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History of the Philippines

Why Philippines is considered a


unique nation?
There are four reasons:
• Religion - Filipinos are predominantly
Christians
• Political History
a. Philippines is the first Republic in Asia, being
the first to achieve independence by
revolution and establish a Republic led by
General Emilio Aguinaldo in 1898 –1901.
b. The first Southeast Asian Nation to
secure independence by voluntary
decolonization of a colonial power after
the second World War in 1946.
c. It led the world in waging a “People
Power Revolution to oust a dictator by
peaceful and prayerful means in 1986”.
• Cultural Heritage
We are assimilated of four heritages, to wit:
a. Indigenous Asia
b. The European
c. Latin
d. American heritage
Geographically, Philippines especially Filipinos are
by race and culture a harmonious blend of the East
and the West.
• Natural Resources – Philippines is one of the
richest counties of the world.
Why Philippines is considered as the Melting
Pot of People and Culture?
• Our country occupies agood
geographical position
• Itis the crossroads of the world’s
culture and races.
• Itis the meeting place of all aviation,
shipping, and trade routes in the
orient.
Importance of Philippine Location:
• Philippines serve as a bridge between the
culture of the East and theWest.
• It lies as a crossroads of international air and
sea routes
• It looms as a bastion of democracy in anarea
where dictators and communism hold sway
over Asian nation.
• It is the citadel of Christianity between the
largely Christian West and largely Non-
Christian East.
Land area of the Philippines:

• Philippines is an archipelago of 7,100 islands


with a total land area of 115,707 sq. m. or
299,681 sq.km.
• In terms of the land area, Philippines is
almost as large as Italy, larger than New
Zealand, twice as big as Greece and very
muchlarger than Britain.
Land area of the Philippines:

• Luzon – Philippines largest island with a total


land area of 40, 814 sq. m., which is bigger
than Hungary and Portugal.
• Mindanao – Second largest island, with total
area of 38,906 sq. m., which is bigger than
Austria.
• Visayas – 3rd largest island with a total land
area of 36, 087 sq.m.
Physical Features:
• Highest mountain – Mt. Apo (9,600 ft. High in
Mindanao)
• Lowest Spot – Philippine Deep, situated off the
Pacific coast of the archipelago with 37, 782 ft. deep,
lower than the Marianas Deep with only 35,640 ft.
Deep.
• San Juanico Strait – the narrowest strait in the world
between Samar and Leyte.
• Manila Bay – one of the finest harbors in the Asian
World, with the historic Corregidor Island standing
guard asits entrance.
Physical Features:
Cont.
• Central Plain in Luzon – largest plain in Central
Luzon, famously known as the “Rice granary
of the Philippines”.
• Cagayan Valley – also in Luzon, is the Asia’s
greatest tobacco producing region.
• Cagayan River – longest river in the
Philippines where tobacco is being drained.
• Laguna de Bay – largest lake in the country.
Filipino Image:
• As Filipino, during the Third Republican
Era (1946-72), Philippines had the
freest press in Asia, the best schools
and colleges, and the most progressive
business environment in the region.
• During the Commonwealth Period
under President Manuel L. Quezon, the
Filipino is not inferior to any man of
any race; his physical, intellectual, and
moral qualities are as excellent as
those proudest stocks of mankind.
Filipino Image:
ANation of manyLanguages:
• Filipinos are known for their talent in languages.
This is exemplified by Dr. Jose Rizal, who knew 22
languages.
• Philippines have 55 languages, and 147 dialects
accordingto the findings of the Summer Institute of
Linguistics of the University of North Dakota,
headed by Dr. Richard S. Pittman.
• From the previous study of Dr. H. Otley Beyer in the
year 1916, he listed only 43 major languages and 87
dialects.
Filipino Image:
• Filipinos are the only English and Spanish
speaking nation in Asia.
• Filipinos are the most literate Nation in
Southeast Asia.
• Women in the Philippines enjoy the
greatest freedom and highest status
among women in Asia; economically,
politically, and socially – considered
equal with men.
Names given for Philippines:
Long before the coming of Magellan,
Philippineswas already known to the early
Chines traders and geographers. Various
e and artifacts antedate Sino-
records
Philippines contacts to 3rd Century A.D., they
gave the names for Philippines as:

• “Ma-yi” – appears in Sung Dynasty sources in


982 A.D.
Names given for Philippines:
• Chau-Ju-Kua, a Chinese trader Official gave a
detailed account of his trip to various islands
in the Philippines in the year 1225, wherein
he called the country as–Ma-i.
• Another Pre-Hispanic Sino Writer, Wang-Ta-
Yuan in 1349, who wrote his travels to “ Ma-
i”, “Mintolang” (Mindanao), “Malilu”
(Manila); “Suluand Pishoye”(Visayas).
Ma-i = is generally accepted to refer to the
island of Mindoro in Luzon, because of its
gold and proximity to the mainland China.
Names given for Philippines:

The official name “Filipinas” was


given to the archipelago in 1543 by
the ill-starred Spanish explorer Ruy
Lopez de Villalobos, in honor of
Prince Felipe (Philip) of Asturias, who
later became King Philip II, the
greatest King of Spain.
Names given for Philippines:

The name first appeared in the rare


map published at Venice in 1554 by
Giovanni Battista Ramusio, an Italian
Geographe in the most popular
r collection of early travels and
voyages at the time.
Names given for Philippines:

• Until it was later Anglicized to


“Philippine Islands” during th
e American Colonial
then to theregime, “Republic of
name of and
the Philippines” after the
decolonization in 1946.
Other Names given for
Philippines:
a. Gems of the East
b. Treasure Islands of the Pacific
c. Isles of Fear
d. Isles of Hope
e. Orphans of the Pacific
f. Land of the Morning
g. Pearl of the Orient
Origin of the Filipinos:
1. The Friar – Historians Ideas
• The ancestors of the Filipinos sprang out
of the soil like wildplants.
• They were created by the sun.
• They were produced from the base
metals by the magic act of ancient
alchemists (herbalists).
2. Myths and Legends
Origin of the Filipinos:
3. The “Dawn Man” and the
“Migration Theory”
• The cave-man, “dawn-Man” type who was
similar to the Java Man, Peking Man, and
other Asian homo Sapiens of 250,000years
ago – this is the theory of H. OtleyBeyer.
• The aboriginal pygmy group, or the Negritos,
who came between 25,000 and 30,000 years
ago.
Origin of the Filipinos:
• The Sea-faring tool-using Indonesian group, who
came about 5,000 to 6,000 yearsago.
• The Sea-faring more civilized Malays who brought
the Iron Age culture and introduced new industries
like iron metal smiting, pottery-making, cloth-
weaving by loom, and jewelry making.

4. Core Population Theory:


• According to this theory, people of the prehistoric
Southeast Asia belonged to the same racial unit.
Origin of the Philippines:

1. The idea of the theologians during the


Spanish era, such as:
• Fr. Colin, Fr. Sta. Ines and Fr. Delgado –
advancing the Theological View that
Philippines is part of God’screation.

2. Legends and Myths


Origin of the Philippines:

3. Scientific Theories, that Philippinesis:


• Part of the lost continent (lost pacific called as
Lemuria or Mu)
• Volcanic Origin (Dr. Bailey Willis, a geologist –
who maintained the theory that Philippines is
a volcanic origin).
• Land-bridge theory
History of the Philippines
• The histor y of the Philippines
is believed to have begun with the
arrival of the first humans via
land bridges at least
30,000 years ago. The first
recorded visit from the West is
the arrival of Ferdinand Magellan
on Homonhon Island, southeast of
Samar on March 16, 1521.
Prior to Magellan's arrival, there were Negrito
tribes who roamed the isles but they were later
supplanted by Austronesians. These groups
then stratified into: hunter-gatherer tribes,
warrior-societies, petty plutocracies and
maritime oriented harbor principalities which
eventually grew into kingdoms, rajahnates,
principalities, confederations and sultanates.
States such as the Indianized Rajahnate of
Butuan and Cebu, the dynasty of Tondo, the
august kingdoms of Maysapan and Maynila, the
Confederation of Madyaas, the sinified
Country of Mai, as well as the Muslim
Sultanates of Sulu and Maguindanao.
These small states flourished from as
early as the 10th century AD, despite
these kingdoms attaining complex
political and social orders, as well as
enjoying trade with areas now called
China, India, Japan, Thailand, Vietnam,
and Indonesia, none encompassed the
whole archipelago which was to become
the unified Philippines of the twentieth
century. The remainder of the
settlements was independent Barangays
allied with one of the larger nations.
* Spanish colonization and
settlement began with the arrival of
Miguel López de Legazpi's expedition in
1565 who established the first permanent
settlement of San Miguel on the island of
Cebu. The expedition continued
northward reaching the bay of Manila on
the island of Luzon in 1571, where they
established a new town and thus began an
era of Spanish colonization that lasted for
more than three centuries.
Spanish rule achieved the political unification of
almost the whole archipelago, that previously
had been composed by independent kingdoms
and communities, pushing back south the
advancing Islamic forces and creating the first
draft of the nation that was to be known as the
Philippines. Spain also introduced Christianity,
the code of law, the oldest Universities and the
first public education system in Asia, the
western European version of printing, the
Gregorian calendar and invested heavily on all
kinds of modern infrastructures, such as train
networks and modern bridges.
• The Philippine Revolution against Spain began in
April 1896, but it was largely unsuccessful until
it received support from the United States,
culminating two years later with a proclamation
of independence and the establishment of the
First Philippine Republic. However, the Treaty
of Paris, at the end of the Spanish– American
War, transferred control of the Philippines to
the United States. This agreement was not
recognized by the Philippine Government
which, on June 2, 1899, proclaimed a
Declaration of War against the United States.
• The Philippine-American War which
ensued resulted in massive casualties.
Philippine president Emilio Aguinaldo was
captured in 1901 and the U.S. government
declared the conflict officially over in
1902. The Filipino leaders, for the most
part, accepted that the Americans had
won, but hostilities continued and only
began to decline in 1913, leaving a total
number of casualties on the Filipino side of
more than one million dead, many of them
civilians.
• U.S. colonial rule of the Philippines started
in 1905 with very limited local rule. Partial
autonomy (commonwealth status) was
granted in 1935, preparatory to a planned
full independence from the United States
in 1946. Preparation for a fully sovereign
state was interrupted by the Japanese
occupation of the islands during World
War II.
With a promising economy in the 1950s
and 1960s, the Philippines in the late
1960s and early 1970s saw a rise of
student activism and civil unrest against
the corrupt dictatorship of President
Ferdinand Marcos who declared
martial law in 1972.
Because of close ties between United States and
President Marcos, the U.S. government
continued to support Marcos even though his
administration was well-known for massive
corruption and extensive human rights abuse.
The peaceful and bloodless
People Power Revolution of 1986, however,
brought about the ousting of Marcos and a
return to democracy for the country. The period
since then, however, has been marked by
political instability and hampered economic
productivity.
Prehistory

• The earliest archeological evidence for man in


the archipelago is the 40,000-year-old
Tabon Man of Palawan and the
Angono Petroglyphs in Rizal, both of whom
appear to suggest the presence of human
settlement prior to the arrival of the Negritos
and Austronesian speaking people.
Prehistory

• The Negritos were early settlers but their


appearance in the Philippines has not been
reliably dated. and they were followed by
speakers of the Malayo-Polynesian languages,
a branch of the Austronesian languages, who
began to arrive in successive waves beginning
about 4000 B.C.E, displacing the earlier
arrivals.
• By 1000 B.C. the inhabitants of the Philippine
archipelago had developed into four distinct
kinds of peoples: tribal groups, such as the Aetas,
Hanunoo, Ilongots and the Mangyan who
depended on hunter-gathering and were
concentrated in forests; warrior societies, such as
the Isneg and Kalingas who practiced social
ranking and ritualized warfare and roamed the
plains; the petty plutocracy of the Ifugao
Cordillera Highlanders, who occupied the
mountain ranges of Luzon; and the harbor
principalities of the estuarine civilizations that
grew along rivers and seashores while
participating in trans-island maritime trade.
• Around 300–700 C.E. the seafaring
peoples of the islands traveling in
balangays began to trade with the
Indianized kingdoms in the
Malay Archipelago and the nearby
East Asian principalities, adopting
influence from both Buddhism and
s
Hinduism.
Spanish Settlement and Rule (1565-
1898)
• Early Spanish expeditions
• Ferdinand Magellan arrived in the Philippines
In 1521.
Parts of the Philippine Islands were known to
Europeans before the 1521 Spanish expedition
around the world led by Portuguese-born Spanish
explorer Ferdinand Magellan, who was not the first
Europeans in the Philippines. Magellan landed on the
island called Homonhon, claiming the islands he saw
for Spain, and naming them Islas de San Lázaro. He
established friendly relations with some of the local
leaders especially with Rajah Humabon and
converted someof them to Roman Catholicism.
• In the Philippines, they explored many islands
including the island of Mactan. However,
Magellan was killed in a battle he led there
against the ruling datu Lapu-Lapu.
• Over the next several decades, other Spanish
expeditions were dispatched to the islands. In
1543, Ruy López de Villalobos led an expedition
to the islands and gave the name Las Islas
Filipinas (after Philip II of Spain) to the islands of
Samar and Leyte. The name was extended to the
entire archipelago in the twentieth century.
Spanish settlement
Colonization began when Spanish explorer
Miguel López de Legazpi, arrived from Mexico in
1565 and formed the first European settlements
in Cebu. In 1571, the Spanish occupied the
kingdoms of Maynila and Tondo and established
Manila as the capital of the Spanish East Indies.
Spanish power was further consolidated after
Miguel López de Legazpi's conquest of the
Confederation of Madya-as, his subjugation of
Rajah Tupas the King of Cebu and
Juan de Salcedo's ransacking of the Chinese
warlord Limahong's pirate kingdom in Pangasinan
.
This grab for power eventually culminated
with the mass murder and exile of the royal
families of the Dynasty of Tondo and the
Kingdom of Maynila when the Tondo
Conspiracy of 1587-1588 failed in which a
planned grand alliance with the Japanese
admiral Gayo, Butuan's last rajah and
Brunei's Sultan Bolkieh, would have restored
the old aristocracy. Its failure resulted in the
hanging of Agustín de Legazpi (great
grandson of Miguel Lopez de Legazpi and
the initiator of the plot) and the execution
of Magat Salamat (the crown- prince of
Tondo).
In the following years, the colony was
governed as a territory of the
Viceroyalty of New Spain, centered in
Mexico, from 1565 to 1821 andadministered
directly from Spain from 1821 to 1898.
Subsequently, the Aztec and Mayan
mercenaries López de Legazpi brought with
him eventually settled in Mexico, Pampanga
where traces of Aztec and Mayan influence
can still be proven by the many chico
plantations in the area (chico is a fruit
indigenous only to Mexico) and also by the
name of the provinceitself.
The fragmented nature of the islands made it
easy for Spanish colonization. The Spanish
then attempted to bring political unification
to the Philippine archipelago via the
conquest of the various states but they were
unable to subjugate the sultanates of
Mindanao and the tribes and highland
plutocracy of the Ifugao of Northern Luzon.
The Spanish introduced elements of
western civilization such as the code of law,
western printing and the Gregorian calendar
alongside new food resources such as maize,
pineapple and chocolate from LatinAmerica.
From 1565 to 1821, the Philippines was governed
from Mexico City via the Royal Audiencia of
Manila, before it was administered directly from
Madrid after the Mexican revolution. The Manila
Galleons which linked Manila to Acapulco traveled
once or twice a year between the 16th and 19th
centuries. The Spanish military fought off various
indigenous revolts and several external colonial
challenges, especially from the British, Chinese
pirates, Dutch, and Portuguese. Roman Catholic
missionaries converted most of the lowland
inhabitants to Christianity and founded schools,
universities, and hospitals. In 1863 a Spanish
decree introduced education, establishing public
schoolingin Spanish.
In 1781, Gover nor- General José Basco y Vargas
established the
Economic Society of the Friends of the Countr y . T he
Philippines was administered from the
Viceroyalty of New Spain until the grant of
independence to Mexico in 1821 necessitated the
direct rule from Spain of the Philippines from that
year. Developments in and out of the countr y helped
to bring new ideas to the Philippines including the
ideals of the French and American Revolutions. In
1863, Queen Isabella of Spain decreed the
establishment of a public school system in Spanish,
leading to increasing numbers of educated Filipinos.
The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 cut travel
time to Spain. Both of these events prompted the rise
of the ilustrados, an enlightened class of
Creoles and Indios, since many young Filipinos were
able to study in Europe.

T he fir st official census in the Philippines was


car ried out in 1878. T he countr y's population as of
December 31, 1877 was recorded at 5,567,685
persons.
Enlightened by the Propaganda Movement to
the injustices of the Spanish colonial
government and the "frailocracy", the
ilustrados originally clamored for adequate
representation to the Spanish Cortes and
later for independence. José Rizal, the most
celebrated intellectual and radical illustrado
of the era, wrote the novels "Noli Me Tangere
", and "El filibusterismo", which greatly
inspired the movement for independence. The
Katipunan, a secret society whose primary
purpose was that of overthrowing Spanish
rule in the Philippines, was founded by
Andrés Bonifacio who became its Supremo
(leader).
The Philippine Revolution began in 1896. Rizal was
wrongly accused of implication in the outbreak of the
revolution and executed for treason in 1896. The
Katipunan in Cavite split into two groups, Magdiwang,
led by Mariano Álvarez (a relative of Bonifacio's by
marriage), and Magdalo, led by Emilio Aguinaldo.
Leadership conflicts between Bonifacio and Aguinaldo
culminated in the execution or assassination of the
former by the latter's soldiers. Aguinaldo agreed to a
truce with the Pact of Biak-na-Bato and Aguinaldo and
his fellow revolutionaries were exiled to Hong Kong. Not
all the revolutionary generals complied with the
agreement. One, General Francisco Makabulos,
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 Spanish-governed Philippines.
• In 1898, as conflicts continued in the Philippines, the
USSMaine, having been sent to Cuba because of U.S.
concerns for the safety of its citizens during an ongoing
Cuban revolution, exploded and sank in Havana harbor.
This event precipitated the Spanish–American War.After
Commodore George Dewey defeated the Spanish squadron
at Manila, the U.S. invited Aguinaldo to return to the
Philippines, which he did on May 19, 1898, in the hope he
would rally Filipinos against the Spanish colonial
government. By the time U.S. land forces had arrived, the
Filipinos had taken control of the entire island of Luzon,
except for the walled city of Intramuros. On June 12, 1898,
Aguinaldo declared the independence of the Philippines in
Kawit, Cavite, establishing the First Philippine Republic
under Asia's first democratic constitution.
• A German squadron arrived in Manila and
engaged in maneuvers which Dewey seeing this
as obstruction of his blockade, offered war —
after which the Germans backed down. The
German Emperor expected an American defeat,
with Spain left in a sufficiently weak position for
the revolutionaries to capture Manila—leaving
the Philippines ripe for Germanpicking.
• In the Battle of Manila, the United States captured the
city from the Spanish. This battle marked an end of
Filipino-American collaboration, as Filipino forces were
prevented from entering the captured city of Manila,
an action deeply resented by the Filipinos. Spain and
the United States sent commissioners to Paris to draw
up the terms of the Treaty of Paris which ended the
Spanish–American War. The Filipino representative,
Felipe Agoncillo, was excluded from sessions as the
revolutionary government was not recognized by the
family of nations. Although there was substantial
domestic opposition, the United States decided to
annex the Philippines.
• In addition to Guam and Puerto Rico, Spain was forced
in the negotiations to hand over the Philippines to the
U.S. in exchange for US$20,000,000.00. U.S. President
McKinley justified the annexation of the Philippines by
saying that it was "... a gift from the gods" and that
since "they were unfit for self-government, ... there
was nothing left for us to do but to take them all, and
to educate the Filipinos, and uplift and civilize and
Christianize them", in spite of the Philippines having
been already Christianized by the Spanish over the
course of several centuries.
• The first Philippine Republic resisted the U.S.
occupation, resulting in the Philippine-American War
(1899–1913).
• American period (1898–1946)

Filipinos initially saw their relationship with the United


States as that of two nations joined in a common
struggle against Spain. However, the United States
later distanced itself from the interests of the Filipino
insurgents. Aguinaldo was unhappy that the United
States would not commit to paper a statement of
support for Philippine independence. Relations
deteriorated and tensions heightened as it became
clear that the Americans were in the islands to stay.
• Philippine-American War
Hostilities broke out on February 4, 1899, after two
American privates on patrol killed three Filipino
soldiers in San Juan, a Manila suburb. This incident
sparked the Philippine-American War, which would
cost far more money and took far more lives than the
Spanish–American War. Some 126,000 American
soldiers would be committed to the conflict; 4,234
Americans died, as did 16,000 Filipino soldiers who
were part of a nationwide guerrilla movement of
indeterminate numbers.
• At least one million Filipinos lost their lives as a direct
result of the war, with as many as 200,000 who died as
a result of the cholera epidemic at the war's end.
Atrocities were committed by both sides.
• The poorly-equipped Filipino troops were easily
overpowered by American troops in open combat, but they
were formidable opponents in guerrilla warfare. Malolos,
the revolutionary capital, was captured on March 31, 1899.
Aguinaldo and his government escaped however,
establishing a new capital at San Isidro, Nueva Ecija. On
June 5, 1899, Antonio Luna, Aguinaldo's most capable
military commander, was killed by Aguinaldo's guards in an
apparent assassination while visiting Cabanatuan, Nueva
Ecija to meet with Aguinaldo. Gregorio del Pilar, another
key general, was killed on December 2, 1899 in the Battle
of Tirad Pass. With his best commanders dead and his
troops suffering continued defeats as American forces
pushed into northern Luzon, Aguinaldo dissolved the
regular army in November 1899 and ordered the
establishment of decentralized guerrilla commands in each
of several military zones. The general population, caught
between Americans and rebels, suffered significantly.
• Aguinaldo was captured at Palanan, Isabela on
March 23, 1901 and was brought to Manila.
Convinced of the futility of further resistance,
he swore allegiance to the United States and
issued a proclamation calling on his compatriots
to lay down their arms, officially bringing an end
to the war. However, sporadic insurgent
resistance continued in various parts of the
Philippines, especially in the Muslim south, until
1913.
• In 1900, President McKinley sent the Taft Commission,
to the Philippines, with a mandate to legislate laws and
re-engineer the political system. On July 1, 1901,
William Howard Taft, the head of the commission, was
inaugurated as Civil Governor, with limited executive
powers. The authority of the Military Governor was
continued in those areas where the insurrection
persisted. The Taft Commission passed laws to set up
the fundamentals of the new government, including a
judicial system, civil service, and local government. A
Philippine Constabulary was organized to deal with the
remnants of the insurgent movement and gradually
assume the responsibilities of the United StatesArmy.
• Insular Government (1902-1935)
• Flag of the United States,1896-1908.
The Philippine Organic Act (1902) was a constitution for
the Insular Government, so called because Philippine
civil administration was under the authority of the U.S.
Bureau of Insular Affairs. This government saw its
mission as one of tutelage, preparing the Philippines
for eventual independence. On July 4, 1902 the office
of Military Governor was abolished and full executive
power passed from Adna Chaffee, the last military
governor, to Taft, who became the first U.S. Governor-
General of the Philippines.
• United States policies towards the Philippines shifted
with changing administrations. During the early years
of territorial administration, the Americans were
reluctant to delegate authority to the Filipinos, but an
elected Philippine Assembly was inaugurated in 1907,
as the lower house of a bicameral legislature, with the
appointive Philippine Commission becoming the upper
house. When Woodrow Wilson became U.S. President
in 1913, a new policy was adopted to put into motion a
process that would gradually lead to Philippine
independence. The Jones Act, passed by the U.S.
Congress in 1916 to serve as the new organic law in
the Philippines, promised eventual independence and
instituted an elected Philippine senate.
• In socio-economic terms, the Philippines made
solid progress in this period. In 1895, foreign
trade amounted to 62 million pesos, 13% of
which was with the United States. By 1920, it
had increased to 601 million pesos, 66% of
which was with the United States. A health care
system was established which, by 1930, reduced
the mortality rate from all causes, including
various tropical diseases, to a level similar to
that of the UnitedStates itself.
• Slavery, piracy and headhunting were all
suppressed, but not extinguished. An educational
system was established which, among other
subjects, provided English as a lingua francaso that
the islands' 170 linguistic groups could
communicate with one another and the outside
world. While prior to the coming of the Americans,
Spanish was spoken by some segments of
Philippine society, the language was unpopular. At
the end of the Spanish era, less than ten percent of
the Christianized population was fully literate in the
language and those who spoke it were limited to
the urban centers and the elite.
• The 1920s saw alternating periods of
cooperation and confrontation with American
governors-general, depending on how intent
the incumbent was on exercising his powers vis-
à-vis the Philippine legislature. Members to the
elected legislature lobbied for immediate and
complete independence from the United States.
Several independence missions were sent to
Washington, D.C. A civil service was formed and
was gradually taken over by Filipinos, who had
effectively gained control by1918.
• Philippine politics during the American
territorial era was dominated by the
Nacionalista Party, which was founded in 1907.
Although the party's platform called for
"immediate independence", their policy toward
the Americans was highly accommodating.
Within the political establishment, the call for
independence was spearheaded by Manuel L.
Quezon, who served continuously as Senate
president from 1916 until 1935.
• Frank Murphy was the last
Governor-General of the Philippines
(1933–35), and the first U.S.
High Commissioner of the Philippines
(1935–36). The change in form
was more than symbolic: it was
intended as a manifestation of the
transition to independence.
Commonwealth
• The Great Depression in the early thirties hastened the
progress of The Philippines towards independence. In the
United States it was mainly the sugar industry and labour
unions that had a stake in loosening the U.S. ties to The
Philippines since they could not compete with the Philippine
cheap sugar (and other commodities) which could freely
enter the U.S. market. Therefore, they agitated in favor of
granting independence to the Philippines so that its cheap
products and labour could be shut out of the United States.
In 1933, the United States Congress passed the Hare-
Hawes-Cutting Act as a Philippine Independence Act over
PresidentHerbert Hoover's veto.
• Though the bill had been drafted with the
aid of a commission from the Philippines,it
was opposed by Philippine Senat
e President Manuel L. Quezon, partially
because of provisions leaving the United
States in control of naval bases. Under his
influence, the Philippine legislature
rejected the bill. The following year, a
revised act known as the Tydings-McDuffie
Act wasfinally passed.
• The act provided for the establishment of
the Commonwealth of the Philippines with
a ten-year period of peaceful transition to
full independence. The commonwealth
would have its own constitution and be
self-governing, though foreign policy
would be the responsibility of the United
States, and certain legislation required
approval of the United Statespresident.
• A constitution was framed and approved
by Franklin D. Roosevelt in March 1935.
On May 14, 1935, a Filipino government
was formed on the basis of
similar to principles
U.S. Constitution.
the The
commonwealth was established in 1935,
electing Manuel L. Quezon as the
president and featuring a very strong
executive, a unicameral National Assembly
, and a Supreme Court composed entirely
of Filipinos for the first time since 1901.
World War II andJapanese
occupation
• Japan launched a surprise
attack on the Clark Air Base in Pampanga, Philippines
on December 8, 1941, just ten hours after the
attack on Pearl Harbor. Aerial bombardment was
followed by landings of ground troops on Luzon.
The defending Philippine and United States troops
were under the command of General
Douglas MacArthur. Under the pressure of superior
numbers, the defendingforces withdrew to the
Bataan Peninsula and to the island of Corregidorat
• On January 2, 1942, General MacArthur declared the
capital city, Manila, an open city to prevent its
destruction. The Philippine defense continued until the
final surrender of United States-Philippine forces on
the Bataan Peninsula in April 1942 and on Corregidor
in May of the same year. Most of the 80,000 prisoners
of war captured by the Japanese at Bataan were
forced to undertake the infamous Bataan Death
March to a prison camp 105 kilometers to the north. It
is estimated that about 10,000 Filipinos and 1,200
Americansdied before reachingtheir destination.
• President Quezon and Osmeña had
accompanied the troops to Corregidor
and later left for the United States,
where they set up a government in
exile. MacArthur was ordered to
Australia, where he started to plan for
a return to the Philippines.
The Japanese military authorities immediately
began organizing a newgovernment structure in
the Philippines and established the Philippine
Executive Commission. They initially organized
a Council of State, through which they directed
civil affairs until October 1943, when they
declared the Philippines an independent
republic. The Japanese-sponsored republic
headed by President José P. Laurel proved to
be unpopular.
Japanese occupation of the Philippines
was opposed by large-scale
underground and guerrilla activity.
The Philippine Army, as well as
remnants of the
U.S. Army Forces Far East, continued
to fight the Japanese in a guerrilla war
and was considered an auxiliary unit
of the United StatesArmy.
Their effectiveness was such that by the
end of the war, Japan controlled only
twelve of the forty-eight provinces. One
element of resistance in the Central Luzon
area was furnished by the Hukbalahap
(Filipino: "Hukbong Bayan Laban sa mga
Hapon") ("People's Army Against the
Japanese"), which armed some 30,000
people and extended their control over
much of Luzon.
The occupation of the Philippines by
Japan ended at the end of the
army war.had been
The American
fighting the so-
Philippines Campaign called since October 1944,
when it started with MacArthur's
Sixth United States Army landing on Leyte.
Landings in other parts of the country had
followed, and the Allies with the Philippine
Commonwealth troops pushed toward Manila.
However, fighting continued until Japan's formal
surrenderon2September1945.
The Philippines suffered great loss of
life and tremendous physical
destruction by the time the war was
over. An estimated 1 million Filipinos
had been killed, a large portion
during the final months of the war,
and Manila was extensively damaged.
Independent Philippines and the
Third Republic (1946–1972)
• Administration of Manuel Roxas (1946-1948)
Elections were held in April 1946, with Manuel Roxas
becoming the first president of the independent
Republic of the Philippines. The United States ceded
its sovereignty over the Philippines on July 4, 1946, as
scheduled. However, the Philippine economy
remained highly dependent on UnitedStates markets
– more dependent, according to United States high
commissioner PaulMcNutt, than any single U.S. state
wasdependentonthe rest of the country.
The Philippine Trade Act, passed as a
precondition for receiving war rehabilitation
grants from the United States, exacerbated the
dependency with provisions further tying the
economies of the two countries. A military
assistance pact was signed in 1947 granting
the United States a 99-year lease on
designated military bases in the country (the
lease was later reduced to 25 years beginning
1967).
• Administration of Elpidio Quirino
(1948-1953)
The Roxas administration granted general
amnesty to those who had collaborated with the
Japanese in World War II, except for those who
had committed violent crimes. Roxas died
suddenly of a heart attack in April 1948, and the
vice president, Elpidio Quirino, was elevated to
the presidency. He ran for president in his own
right in 1949, defeating Jose P. Laurel and
winning a four-year term.
World War II had left the Philippines
demoralized and severely damaged. The task
of reconstruction was complicated by
the activitiesof the
Hukbalahapguerrillas
Communist-supported
(known as "Huks"), who
had evolved into a violent resistance force
against the new Philippine government.
Government policy towards the Huks
alternated between gestures of negotiation and
harsh suppression.
Secretary of Defense Ramon Magsaysay
initiated a campaign to defeat the
insurgents militarily and at the same time
win popular support for the government.
The Huk movement had waned in the
early 1950s, finally ending with the
unconditional surrender of Huk leader
Luis Taruc in May 1954.
• Administration of Ramon Magsaysay
(1953-1957)
Supported by the United States,
Magsaysay was elected president in 1953
on a populist platform. He promised
sweeping economic reform, and made
progress in land reform by promoting the
resettlement of poor people in the
Catholic north into traditionally Muslim
areas.
• Though this relieved population
pressure in the north, it
heightened religious hostilities.
Nevertheless, he was extremely
popular with the common people,
and his death in an airplane crash
in March 1957 dealt a serious
blow to nationalmorale.
• Administration of Carlos P. Garcia (1957-
1961)
Carlos P. Garcia succeeded to the
presidency after Magsaysay's death, and
was elected to a four-year term in the
election of November that same year. His
administration emphasized the nationalist
theme of "Filipino first", arguing that the
Filipino people should be given the
chances to improve the country's
economy.
• Garcia successfully negotiated for
the United States' relinquishment
of large military land reservations.
However, his administration lost
popularity on issues of
government corruption as his
term advanced.
• Administration of Diosdado Macapagal
(1961-1965)
Diosdado Macapagal was elected president in the
1961 election, defeating Garcia's re-election bid.
Macapagal's foreign policy sought closer relations
with neighboring Asian nations, particularly Malaya
(later Malaysia) and Indonesia. Negotiations with the
United States over base rights led to anti-American
sentiment. Notably, the celebration of Independence
Daywaschangedfrom July 4to June 12, to honorthe
day that Emilio Aguinaldo declared independence
fromSpainin 1898.
• Marcos era and martial law (1965–1986)
Macapagal ran for re-election in 1965, but
was defeated by his former party-mate,
Senate President Ferdinand Marcos, who
had switched to the Nacionalista Party.
Early in his presidency, Marcos initiated
ambitious public works projects and
intensified tax collection which brought
the country economic prosperity
throughout the 1970s.
• His administration built more roads
(including a substantial portion of the
Pan-Philippine Highway) than all his
predecessors combined, and more
schools than any
administration. previous
elected president Marcos
in 1969, becoming
was re-
the first president of the independent
Philippines to achieve a second term.
The Philippine Legislature was corrupt
and impotent. Opponents of Marcos
blocked the necessary legislation to
implement his ambitious plans.
Because of this, optimism faded early
in his second term and economic
growth slowed. Crime and civil
disobedience increased. The
Communist Party of the Philippines
formed the New People'sArmy.
The Moro National Liberation Front
continued to fight for anindependent
Muslim nation in Mindanao. An
explosion during the proclamation
rally of the senatorial slate of the
Liberal Party on August 21, 1971
prompted Marcos to suspend the
writ of habeascorpus, which he
restored on January 11, 1972 after
public protests.
• Martial law
Amidst the rising wave of lawlessness and the threat
of a Communist insurgency, Marcos declared martial
law on September 21, 1972 by virtue of
Proclamation No. 1081. Marcos, ruling by decree,
curtailed press freedom and other civil liberties,
closed down Congress and media establishments,
and ordered the arrest of opposition leaders and
militant activists, including his staunchest critics
senators Benigno Aquino, Jr., Jovito Salonga and
Jose Diokno.
• The declaration of martial law was initially well
received, given the social turmoil the Philippines
was experiencing. Crime rates plunged
dramatically after a curfew was implemented.
Many political opponents were forced to go into
exile.
• A constitutional convention, which had been
called for in 1970 to replace the colonial 1935
Constitution, continued the work of framing a
new constitution after the declaration of martial
law. The new constitution went into effect in early
1973, changing the form of government from
presidential to parliamentary and allowing Marcos
to stay in power beyond 1973.
Marcos claimed that martial law was the
prelude to creating a "New Society" based on
new social and political values. The economy
during the 1970s was robust, with budgetary
and trade surpluses.
The Gross National Product rose
from P55 billion in 1972 to P193 billion in
1980. Tourism rose, contributing to the
economy's growth. However, Marcos, his
cronies and his wife, Imelda Romualdez-
Marcos, wilfully engaged in rampant
corruption.
• Fourth Republic
Appeasing the Roman Catholic Church,
Marcos officially lifted martial law on
January 17, 1981. However, he retained
much of the government's power for
arrest and detention. Corruption and
nepotism as well as civil unrest
contributed to a serious decline in
economic growth and development under
Marcos, whose health declined due to
lupus.
• The political opposition boycotted the
1981 presidential elections, which pitted
Marcos against retired general
Alejo Santos. Marcos won by a margin of
over 16 million votes, whic
constitutionally allowed him to h
another six-year term. Finance Minister
have
Cesar Virata was elected as Prime
Minister by the BatasangPambansa.
• In 1983, opposition leader
Benigno Aquino, Jr. was assassinated at
the Manila International Airport upon his
return to the Philippines after a long
period of exile. This coalesced popular
dissatisfaction with Marcos and began a
succession of events, including pressure
from the United States, that culminated
in a snap presidential election in February
1986. The opposition united under
Aquino's widow, CorazonAquino.
• The official election canvasser, the
Commission on Elections (Comelec),
declared Marcos the winner of the
election. However, there was a large
discrepancy between the Comelec
results and that of Namfrel, an
accredited poll watcher. The allegedly
fraudulent result was rejected by
Corazon Aquino and her supporters.
• International observers, including a
U.S. delegation, denounced the
official results. Gen. Fidel Ramos and
Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile
withdrew their support for Marcos. A
peaceful civilian-military uprising,
now popularly called the
People Power Revolution, forced
Marcos into exile and installed
Corazon Aquino as president on
Fifth Republic (1986–present)
• Administration of Corazon C. Aquino (1986-
1992)
Corazon Aquino immediately formed a
revolutionary government to normalize the
situation, and provided for a transitional "
Freedom Constitution". A new permanent
constitution was ratified and enacted in
February 1987.
The constitution crippled
presidential power to declare
martial law, proposed the
creation of autonomous regionsin
the Cordilleras and
Muslim Mindanao, and restored
the presidential form of
government and the bicameral
Congress.
Progress was made in revitalizing
democratic institutions and respect
for civil liberties, but
administration was Aquino's
weak and fractious, and also aviewed
return as
to
full political stability and economic
development was hampered by
several attempted coups staged by
disaffected members of the
Philippine military.
Economic growth was additionally
hampered by a series of natural
disasters, including the 1991 eruption
of Mount Pinatubo that left 700 dead
and 200,000 homeless. During the
Aquino presidency, Manila witnessed
six unsuccessful coup attempts, the
most serious occurring in December
1989.
In 1991, the Philippine Senate
rejected a treaty that would have
allowed a 10-year extension of the
U.S. military bases in the country. The
United States turned over in
Clark Air Base Pampanga to the in
government November, and
Subic Bay Naval Base in Zambales in
December 1992, ending almost a
century of U.S. military presence in
• Administration of Fidel V. Ramos
(1992-1998)
In the 1992 elections, Defense Secretary
Fidel V. Ramos, endorsed by Aquino, won
the presidency with just 23.6% of the vote
in a field of seven candidates. Early in his
administration, Ramos declared "national
reconciliation" his highest priority and
worked at building a coalition to overcome
the divisiveness of the Aquino years.
• He legalized the Communist Party and laid
the groundwork for talks with communist
insurgents, Muslim separatists, and military
rebels, attempting to convince them to
cease their armed activities against the
government. In June 1994, Ramos signed
into law a general conditional amnesty
covering all rebel groups, and Philippine
military and police personnel accused of
crimes committed while fighting the
insurgents.
• In October 1995, the
government signed an agreement
bringing the militaryinsurgency
to an end. A
peace agreement with
the Moro National Liberation
Front (MNLF),
fighting for aan
majorindependent
separatist
group
homeland in Mindanao, was
signed in 1996, ending the 24-year
• However, an MNLF splinter group,
the Moro Islamic Liberation Front
continued the armed struggle for an
Islamic state. Efforts by Ramos
supporters to gain passage of an
amendment that would allow him to
run for a second term were met with
large-scale protests, leading Ramos to
declare hewouldnot seek re-election.
• Administration of Joseph Estrada
(1998-2001)
• Joseph Estrada, a former movie actor
who had served as Ramos' vice
president, was elected president by a
landslide victory in 1998. His election
campaign pledged to help the poor
and develop the country's agricultural
sector
• He enjoyed widespread popularity,
particularly among the poor. Estrada
assumed office amid the
Asian Financial Crisis. The economy did,
however, recover from a low -0.6% growth
in 1998 to a moderate growth of 3.4% by
1999. Like his predecessor there was a
similar attempt to change the 1987
constitution. The process is termed as
CONCORD or Constitutional Correction for
Development.
• Unlike Charter change under
Ramos and Arroyo the CONCORD
proposal, according to its
proponents, would only amend the
'restrictive' economic provisions of
the constitution that is considered
as impeding the entry of more
foreign investments in the
Philippines. However it was not
successful in amending the
constitution.
• In March 21, 2000 President Estrada
declared an "all-out-war" against the
Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) after
the worsening secessionist movement in
Midanao The government later captured 46
MILF camps including the MILF's
headquarters', Camp Abubakar. In October
2000, however, Estrada was accused of
having accepted millions of pesos in
payoffs from illegal gambling businesses.
• He was impeached by the House of
Representatives, but his impeachment trial
in the Senate broke down when the senate
voted to block examination of the
president's bank records. In response,
massive street protests erupted demanding
Estrada's resignation. Faced with street
protests, cabinet resignations, and a
withdrawal of support from the armed
forces, Estrada was forced from office on
January 20, 2001.
• Administration of Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
(2001-2010)
Vice President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
(the daughter of the late President
Diosdado Macapagal) was sworn in as
Estrada's successor on the day of his
departure. Her accession to power was
further legitimized by the mid-term
congressional and local elections held
four months later, when her coalition
won an overwhelming victory.
• Arroyo's initial term in office was marked
by fractious coalition politics as well as a
military mutiny in Manila in July 2003 that
led her to declare a month-long
nationwide state of rebellion.
• Arroyo had declared in December 2002
that she would not run in the May 2004
presidential election, but she reversed
herself in October 2003 and decided to
join the race.
• She was re-elected and sworn in for
her own six-year term as president on
June 30, 2004. In 2005, a tape of a
wiretapped conversation surfaced
bearing the voice of Arroyo
apparently asking an election official
if her margin of victory could be
maintained. The tape sparked
protests calling for Arroyo's
resignation.
• Arroyo admitted to inappropriately
speaking to an election official, but
denied allegations of fraud and refused to
step down. Attempts to impeach the
president failed later that year.
• Arroyo unsuccessfully attempted a
controversial plan for an overhaul of the
constitution to transform the present
presidential-bicameral republic into a
federal parliamentary-unicameral form of
government.
1899 (Malolos Constitution –
Emilio Aguinaldo)
• The President of the Council,Apolinario
Mabini.
• Preamble
We, the Representatives of the Filipino people,
lawfully covened, in order to establish justice,
provide for common defense, promote the general
welfare, and insure the benefits of liberty, imploring
the aid of the Sovereign Legislator of the Universe
for the attainment of these ends, have voted,
decreed, and sanctioned the following.
1935 – (Commonwealth Period)
• The 1935 Constitution was ratified on May 14,
1935.
Preamble
The Filipino people, imploring the aid of Divine
Providence, in order to establish a government that
shall embody their ideals, conserve and develop the
patrimony of the nation, promote the general
welfare, and secure to themselves and their posterity
the blessings of independence under a regime of
justice, liberty, and democracy, do ordain and
promulgate this Constitution.
1973 – Martial Law
• [The 1973 Constitution was ratified
on January 17, 1973 in accordance
with Presidential Proclamation No.
1102 issued by President Ferdinand
E. Marcos].
This is known as the Martial
Constitution……..
Preamble
We, the sovereign Filipino people, imploring
the aid of Divine Providence, in order to
establish a government that shall embody our
ideals, promote the general welfare, conserve
and develop the patrimony of our Nation, and
secure to ourselves and our posterity the
blessings of democracy under a regime of
justice, peace, liberty, and equality, do ordain
andpromulgate this Constitution.
THE1987 CONSTITUTION -
Freedom Constitution
PREAMBLE
We, the sovereign Filipino people, imploring
the aid of Almighty God, in order to build a
just and humane society, and establish a
Government that shall embody our ideals
and aspirations, promote the common good,
conserve and develop our patrimony, and
secure to ourselves and our posterity, the
blessings of independence and democracy
under the rule of law and a regime of truth,
justice, freedom, love, equality, and peace,
do ordain and promulgate this Constitution.
Propaganda Movement
• The Propaganda Movement was a literary
and cultural organization formed in 1872 by
Filipino émigrés who had settled in Europe.
Composed of Filipino liberals exiled in 1872
and students attending Europe's universities,
the organization aimed to increase Spanish
awareness of, the needs of its colony, the
Philippines and to propagate a closer
relationship between the colony andSpain.
• Its prominent members included
José Rizal, author of Noli Me Tangere
and El Filibusterismo,
Graciano López Jaena, publisher of
La Solidaridad, the movement's
principal organ, Mariano Ponce, the
organization's secretary and
Marcelo H. del Pilar.
Goals
• Specifically, the Propagandists aims
were:
• Representation of the Philippinesin
the Cortes Generales, the Spanish
parliament;
• Secularization of the clergy;
• Legalization of Spanish and Filipino
equality;
• Creation of a public school system
independent of the friars;
• Abolition of the polo (laborservice)
and vandala (forced sale of local
products to the government);
• Guarantee of basic freedoms of
speech and association;
• Equal opportunity for Filipinos and
Spanish to enter government service.
• Recognition of the Philippines asa
province of Spain
• Secularization of Philippine parishes.
• Recognition of human rights
• What are the factors that led to
propaganda movement in the
Philippines?
There are two major factors that led to propaganda
movement in the Philippines during our early history
from1800–1889.Such as:
• To expose the defects and abuses of the Spanish
Government;
• Aimed to seek reforms to remedy the defects and
abusesof Colonial government.
Be it noted however, that the
propaganda Movement was not a
revolutionary or seditious affair; they
merely asked for reforms, not
independence until the Rise of the
Katipunan movement in 1892 which
aimed to gain Independence from
Spain.
Reforms desired by the Propaganda
Movement:
• Equality of Filipinos and Spaniards before
the laws.
• Assimilation of the Philippines as a
regular province of Spain;
• Filipino representation in the Spanish
Cortes and equal treatment of Filipinos
andSpaniardsin the Philippines
• Filipinization of the Philippine
parishes and expulsion of the friars.
• Human rights of Filipinos, such as
freedom of speech, freedom of the
press, and the freedom to meet and
petition for redress of grievances.
To further illustrate:
• In February 17, 1872, Fathers Mariano
Gomez, Jose Burgos and Jacinto Zamora
(Gomburza), these priests, were
executed by the Spanish colonizers on
charges of subversion. The charges
against Fathers Gomez, Burgos and
Zamora were their alleged complicity in
the uprising of workers at the Cavite
Naval Yard.
The death of Gomburza awakened strong
feelings of anger and resentment among
the Filipinos. They questioned Spanish
Authorities and demanded reforms. The
martyrdom of the three priests
apparently helped to inspire the
organization of the Propaganda
Movement, which aimed to seek reforms
and inform Spain of the abuses of its
colonial government.
The ilustrados led the Filipinos’ quest for
reforms. Because of their education and
newly acquired wealth, they felt more
confident about voicing out popular
grievances. However, since the ilustrados
themselves were a result of the changes
that the Spanish government had been
slowly implementing, the group could
not really push very hard for the reforms
it wanted.
The ilustrados did not succeed in
easing the sufferings of the Filipinos;
but from this group another faction
arises called the intelligentsia. The
intelligentsia also wanted reforms;
but they were more systematic and
used a peaceful means called the
Propaganda Movement.
Katipunan
• The was a Philippine revolutionary
society Katipun
founded by anti-Spanish Filipinos in Manila in
an which aimed primarily to gain independence
1892,
from Spain through revolution. The society was
initiated by Filipino patriots Andrés Bonifacio,
Teodoro Plata, Ladislao Diwa, and others on the
night of July 7, whenFilipino writer José Rizal was to
be banished to Dapitan. Initially, Katipunan was a
secret organization until its discovery in 1896that led
to the outbreak of Philippine Revolution.
The word "katipunan", literally
means association, comes from the
root word "tipon", an indigenous
Tagalog word, meaning "society" or
"gather together" Its official
revolutionary name is Kataas-taasan,
Kagalang-galangang Katipunan ng̃ mgá̃
Anak ng̃ Bayan (English: High and
Honorable Society of the Children of
the Nation, Spanish: Suprema y
Venerable Asociación de los Hijos del
Pueblo). Katipunan is also known by
Being a secret organization, its members
are subjected to utmost secrecy and are
expected to abide with the
established rules by the
applicants weresociety.
given standard
Aspirant initiation
rites to become members of the society.
At first, Katipunan was only open to male
Filipinos; later, women were accepted in
the society.
The Katipunan had its own publication,
Kalayaan (Liberty) that had its first and
last print on March 1896. Revolutionary
ideals and works flourished within the
society, and Philippine literature were
expanded by its some prominent
members.
In planning the revolution, Bonifacio
contacted Rizal for his full-fledged
support for the Katipunan in exchange
for a promise of Rizal's liberty from
detainment by rescuing him. On May
1896, a delegation was sent to the
Emperor of Japan to solicit and
funds military
arms.
Katipunan's existence was revealed to the
Spanish authorities after a member named
Teodoro Patiño confessed Katipunan's illegal
activities to his sister, and finally to the
mother portress of Mandaluyong Orphanage.
Seven days after the Spanish authorities
learned the existence of such secret society,
on August 26, 1896, Bonifacio and his men
tore their cedúlas during the infamous
Cry of Balintawak that started the
Philippine Revolution.
Influence of the Propaganda
Movement
•A late 19th century photograph of leaders of the
Propaganda Movement: José Rizal, Marcelo H. del Pilar
andMariano Ponce.
• The Katipunan and the Cuerpo de Compromisarios
were, effectively, successor organizations of La Liga
Filipina, founded by José Rizal, as part of the late 19th
century Propaganda Movement in the Philippines.
Katipunan founders Andrés Bonifacio, Ladislao Diwa, and
Teodoro Plata were all members of La Liga and were
influenced by the nationalistic ideals of the Propaganda
MovementinSpain.
Marcelo H. del Pilar, another leader of the
Propaganda Movement in Spain,
influenced the formation als
Katipunan. Modern-day historians
o of the
believe that he had a direct hand in its
organization because of his role in the
Propaganda Movement and his eminent
position in Philippine Masonry; most of
the Katipunan's founders were
freemasons.
The Katipunan had initiation ceremonies
that were copied from masonic rites. It
also had an order of rank, similar to that of
freemasonry. Rizal's Spanish biographer
Wenceslao Retaña and Filipino biographer
Juan Raymundo Lumawag saw the
formation of the Katipunan as Del Pilar's
victory over Rizal: "La Liga dies, and the
Katipunan rises in its place. Del Pilar's
plan wins over that of Rizal. Del Pilar and
Rizal had the same end, even if each took
a different road to it."
The Katipunan had initiation ceremonies
that were copied from masonic rites. It
also had an order of rank, similar to that of
freemasonry. Rizal's Spanish biographer
Wenceslao Retaña and Filipino biographer
Juan Raymundo Lumawag saw the
formation of the Katipunan as Del Pilar's
victory over Rizal: "La Liga dies, and the
Katipunan rises in its place. Del Pilar's
plan wins over that of Rizal. Del Pilar and
Rizal had the same end, even if each took
a different road to it."
Founding of the Katipunan
• Captured Katipunan members (also
known as Katipuneros), who were also
members of La Liga, revealed to the
Spanish colonial authorities that there
was a difference of opinion among
members of La Liga. One group insisted
on La Liga's principle of a peaceful
reformation while the other espoused
armed revolution.
On the night of July 7, 1892, when Rizal
was banished and exiled to Dapitan in
Mindanao, Andrés Bonifacio, a member
of the La Liga Filipina, founded the
Katipunan in a house in Tondo, Manila.
Bonifacio did established the Katipunan
when it was become apparent to anti-
Spanish Filipinos that societies like the La
Liga Filipina would be suppressed by
colonial authorities.
He was assisted by his two friends, Teodoro Plata
(brother-in-law) and Ladislao Diwa, plus Valentín
Díaz and Deodato Arellano. The Katipunan was
founded along Azcarraga St. (now Claro M. Recto
Avenue) near Elcano St. in Tondo, Manila. Despite
their reservations about the peaceable reformation
that Rizal espoused, they named Rizal honorary
president without his knowledge. The Katipunan,
established as a secret brotherhood organization,
went under the name Kataas-taasang, Kagalang-
galangang Katipunan ng̃ mgá̃ Anak ng̃ Bayan
(Supreme and Venerable Society of the Children of
the Nation)
The Katipunan had four aims, namely:
• to develop a strong alliance with each
and every Katipuneros
• tounite Filipinos into one solid nation;
• to win Philippine independence by
means of an armed conflict (or
revolution);
• to establish a republic after
independence.
The rise of the Katipunan signalized the
end of the crusade to secure reforms
from Spain by means of a peaceful
campaign. The Propaganda Movement
led by Rizal, del Pilar, Jaena and others
had failed its mission; hence, Bonifacio
started the militant movement for
independence

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