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The Cagayan and Dingras Revolts Against the Tribute occurred on Luzon in the present-day provinces of Cagayan and Ilocos Norte in 1589. Ilocanos, Ibanags, and other Filipinos revolted against alleged abuses by the tax collectors, including the collection of high taxes. It began when six tax collectors who had arrived from Vigan were killed by ...
Cagayan and Dingras Revolts Against the Tribute (1589) Ilocanos and Ibanag: Spanish conquistadors. Santiago de Vera; Ceasefire. Rebels pardoned. The tax system was reformed. Magalat Revolt (1596) Datu Magalat of Cagayan People of Cagayan Valley; Spanish and Filipino colonial troops Pedro de Chaves; Revolutionary defeat. Death of Datu Magalat
The Mejba Revolt was a rebellion in Tunisia against the doubling of an unpopular poll tax (the mejba) imposed on his subjects by Sadok Bey. The most extensive revolt against the rule of the Husainid Beys of Tunis, it saw uprisings all over the country and came close to prompting military intervention by Britain and France.
The Tondo Conspiracy of 1587, popularly known as the Conspiracy of the Maginoos (Spanish: La Conspiración de las Maginoos), also known as the Revolt of the Lakans, was a revolt planned by Tagalog nobles known as maginoos, led by Don Agustin de Legazpi of Tondo and his cousin Martin Pangan, to overthrow the Spanish government in the Philippines due to injustices against the Filipinos. [1]
The revolt started on November 3, 1762, after the alcalde mayor of Pangasinan sent a royal commission to collect tribute from the natives. Simon de Anda was at Bacolor, Pampanga at the time when he heard of the revolt in Pangasinan. He warned to the inhabitants of the province to retain loyalty to Spain, serve without pay and pay taxes.
The Cavite Mutiny was an aim of the natives to get off the Spanish government in the Philippines, due to the removal of privileges enjoyed by the laborers of the Cavite arsenal at Fort San Felipe, such as exemption from the tribute and forced labor (polo y servicio). The democratic and republican books and pamphlets, the speeches and preaching ...
The Pima Revolt was a revolt of Pima people against colonial forces in Pimería Alta, New Spain. The revolt culminated from decades of violence by the local Spanish settlers against Indians beginning in 1684. [26] While the 15,000 rebels had no central authority, the charismatic Luis Oacpicagigua was influential in unifying them under a single ...
These actions lead to the agrarian crisis and the Huk rebellion many decades later. [1] The war also ruined Kapampangan prestige, going from an autonomous vassal of the Spanish crown to a mere canton of the Philippine Republic. [12] Puppet mayors enacted taxes and tribute to donate to the Philippine Republic.