When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Emilio Aguinaldo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emilio_Aguinaldo

    Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy [e] QSC CCLH PMM KGCR [f] (Spanish: [eˈmiljo aɣiˈnaldoj ˈfami]: March 22, 1869 – February 6, 1964) was a Filipino revolutionary, statesman, and military leader who became the first president of the Philippines (1899–1901), and the first president of an Asian constitutional republic.

  3. Apolinario Mabini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apolinario_Mabini

    Apolinario Mabini y Maranán [a] (Tagalog: [apolɪˈnaɾ.jo maˈbinɪ]; July 23, 1864 – May 13, 1903) was a Filipino revolutionary leader, educator, lawyer, and statesman who served first as a legal and constitutional adviser to the Revolutionary Government, and then as the first Prime Minister of the Philippines upon the establishment of the First Philippine Republic.

  4. Artemio Ricarte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artemio_Ricarte

    Artemio Ricarte y García (October 20, 1866 – July 31, 1945) was a Filipino general during the Philippine Revolution and the Philippine–American War.He is regarded as the Father of the Philippine Army, [1] and the first Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (March 22, 1897- January 22, 1899) though the present Philippine Army descended from the American-allied forces that ...

  5. Baldomero Aguinaldo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baldomero_Aguinaldo

    He was married to Doña Petrona Reyes with 2 children: Leonor and Aureliano. Leonor was the mother of former Prime Minister Cesar Virata.Aguinaldo was a member of the Philippine Independent Church (IFI, also known as the Aglipayan Church) as he saw independence from the Roman Catholic Church as a source of national pride.

  6. Cry of Pugad Lawin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cry_of_Pugad_Lawin

    Emilio Aguinaldo’s memoirs, Mga Gunita ng Himagsikan (1964, English title:Memories of the Revolution), refer to two letters from Andres Bonifacio dated 22 and 24 August that pinpoint the date and place of the crucial Cry meeting when the decision to attack Manila was made. [8]

  7. Antonio Luna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio_Luna

    Antonio Narciso Luna de San Pedro y Novicio Ancheta (Spanish: [anˈtonjo ˈluna]; October 29, 1866 – June 5, 1899) was a Filipino army general and a pharmacist who fought in the Philippine–American War before his assassination on June 5, 1899, at the age of 32.

  8. Mariano Álvarez - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariano_Álvarez

    In their memoirs, Emilio Aguinaldo and other Magdalo personages claim that Bonifacio became the head of the Magdiwang, receiving the title Hari ng Bayan (“King of the People”) with Álvarez as his second-in-command. [4] [7] However, no documentary sources have been found substantiating these claims. [8]

  9. Mariano Noriel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mariano_Noriel

    The records show that Noriel, along with two others, was sentenced to death for the murder of a man in the Bacoor cockpit in May 1909. The Court of First Instance decision on the case was later confirmed by the Philippine Supreme Court, so it was appealed by an Irish-American lawyer named Amzi B. Kelly, to the Supreme Court of the United States which subsequently reversed the decision.