Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Leadership became arbitrary with succession of "generals" and "commanders" based on who was second in command from the hierarchy of the old republic or who has more supporters or people under one's command. The remnants of the First Philippine Republic continued the struggle for independence into local regional and provincial levels as late as ...
After graduating from high school, Trinidad joined the Far Eastern Broadcasting Company working as an announcer and program arranger. He rose ranks to become chief of program arrangers, appointed as a production coordinator, and became a production manager.
Polo y servicio was the forced labor system without compensation [1] imposed upon the local population in the Philippines during the Spanish colonial period. [2] In concept, it was similar to Repartimiento, a forced labor system used in the Spanish America.
Jagor, Feodor (1873), Travels in the Philippines (in German), Berlin: Weidmannsche Buchhandlung, An English translation under this title was printed in London, 1875, by Chapman and Hall. Kalaw, Maximo Manguiat (1927), The Development of Philippine Politics, Oriental commercial
The Sultanate of Buayan (Maguindanaon: Kasultanan nu Buayan, Jawi: كسولتانن نو بواين; Filipino: Sultanato ng Buayan) was a Muslim state on the island of Mindanao in the southern Philippines from the mid-14th to the 20th century.
Regular soldiers of the Philippine Revolutionary Army stand attention for an inspection.. The Philippine Revolution, also called the Tagalog War by the Spaniards, [1] was a revolution and subsequent conflict fought between the Katipunan, later the Philippine Revolutionary Army, and the Spanish colonial government.
León María Guerrero y Leogardo (January 21, 1853 – April 13, 1935) was a Filipino writer, revolutionary leader, politician, the first licensed pharmacist in the Philippines, and one of the most eminent botanists in the country during the late Spanish colonial period.
Marcela was born in 1869 in the town of Malibay, which is now part of the present-day Pasay. [3] She belonged to an upper-class family that owns an areca nut farm. [4] She married Quirico Lugo, a man from Aguho, Pateros, and bore him a son. [5]