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The Naic Military Agreement. The Naic Military Agreement was a document prepared on April 18, 1897, [1] in which a number of participants in the Tejeros Convention repudiated the convention results.
Lázaro Macapagal y Olaes (December 17, 1871 – unknown) was a lieutenant colonel in the Philippine Revolution, known for being the executioner of Andrés Bonifacio and his brother Procopio Bonifacio in 1897 under the orders of the Consejo dela Guerra (Council of War) headed by Mariano Noriel.
People executed in the Salem witch trials (20 P) Pages in category "17th-century executions of American people" The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total.
Bonifacio nullified the results after a Magdalo member questioned his election as the Secretary of the Interior. This resulted in a schism, with Bonifacio's supporters alleging that the elections was fraudulent, with Bonifacio himself refusing to recognize the results. In April 1897, Aguinaldo ordered the arrest of Bonifacio.
Bonifacio believed Aguinaldo was willing to surrender the revolution. [92] Bonifacio was also subject to rumors that he had stolen Katipunan funds, his sister was the mistress of a priest, and he was an agent provocateur paid by friars to foment unrest. Also circulated were anonymous letters which told the people of Cavite not to idolize ...
24 August 1896 – Bonifacio and his men escape to the house of Melchora Aquino to evade the pursuing Spanish civil guards. 28 August 1896 – Bonifacio issues a manifesto urging the Filipinos to take up arms against the Spaniards. 29 August 1896 – Melchora Aquino was arrested by the Spaniards for aiding the revolutionaries.
Fifty-seven of the revolutionaries at San Juan del Monte were executed on August 31, 1896. [5] On September 4, Sancho Valenzuela, Rivera, Silvestrre and Peralta were executed, [5] on the Campo de Bagumbayan, facing the Luneta Esplanade. [7]: 369 On September 12, thirteen revolutionaries were executed in Cavite. [8]
Bonifacio visits the church, meeting Bantug again. She knows that he joined a group of Masons and is not religious. Bonifacio denies the accusations, saying that those are just inventions of the friars. Later that day, while walking on the street, they encounter a friend of Oriang, begging a friar to give his salary in the polo. However, the ...