revoked and the port of Manila was opened to trade 37 Economic surveys port openings and admission of foreign firms Edit Shortly after the opening of Manila to world trade the Spanish merchants began to lose their commercial supremacy in the Philippines In 1834 restrictions against foreign traders were relaxed when Manila became an open port By the end of 1859 there were 15 foreign firms in Manila Seven of these were British three were American two were French two were Swiss and one was German 38 In 1834 some American merchants settled in Manila and invested heavily in business Two American business firms were established the Russell Sturgis amp Company and the Peele Hubbell amp Company These became two of the leading business firms At first Americans had an edge over their British competitors because they offered high prices for Philippine exports such as hemp sugar and tobacco 39 American trade supremacy did not last long In the face of stiff British competition they gradually lost their control over the Philippine business market This decline was due to lack of support from the U S government and lack of U S trade bases in the Orient 39 In 1875 Russell Sturgis amp Company went into bankruptcy followed by Peele Hubbell amp Company in 1887 Soon after British merchants including James Adam Smith Lawrence H Bell and Robert P Wood dominated the financial sector in Manila 39 In 1842 alarmed by the domination of foreign merchants in the economy of Manila the Spanish government sent Sinibaldo de Mas a Spanish diplomat to the Philippines in order to conduct an economic survey of the Philippines and submit recommendations 40 After an intensive investigation of colonial affairs in the Philippines Mas submitted his official report to the Crown The report Informe sobre el estado de las Islas Filipinas en 1842 was published at Madrid in 1843 Mas recommended the following opening of more ports to promote foreign trade encouragement of Chinese immigration to stimulate agricultural development and abolition of the tobacco monopoly 41 In response to Sinibaldo de Mas s recommendations more ports were opened by Spain The ports of Sual Pangasinan Iloilo and Zamboanga were opened in 1855 Cebu was opened in 1860 and both Legazpi and Tacloban were opened in 1873 42 Enlightenment Edit Main article Ilustrado Further information Casta Peninsulares Creoles Principalia and rizal family Leaders of the reform movement in Spain Jose Rizal Marcelo H del Pilar and Mariano Ponce Photo was taken in Spain in 1890 Ilustrados in Madrid c 1890 Standing clockwise from left Vicente Francisco Cajigas Jose Abreu Mariano Abella Dominador Gomez Francisco Tongio Liongson Flaviano Cordecruz a Tuazon from Malabon Alejandro Yance de Lara Lauro Dimayuga Marcelo H del Pilar Gregorio Aguilera Jose Rizal Jose Alejandrino Baldomero Roxas Moises Salvador Modesto Reyes Gaudencio Juanengo Pablo Rianzares Bautista Seated from left Dr Santamaria Candido Morada Damaso Ponce Ariston Bautista Pedro Serrano Lactao and Teodoro Sandiko Before the start of the Philippine Revolution Filipino society was subdivided into social classifications that were based on the economic status of a person Background ancestry and economic status played a huge role in determining standing in the social hierarchy The Spanish people as well as Native descendants of precolonial nobility belonged to the upper class and they were further subdivided into more classes the peninsulares the creoles and the Principalia The peninsulares were people who were Spanish born but lived in the Philippines The creoles or criollo people were Spaniards who were born in the colonies The principalia was a hereditary class of local Indios who descended from precolonial datus rajah and nobility and were granted special rights and privileges such as positions in local government and the right to vote though they were lower than the peninsulares and insulares in social standing Many members of the Philippine Revolution belonged to the principalia class like Jose Rizal Although the peninsulares and the creoles enjoyed the same social power as they both belonged to the upper class the peninsulares considered themselves as socially superior to the creoles and the native principalia 43 The lowest of the two classes was the masses or Indios This class included all poor commoners peasants and laborers Unlike the principalia class where the members enjoyed high public offices and recommendations from the King of Spain the masses only enjoyed a few civil rights and privileges The highest political office that they could possibly hold was the gobernadorcillo or the town executive The members of Katipunan the secret organization that would trigger the revolution mainly consisted of the masses 43 Material prosperity at the start of 19th century produced an enlightened middle class in the Philippines consisting of well to do farmers teachers lawyers physicians writers and government employees Many of them were able to buy and read books originally withheld from the lowly Filipino class They discussed political problems and sought government reforms and eventually they were able to send their children to colleges and universities in Manila and abroad particularly to Madrid The material progress was primarily due to the opening of the Manila ports to world trade 44 The leading intellectuals of the country came from the enlightened middle class They later called themselves the Ilustrados which means erudite ones They also considered themselves to be the intelligentsia branch of the Filipino society From the Ilustrados rose the prominent members of the Propaganda Movement who stirred the very first flames of the revolution 45 Liberalism 1868 1874 Edit In 1868 a revolution overthrew the autocratic monarchy of Queen Isabella II of Spain which was replaced by a civil and liberal government with Republican principles led by Francisco Serrano 46 107 The next year Serrano appointed Carlos Maria de la Torre a member of the Spanish Army as the 91st Governor General of the Philippines Filipino and Spanish liberals residing in the country welcomed him with a banquet at the Malacanan Palace on June 23 1869 On the night of July 12 1869 Filipino leaders priests and students gathered and serenaded de la Torre at Malacanan Palace to express their appreciation for his liberal policies The serenade was led by prominent residents of Manila including Jose Cabezas de Herrera the Civil Governor of Manila Jose Burgos Maximo Paterno Manuel Genato Joaquin Pardo de Tavera Angel Garchitorena Andres Nieto and Jacobo Zobel y Zangroniz An Assembly of Reformists the Junta General de Reformas was established in Manila It consisted of five Filipinos eleven Spanish civilians and five Spanish friars 46 362 363 They had the ability to vote on reforms subject to ratification by the Home Government 46 363 However none of the reforms were put into effect due to the friars fearing that the reforms would diminish their influence The Assembly ceased to exist after the 1874 Restoration 46 363 Rise of Filipino nationalism Edit Main article Filipino nationalism In 1776 the first major challenge to monarchy in centuries occurred in the American Colonies Although the American Revolution succeeded it was in a relatively isolated area In 1789 however the French Revolution began to change the political landscape of Europe as it ended absolute monarchy in France The power passed from the king to the people through representation in parliament People in other European countries began asking for representation as well In the Philippines this idea spread through the writings of criollo writers such as Luis Rodriguez Varela who called himself Conde Filipino Earl of the Philippines 47 This was the first time that a colonist called himself a Filipino rather than a Spanish subject With the increasing economic and political stability in the Philippines the middle class began demanding that the churches in the Philippines be nationalized through a process known as Secularization In this process control of Philippine parishes were to be passed from the religious orders to the secular priests particularly Philippine born priests The religious orders or friars reacted negatively and a political struggle between the friars and secular priests began The 19th century was also a new era for Europe Church power was declining and friars began coming to the Philippines ending hopes that the friars would relinquish their posts With the opening of the Suez Canal the voyage between Spain and the Philippines was made shorter More peninsulares Spaniards born in Spain began pouring into the colony and started to occupy the various government positions traditionally held by the criollos Spaniards born in the Philippines In the 300 years of colonial rule the criollos had been accustomed to being semi autonomous with the governor general who was the only Spaniard peninsulares government official The criollos demanded representation in the Spanish Cortes where they could express their grievances This together with the secularization issues gave rise to the Criollo insurgencies Criollo insurgencies Edit Priests Mariano Gomez Jacinto Zamora and Jose Burgos L R remembered in Philippine history as Gomburza In the late 18th century Criollo or Insulares islanders as they were locally called writers began spreading the ideals of the French Revolution in the Philippines At the same time a royal decree ordered the secularization of Philippine churches and many parishes were turned over to Philippine born priests Halfway through the process it was aborted due to the return of the Jesuits The religious orders began retaking Philippine parishes One instance that enraged the Insulares was the Franciscan takeover of Antipolo the richest parish in the islands which had been under the control of Philippine born priests In the early 19th century Fathers Pedro Pelaez and Mariano Gomez began organizing activities which demanded that control of Philippine parishes be returned to the Filipino seculars Father Pelaez who was Archbishop of the Manila Cathedral died in an earthquake while Father Gomez retired to private life The next generation of Insular activists included Father Jose Burgos who organized the student rallies in the University of Santo Tomas On the political front Insular activists included Joaquin Pardo de Tavera and Jacobo Zobel The unrest escalated into a large insurgency in 1823 when Andres Novales a creole captain declared the Philippines to be independent from Spain and crowned himself Emperor of the Philippines 47 In January 1872 the Insular uprisings began when soldiers and workers of the Cavite Arsenal of Fort San Felipe mutinied They were led by sergeant Ferdinand La Madrid a Spanish mestizo The soldiers mistook the fireworks in Quiapo which were being fired for the feast of St Sebastian as the signal to start a long planned national uprising The colonial government used the incident to spread a reign of terror and to eliminate subversive political and church figures Among these were priests Mariano Gomez Jose Burgos and Jacinto Zamora who were executed by garrote on February 18 1872 They are remembered in Philippine history as Gomburza 47 Organizations EditLa Solidaridad La Liga Filipina and the Propaganda Movement Edit A copy of La Solidaridad Solidarity The Cavite Mutiny of 1872 and the subsequent deportation of criollos and mestizos to the Mariana Islands and Europe created a colony of Filipino expatriates in Europe particularly in Madrid In Madrid Marcelo H del Pilar Mariano Ponce Eduardo de Lete and Antonio Luna founded La Solidaridad a newspaper that pressed for reforms in the Philippines and spread ideas of revolution 46 363 This effort is known as the Propaganda Movement and the result was the founding of secret societies in villages 46 363 Among the pioneering editors of the paper were Graciano Lopez Jaena Marcelo H del Pilar and Jose Rizal The editors of La Solidaridad also included leading Spanish liberals such as Miguel Morayta 48 The Propaganda Movement in Europe resulted in the Spanish legislature passing some reforms for the islands but the colonial government did not implement them After being published from 1889 to 1895 La Solidaridad began to run out of funds and it had not accomplished concrete changes in the Philippines Jose Rizal decided to return to the Philippines where he founded La Liga Filipina the Manila chapter of the Propaganda Movement Only days after its founding Rizal was arrested by colonial authorities and deported to Dapitan and the Liga was soon disbanded 48 Ideological differences had contributed to its dissolution Conservative upper class members favoring reform under the leadership of Apolinario Mabini set up the Cuerpo de Compromisarios which attempted to revive La Solidaridad in Europe Other more radical members belonging to the middle and lower classes led by Andres Bonifacio set up the Katipunan alongside the revived Liga The goals of the Propaganda Movement included legal equality of Filipinos and Spaniards restoration of Philippine representation in the Spanish Cortes Filipinization of the Catholic parishes and the granting of individual liberties to Filipinos such as freedom of speech freedom of press freedom of assembly and freedom to petition for grievances 49 Katipunan Edit Main article KatipunanKatipunanParticipant at the Philippine Revolution Flag of the Katipunan 1892BackgroundEventsVarious revolts and uprisingsFactionsSee FactionsMagdiwang Noveleta Magdalo Kawit Cavite el Viejo Haligue Imus Gargano Bakood Mapagtiis San Francisco de Malabon Magwagi Naic Pangwagi Tanza Walang tinag Indang Katuwa tuwa Ternate Magtagumpay Maragondon Naghapay Bailen Key organizationsPropaganda MovementLa Liga FilipinaObjectsNoli Me TangereEl filibusterismoLa SolidaridadOrganizationLeadersAndres BonifacioEmilio AguinaldoLadislao DiwaGregoria de JesusTeodoro PlataRoman BasaDeodato ArellanoValentin DiazJose DizonPio del PilarMembersMelchora AquinoPio ValenzuelaEmilio JacintoMacario SakayGregorio del PilarCandido TironaMariano NorielTeresa MagbanuaPaciano RizalArtemio RicarteDaniel TironaJose SantiagoManuel TinioAniceto LacsonLeon KilatArcadio MaxilomothersvteAndres Bonifacio Deodato Arellano Ladislao Diwa Teodoro Plata and Valentin Diaz founded the Katipunan in full Kataas taasang Kagalang galangang Katipunan ng mga Anak ng Bayan 50 Supreme and Venerable Society of the Children of the Nation in Manila on July 7 1892 The organization advocating independence through armed revolt against Spain was influenced by the rituals and organization of Freemasonry Bonifacio and other leading members were also Freemasons From Manila the Katipunan expanded into several provinces including Batangas Laguna Cavite Bulacan Pampanga Tarlac Nueva Ecija Ilocos Sur Ilocos Norte Pangasinan Bicol and Mindanao Most of the members called Katipuneros came from the lower and middle classes The Katipunan had its own laws bureaucratic structure and elective leadership 5 The Katipunan Supreme Council Kataas taasang Kapulungan of which Bonifacio was a member and eventually head coordinated provincial councils Sangguniang Bayan 6 The provincial councils were in charge of public administration and military affairs on the supra municipal or quasi provincial level 5 Local councils Panguluhang Bayan 6 were in charge of affairs on the district or barrio level 5 By 1895 Bonifacio was the supreme leader Supremo or supreme president Presidente Supremo 51 52 of the Katipunan and was the head of its Supreme Council Some historians estimate that there were between 30 000 and 400 000 members by 1896 other historians argue that there were only a few hundred to a few thousand members 53 History EditCourse of the Revolution Edit Bonifacio s Katipunan battle flag Monument for the 1896 Revolution in University of the Philippines Diliman See also Bonifacio Plan The existence of the Katipunan eventually became known to the colonial authorities through Teodoro Patino who revealed it to the Spaniard La Font general manager of the printing shop Diario de Manila 51 29 31 Patino was engaged in a bitter dispute over pay with a co worker Katipunero member Apolonio de la Cruz and exposed the Katipunan in revenge 54 30 31 La Font led a Spanish police lieutenant to the shop and to the desk of Apolonio where they found Katipunan paraphernalia such as a rubber stamp a little book ledgers membership oaths signed in blood and a membership roster of the Maghiganti chapter of the Katipunan 54 31 As with the Terror of 1872 colonial authorities made several arrests and used torture to identify other Katipunan members 54 31 Despite having no involvement in the secessionist movement many of them were executed notably Don Francisco Roxas Bonifacio had forged their signatures in Katipunan documents hoping that they would be forced to support the revolution On August 24 1896 Bonifacio called Katipunan members to a mass gathering in Caloocan where the group decided to start a nationwide armed revolution against Spain 5 54 34 35 The event included a mass tearing of cedulas community tax certificates accompanied by patriotic cries The exact date and location are disputed but two possibilities have been officially endorsed by the Philippine government August 26 in Balintawak and later August 23 in Pugad Lawin Thus the event is called the Cry of Pugad Lawin or Cry of Balintawak However the issue is further complicated by other possible dates such as August 24 and 25 and other locations such as Kangkong Bahay Toro and Pasong Tamo Furthermore at the time Balintawak referred not only to a specific place but also a general area that included some of the proposed sites such as Kangkong 55 56 Upon the discovery of the Katipunan Bonifacio called all Katipunan councils to a meeting in Balintawak 57 or Kangkong 54 58 to discuss their situation According to historian Teodoro Agoncillo the meeting occurred on August 19 57 however revolutionary leader Santiago Alvarez stated that it occurred on August 22 54 58 On August 21 Katipuneros were already congregating in Balintawak 57 in Caloocan 54 58 Late in the evening amidst heavy rain the rebels moved to Kangkong in Caloocan and arrived there past midnight 54 58 As a precaution the rebels moved to Bahay Toro 54 or Pugad Lawin 55 on August 23 Agoncillo places the Cry and tearing of certificates at the house of Juan Ramos which was in Pugad Lawin 55 Alvarez writes that they met at the house of Melchora Aquino known as Tandang Sora and mother of Juan Ramos in Bahay Toro on that date 54 58 Agoncillo places Aquino s house in Pasong Tamo and the meeting there on August 24 59 The rebels continued to congregate and by August 24 there were over a thousand 54 58 Katipunan supreme leader Andres Bonifacio On August 24 it was decided to notify the Katipunan councils of the surrounding towns that an attack on the capital Manila was planned for August 29 54 58 59 Bonifacio appointed generals to lead rebel forces in Manila Before hostilities erupted Bonifacio also reorganized the Katipunan into an open revolutionary government with himself as president and the Supreme Council of the Katipunan as his cabinet 6 54 On the morning of August 25 the rebels came under attack by a Spanish civil guard unit with the rebels having greater numbers but the Spanish being better armed The forces disengaged after a brief skirmish and some casualties on both sides 54 58 59 Another skirmish took place on August 26 which sent the rebels retreating toward Balara At noon Bonifacio and some of his men briefly rested in Diliman In the afternoon civil guards sent to Caloocan to investigate attacks on Chinese merchants done by bandits who had attached themselves to the rebels came across a group of Katipuneros and briefly engaged them 46 367 The commander of the guards Lieutenant Ros reported the encounter to the authorities and the report drove Governor General Ramon Blanco to prepare for coming hostilities 54 58 General Blanco had about 10 000 Spanish regulars and the gunboats Isla de Cuba and Isla de Luzon by the end of November 46 365 From August 27 to 28 Bonifacio moved from Balara to Mt Balabak in Hagdang Bato Mandaluyong There he held meetings to finalize plans for the Manila attack the following day 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 58 The conventional view among Filipino historians is that Bonifacio did not carry out the planned Katipunan attack on Manila the following day and instead attacked a powder magazine at San Juan del Monte 60 61 However more recent studies have advanced the view that the planned attack did occur according to this view Bonifacio s battle at San Juan del Monte now called the Battle of Pinaglabanan was only a part of a bigger battle for Manila hitherto unrecognized as such 6 58 Hostilities in the area started on the evening of August 29 when hundreds of rebels attacked the Civil Guard garrison in Pasig just as hundreds of other rebels personally led by Bonifacio were amassing in San Juan del Monte which they attacked at about 4 a m on the 30th 46 368 Bonifacio planned to capture the San Juan del Monte powder magazine 46 368 along with a water station which supplied Manila The Spaniards outnumbered fought a delaying battle until reinforcements arrived Once reinforced the Spaniards drove Bonifacio s forces back with heavy casualties Elsewhere rebels attacked Mandaluyong Sampaloc Sta Ana Pandacan Pateros Marikina and Caloocan 58 as well as Makati and Taguig 60 Balintawak in Caloocan saw intense fighting Rebel troops tended to gravitate towards fighting in San Juan del Monte and Sampaloc 58 South of Manila a thousand strong rebel force attacked a small force of civil guards In Pandacan Katipuneros attacked the parish church making the parish priest run for his life 60 After their defeat in Battle of San Juan del Monte Bonifacio s troops regrouped near Marikina San Mateo and Montalban where they proceeded to attack these areas They captured the areas but were driven back by Spanish counterattacks and Bonifacio eventually ordered a retreat to Balara On the way Bonifacio was nearly killed shielding Emilio Jacinto from a Spanish bullet that grazed his collar 60 Despite his retreat Bonifacio was not completely defeated and was still considered to be a threat 6 58 South of Manila the towns of San Francisco de Malabon Noveleta and Kawit in Cavite rebelled a few days after 60 In Nueva Ecija north of Manila rebels in San Isidro led by Mariano Llanera attacked the Spanish garrison on September 2 4 but they were repulsed 62 By August 30 the revolt had spread to eight provinces On that date Governor General Ramon Blanco declared a state of war in these provinces and placed them under martial law 46 368 These provinces were Manila Bulacan Cavite Pampanga Tarlac Laguna Batangas and Nueva Ecija 47 60 63 They would later be represented as the eight rays of the sun in the Filipino flag The rebels had few firearms they were mostly armed with bolo knives and bamboo spears The lack of guns has been proposed as a possible reason why the Manila attack allegedly never succeeded 60 Also the Katipunan leaders from Cavite had earlier expressed reservations about starting an uprising due to their lack of firearms and preparation As a result they did not send troops to Manila but instead attacked garrisons in their own locales Some historians have argued that the Katipunan defeat in the Manila area was partly the fault of the Cavite rebels due to their absence as their presence would have proved crucial 6 58 In their memoirs Cavite rebel leaders justified their absence in Manila by claiming Bonifacio failed to execute pre arranged signals to begin the uprising such as setting balloons loose and extinguishing the lights at the Luneta park However these claims have been dismissed as historical mythology as reasoned by historians if they were really waiting for signals before marching on Manila they would have arrived too late for the fray Bonifacio s command for a simultaneous attack is interpreted as evidence that such signals were never arranged 6 58 Other factors for the Katipunan defeat include the capture of Bonifacio s battle plans by Spanish intelligence The Spanish concentrated their forces in the Manila area while pulling out troops in other provinces which proved beneficial for rebels in other areas particularly Cavite The authorities also transferred a regiment of 500 native troops to Marawi Mindanao where the soldiers later rebelled 6 58 Final statement and execution of Jose Rizal Edit Main article Jose Rizal Rizal s execution in what was then Bagumbayan When the revolution broke out Rizal was in Cavite awaiting the monthly mailboat to Spain He had volunteered and been accepted for medical service in the Cuban War of Independence The mailboat left on September 3 and arrived in Barcelona which was under martial law on October 3 1896 After a brief confinement at Montjuich prison Rizal was told by Captain General Eulogio Despujol that he would not be going on to Cuba but would be sent back to the Philippines instead Upon his return he was imprisoned in Fort Santiago While incarcerated Rizal petitioned Governor General Ramon Blanco for permission to make a statement on the rebellion 64 His petition was granted and Rizal wrote the Manifesto a Algunos Filipinos wherein he decried the use of his name as a war cry among certain people who were up in arms 65 stated that for reforms to bear fruit they must come from above since those that come from below will be irregular and uncertain shocks 66 and affirmed that he condemn s this absurd savage insurrection 66 However the text was suppressed on the recommendation of the Judge Advocate General 66 Revolution in Cavite Edit Emilio Aguinaldo as a field marshal during the battle By December there were three major centers of rebellion Cavite under Mariano Alvarez Baldomero Aguinaldo and others Bulacan under Mariano Llanera and Morong now part of Rizal under Bonifacio Bonifacio served as tactician for the rebel guerillas though his prestige suffered when he lost battles that he personally led 6 Meanwhile in Cavite Katipuneros under Mariano Alvarez Bonifacio s uncle by marriage and Baldomero Aguinaldo of Cavite El Viejo modern Kawit won early victories The Magdalo council commissioned Edilberto Evangelista an engineer to plan the defense and logistics of the revolution in Cavite His first victory was in the Battle of Imus on September 1 1896 defeating the Spanish forces under General Ernesto Aguirre with the aid of Jose Tagle The Cavite revolutionaries particularly Emilio Aguinaldo won prestige through defeating Spanish troops in set piece battles while other rebels like Bonifacio and Llanera were engaged in guerrilla warfare Aguinaldo speaking for the Magdalo ruling council issued a manifesto proclaiming a provisional and revolutionary government after his early successes despite the existence of Bonifacio s Katipunan government 67 The Katipunan in Cavite was divided into two councils the Magdiwang led by Alvarez and the Magdalo led by Baldomero Aguinaldo Emilio s cousin At first these two Katipunan councils cooperated with each other in the battlefield as in the battles of Binakayan and Dalahican where they won their first major victory over the Spaniards However rivalries between command and territory soon developed and they refused to cooperate with each other in battle To unite the Katipunan in Cavite the Magdiwang through Artemio Ricarte and Pio del Pilar called Bonifacio who was fighting in Morong present day Rizal province to mediate between the factions Perhaps due to his kinship ties with their leader Bonifacio was seen as partial to the Magdiwang 68 It was not long before the issue of leadership was debated The Magdiwang faction recognized Bonifacio as supreme leader being the head of the Katipunan The Magdalo faction agitated for Emilio Aguinaldo to be the movement s head because of his successes in the battlefield compared to Bonifacio s record of personal defeats Meanwhile the Spanish troops now under the command of the new Governor General Camilo de Polavieja steadily gained ground Tejeros Convention Edit Main articles Imus Assembly and Tejeros Convention On December 31 an assembly was convened in Imus to settle the leadership dispute The Magdalo insisted on the establishment of revolutionary government to replace the Katipunan The Magdiwang favored retention of the Katipunan arguing that it was already a government in itself The assembly dispersed without a consensus 69 On March 22 1897 another meeting was held in Tejeros It called for the election of officers for the revolutionary government which was in need of united military forces as there was a pending Spanish offensive against the Magdalo faction The Magdiwang faction allied with Bonifacio and prepared and hosted the election as most of the Magdalo faction was occupied by battle preparations Bonifacio chaired the election and stated that the election results were to be respected When the voting ended Bonifacio had lost and the leadership turned over to Aguinaldo who was away fighting in Pasong Santol Bonifacio also lost other positions to members of his Magdiwang faction Instead he was elected as Director of the Interior but his qualifications were questioned by a Magdalo Daniel Tirona Bonifacio felt insulted and would have shot Tirona if Artemio Ricarte had not intervened Invoking his position of Supremo of the Katipunan Bonifacio declared the election void and stomped out in anger 70 Aguinaldo took his oath of office as president the next day in Santa Cruz de Malabon present day Tanza in Cavite as did the rest of the officers except for Bonifacio 71 Execution of Bonifacio Edit See also Andres Bonifacio Bonifacio moved his headquarters to Naic after the fall of Imus 51 112 In Naic Bonifacio and his officers created the Naic Military Agreement establishing a rival government to the newly constituted government of Aguinaldo It rejected the election at Tejeros and asserted that Bonifacio was the leader of the revolution It also ordered that Filipino men be forced to enlist in Bonifacio s army The agreement eventually called for a coup d etat against the established government When Limbon in Indang a town in Cavite refused to supply provisions Bonifacio ordered it to be burned 51 117 When Aguinaldo learned about the Naic Military Agreement and the reports of abuse he ordered the arrest of Bonifacio and his soldiers without Bonifacio s knowledge on April 27 1897 51 120 Colonel Agapito Bonzon met with Bonifacio in Limbon and attacked him the next day Bonifacio and his brother Procopio were wounded while their brother Ciriaco was killed on April 28 51 121 They were taken to Naic to stand trial 51 124 The Consejo de Guerra War Council sentenced Andres and Procopio to death on May 10 1897 for committing sedition and treason 56 Aguinaldo supported deportation of Andres and Procopio rather than execution 51 140 but withdrew his decision as a result of pressure from Pio del Pilar and other officers of the revolution On May 10 Major Lazaro Makapagal upon orders from General Mariano Noriel executed the Bonifacio brothers 51 143 at the foothills of Mount Buntis 56 near Maragondon Andres and Procopio were buried in a shallow grave marked only with twigs The Battle of Kakarong de Sili Edit Main article Battle of Kakarong de Sili Inang Filipina Shrine Panorama of the Park and the Shrine Facade The battle of Kakarong de Sili took place on January 1 1897 Pandi Bulacan played a vital and historical role in the fight for Philippine independence Pandi is historically known for the Real de Kakarong de Sili Shrine Inang Filipina Shrine the site where the bloodiest revolution in Bulacan took place where more than 3 000 Katipunero revolutionaries died Likewise it is on this site where the Republic of Real de Kakarong de Sili of 1896 one of the first Philippine revolutionary republics was established It was also in Kakarong de Sili that the Kakarong Republic 72 was organized shortly after the Cry of Pugad Lawin referred to as The Cry of Balintawak by about 6 000 Katipuneros from various towns of Bulacan headed by Brigadier General Eusebio Roque better known as Maestrong Sebio or Dimabungo 73 Kakarong Republic Edit History and researchers who as well as records of the National Historical Commission tell that the Kakarong Republic was the first truly organized revolutionary government established in the country to overthrow the Spaniards antedating even the famous Malolos Republic and the Biak na Bato Republic In recognition thereof these three Republics established in Bulacan have been incorporated in the provincial seal The Kakarong Republic established in late 1896 grew out of the local Katipunan chapter in the town of Pandi Bulacan called the Balangay Dimas Alang According to available records including the biography of General Gregorio del Pilar entitled Life and Death of a Boy General written by Teodoro Kalaw former director of the National Library of the Philippines a fort was constructed at Kakarong de Sili that was like a miniature city It had streets an independent police force a military band a military arsenal with factories for bolos and artillery and repair shops for rifles and cartridges The Kakarong Republic had a complete set of officials with Canuto Villanueva as Supreme Chief and Captain General of the military forces and Eusebio Roque also known by his nom de guerre Maestrong Sebio then head of the Katipunan local organization as Brigadier General of the Army of the Republic The fort was attacked and completely destroyed on January 1 1897 by a large Spanish force headed by General Jose Olaguer Feliu 74 General Gregorio del Pilar was only a lieutenant at that time and the Battle of Kakarong de Sili was his first baptism of fire This was where he was first wounded and escaped to Manatal a nearby barangay In memory of the 1 200 Katipuneros who perished in the battle the Kakarong Lodge No 168 of the Legionarios del Trabajo erected a monument of the Inang Filipina Shrine Mother Philippines Shrine in 1924 in the barrio of Kakarong in Pandi Bulacan The actual site of the Battle of Kakarong de Sili is now a part of the barangay of Real de Kakarong Emilio Aguinaldo visited this ground in his late fifties Biak na Bato Edit Further information Republic of Biak na Bato and Pact of Biak na Bato The flag used by the Republic of Biak na Bato Augmented by new recruits from Spain government troops recaptured several towns in Cavite taking Imus on March 25 1897 51 110 The head of the Spanish expeditionary force General Jose de Lacambre then offered amnesty to all who would surrender and accept Spanish authority 51 111 In May 1897 the Spanish captured Maragondon forcing the Government of the Philippine Republic to move to Mt Buntis 51 146 By June the Spanish had taken Mendez Nunez Amadeo Alfonso Bailen and Magallanes with little resistance 51 149 The Spanish planned war including the concentration of rebel relatives and friends in camps 51 222 As argued by Apolinario Mabini and others the succession of defeats for the rebels could be attributed to discontent that resulted from Andres Bonifacio s death Mabini wrote This tragedy smothered the enthusiasm for the revolutionary cause and hastened the failure of the insurrection in Cavite because many from Manila Laguna and Batangas who were fighting for the province of Cavite were demoralized and quit 75 In other areas some of Bonifacio s associates such as Emilio Jacinto and Macario Sakay never subjected their military commands to Emilio Aguinaldo s authority Aguinaldo and his men retreated northward from one town to the next until they finally settled in Biak na Bato in the town of San Miguel de Mayumo in Bulacan Here they established what became known as the Republic of Biak na Bato with a constitution drafted by Isabelo Artacho and Felix Ferrer based on the first Cuban Constitution 76 The new Spanish Governor General Fernando Primo de Rivera declaring I can take Biak na Bato Any army can capture it But I cannot end the rebellion 77 proffered peace to the revolutionaries A lawyer named Pedro Paterno volunteered to be negotiator between the two sides For four months he traveled between Manila and Biak na Bato His hard work finally bore fruit when on December 14 to 15 1897 the Pact of Biak na Bato was signed Consisting of three documents it called for the following agenda 78 The surrender of all weapons of the revolutionaries Amnesty for those who participated in the revolution Exile for the revolutionary leadership Payment by the Spanish government of 400 000 Mexican peso to the revolutionaries in three installments 200 000 Mexican peso upon leaving the country 100 000 Mexican peso upon the surrender of at least 700 firearms and another 200 000 Mexican peso upon the declaration of general amnesty 79 Aguinaldo and eighteen other top officials of the revolution including Mariano Llanera Tomas Mascardo Benito Natividad Gregorio del Pilar and Vicente Lukban left Biak na Bato on December 24 1897 for exile in Hong Kong Second Phase of the revolution Edit In the Philippines Edit Main article Central Executive Committee Philippines This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Not all the revolutionary generals complied with the treaty One General Francisco Macabulos established a Central Executive Committee to serve as the interim government until a more suitable one was created Armed conflicts resumed this time coming from almost every province in the Philippines The colonial authorities on the other hand continued the arrest and torture of those suspected of committing banditry In exile Edit Main article Hong Kong Junta Aguinaldo and his party arrived in Hong Kong with MXN 400 000 a The funds were deposited in bank account controlled by Aguinaldo The exiles were convinced that the Spaniards would never give the rest of the money promised After their arrival Isabelo Artacho a revolutionary who had not been exiled arrived in Hong Kong and demanded the funds as payment for his services threatening legal action which would tie up the funds On advice from Felipe Agoncillo Aguinaldo and two aides fled under false names to Singapore There Aguinaldo met clandestinely with U S Consul E Spencer Pratt learned that war had been declared between the U S and Spain 80 Spanish American War Edit Main article Spanish American War Battle of Manila Bay The failure of Spain to engage in active social reforms in Cuba as demanded by the United States government was the basic cause for the Spanish American War American attention was focused on the issue after the mysterious explosion that sank the American battleship Maine on February 15 1898 in Havana Harbor As public political pressure from the Democratic Party and certain industrialists built up for war the U S Congress forced the reluctant Republican president William McKinley to issue an ultimatum to Spain on April 19 1898 Spain found it had no diplomatic support in Europe but nevertheless declared war the U S followed on April 25 with its own declaration of war 81 82 Theodore Roosevelt who was at that time Assistant Secretary of the Navy ordered Commodore George Dewey commanding the Asiatic Squadron of the United States Navy Order the squadron to Hong Kong Keep full of coal In the event of declaration of war Spain your duty will be to see that the Spanish squadron does not leave the Asiatic coast and then offensive operations in Philippine Islands Dewey s squadron departed on April 27 for the Philippines reaching Manila Bay on the evening of April 30 83 On April 27 Commodore George Dewey sailed for Manila with a fleet of nine U S ships Upon arriving on May 1 Dewey encountered a fleet of nine Spanish ships commanded by Admiral Patricio Montojo The subsequent Battle of Manila Bay only lasted for a few hours and ending with no loss of life among the American forces While the naval victory was decisive the small fleet lacked the numbers needed to capture Manila The U S squadron took control of the arsenal and navy yard at Cavite Dewey cabled Washington stating that although he controlled Manila Bay he needed 5 000 additional men to seize Manila itself The fleet remained in Manila Bay while reinforcements were sent from the United States 84 85 Preparation for land based operations and Aguinaldo s return Edit The unexpected rapidity and completeness of Dewey s victory in the first engagement of the war prompted the McKinley administration to make the decision to capture Manila from the Spanish The United States Army began to assemble the Eighth Army Corps a military unit which would consist of 10 844 soldiers under the command of Major General Wesley Merritt in preparation for deployment to the Philippines 84 On May 7 1898 USS McCulloch an American dispatch boat arrived in Hong Kong from Manila bringing reports of Dewey s victory in the Battle of Manila Bay Emilio Aguinaldo had recently returned there from Singapore expecting to be transported to Manila by the Americans but McCulloch had no orders regarding this McCulloch again arrived in Hong Kong on May 15 bearing such orders and departed Hong Kong with Aguinaldo aboard on May 17 arriving in Manila Bay on May 19 86 Several revolutionaries as well as Filipino soldiers employed by the Spanish army crossed over to Aguinaldo s command Aguinaldo arrived on May 19 and after a brief meeting with Dewey resumed revolutionary activities against the Spanish On May 24 Aguinaldo issued a proclamation in which he assumed command of all Philippine forces and announced his intention to establish a dictatorial government with himself as dictator saying that he would resign in favor of a duly elected president 87 In the Battle of Alapan on May 28 1898 Aguinaldo raided the last remaining stronghold of the Spanish Empire in Cavite with fresh reinforcements of about 12 000 men This battle eventually liberated Cavite from Spanish colonial control and led to the first time the modern flag of the Philippines being unfurled in victory Public jubilation marked Aguinaldo s return Many Filipino enlisted men deserted local Spanish army units to join Aguinaldo s command and the Philippine Revolution against Spain resumed Soon many cities such as Imus Bacoor Paranaque Las Pinas Morong Macabebe and San Fernando as well as some entire provinces such as Laguna Batangas Bulacan Nueva Ecija Bataan Tayabas now Quezon and the Camarines provinces were liberated by the Filipinos and the port of Dalahican in Cavite was secured 88 Thomas M Anderson The first contingent of American troops arrived on June 30 under the command of Brigadier General Thomas McArthur Anderson commander of the Eighth Corps 2nd Division U S brigade and division numbers of the era were not unique throughout the army General Anderson wrote to Aguinaldo requesting his cooperation in military operations against the Spanish forces 89 Aguinaldo responded thanking General Anderson for his amicable sentiments but saying nothing about military cooperation General Anderson did not renew the request 89 The 2nd Brigade and the 2nd Division of the Eighth Corps arrived on July 17 under the command of Brigadier General Francis V Greene Major General Wesley Merritt the Commander in Chief of the Philippine Expedition and his staff arrived at Cavite on July 25 The 1st Brigade of the corps 2nd Division arrived on July 30 under the command of Brigadier General Arthur MacArthur 90 Declaration of Independence Edit Main article Philippine Declaration of Independence See also Dictatorial Government of the Philippines and Revolutionary Government of the Philippines By June 1898 the island of Luzon except for Manila and the port of Cavite was under Filipino control after General Monet s retreat to Manila with his remaining force of 600 men and 80 wounded 46 445 The revolutionaries were laying siege to Manila and cutting off its food and water supply With most of the archipelago under his control Aguinaldo decided it was time to establish a Philippine government When Aguinaldo arrived from Hong Kong he had brought with him a copy of a plan drawn by Mariano Ponce calling for the establishment of a revolutionary government Upon the advice of Ambrosio Rianzares Bautista however an autocratic regime was established on May 24 with Aguinaldo as dictator It was under this dictatorship citation needed On June 12 1898 Aguinaldo proclaimed the independence of the Philippines at his house in Cavite El Viejo 91 92 Ambrosio Rianzares Bautista wrote the Philippine Declaration of Independence and read this document in Spanish that day at Aguinaldo s house 21 The first Filipino flag was again unfurled and the national anthem was played for the first time citation needed On June 18 Aguinaldo issued a decree formally establishing his dictatorial government 22 Apolinario Mabini Aguinaldo s closest adviser opposed Aguinaldo s decision to establish an autocracy He instead urged Aguinaldo to create a revolutionary government Aguinaldo refused to do so however Mabini was eventually able to convince him citation needed On June 23 Aguinaldo issued another decree this time replacing the dictatorial government with a revolutionary government and naming himself as president 23 93 Writing retrospectively in 1899 Aguinaldo claimed that U S Consul E Spencer Pratt had verbally assured him that the United States would at least recognize the independence of the Philippines under the protection of the United States Navy 94 In an April 28 message from Pratt to U S Secretary of State William R Day there was no mention of independence or of any conditions on which Aguinaldo was to cooperate In a July 28 communication Pratt stated that no promises had been made to Aguinaldo regarding U S policy with the concept aimed at facilitating the occupation and administration of the Philippines while preventing a possible conflict of action 95 96 On June 16 Day cabled Pratt with instructions to avoid unauthorized negotiations along with a reminder that Pratt had no authority to enter into arrangements on behalf of the U S government 97 Filipino scholar Maximo Kalaw wrote in 1927 A few of the principal facts however seem quite clear Aguinaldo was not made to understand that in consideration of Filipino cooperation the United States would extend its sovereignty over the Islands and thus in place of the old Spanish master a new one would step in The truth was that nobody at the time ever thought that the end of the war would result in the retention of the Philippines by the United States 98 On July 15 Aguinaldo issued three organic decrees assuming civil authority of the Philippines 99 American generals suspected Aguinaldo was attempting to take Manila without American assistance had restricted supplies to American forces and was secretly negotiating with Spanish authorities while informing them of American troop movements 100 101 102 Aguinaldo warned that American troops should not disembark in places conquered by the Filipinos without first communicating in writing and did not offer his full service to arriving American forces 103 Capture of Manila Edit Main article Battle of Manila 1898 By June U S and Filipino forces had taken control of most of the islands except for the walled city of Intramuros Admiral Dewey and General Merritt were able to work out a bloodless solution with acting governor general Fermin Jaudenes The negotiating parties made a secret agreement to stage a mock battle in which the Spanish forces would be defeated by the American forces but the Filipino forces would not be allowed to enter the city This plan minimized the risk of unnecessary casualties on all sides while the Spanish would also avoid the shame of possibly having to surrender Intramuros to the Filipino forces 104 On the evening of August 12 the Americans notified Aguinaldo to forbid the insurgents under his command from entering Manila without American permission 105 106 On August 13 unaware of the peace protocol signing 105 107 108 109 U S forces assaulted and captured the Spanish positions in Manila While the plan was for a mock battle and simple surrender the insurgents made an independent attack of their own which led to confrontations with the Spanish in which some American soldiers were killed and wounded 105 110 The Spanish formally surrendered Manila to U S forces 111 There was some looting by Insurgent forces in portions of the city they occupied 112 Aguinaldo demanded joint occupation of the city 113 however U S commanders pressed Aguinaldo to withdraw his forces from Manila 114 On August 12 1898 The New York Times reported that a peace protocol had been signed in Washington that afternoon between the U S and Spain suspending hostilities between the two nations 115 The full text of the protocol was not made public until November 5 but Article III read The United States will occupy and hold the City Bay and Harbor of Manila pending the conclusion of a treaty of peace which shall determine the control disposition and government of the Philippines 116 117 After conclusion of this agreement U S President McKinley proclaimed a suspension of hostilities with Spain 118 General Merritt received news of the August 12 peace protocol on August 16 three days after the surrender of Manila 119 Admiral Dewey and General Merritt were informed by a telegram dated August 17 that the president of the United States had directed that the United States should have full control over Manila with no joint occupation permissible 113 After further negotiations insurgent forces withdrew from the city on September 15 120 This battle marked the end of Filipino American collaboration as the American action of preventing Filipino forces from entering the captured city of Manila was deeply resented by the Filipinos 121 U S military government Edit Main article United States Military Government of the Philippine Islands On August 14 1898 two days after the capture of Manila the U S established a military government in the Philippines with General Merritt acting as military governor 122 During military rule 1898 1902 the U S military commander governed the Philippines under the authority of the U S president as commander in chief of the United States Armed Forces After the appointment of a civil governor general the procedure developed that as parts of the country were pacified and placed firmly under American control responsibility for the area would be passed to the civilian General Merritt was succeeded by General Otis as military governor who in turn was succeeded by General MacArthur Major General Adna Chaffee was the final military governor The position of military governor was abolished in July 1902 after which the civil governor general became the sole executive authority in the Philippines 123 124 Under the military government an American style school system was introduced initially with soldiers as teachers civil and criminal courts were reestablished including a supreme court 125 and local governments were established in towns and provinces The first local election was conducted by General Harold W Lawton on May 7 1899 in Baliuag Bulacan 126 First Philippine Republic Edit Main article First Philippine Republic Map of the Philippines during the inauguration of the First Philippine Republic Elections were held by the revolutionary government between June and September 10 resulting in the seating of a legislature known as the Malolos Congress 127 This followed the recommendations of the decree that established the revolutionary government and the Congreso Revolucionario Revolutionary Congress was assembled at Barasoain Church in Malolos Bulacan on September 15 46 469 All of the delegates to the congress were from the ilustrado class Mabini objected to the call for a constitutional assembly when he did not succeed he drafted a constitution of his own which also failed A draft by an ilustrado lawyer Felipe Calderon y Roca was instead presented and this became the framework upon which the assembly drafted the first constitution the Malolos Constitution On November 29 the assembly now popularly called the Malolos Congress finished the draft However Aguinaldo who always placed Mabini in high esteem and heeded most of his advice refused to sign the draft when the latter objected On January 21 1899 after some modifications were made to suit Mabini s arguments the constitution was finally approved by the Congress and signed by Aguinaldo Two days later the Philippine Republic also called the First Republic and Malolos Republic was established in Malolos with Emilio Aguinaldo as president 46 486 Spanish American War ends Edit Main article Treaty of Paris 1898 Felipe Agoncillo was the Filipino representative to the negotiations in Paris that led to the Treaty of Paris 1898 ending the Spanish American War He has been referred to as the outstanding first Filipino diplomat While the initial instructions of the American commission undertaking peace negotiators with Spain was to seek only Luzon and Guam which could serve as harbours and communication links 128 President McKinley later wired instructions to demand the entire archipelago 129 The resultant Treaty of Paris signed in December 1898 formally ended the Spanish American War Its provisions included the cession of the archipelago to the United States for which 20 million would be paid as compensation 130 131 132 This agreement was clarified through the 1900 Treaty of Washington which stated that Spanish territories in the archipelago which lay outside the geographical boundaries noted in the Treaty of Paris were also ceded to the U S 133 On December 21 1898 President McKinley proclaimed a policy of benevolent assimilation with regards to the Philippines This was announced in the Philippines on January 4 1899 Under this policy the Philippines was to come under the sovereignty of the United States with American forces instructed to declare themselves as friends rather than invaders 134 Philippine American War Edit Main article Philippine American War On February 4 1899 hostilities between Filipino and American forces began when an American sentry patrolling between Filipino and American lines shot a Filipino soldier The Filipino forces returned fire thus igniting a second battle for Manila Aguinaldo sent a ranking member of his staff to Ellwell Otis the U S military commander with the message that the firing had been against his orders According to Aguinaldo Otis replied The fighting having begun must go on to the grim end 135 The Philippines declared war against the United States on June 2 1899 with Pedro Paterno President of the Congress of the First Philippine Republic issuing a Proclamation of War 12 As the First Philippine Republic was never recognized as a sovereign state and the United States never formally declared war the conflict was not concluded by a treaty On July 2 1902 the United States Secretary of War telegraphed that since the insurrection against the United States had ended and provincial civil governments had been established throughout most of the Philippine archipelago the office of military governor was terminated 136 On July 4 Theodore Roosevelt who had succeeded to the U S presidency after the assassination of William McKinley proclaimed an amnesty to those who had participated in the conflict 136 137 On April 9 2002 Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo proclaimed that the Philippine American War had ended on April 16 1902 with the surrender of General Miguel Malvar 138 and declared the centennial anniversary of that date as a national working holiday and as a special non working holiday in the Province of Batangas and in the cities of Batangas Lipa and Tanauan 139 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Philippine Revolution Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Philippine Revolution American imperialism Battle of Pasong Tamo History of the Philippines 1521 1898 History of the Philippines Influence of the French Revolution List of weapons of the Philippine revolution Moro Rebellion Negros Revolution Philippine revolts against Spain Republic of Zamboanga Timeline of the Philippine RevolutionNotes Edit The funds were denominated in Mexican dollars which were worth at the time to about 50 US cents equivalent to about 16 29 today References Edit AGUINALDO WAS BUT A PUPPET IN GERMAN HANDS San Francisco Call San Francisco Call August 14 1898 Retrieved October 29 2022 Revisiting Bonifacio s controversial history Retrieved December 4 2021 Recognition sought for Bonifacio as 1st Tagalog Republic president The Manila Times November 29 2013 Retrieved December 4 2021 Alexander M Bielakowski 2013 Ethnic and Racial Minorities in the U S Military A L ABC CLIO p 204 ISBN 978 1 59884 427 6 a b c d e 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 November 15 2010 retrieved July 8 2009 a b c d e f g h i j k Guerrero Custodio amp Dalisay 1998 Newton Matza Mitchell March 2014 Disasters and Tragic Events An Encyclopedia of Catastrophes in American History ABC CLIO p 165 Marshall Cavendish Corporation 2007 World and Its Peoples Malaysia Philippines Singapore and Brunei Marshall Cavendish p 1181 Wesling Meg 2011 Empire s Proxy American Literature and U S Imperialism in the Philippines NYU Press p 39 Halstead 1898 p 318 Kalaw 1927 pp 199 200 a b Pedro Paterno s Proclamation of War MSC Schools Philippines June 2 1899 retrieved October 17 2007 Bautista Ma Lourdes S Bolton Kingsley November 2008 Philippine English Linguistic and Literary Hong Kong University Press p 2 Spanish Colony 1565 1898 University of Alberta Archived from the original on May 14 2016 Retrieved October 20 2009 a b Tucker Phillip Thomas March 2002 Cubans in the Confederacy Jose Agustin Quintero Ambrosio Jose Gonzales and Loreta Janeta Velazquez McFarland p 95 O Gorman Anderson Benedict Richard 2005 Under Three Flags Anarchism and the Anti Colonial Imagination Verso p 57 Institut Kajian Dasar Malaysia 1996 Jose Rizal and the Asian renaissance Institut Kajian Dasar p 193 Nationalista Party History Archived from the original on June 27 2007 Retrieved July 30 2007 Lone 2007 p 42 Titherington 1900 pp 357 358 a b Kalaw 1927 pp 413 417Appendix A a b Guevara 1972 p 10 a b Kalaw 1927 pp 423 429Appendix C Kalaw 1927 pp 199 200 Ch 7 Worcester 1914 p 180 GENERAL AMNESTY FOR THE FILIPINOS Proclamation Issued by the President PDF The New York Times July 4 1902 retrieved February 5 2008 Spanish Occupation Archived from the original on July 7 2011 Retrieved November 3 2009 The Death of Gomburza amp The Propaganda Movement Philippine History org Retrieved November 3 2009 Letters and Addresses of Jose Rizal Philippine Education Manila 315 December 1915 Zaide 1957 p 63 a b Montero y Vidal 1887 p 360 Blair amp Robertson 1903 1909 p 10296 Blair amp Robertson 1903 1909 p 51071 Zaide 1957 p 64 de Moya 1883 p 183 Jagor 1873 p 16 Diaz Arenas 1838 p 4 Diaz Arenas 1838 p 10 a b c Regidor amp Mason 1905 pp 19 29 Blair amp Robertson 1903 1909 p 10315 Blair amp Robertson 1903 1909 p 10453 Bowring 1859 p 247 a b Zaide 1957 p 81 Zaide 1957 p 82 Zaide 1957 p 107 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Foreman 1906 a b c d Joaquin Nick 1990 Manila My Manila Vera Reyes Inc a b Keat2004 p 755 10 Jose Rizal and the Propaganda Movement Philippines A Country Study Washington GPO for the Library of Congress 1991 The Project Gutenberg eBook Kartilyang Makabayan a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Alvarez 1992 244 Schumacher 1991 p 196 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Alvarez amp Malay 1992 a b c Agoncillo 1990 pp 171 172 a b c Gatbonton 2000 a b c Agoncillo 1990 p 171 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Salazar 1994 a b c Agoncillo 1990 p 172 a b c d e f g Agoncillo 1990 p 173 Zaide 1954 p 115 Agoncillo 1990 p 174 Lone 2007 p 37 Anderson 2005 p 161 Anderson 2005 p 162 a b c Anderson 2005 p 163 Constantino 1975 pp 179 180 Rodao amp Rodriguez 2001 pp 40 287 Agoncillo 1990 pp 176 177 Agoncillo 1990 pp 177 179 Sagmit 2007 p 158 History of Pandi amp The Kakarong Republic sagippandi blogspot com May 19 2016 Halili 2004 p 145 Halili 2004 p 145 146 Mabini 1969 1897 Constitution of Biak na Bato Philippines at Wikisource Secessionist insurgency in south Philippines 1969 2008 updated at February 2008 bippi org February 2008 Archived from the original on August 8 2009 Aguinaldo 1899a The Mexican dollar at the time was worth about 50 U S cents according to Halstead 1898 p 126 Aguinaldano amp Pacis 1957 pp 31 34 sfn error no target CITEREFAguinaldanoPacis1957 help Trask 1996 pp 56 8 Beede 1994 p 148 Howland Harold 1921 Theodore Roosevelt and his times a chronicle of the progressive movement p 245 ISBN 978 1279815199 a b Battle of Manila Bay 1 May 1898 Department of the Navy Naval Historical Center Archived from the original on October 14 2007 Retrieved October 10 2007 The Battle of Manila Bay by Admiral George Dewey The War Times Journal Retrieved October 10 2007 Aguinaldo 1899b Chapter III Titherington 1900 pp 357 8 Agoncillo 1990 pp 192 4 a b Worcester 1914 p 57Ch 3 Halstead 1898 p 95ch 10 Guevara 1972 Philippine Declaration of Independence Philippine History DLSU Manila Archived from the original on August 22 2006 Retrieved August 21 2006 Guevara 1972 p 35 Aguinaldo 1899b Ch 3 Worcester 1914 p 19Ch 2 Worcester 1914 p 21Ch 2 Halstead 1898 p 311Ch 28 Kalaw 1927 pp cc philamer rgn full 20text idno afj2233 0001 001 didno AFJ2233 0001 001 view image seq 120 page root size s frm frameset 100Ch 5 Worcester 1914 p 154Ch 7 Worcester 1914 p 60 Worcester 1914 p 61 Worcester 1914 p 63Ch 3 Halstead 1898 p 97Ch 10 Karnow 1990 p 123 a b c Worcester 1914 p 55Ch 3 Agoncillo 1990 p 196 The World of 1898 The Spanish American War U S Library of Congress retrieved June 15 2014 The World of 1898 the Spanish American War U S Library of Congress retrieved October 10 2007 Our flag is now waving over Manila San Francisco Chronicle retrieved December 20 2008 Halstead 1898 p 153Ch 10 Karnow 1990 pp 123 4 Wolff 2006 p 119 Worcester 1914 p 106Ch 3 a b Worcester 1914 p 69Ch 3 Worcester 1914 pp 115 119Ch 3 WAR SUSPENDED PEACE ASSURED President Proclaims a Cessation of Hostilities PDF The New York Times August 12 1898 retrieved February 6 2008 Halstead 1898 p 177Ch 15 Protocol of Peace Embodying the Terms of a Basis for the Establishment of Peace Between the Two Countries August 12 1898 Proclamation 422 Suspension of Hostilities with Spain United States Govrnment August 12 1898 via The American Presidency Project Halstead 1898 p 108Ch 10 Worcester 1914 p 121Ch 3 Lacsamana 2006 p 126 Halstead 1898 pp 110 112 Elliott 1917 p 509 Amnesty Proclamation Proclamation 483 Granting Pardon and Amnesty to Participants in Insurrection in the Philippines United States Government July 4 1902 via The American Presidency Project GENERAL AMNESTY FOR THE FILIPINOS Proclamation Issued by the President PDF The New York Times July 4 1902 Otis Elwell Stephen 1899 Annual report of Maj Gen E S Otis U S V commanding Department of the Pacific and 8th Army Corps military governor in the Philippine Islands Annual Report of the Major General Commanding the Army Vol 2 Washington DC Government Printing Office p 146 Zaide 1994 p 279Ch 21 Kalaw 1927 pp 132Ch 6 Miller 1984 p 20 Miller 1984 p 24 Kalaw 1927 pp 430 445Appendix D Draper Andrew Sloan 1899 The Rescue of Cuba An Episode in the Growth of Free Government Silver Burdett pp 170 172 Retrieved January 29 2021 Fantina Robert 2006 Desertion and the American Soldier 1776 2006 Algora Publishing p 83 ISBN 978 0 87586 454 9 Retrieved January 29 2021 Treaty Between Spain and the United State sic for Cession of Outlying Islands of the Philippines PDF University of the Philippines November 7 1900 Archived from the original PDF on March 26 2012 President William McKinley December 21 1898 McKinley s Benevolent Assimilation Proclamation msc edu ph retrieved February 10 2008 Blanchard 1996 p 130 a b Worcester 1914 p 293 General amnesty for the Filipinos proclamation issued by the President PDF The New York Times New York City July 4 1902 Speech of President Arroyo during the Commemoration of the Centennial Celebration of the end of the Philippine American War April 16 2002 Official Gazette Government of the Philippines Archived from the original on October 11 2016 Macapagal Arroyo Gloria April 9 2002 Proclamation No 173 s 2002 Manila Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines Archived from the original on December 28 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 Bibliography EditAgoncillo Teodoro C 1990 1960 History of the Filipino People 8th ed Quezon City Garotech Publishing ISBN 971 8711 06 6 Aguinaldo y Famy Emilio 1899 Chapter II The Treaty of Biak na bato True Version of the Philippine Revolution Authorama Public Domain Books retrieved February 7 2008 Aguinaldo y Famy Emilio 1899 Chapter III Negotiations True Version of the Philippine Revolution Authorama Public Domain Books retrieved December 26 2007 Aguinaldo E Pacis V A 1957 A Second Look at America Makers of history R Speller Alvarez S V 1992 Recalling the Revolution Madison Center for Southeast Asia Studies University of Wisconsin Madison ISBN 1 881261 05 0 Alvarez Santiago V Malay Paula Carolina S 1992 The katipunan and the revolution memoirs of a general with the original Tagalog text Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 077 7 Translated by Paula Carolina S Malay Anderson Benedict 2005 Under Three Flags Anarchism and the Anti Colonial Imagination London Verso ISBN 1 84467 037 6 Batchelor Bob 2002 The 1900s American popular culture through history Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 31334 9 Blanchard William H 1996 Neocolonialism American Style 1960 2000 illustrated ed Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 30013 4 Beede Benjamin R 1994 The War of 1898 and U S interventions 1898 1934 an encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 8240 5624 7 Blair Emma Robertson James 1903 1909 The Philippine Islands 1493 1898 vol 1 55 Cleveland Bowring Sir John 1859 A Visit to the Philippine Islands London Smith Elder and Co Constantino Renato 1975 The Philippines A Past Revisited Self published Tala Pub Services de Moya Francisco Javier 1883 Las Islas Filipinas en 1882 in Spanish vol 1 55 Madrid Dav Chaitanya 2007 Crimes Against Humanity A Shocking History of U s Crimes Since 1776 AuthorHouse ISBN 978 1 4343 0181 9 Diaz Arenas Rafael 1838 Memoria sobre el comercio y navegacion de las islas Filipinas in Spanish Cadiz Spain Elliott Charles Burke 1917 The Philippines To the End of the Commission Government a Study in Tropical Democracy Foreman J 1906 The Philippine Islands A Political Geographical Ethnographical Social and Commercial History of the Philippine Archipelago New York Charles Scribner s Sons Gatbonton Esperanza B ed 2000 The Philippines After The Revolution 1898 1945 National Commission for Culture and the Arts ISBN 971 814 004 2 Guerrero Milagros Custodio Teresa Ma Dalisay Jose Y 1998 Reform and Revolution Kasaysayan The History of the Filipino People vol 5 Asia Publishing Company Limited ISBN 962 258 228 1 Guevara Sulpico ed 1972 The laws of the first Philippine Republic the laws of Malolos 1898 1899 Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Library retrieved March 26 2008 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link English translation by Sulpicio Guevara Halili Maria Christine N 2004 Philippine History Manila Rex Book Store ISBN 978 971 23 3934 9 Halstead Murat 1898 XII The American Army in Manila The Story of the Philippines and Our New Possessions Including the Ladrones Hawaii Cuba and Porto Rico Jagor Feodor 1873 Weidmannsche Buchhandlung in German Berlin An English translation under the title Travels in the Philippines was printed in London 1875 by Chapman and Hall Kalaw Maximo Manguiat 1927 The Development of Philippine Politics Oriental commercial retrieved February 7 2008 Keat Gin Ooi 2004 Southeast Asia A Historical Encyclopedia from Angkor Wat to East Timor Volume 1 BC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 770 2 Karnow Stanley 1990 In Our Image Century ISBN 978 0 7126 3732 9 Lacsamana Leodivico Cruz 2006 Philippine history and government Phoenix Publishing House ISBN 978 971 06 1894 1 Lone Stewart 2007 Daily Lives of Civilians in Wartime Asia From the Taiping Rebellion to the Vietnam War Life Through History Series Daily Lives of Civilians during Wartime Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 33684 3 Mabini Apolinario 1969 CHAPTER VIII First Stage of the Revolution in Guerrero Leon Ma ed The Philippine Revolution National Historical Commission Translated by Leon Ma Guerrero Miller Stuart Creighton 1984 Benevolent Assimilation The American Conquest of the Philippines 1899 1903 4th edition reprint ed Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 03081 5 Montero y Vidal Jose 1887 1895 Historia general de Filipinas in Spanish vol 1 3 Madrid Imprenta de Manuel Tello Nelson Pallmeyer Jack 2005 Saving Christianity from empire Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8264 1627 8 Regidor Antonio M Mason J Warren 1905 Commercial Progress in the Philippine Islands London Dunn amp Chidley Rodao Florentino Rodriguez Felice Noelle 2001 The Philippine revolution of 1896 ordinary lives in extraordinary times Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 386 0 Salazar Zeus 1994 Agosto 29 30 1896 ang pagsalakay ni Bonifacio sa Maynila Quezon City Miranda Bookstore Seekins Donald M 1991 Historical Setting Outbreak of War 1898 in Seekins Dolan ed Philippines A Country Study Washington Library of Congress retrieved December 25 2007 Sagmit Rosario S Sagmit Mendosa Lourdes 2007 The Filipino Moving Onward 5 Rex Bookstore Inc ISBN 978 971 23 4154 0 Schumacher John N 1991 The Making of a Nation Essays on Nineteenth century Filipino Nationalism Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 019 7 Titherington Richard Handfield 1900 A history of the Spanish American War of 1898 D Appleton and Company Trask David F 1996 The war with Spain in 1898 University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 9429 5 Wolff Leon 2006 Little brown brother how the United States purchased and pacified the Philippine Islands at the century s turn History Book Club ISBN 978 1 58288 209 3 Introduction Decolonizing the History of the Philippine American War by Paul A Kramer dated December 8 2005 Worcester Dean Conant 1914 The Philippines Past and Present vol 1 of 2 Macmillan pp 75 89 ISBN 1 4191 7715 X retrieved February 7 2008 Zaide Gregorio 1954 The Philippine Revolution Manila The Modern Book Company Zaide Gregorio F 1957 Philippine Political and Cultural History The Philippines Since the British Invasion vol II 1957 Revised ed Manila McCullough Printing Company Zaide Sonia M 1994 The Philippines A Unique Nation All Nations Publishing Co ISBN 978 971 642 071 5External links EditDon Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy True Version of the Philippine Revolution Authorama Public Domain Books Retrieved November 16 2007 page 1 of 20 linked web pages Hisona Harold T Opening of Manila to World Trade Philippine Almanac Archived from the original on March 21 2012 Retrieved August 27 2011 Coats Steven D 2006 Gathering at the Golden Gate Mobilizing for War in the Philippines 1898 Combat studies Institute Press Part 1 Ch I IV Part 2 Ch V VIII The Philippine Revolution by Apolinario Mabini Centennial Site The Katipunan Leon Kilat covers the Revolution in Cebu archived from the original on October 26 2009 Another site on the Revolution archived from the original on October 13 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philippine Revolution amp oldid 1130837699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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