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| Colonial body Philippine Assembly, imperialist US Occupation |
Photo credit: http://philippineamericanwar.webs.com/
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| Colonial body Philippine Assembly, imperialist US Occupation |
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| Imperialist American Civil Gov.-Gen William Forbes (right, back row) |
1645
- Native Muslims attack the Spanish garrison with help from a Dutch
squadron that arrives at Jolo from Batavia (North Jakarta) during Spain's colonial rule of the Philippines; the Filipino-Spanish troops
under Commander Esteban Ugalde will resist and finally force the withdrawal of the squadron after three days of combat
in what would be one of the few unsuccessful attempts of the
Dutch to expel the Spaniards from the Philippine islands; the contexts are
Spain's tenuous hold on Mindanao and the so-called 80 Years War of Netherlands' revolt and, subsequently, assertion of its independence; Spain's colonization of the Southeast Asian islands began in the mid 1500s when King Philip II sent sent an expedition to conquer said archipelago in 1559 following earlier exploration missions including that led by Ferdinand Magellan who was killed by the native chieftain Lapu-Lapu and his forces in the island of Mactan.![]() |
| Japanese occupies the US colony, the Philippines |
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| Hen. Santiago V. Alvarez |
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| Filipinos captured by American invaders |
1864 - Apolinario Mabini y Maranan, the future "Brains of the Philippine Revolution", key adviser, and Foreign Minister of what would be the short-lived Philippine Republic under Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo, is born in Talaga, Tanauan, Batangas to Dionisia Maranan and Inocencio Mabini during the Spanish colonial rule; acquiring paralysis later in adulthood, Mabini will be summoned to become an adviser of Aguinaldo who, by that time, had already seized revolutionary leadership from Generalissimo Andres Bonifacio y de Castro during the time of the Philippine Revolution against Spain; Mabini will be one of the few officials of the fledgling Philippine Republic that will for some time resist the pressure of swearing fealty to the imperialist United States of America during the Filipino-American War (1899-1914) ; it will be the second phase of the Philippine Revolution that Mabini will become a key Filipino figure--his counterpart during the initial phase of the Himagsikan led by Bonifacio, co-founder and Supremo of the Kataastaasang Kagalanggalangang Katipunan nang manga Anak nang Bayan, will be Emilio Jacinto y Dizon, who will earn the title "Brains of the Katipunan; a few years before his death, Mabini will author his memoirs of the Philippine Revolution, including his account of Aguinaldo's "insubordination" to, and the tragic "crime" and "assassination" committed against Bonifacio. ![]() |
| Filipino soldiers resisting imperialist United States invasion |
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| William Rufus Day, Imperialist Asst. State Secretary |
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| Bust of Gen. Simon de Anda on the wall of Santa Cruz Church |
1844 - Narciso Claveria y Zaldua becomes governor-general of the Philippines during the Spanish colonial rule; his administration will be responsible for correcting the Philippine calendar; establishing the Sociedad de Recreo (Recreation Association); the founding of papers such as Diario de Manila and La Esperanza; constructing a military library; the purchase of the first steam war-vessel for the Southeast Asian colony; and issuing a decree obligating the natives to adopt Spanish surnames from a catalogue (Catalogo de Apellidos) for the purpose of easier taxation and identification, exempting only pre-Spanish royalty and Chinese with pre-existing surnames; Claveria would also be responsible for granting Jose Oranguyen, Spanish lawyer-turned-businessman-then-(Tondo)judge-and-explorer, the permit to colonize Davao--a 'mini-conquista'--eventually leading to the area being constituted as a province (Nueva Guipizcoa) with Nueva Bergara (future Davao City) as capital; the 62nd Spanish colonial governor in the Philippines would also be responsible for the conquest of the Sulu island of Balanguingui some four years into his term, overcoming the Moros for which he would be accorded the titles viscount of claveria and count of Mnaila along with the cross of San Fernando.
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| Rey Felipe II de Espana (King Philip II of Spain) |
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| Maj. Gen. Elwell Otis of the imperialistic U.S. "fighting, having begun, must go on to the grim end" |
1901 - Gen. Miguel Malvar y Carpio succeeds as Commander-in-Chief of the beleaguered Philippine Republic following President Emilio F. Aguinaldo's treacherous capture by, and hasty swearing of fealty to, the imperialist United States forces nearly 2 1/2 years into the protracted and bloody Filipino-American War (1899-1914); more than three years earlier, Bald Eagle Commodore George Dewey had earlier met with Aguinaldo to strike an alliance, with Filipinos in his nation's separate war with Spain, deceptively making assurances that America is intends to honor Philippine independence; by August 1898, the US and Spain wickedly staged the infamous Mock Battle of Manila that falsely showed to the world that it was the Americans instead of the Filipinos defeated the Spaniards in the capital, Manila; in five months' time, the Treaty of Paris will be signed, with the virtually ousted-by-Filipinos Spain ridiculously 'ceding' the Philippines to the Bald Eagle nation for $20,000,000 US, and on February 4, 1899, American generals will deliberately instigate the bloody and protracted Philippine-American War (1899-1914) in the nefarious bid of the US President William McKinley to make their Congress approve the Treaty of Paris and the annexation [translation: invasion] of the fledgling Southeast Asian nation; Malvar would reverse Aguinaldo's policy of upholding elite interests, giving importance to the role of peasantry in the anti-imperialist resistance and resulting to covert support of the townspeople to the Filipino freedom fighters while pretending to cooperate with the North American colonizers; by December 1901, Malvar would shift from defensive to offensive campaigns against a number of towns held by the enemy Americans; it would only be after US Gen. Franklin Bell's horrific reconcentration campaign that would break the back of the resistance movement in Batangas province that Gen. Malvar will surrender to enemy flag in 1902 ; other Filipino guerrila leaders, such as Macario Sakay and Simeon Ola, and Muslim compatriots in the South will continue the valiant war against the heavily armed North American invaders until about 1913.
1899 - Filipino Gen. Artemio Ricarte y Garcia issues a circular asking for contributions to continue war operations against enemy American forces, five months into the imperialistic United States invasion of the fledgling Philippine Republic; the bloody Filipino-American War (1899-1914) broke out in February 1899 after the Republican administration of Bald Eagle President William McKinley deliberately instigated hostilities between the Filipino and American forces at the San Juan bridge as part of his sinister plan to make the US Senate approve the December 1898 Treaty of Paris to pave the way for the annexation [translation: invasion] of the fledgling Southeast Asian Republic; more than a year earlier, the emerging imperialist power that was the US forged an alliance with revolutionary leader Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy as part of its war against colonial Spain during the second phase of the Philippine Revolution, deceptively promising to honor the independence of the Filipinos; weeks later, amidst the fact that the Filipino revolutionary forces have already wrested control of virtually all of the entire archipelago from the Spaniards, the Americans further conned Aguinaldo by asking him to "not to interfere" and allow the free entry of G.I.s into the islands only to stage the infamous Mock Battle of Manila that falsely showed to the world that the Americans--instead of the Filipinos--were the ones who defeated the Spaniards in Manila; Spain and the US would then sign the Paris Treaty that 'ceded' the Philippines as McKinley justifies his undemocratic, treacherous policy before the American public by ridiculously claiming that God had supposedly spoken to him to colonize the Southeast Asian land "to educate the Filipinos, and uplift and Christianize them,"--this, when most of the Philippines have long been Catholic Christians. ![]() |
| Dr. Pio Valenzuela |
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| US Forces, on a sinister hidden plan to invade the Philippines, disembark |
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| Imperialist American soldiers march to Manila |
1899 - More than a month after Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo had Gen. Antonio Luna assassinated, dispatches from Manila contain the statement that General Luna’s death has strengthened Aguinaldo’s leadereship. “Luna’s supporters are now outwardly loyal to Aguinaldo.”; Aguinaldo has been widely blamed for setting a trap for Luna's assassination on June 5, 1899, 5 months into the Philippine-American War (1899-1904), because he did not meet Luna despite his signed telegram calling him to a conference and because during the murder, Aguinaldo's mother looked out the window and asked: Is he still breathing?"; historian Teodoro Kalaw would write that Aguinaldo also ordered his other subordinates including Gen. Gregorio del Pilar to capture Gen. Luna 'dead or alive,' prompting the Bulakeno boy-general to leave for Bamban and Mabalacat to execute the bloody task although the President's bodyguards got to Luna first.
1898 - In what will prove to be a most stupid military decision, Dictator Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy of the fledgling Philippine Republic assures imperialist United States Gen. Thomas M. Anderson that he has already ordered his "people not to interfere" with the North American forces who has been entering the Southeast Asian archipelago during the Spanish-American War; Aguinaldo, who has led Filipinos to defeat the Spanish forces at almost every encounter and win control over almost the entire northern provinces and the bay coast from colonial Spanish forces during the so-called second phase of the Revolution, had forged an alliance with the Americans after earlier being deceptively assured by United States Commodore George Dewey and other military diplomatic Bald Eagle officials including Anderson himself, that the US is an ally who will respect Philippine independence; in a few months, the sinister and eventually successful invasion plan of the Bald Eagle nation against the Philippines will be revealed, initially through the infamous Mock Battle of Manila that will falsely show to the world that it is the Americans instead of the Filipinos that have defeated the Spaniards in the islands, and then when the imperialist US generals instigate the bloody and protracted Philippine-American War (1899-1914) seven months later; Apolinario Mabini y Maranan, Aguinaldo's adviser and future Prime Minister, will later express his belief in his memoirs that Aguinaldo, who in 1897 violently wrested the revolutionary leadership from Katipunan Supreme President Andres Bonifacio y de Castro, "accepted [the verbal promises] because he [feared] that other influential Filipinos should (rob him of glory and) reach an understanding with the Americans in
the name of the people." ![]() |
| Imperialist US Gen. Anderson |