Emilio Aguinaldo: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description| | {{Short description|Filipino revolutionary leader (1869–1964)}} | ||
{{Redirect|General Emilio Aguinaldo|the municipality|General Emilio Aguinaldo, Cavite}} | {{Redirect|General Emilio Aguinaldo|the municipality|General Emilio Aguinaldo, Cavite}} | ||
{{family name hatnote|Aguinaldo|Famy|lang=Spanish}} | {{family name hatnote|Aguinaldo|Famy|lang=Spanish}} | ||
{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}} | {{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}} | ||
{{Use Philippine English|date= | {{Use Philippine English|date=October 2025}} | ||
{{Infobox officeholder | {{Infobox officeholder | ||
| honorific-prefix = <!-- See discussion at "WP:BRD discussion re the honorific-prefix parameter in the infobox" on the talk page --> | | honorific-prefix = <!-- See discussion at "WP:BRD discussion re the honorific-prefix parameter in the infobox" on the talk page --> | ||
| name = Emilio Aguinaldo | | name = Emilio Aguinaldo | ||
| birth_name = Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy | | birth_name = Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy | ||
| image = Emilio Aguinaldo ca. 1919 (Restored).jpg | | image = Emilio Aguinaldo ca. 1919 (Restored).jpg | ||
| caption = Aguinaldo {{circa|1919}} | | caption = Aguinaldo {{circa|1919}} | ||
| primeminister = {{unbulleted list|child=yes|[[Apolinario Mabini]]|(January 23 – May 7, 1899)|[[Pedro Paterno]]|(May 7 – November 13, 1899)}} | | primeminister = {{unbulleted list|child=yes|[[Apolinario Mabini]]|(January 23 – May 7, 1899)|[[Pedro Paterno]]|(May 7 – November 13, 1899)}} | ||
| predecessor = ''Position established''<br />[[Diego de los Ríos]] (as [[Governor-General of the Philippines]]) | | predecessor = ''Position established''<br />[[Diego de los Ríos]] (as [[Governor-General of the Philippines]]) | ||
| successor = ''Position abolished'' | | successor = ''Position abolished''{{efn|[[Miguel Malvar]] acted unofficially as head of the Philippine Republic after Aguinaldo was captured. However, Manuel Quezon, elected in 1935, is officially considered to be the next president following Aguinaldo.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://www.esquiremag.ph/long-reads/features/miguel-malvar-a2212-20190909-lfrm|title=Miguel Malvar Was the Forgotten President of the Philippine Republic|date=September 9, 2019|magazine=Esquire}}</ref>}}<br />[[Manuel L. Quezon]]{{efn|As officially recognized by the contemporary Philippine government; President of the [[Philippine Commonwealth]] in 1935}} | ||
| title = | | title = Philippine revolutionary leader<br /> | ||
| term_start | President of the [[First Philippine Republic]]{{efn|name="as president"|Aguinaldo is honored by the [[Presidential Museum and Library (Philippines)|Philippine Presidential Museum and Library]] as First President of the Philippines for his presidency of the First Philippine Republic. He had held prior positions as president of a [[Revolutionary Government of the Philippines|revolutionary government]] from June 23, 1898, to January 22, 1899, president of the [[Biak-na-Bato Republic]] from November 2, 1897, to December 20, 1897, and president of another revolutionaty government from March 22, 1897, to November 2, 1897. He headed a [[Dictatorial Government of the Philippines|dictatorial government]] from May 24, 1898, to June 23, 1898;<ref name="iIBcw" /> That dictatorial government proclaimed Philippine independence from Spain on June 12, 1898.}} | ||
| term_start = January 23, 1899{{efn|It was the date of Aguinaldo's inauguration as president under the [[First Philippine Republic]] of the [[Malolos Constitution]].<ref name="inaugural1899">{{Cite speech |date=January 23, 1899 |title=Inaugural Address of President Aguinaldo, January 23, 1899 |url=https://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/1899/01/23/inaugural-address-of-president-aguinaldo-january-23-1899/ |access-date=June 24, 2023 |publisher=[[Official Gazette (Philippines)|Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines]] |archive-date=June 24, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230624094006/https://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/1899/01/23/inaugural-address-of-president-aguinaldo-january-23-1899/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> He had held positions as president of the revolutionary government from March 22, 1897, to November 2, 1897, president of the [[Biak-na-Bato Republic]] from November 2, 1897, to December 20, 1897, head of a dictatorial government from May 24, 1898, to June 23, 1898, and president of another revolutionary government from June 23, 1898, to January 22, 1899.<ref name="Library" />}} | |||
| term_end = April 19, 1901{{efn|It was the date that Aguinaldo formally swore an oath accepting the authority of the United States over the Philippines and pledging his allegiance to the American government after he was captured in March 23.}} | | term_end = April 19, 1901{{efn|It was the date that Aguinaldo formally swore an oath accepting the authority of the United States over the Philippines and pledging his allegiance to the American government after he was captured in March 23.}} | ||
| title1 = [[List of unofficial Presidents of the Philippines|President]] of the [[Revolutionary Government of the Philippines]] | | title1 = [[List of unofficial Presidents of the Philippines|President]] of the [[Revolutionary Government of the Philippines]] | ||
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| nickname = {{ubl|"Kapitan Miong"|"Heneral Miong"|"Ka Miong"|"El [[Caudillo]]"|"Magdalo"|"Hermano Colon"}} | | nickname = {{ubl|"Kapitan Miong"|"Heneral Miong"|"Ka Miong"|"El [[Caudillo]]"|"Magdalo"|"Hermano Colon"}} | ||
| allegiance = {{ubl | | allegiance = {{ubl | ||
|{{flagicon image| | |{{flagicon image|Flag of Katipunan.svg}} 1896 [[Katipunan]] ([[Magdalo (Katipunan faction)|Magdalo]]) | ||
|[[File:Flag of the | |[[File:Flag of the Biak-na-Bato.svg|25px]] 1897 [[Republic of Biak-na-Bato]] | ||
|{{flagicon image|Flag of the Philippines (1898–1901).svg}} 1899 [[First Philippine Republic]] | |{{flagicon image|Flag of the Philippines (1898–1901).svg}} 1899 [[First Philippine Republic]] | ||
}} | }} | ||
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| unit = | | unit = | ||
| commands = | | commands = | ||
| battles = {{tree list}}[[Philippine Revolution]] | | battles = {{collapsible list|expand=true|bullets=true| | ||
{{tree list}}[[Philippine Revolution]] | |||
**[[Kawit revolt]] | **[[Kawit revolt]] | ||
**[[Battle of Imus]] | **[[Battle of Imus]] | ||
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**[[Battle of Marilao River]] | **[[Battle of Marilao River]] | ||
{{tree list/end}} | {{tree list/end}} | ||
}} | |||
| awards = {{ubl|[[Quezon Service Cross]]|[[Philippine Legion of Honor]]|[[Presidential Medal of Merit (Philippines)|Presidential Medal of Merit]]|[[Order of the Knights of Rizal]]}} | | awards = {{ubl|[[Quezon Service Cross]]|[[Philippine Legion of Honor]]|[[Presidential Medal of Merit (Philippines)|Presidential Medal of Merit]]|[[Order of the Knights of Rizal]]}} | ||
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{{reflist|group=infobox}} | {{reflist|group=infobox}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy''' {{Post-nominals|post-noms=[[Quezon Service Cross|QSC]] [[Philippine Legion of Honor|CCLH]] [[Presidential Medal of Merit (Philippines)|PMM]] [[Knights of Rizal|KGCR]]}}{{efn|name="name"|In the [[Philippine Declaration of Independence|Philippine "Declaration of Independence"]] his maternal family name is given as Fami.<ref name="LD04Q" /><ref name="MTEpC" />}} ({{IPA|es|eˈmiljo | '''Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy''' {{Post-nominals|post-noms=[[Quezon Service Cross|QSC]] [[Philippine Legion of Honor|CCLH]] [[Presidential Medal of Merit (Philippines)|PMM]] [[Knights of Rizal|KGCR]]}}{{efn|name="name"|In the [[Philippine Declaration of Independence|Philippine "Declaration of Independence"]] his maternal family name is given as Fami.<ref name="LD04Q" /><ref name="MTEpC" />}} ({{IPA|es|eˈmiljo aɣiˈnaldo j ˈfami|lang}}: March 22, 1869{{spnd}}February 6, 1964) was a Filipino revolutionary, statesman, and military leader who became the first [[List of presidents of the Philippines|president of the Philippines]] (1899–1901), and the first president of an [[Asia (continent)|Asian]] constitutional republic. He led the Philippine forces first against [[Spain]] in the [[Philippine Revolution]] (1896–1898), then in the [[Spanish–American War]] (1898), and finally against the [[United States]] during the [[Philippine–American War]] (1899–1901). He is regarded in the Philippines as having been the country's first president during the period of the [[First Philippine Republic]],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://museums.gov.ph/gallery-2-presidents-aguinaldo-quezon-laurel/|title=Presidents Aguinaldo, Quezon & Laurel|work=Malacañang Heritage Mansions |publisher=Presidential Museum of the Philippines|date=n.d.|accessdate=August 10, 2024}}</ref> though he was not recognized as such outside of the [[Philippine Revolution|revolutionary Philippines]]. | ||
Aguinaldo is known as a [[national hero]] in the Philippines.<ref name="official" /> However, he was also known to be somewhat controversial due to his alleged involvement in the deaths of the revolutionary leader [[Andrés Bonifacio]] and general [[Antonio Luna]], and for his collaboration with the [[Empire of Japan]] during their [[Japanese occupation of the Philippines|occupation of the Philippines]] in [[World War II]].<ref name=asa2015p170q>{{harvnb|Ara|2015|p=170}} "Aguinaldo's collaboration with Japan began with his contact with Gen. Masami Maeda, Homma's chief of staff.[...] Aguinaldo (ca. 1942) voluntarily met with Maeda at his residence in Cavite to suggest the creation of a provisional government to terminate American rule and cooperate with the Japanese."</ref> | Aguinaldo is known as a [[national hero]] in the Philippines.<ref name="official" /> However, he was also known to be somewhat controversial due to his alleged involvement in the deaths of the revolutionary leader [[Andrés Bonifacio]] and general [[Antonio Luna]], and for his [[Collaboration with Imperial Japan|collaboration]] with the [[Empire of Japan]] during their [[Japanese occupation of the Philippines|occupation of the Philippines]] in [[World War II]].<ref name=asa2015p170q>{{harvnb|Ara|2015|p=170}} "Aguinaldo's collaboration with Japan began with his contact with Gen. Masami Maeda, Homma's chief of staff.[...] Aguinaldo (ca. 1942) voluntarily met with Maeda at his residence in Cavite to suggest the creation of a provisional government to terminate American rule and cooperate with the Japanese."</ref> | ||
{{anchor|earlylife}} | {{anchor|earlylife}} | ||
==Early life and career== | ==Early life and career== | ||
Emilio Aguinaldo | Emilio Aguinaldo was born on March 22, 1869{{efn|1=The exact date of Aguinaldo's birthdate was March 22, 1869. It can be seen in National Historical Institute's marker in Aguinaldo Shrine, Kawit, Cavite.<ref name="nhibio" /><ref name="dyalp6" /><ref name="ooikg1-129" /><ref name="death" /> Some sources give other dates.<ref name="5dvIb" /><ref name="turoth1" />|group=lower-alpha|name=birthdate-note}} in Cavite el Viejo (present-day [[Kawit]]) in the province of [[Cavite]] to Carlos Aguinaldo y Jamir and [[Trinidad Aguinaldo|Trinidad Villanueva]],{{efn|name="name"}} a couple that had eight children, the seventh of whom was Emilio. He was baptized and raised in [[Roman Catholicism]].<ref name="religion">{{Cite news |title=Filipinos mourning death of Aguinaldo |work=The New York Times |date=February 7, 1964 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1964/02/07/archives/filipinos-mourning-death-of-aguinaldo.html |access-date=November 8, 2022}}</ref> The Aguinaldo family was quite well-to-do as his father, Carlos Aguinaldo, was the community's appointed ''[[Gobernadorcillo]]'' (municipal governor) in the [[Spanish Empire|Spanish]] [[Viceregal]] administration.<ref>{{harvnb|Sullivan|2022|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=26SYEAAAQBAJ&dq=%22Carlos+Aguinaldo%22&pg=PA96 96]}}</ref> He studied at [[Colegio de San Juan de Letran]], but could not finish his studies due to an outbreak of [[cholera]] in 1882. On April 30th, 1888, he entered the lottery of the Spanish auxiliary conscription with number 221.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Azarcon |first=Joselito |date=December 17, 1986 |title=Cavite. Draft Records 1889 |url=https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSHK-43KP-C?view=fullText&keywords=Aguinaldo%2CEmilio&lang=en&groupId=M9ZG-MVJ |access-date=August 31, 2025 |website=FamilySearch}}</ref> | ||
He became a [[Cabeza de Barangay|cabeza de barangay]] in | He became a [[Cabeza de Barangay|cabeza de barangay]] in 1893, before the [[Maura Law]] called for the reorganization of local governments. At the age of 25, Aguinaldo became Cavite el Viejo's first ''[[gobernadorcillo#Capitan municipal|Gobernadorcillo Capitan Municipal]]'' (municipal governor-captain) while he was on a business trip in [[Mindoro]]. | ||
==Philippine Revolution== | ==Philippine Revolution== | ||
[[File:Seal of the Magdalo.svg|thumb|left|upright|The seal of Emilio Aguinaldo as War Chief of the [[Magdalo (Katipunan faction)|Magdalo]] faction]] | [[File:Seal of the Magdalo.svg|thumb|left|upright|The seal of Emilio Aguinaldo as War Chief of the [[Magdalo (Katipunan faction)|Magdalo]] faction]] | ||
[[File:General Emilio Aguinaldo.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Aguinaldo in military uniform]] | [[File:General Emilio Aguinaldo.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Aguinaldo in military uniform]] | ||
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On March 7, 1895, Santiago Alvarez, whose father was a ''Capitan Municipal'' (Mayor) of [[Noveleta]], encouraged Aguinaldo to join the "[[Katipunan]]", a secret organization led by [[Andrés Bonifacio]] that was dedicated to the expulsion of the Spanish and the independence of the Philippines through armed force.{{sfn|Kalaw|1926|p=77}} Aguinaldo joined the organization and used the ''[[nom de guerre]]'' [[Magdalo (Katipunan faction)|Magdalo]] in honor of [[Mary Magdalene]]. The local chapter of Katipunan in Cavite was established and named ''Sangguniang Magdalo'', and Aguinaldo's cousin [[Baldomero Aguinaldo]] was appointed leader.{{sfn|Agoncillo|1990|p=79}}{{sfn|Guerrero |Schumacher |1998 |p={{page needed|date=July 2022}}}} | On March 7, 1895, Santiago Alvarez, whose father was a ''Capitan Municipal'' (Mayor) of [[Noveleta]], encouraged Aguinaldo to join the "[[Katipunan]]", a secret organization led by [[Andrés Bonifacio]] that was dedicated to the expulsion of the Spanish and the independence of the Philippines through armed force.{{sfn|Kalaw|1926|p=77}} Aguinaldo joined the organization and used the ''[[nom de guerre]]'' [[Magdalo (Katipunan faction)|Magdalo]] in honor of [[Mary Magdalene]]. The local chapter of Katipunan in Cavite was established and named ''Sangguniang Magdalo'', and Aguinaldo's cousin [[Baldomero Aguinaldo]] was appointed leader.{{sfn|Agoncillo|1990|p=79}}{{sfn|Guerrero |Schumacher |1998 |p={{page needed|date=July 2022}}}} | ||
The Katipunan-led [[Philippine Revolution]] against the Spanish began in the last week of August 1896 in [[San Juan, Metro Manila|San Juan del Monte]] (now part of [[Metro Manila]]).{{sfn|Agoncillo|1990|p=176}} However, Aguinaldo and other Cavite rebels initially refused to join in the offensive for lack of arms.{{sfn|Guerrero |Schumacher |1998 |p={{page needed|date=July 2022}}}} Bonifacio and other rebels were forced to resort to [[guerrilla warfare]], but Aguinaldo and the Cavite rebels won major victories in carefully planned and well-timed [[Pitched battle|set-piece battles]] and temporarily drove the Spanish out of their area.{{sfn|Guerrero |Schumacher |1998 |p={{page needed|date=July 2022}}}} On August 31, 1896, Aguinaldo started the assault by beginning as a skirmish to the full-blown revolt [[Kawit Revolt]]. He marched with his army of bolomen to the town center of Kawit. Prior to the battle, Aguinaldo strictly ordered his men not to kill anyone in his hometown. Upon his men's arrival at the town center, the guards, armed with Remingtons and unaware of the preceding events, were caught completely by surprise and surrendered immediately. The guns there were captured | The Katipunan-led [[Philippine Revolution]] against the Spanish began in the last week of August 1896 in [[San Juan, Metro Manila|San Juan del Monte]] (now part of [[Metro Manila]]).{{sfn|Agoncillo|1990|p=176}} However, Aguinaldo and other Cavite rebels initially refused to join in the offensive for lack of arms.{{sfn|Guerrero |Schumacher |1998 |p={{page needed|date=July 2022}}}} Bonifacio and other rebels were forced to resort to [[guerrilla warfare]], but Aguinaldo and the Cavite rebels won major victories in carefully planned and well-timed [[Pitched battle|set-piece battles]] and temporarily drove the Spanish out of their area.{{sfn|Guerrero |Schumacher |1998 |p={{page needed|date=July 2022}}}} On August 31, 1896, Aguinaldo started the assault by beginning as a skirmish to the full-blown revolt [[Kawit Revolt]]. He marched with his army of bolomen to the town center of Kawit. Prior to the battle, Aguinaldo had strictly ordered his men not to kill anyone in his hometown. Upon his men's arrival at the town center, the guards, armed with Remingtons and unaware of the preceding events, were caught completely by surprise and surrendered immediately. The guns there were captured by the Katipuneros, and the revolt was a major success for Aguinaldo and his men. Later that afternoon, they raised the [[Magdalo (Katipunan faction)|Magdalo]] flag at the town hall to a large crowd of people from Kawit that had assembled after it heard of the city's liberation. | ||
The Magdalo faction of the Katipunan, which also operated in Cavite under Gen. Aguinaldo, used [[Flags of the Philippine Revolution#Magdalo faction|flags]] similar to those used by the Magdiwang faction and featuring a white sun with a red [[baybayin]] symbol for ''Ka''. | The Magdalo faction of the Katipunan, which also operated in Cavite under Gen. Aguinaldo, used [[Flags of the Philippine Revolution#Magdalo faction|flags]] similar to those used by the Magdiwang faction and featuring a white sun with a red [[baybayin]] symbol for ''Ka''. | ||
The symbol has recently been revived by a breakaway group of army officers to show the end of war with Spain after the peace agreement. The flag became the first official banner of the revolutionary forces and was blessed in a crowd | The symbol has recently been revived by a breakaway group of army officers to show the end of war with Spain after the peace agreement. The flag became the first official banner of the revolutionary forces and was blessed in a crowd celebrating at Imus. Aguinaldo referred to this flag in his proclamation of October 31, 1896: "Filipino people!! The hour has arrived to shed blood for the conquest of our liberty. Assemble and follow the flag of the Revolution – it stands for Liberty, Equality and Fraternity."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://pinoystories.com/president-emilio-aguinaldo/|title=President Emilio Aguinaldo – Pinoy Stories|date=January 8, 2022|website=pinoystories.com}}</ref> | ||
===Battle of Imus=== | ===Battle of Imus=== | ||
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===Battles of Binakayan–Dalahican=== | ===Battles of Binakayan–Dalahican=== | ||
{{main|Battle of Binakayan–Dalahican}} | {{main|Battle of Binakayan–Dalahican}} | ||
Alarmed by previous siege, led by General Aguinaldo in Imus, in September 1896, Governor-General [[Ramón Blanco y Erenas]] ordered the 4th Battalion of Cazadores from Spain to aid him in quelling the rebellion in Cavite. On November 3, 1896, the battalion arrived carrying a squadron of 1,328 men and some 55 officers.<ref name="OLEud" /> Also, Blanco ordered about 8,000 men who recently came from [[Spanish Cuba|Cuba]] and Spain to join in suppressing the rebellion. Prior to the land attacks, Spanish naval raids were conducted on the shores of Cavite, where [[cannons]] bombarded the revolutionary fortifications in Bacoor, Noveleta, Binakayan, and Cavite Viejo. The most fortified locations in Noveleta were the Dalahican and Dagatan shores, defended by ''Magdiwang'' soldiers commanded by General [[Santiago Alvarez (general)|Santiago Alvarez]], and the adjacent fishing village of Binakayan in Kawit was fortified by ''Magdalo'' under General Aguinaldo. Spanish naval operations were determined to crush the fortifications in these areas, mainly because the lake around Dalahican was strategic by connecting to the interior of Cavite. Apart from defending Binakayan, the ''Magdalo'' soldiers also kept the lower part of Dagatan up to Cavite's border near [[Manila (province)|Manila province]].<ref name="9fehE" /> Between the barrios of Binakayan and Dalahican, the Spanish forces lost decisively since the Filipino rebels, led by Aguinaldo and Alvarez, routed them back to [[Cavite City|Cavite Nuevo]] in which the remaining Spanish troops would eventually surrender. The successful defenses of Binakayan and Dalahican was considered to be the first major victory of the Filipinos over a colonial power.{{Citation needed|date=December 2019}} | Alarmed by a previous siege, led by General Aguinaldo in Imus, in September 1896, Governor-General [[Ramón Blanco y Erenas]] ordered the 4th Battalion of Cazadores from Spain to aid him in quelling the rebellion in Cavite. On November 3, 1896, the battalion arrived carrying a squadron of 1,328 men and some 55 officers.<ref name="OLEud" /> Also, Blanco ordered about 8,000 men who recently came from [[Spanish Cuba|Cuba]] and Spain to join in suppressing the rebellion. Prior to the land attacks, Spanish naval raids were conducted on the shores of Cavite, where [[cannons]] bombarded the revolutionary fortifications in Bacoor, Noveleta, Binakayan, and Cavite Viejo. The most fortified locations in Noveleta were the Dalahican and Dagatan shores, defended by ''Magdiwang'' soldiers commanded by General [[Santiago Alvarez (general)|Santiago Alvarez]], and the adjacent fishing village of Binakayan in Kawit was fortified by ''Magdalo'' under General Aguinaldo. Spanish naval operations were determined to crush the fortifications in these areas, mainly because the lake around Dalahican was strategic by connecting to the interior of Cavite. Apart from defending Binakayan, the ''Magdalo'' soldiers also kept the lower part of Dagatan up to Cavite's border near [[Manila (province)|Manila province]].<ref name="9fehE" /> Between the barrios of Binakayan and Dalahican, the Spanish forces lost decisively since the Filipino rebels, led by Aguinaldo and Alvarez, routed them back to [[Cavite City|Cavite Nuevo]] in which the remaining Spanish troops would eventually surrender. The successful defenses of Binakayan and Dalahican was considered to be the first major victory of the Filipinos over a colonial power.{{Citation needed|date=December 2019}} | ||
===Battle of Zapote Bridge=== | ===Battle of Zapote Bridge=== | ||
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[[File:The Hongkong Junta.jpg|thumb|right|Aguinaldo with the other revolutionaries on the Pact of Biak-na-Bato]] | [[File:The Hongkong Junta.jpg|thumb|right|Aguinaldo with the other revolutionaries on the Pact of Biak-na-Bato]] | ||
In March 1897, [[Fernando Primo de Rivera, 1st Marquis of Estella]], the Spanish [[Governor-General of the Philippines]], had been encouraging prominent Filipinos to contact Aguinaldo for a peaceful settlement of the conflict. On August 9, the Manila lawyer [[Pedro Paterno]] met with Aguinaldo at Biak-na-Bato with a proposal for peace based on reforms and amnesty. In succeeding months, Paterno conducted [[shuttle diplomacy]], acting as an intermediary between de Rivera and Aguinaldo. On December 14–15, 1897, Aguinaldo signed the [[Pact of Biak-na-Bato]] under which Aguinaldo effectively agreed to end hostilities and to dissolve his government in exchange for amnesty and "₱800,000 (Mexican)" (Aguinaldo's description of the $MXN800,000{{efn|name=mex-us|1=The Mexican dollar at the time was worth about {{US$|0.50|1897|link=yes}}.<ref name="5tlLq" />{{sfn|Halstead|1898|p=[https://archive.org/details/storyphilippine00halsgoog/page/n191 <!-- quote=cents. --> 177]}} The ''[[Philippine peso fuerte|peso fuerte]]'' and the Mexican dollar were interchangeable at par.}} amount) as an indemnity.{{sfn|Zaide|1999|p=252}}<ref name="Aguinaldo1899ch2" /> The documents were signed on December 14–15, 1897. On December 23, Aguinaldo and other revolutionary officials departed for Hong Kong to enter [[Hong Kong Junta|voluntary exile]]. MXN$400,000,{{efn|name=mex-us}} representing the first installment of the indemnity, was deposited into Hong Kong banks. In exile, Aguinaldo reorganized his revolutionary government into the "Hong Kong Junta" and enlarged it into the "Supreme Council of the Nation".{{sfn|Zaide|1999|p=253}} | In March 1897, [[Fernando Primo de Rivera, 1st Marquis of Estella]], the Spanish [[Governor-General of the Philippines]], had been encouraging prominent Filipinos to contact Aguinaldo for a peaceful settlement of the conflict. On August 9, the Manila lawyer [[Pedro Paterno]] met with Aguinaldo at Biak-na-Bato with a proposal for peace based on reforms and amnesty. In the succeeding months, Paterno conducted [[shuttle diplomacy]], acting as an intermediary between de Rivera and Aguinaldo. On December 14–15, 1897, Aguinaldo signed the [[Pact of Biak-na-Bato]] under which Aguinaldo effectively agreed to end hostilities and to dissolve his government in exchange for amnesty and "₱800,000 (Mexican)" (Aguinaldo's description of the $MXN800,000{{efn|name=mex-us|1=The Mexican dollar at the time was worth about {{US$|0.50|1897|link=yes}}.<ref name="5tlLq" />{{sfn|Halstead|1898|p=[https://archive.org/details/storyphilippine00halsgoog/page/n191 <!-- quote=cents. --> 177]}} The ''[[Philippine peso fuerte|peso fuerte]]'' and the Mexican dollar were interchangeable at par.}} amount) as an indemnity.{{sfn|Zaide|1999|p=252}}<ref name="Aguinaldo1899ch2" /> The documents were signed on December 14–15, 1897. On December 23, Aguinaldo and other revolutionary officials departed for Hong Kong to enter [[Hong Kong Junta|voluntary exile]]. MXN$400,000,{{efn|name=mex-us}} representing the first installment of the indemnity, was deposited into Hong Kong banks. In exile, Aguinaldo reorganized his revolutionary government into the "Hong Kong Junta" and enlarged it into the "Supreme Council of the Nation".{{sfn|Zaide|1999|p=253}} | ||
===Return to the Philippines=== | ===Return to the Philippines=== | ||
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===Declaration of independence and revolutionary government=== | ===Declaration of independence and revolutionary government=== | ||
{{main|Philippine Declaration of Independence|Revolutionary Government of the Philippines}} | {{main|Philippine Declaration of Independence|Revolutionary Government of the Philippines}} | ||
On June 12, Aguinaldo promulgated the [[Philippine Declaration of Independence]] from Spain in his own [[Aguinaldo Shrine|mansion house]] in Cavite El Viejo, believing that declaration would inspire the Filipino people to eagerly rise against the Spaniards. On June 18, he issued a decree formally establishing his dictatorial government in which he also provided the organization of the local government and the establishment and the composition of the Revolutionary Congress.<ref name="7Iu6Y" /> | On June 12, Aguinaldo promulgated the [[Philippine Declaration of Independence]] from Spain in his own [[Aguinaldo Shrine|mansion house]] in Cavite El Viejo, believing that declaration would inspire the Filipino people to eagerly rise against the Spaniards. On June 18, he issued a decree formally establishing his dictatorial government in which he also provided for the organization of the local government and the establishment and the composition of the Revolutionary Congress.<ref name="7Iu6Y" /> | ||
On June 23, Aguinaldo issued a decree replacing his dictatorial government with a revolutionary government with himself as president upon the recommendation of his adviser [[Apolinario Mabini]]. The decree defined the organization of the central government and the establishment and the election of delegates to the Revolutionary Congress and to prepare the shift from a revolutionary government to a republic.<ref name="VGm8i" /><ref name="QD8cH" /> | On June 23, Aguinaldo issued a decree replacing his dictatorial government with a revolutionary government with himself as president upon the recommendation of his adviser [[Apolinario Mabini]]. The decree defined the organization of the central government and the establishment and the election of delegates to the Revolutionary Congress and to prepare for the shift from a revolutionary government to a republic.<ref name="VGm8i" /><ref name="QD8cH" /> | ||
{{Clear}} | {{Clear}} | ||
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==First Philippine Republic== | ==First Philippine Republic== | ||
[[File:President Emilio Aguinal Official Portrait at Malacañang Palace.jpg|thumb|upright=0.8|Official Malacañan Palace portrait of Aguinaldo]] | |||
The [[First Philippine Republic]] was formally established with the proclamation of the [[Malolos Constitution]] on January 21, 1899, in [[Malolos]], [[Bulacan]] and endured until capture of Aguinaldo by the American forces on March 23, 1901, in [[Palanan, Isabela]], which effectively dissolved the First Republic. Aguinaldo wrote in [[Tarlac]] during the First Republic the [[Tagalog language|Tagalog]] manuscript of his autobiographical work, which would later be translated by [[Felipe Buencamino]] into Spanish and released as ''Reseña Veridica de la Revolucion Filipina'' (in English, ''True Account of the Philippine Revolution'').<ref name="7f9VZ" /> | The [[First Philippine Republic]] was formally established with the proclamation of the [[Malolos Constitution]] on January 21, 1899, in [[Malolos]], [[Bulacan]] and endured until capture of Aguinaldo by the American forces on March 23, 1901, in [[Palanan, Isabela]], which effectively dissolved the First Republic. Aguinaldo wrote in [[Tarlac]] during the First Republic the [[Tagalog language|Tagalog]] manuscript of his autobiographical work, which would later be translated by [[Felipe Buencamino]] into Spanish and released as ''Reseña Veridica de la Revolucion Filipina'' (in English, ''True Account of the Philippine Revolution'').<ref name="7f9VZ" /> | ||
[[File:Emilio Aguinaldo boarding USS Vicksburg.jpg|thumb|right|Aguinaldo boarding {{USS|Vicksburg|PG-11|6}} following his capture in 1901]] | [[File:Emilio Aguinaldo boarding USS Vicksburg.jpg|thumb|right|Aguinaldo boarding {{USS|Vicksburg|PG-11|6}} following his capture in 1901]] | ||
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==Controversies== | ==Controversies== | ||
===As president of a sovereign, independent Philippines=== | |||
{{main article|Sovereignty of the Philippines}} | |||
Aguinaldo is described as president of the Philippines in some official and authoritative sources in connection with insurgent governments he headed in revolution against outside sovereignties holding the Philippines as a territorial possession.{{efn|name="as president"}}<ref>Philippine Supreme Court decisions [https://elibrary.judiciary.gov.ph/thebookshelf/showdocs/1/53099 G.R. No. 192935], identifying Aguinaldo as the beginning of presidential succession, and [https://elibrary.judiciary.gov.ph/thebookshelf/showdocs/1/66067 G.R. No. 248395], identifying the 1899 constitution as the beginning of constitutional succession.</ref><ref>[https://archive.org/details/the-framing-of-the-philippine-constitution/page/n172/mode/1up?q=malolos comments] by 1935 Constitutional Convention delegate Jose Aruego</ref> | |||
=== Execution of Bonifacio brothers === | === Execution of Bonifacio brothers === | ||
Bonifacio refused to recognize the revolutionary government that was elected in the [[Tejeros Convention]] and reasserted his authority via the [[Acta de Tejeros]] and the [[Naic Military Agreement]]. He accused the [[Magdalo (Katipunan faction)|Magdalo faction]] of treason and issued orders that are contradictory and contravention to the revolutionary government.{{sfn|Agoncillo|1990|p=188}} On April 25, 1897, several complaints were sent to Aguinaldo, notably by Severino de las Alas, a known supporter and loyalist of Bonifacio, along with Jose Coronel, and many others, that Bonifacio and his men ransacked, pillaged and burned the town of [[Indang, Cavite|Indang]], stealing the carabaos and other work animals by force and killed them for food and terrorized the townspeople for being unable to give enough supplies and other provisions due to poor harvest.<ref name="13gii">{{cite web|title=Artemio Ricarte on the arrest and execution of Bonifacio|url=http://malacanang.gov.ph/3622-artemio-ricarte-on-the-arrest-and-execution-of-bonifacio/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130625164313/http://malacanang.gov.ph/3622-artemio-ricarte-on-the-arrest-and-execution-of-bonifacio/|archive-date=June 25, 2013|website=Gov PH|access-date=September 14, 2016}}</ref><ref name="Revolt of the Masses">{{cite book |last=Agoncillo |first=Teodoro |author-link=Teodoro Agoncillo |title=The Revolt of the Masses: The story of Bonifacio and the Katipunan |publisher=University of the Philippines Press |location=Quezon City |year=1996 |orig-year=1956 |isbn=971-8711-06-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SV_BAQAACAAJ |pages=259, 275}}</ref><ref name="The Katipunan and the Revolution: Memoirs of a General">{{harvnb|Alvarez|1992a}}.</ref> Aguinaldo was then forced to order the arrest of Bonifacio. After the trials, Andrés and his brother, Procopio, were ordered by the Consejo | Bonifacio refused to recognize the revolutionary government that was elected in the [[Tejeros Convention]] and reasserted his authority via the [[Acta de Tejeros]] and the [[Naic Military Agreement]]. He accused the [[Magdalo (Katipunan faction)|Magdalo faction]] of treason and issued orders that are contradictory and contravention to the revolutionary government.{{sfn|Agoncillo|1990|p=188}} On April 25, 1897, several complaints were sent to Aguinaldo, notably by Severino de las Alas, a known supporter and loyalist of Bonifacio, along with Jose Coronel, and many others, that Bonifacio and his men ransacked, pillaged and burned the town of [[Indang, Cavite|Indang]], stealing the carabaos and other work animals by force and killed them for food and terrorized the townspeople for being unable to give enough supplies and other provisions due to poor harvest.<ref name="13gii">{{cite web|title=Artemio Ricarte on the arrest and execution of Bonifacio|url=http://malacanang.gov.ph/3622-artemio-ricarte-on-the-arrest-and-execution-of-bonifacio/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130625164313/http://malacanang.gov.ph/3622-artemio-ricarte-on-the-arrest-and-execution-of-bonifacio/|archive-date=June 25, 2013|website=Gov PH|access-date=September 14, 2016}}</ref><ref name="Revolt of the Masses">{{cite book |last=Agoncillo |first=Teodoro |author-link=Teodoro Agoncillo |title=The Revolt of the Masses: The story of Bonifacio and the Katipunan |publisher=University of the Philippines Press |location=Quezon City |year=1996 |orig-year=1956 |isbn=971-8711-06-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SV_BAQAACAAJ |pages=259, 275}}</ref><ref name="The Katipunan and the Revolution: Memoirs of a General">{{harvnb|Alvarez|1992a}}.</ref> Aguinaldo was then forced to order the arrest of Bonifacio. After the trials, Andrés and his brother, Procopio, were ordered by the Consejo de la Guerra (Council of War) to be executed by firing squad under the command of Major [[Lazaro Macapagal]] on May 10, 1897, near Mount Nagpatong, Mount Buntis, Mount Pumutok, and [[Maragondon, Cavite]].<ref name="zds2o" /> Aguinaldo had pardoned the Bonifacio brothers and that they should be exiled in Pico de Loro, but [[Pío del Pilar]] and [[Mariano Noriel]], both former supporters and loyalist of Bonifacio, along with other high-ranking generals of the revolution, forced Aguinaldo to withdraw the order for the sake of preserving unity.{{sfn|Zaide|1999|p=249}} According to Aguinaldo, in his two books "Mga Gunita ng Himagsikan" and "A Second Look at America", he stated that his withdrawal of the commutation order/exile did not mean immediate implementation of the death verdict, that Noriel had misconstrued this and acted hastily. He says he wanted a little more time for a cooling-off period so that eventually the Bonifacio brothers would be forgiven and pardoned. | ||
===Assassination of Luna=== | ===Assassination of Luna=== | ||
{{ | {{Main|Antonio Luna#Assassination and aftermath}} | ||
[[Antonio Luna]] was a highly regarded general in the revolution who was sometimes at odds with Aguinaldo. On June 2, 1899, Luna received one telegram (he failed to receive two others) sent by Aguinaldo himself | [[Antonio Luna]] was a highly regarded general in the revolution who was sometimes at odds with Aguinaldo. On June 2, 1899, Luna received one telegram (he failed to receive two others) sent by Aguinaldo himself. According to Ambeth Ocampo, the message that Aguinaldo sent stated "Felipe Buencamino is detained without ordering the formation of the case. I await your reply to my previous telegram where I request the basis for your accusation. Beseech urgency."<ref>{{cite news|url=https://lifestyle.inquirer.net/316651/discrepancies-and-more-questions-about-lunas-deadly-p3-2m-telegram/ |title=The Luna telegram: Not so 'deadly' after all|date=December 9, 2018|newspaper=Philippine Daily Inquiter}}</ref> | ||
Luna wrote to [[Arcadio Maxilom]], military commander of [[Cebu]], to stand firm in the war.{{sfn|Jose|1972|p=377}} Luna set off from [[Bayambang]], first by train, then on horseback, and eventually in three carriages, to Nueva Ecija with 25 of his men. | Luna wrote to [[Arcadio Maxilom]], military commander of [[Cebu]], to stand firm in the war.{{sfn|Jose|1972|p=377}} Luna set off from [[Bayambang]], first by train, then on horseback, and eventually in three carriages, to Nueva Ecija with 25 of his men. | ||
<ref name="Dumindin 2006">{{cite web|last=Dumindin|first=Arnaldo|title=June 5, 1899: Assassination of Gen. Antonio Luna|url=http://philippineamericanwar.webs.com/lunaassassination.htm|access-date=June 29, 2012|archive-date=June 20, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120620032127/http://philippineamericanwar.webs.com/lunaassassination.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="malolos crisis">{{cite book|last=Agoncillo|first=Teodoro|title=Malolos: The Crisis of the Republic|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LnxvAAAACAAJ|year=1960|publisher=University of the Philippines Press |isbn=978-971-542-096-9}}</ref> During the journey, two of the carriages broke down and so he proceeded with just one carriage with [[Paco Roman|Colonel Francisco Román]] and Captain Eduardo Rusca, having earlier shed his cavalry escort.{{citation needed|date=July 2019}} On June 4, Luna sent a telegram to Aguinaldo to confirm his arrival. Upon arriving at Cabanatuan on June 5, Luna alone proceeded to | <ref name="Dumindin 2006">{{cite web|last=Dumindin|first=Arnaldo|title=June 5, 1899: Assassination of Gen. Antonio Luna|url=http://philippineamericanwar.webs.com/lunaassassination.htm|access-date=June 29, 2012|archive-date=June 20, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120620032127/http://philippineamericanwar.webs.com/lunaassassination.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="malolos crisis">{{cite book|last=Agoncillo|first=Teodoro|title=Malolos: The Crisis of the Republic|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LnxvAAAACAAJ|year=1960|publisher=University of the Philippines Press |isbn=978-971-542-096-9}}</ref> During the journey, two of the carriages broke down and so he proceeded with just one carriage with [[Paco Roman|Colonel Francisco Román]] and Captain Eduardo Rusca, having earlier shed his cavalry escort.{{citation needed|date=July 2019}} On June 4, Luna sent a telegram to Aguinaldo to confirm his arrival. Upon arriving at Cabanatuan on June 5, Luna alone proceeded to headquarters to communicate with the president. As he went up the stairs, he ran into two men: Felipe Buencamino, [[Secretary of Foreign Affairs (Philippines)|Minister of Foreign Affairs]] and a member of the Cabinet; and Captain Pedro Janolino. The commander of the Kawit Battalion, Janolino was an old enemy whom Luna had disarmed for insubordination, and once threatened with arrest for favoring American autonomy. General Luna was told that Aguinaldo had left for [[San Isidro, Nueva Ecija|San Isidro]] in [[Nueva Ecija]]. (He had actually gone to [[Bamban]] in Tarlac.) Enraged, Luna asked why he had not been told that the meeting had been canceled.{{sfn|Jose|1972|pp=429–436}} | ||
The general and the captain exchanged heated words as Luna was about to depart. In the [[plaza]], a rifle shot rang out. Still outraged and furious, Luna rushed down the stairs and met Janolino, accompanied by some elements of the Kawit Battalion. Janolino swung his [[Bolo knife|bolo]] at Luna, wounding him in the head. Janolino's men fired at Luna while others started stabbing him even as he tried to fire his revolver at one of his attackers.{{sfn|Jose|1972|pp=429–436}} He staggered out into the plaza where Román and Rusca were rushing to his aid, but as he lay dying, they too were set upon and shot, with Román being killed and Rusca being severely wounded. Luna received more than 30 wounds{{sfn|Jose|1972|p=436}} and uttered "Traitors! Assassins!"{{sfn|Jose|1972|pp=429–436}} He was hurriedly buried in the [[churchyard]], and Aguinaldo [[relief (military)|relieved]] Luna's officers and men from the field, including General [[Venacio Concepción]], whose headquarters in [[Angeles, Pampanga]], Aguinaldo besieged the same day that Luna was assassinated. | The general and the captain exchanged heated words as Luna was about to depart. In the [[plaza]], a rifle shot rang out. Still outraged and furious, Luna rushed down the stairs and met Janolino, accompanied by some elements of the Kawit Battalion. Janolino swung his [[Bolo knife|bolo]] at Luna, wounding him in the head. Janolino's men fired at Luna while others started stabbing him even as he tried to fire his revolver at one of his attackers.{{sfn|Jose|1972|pp=429–436}} He staggered out into the plaza where Román and Rusca were rushing to his aid, but as he lay dying, they too were set upon and shot, with Román being killed and Rusca being severely wounded. Luna received more than 30 wounds{{sfn|Jose|1972|p=436}} and uttered "Traitors! Assassins!"{{sfn|Jose|1972|pp=429–436}} He was hurriedly buried in the [[churchyard]], and Aguinaldo [[relief (military)|relieved]] Luna's officers and men from the field, including General [[Venacio Concepción]], whose headquarters in [[Angeles, Pampanga]], Aguinaldo besieged the same day that Luna was assassinated. | ||
Immediately after Luna's death, confusion reigned on both sides. The Americans even thought that Luna had taken over to replace Aguinaldo.{{sfn|Jose|1972|p=375}} Luna's death was publicly declared only by June 8, and a circular providing details of the event released by June 13. Investigations were supposedly made concerning Luna's death, but not one person was [[convicted]].{{sfn|Jose|1972|pp=388–392}} Later, General | Immediately after Luna's death, confusion reigned on both sides. The Americans even thought that Luna had taken over to replace Aguinaldo.{{sfn|Jose|1972|p=375}} Luna's death was publicly declared only by June 8, and a circular providing details of the event was released by June 13. Investigations were supposedly made concerning Luna's death, but not one person was [[convicted]].{{sfn|Jose|1972|pp=388–392}} Later, General Pantaleón García said in 1921 that he was verbally ordered by Aguinaldo to conduct the assassination of Luna at Cabanatuan. His sickness then prevented his participation in the assassination.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.filipinaslibrary.org.ph/biblio/106315/|title=Declaration of Pantaleón Garcia, 5 June 1921, stating Aguinaldo gave him verbal orders to assassinate Antonio Luna but he was ill and couldn't comply|date=June 5, 1921|publisher=[[Ayala Museum|Filipinas Heritage Library]]}}</ref> Aguinaldo would be firm in his stand that he had nothing to do with the assassination of Luna.<ref name="MjLoO">Aguinaldo, Emilio. (1964). ''Mga Gunita ng Himagsikan''.</ref> | ||
==American era== | ==American era== | ||
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In 1935, the Philippines became a [[Commonwealth of the Philippines|commonwealth]], and [[1935 Philippine presidential election|presidential elections]] were held as part of a ten-year transition to complete independence. Aguinaldo returned to public life and ran for the presidency as the candidate of the [[National Socialist Party (Philippines)|National Socialist Party]] (no relation to the German [[Nazi Party]]) against the highly popular [[Nacionalista Party]] candidate [[Manuel L. Quezon]] and Republican Party candidate [[Gregorio Aglipay]]. However, Aguinaldo's capture by the Americans in 1901 as well as his allegations in the deaths of Bonifacio and Luna had since made him an unpopular figure among the Filipino people, and he lost to Quezon in a landslide, gaining only 17.5% of the popular vote. | In 1935, the Philippines became a [[Commonwealth of the Philippines|commonwealth]], and [[1935 Philippine presidential election|presidential elections]] were held as part of a ten-year transition to complete independence. Aguinaldo returned to public life and ran for the presidency as the candidate of the [[National Socialist Party (Philippines)|National Socialist Party]] (no relation to the German [[Nazi Party]]) against the highly popular [[Nacionalista Party]] candidate [[Manuel L. Quezon]] and Republican Party candidate [[Gregorio Aglipay]]. However, Aguinaldo's capture by the Americans in 1901 as well as his allegations in the deaths of Bonifacio and Luna had since made him an unpopular figure among the Filipino people, and he lost to Quezon in a landslide, gaining only 17.5% of the popular vote. | ||
Despite his decisive defeat, however, Aguinaldo refused to accept the results of the election, | Despite his decisive defeat, however, Aguinaldo refused to accept the results of the election, asserting that it was rigged against him.<ref>{{Cite web|date=September 21, 1935|title=Coalition ticket wins by landslide, September 21, 1935 |url=https://philippinesfreepress.wordpress.com/1935/09/21/coalition-ticket-wins-by-landslide-september-21-1935/|access-date=August 28, 2021|website=The Philippines Free Press Online|language=en}}</ref> In Cavite, the only province he had won, Aguinaldo's supporters plotted a rally in Manila to disrupt Quezon's inauguration and even assassinate him. However, this planned event was never actually carried out. Aguinaldo continued to criticize Quezon throughout the latter's presidency, expressing [[Antisemitism|anti-semitic]] views when opposing Quezon's plan to shelter Jews fleeing from [[the Holocaust]].<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pPTKDwAAQBAJ&q=emilio+aguinaldo+jews&pg=PA133|title=Philippine Sanctuary: A Holocaust Odyssey|first=Bonnie M.|last=Harris|year=2020|publisher=University of Wisconsin Pres|isbn=978-0299324605|via=Google Books}}</ref> In 1939, Aguinaldo vigorously expressed his antisemitism by echoing bigoted notions that Jewish people were "dangerous" and "selfishly materialistic".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Harris |first1=Bonnie M. |title=Philippine Sanctuary: A Holocaust Odyssey |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pPTKDwAAQBAJ&dq=emilio+aguinaldo+jews&pg=PA133 |publisher=University of Wisconsin Pres |page=113 |language=en |date= 2020|isbn=978-0299324605 }}</ref> | ||
The two men formally reconciled in 1941, when Quezon moved Flag Day to June 12 to commemorate the proclamation of Philippine independence.<ref name="hist" /> | The two men formally reconciled in 1941, when Quezon moved Flag Day to June 12 to commemorate the proclamation of Philippine independence.<ref name="hist" /> | ||
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Following the retreat of American forces, Aguinaldo continued his collaboration with the Japanese. He was appointed as a member of both the provisional Council of State as well as the [[Preparatory Committee for Philippine Independence]], which was tasked with creating a new constitution for a Japanese [[puppet state]] in the Philippines. Aguinaldo also played a key role in the [[Kempeitai]]'s campaign to suppress [[Philippine resistance against Japan|anti-Japanese resistance]], urging guerrilla fighters to lay down their arms and surrender to Japan.<ref>{{harvnb|Ara|2015|p=173}}</ref> Aguinaldo was present at the inauguration ceremony of the [[Second Philippine Republic]] on October 14, 1943, raising the flag with Artemio Ricarte, who had returned to the Philippines from Japan at the request of Japanese Prime Minister [[Hideki Tojo]]. The Japanese had considered making Aguinaldo president of the republic, a proposal which was supported by Aguinaldo himself, but he was ultimately passed up in favor of former [[Supreme Court of the Philippines|Supreme Court]] justice [[Jose P. Laurel]]. | Following the retreat of American forces, Aguinaldo continued his collaboration with the Japanese. He was appointed as a member of both the provisional Council of State as well as the [[Preparatory Committee for Philippine Independence]], which was tasked with creating a new constitution for a Japanese [[puppet state]] in the Philippines. Aguinaldo also played a key role in the [[Kempeitai]]'s campaign to suppress [[Philippine resistance against Japan|anti-Japanese resistance]], urging guerrilla fighters to lay down their arms and surrender to Japan.<ref>{{harvnb|Ara|2015|p=173}}</ref> Aguinaldo was present at the inauguration ceremony of the [[Second Philippine Republic]] on October 14, 1943, raising the flag with Artemio Ricarte, who had returned to the Philippines from Japan at the request of Japanese Prime Minister [[Hideki Tojo]]. The Japanese had considered making Aguinaldo president of the republic, a proposal which was supported by Aguinaldo himself, but he was ultimately passed up in favor of former [[Supreme Court of the Philippines|Supreme Court]] justice [[Jose P. Laurel]]. | ||
=== Capture, investigation and | === Capture, investigation, and amnesty === | ||
After US forces [[Philippines campaign (1944–1945)|returned to the Philippines]] in October 1944, Aguinaldo went into hiding in order to avoid being captured and potentially killed. During the [[Battle of Manila (1945)|Battle of Manila]], however, members of the [[Marking Guerrillas]] resistance force were able to track his whereabouts, and arrested him on February 8, 1945. Aguinaldo was then placed under [[house arrest]] as the US Army's [[Counterintelligence Corps]] investigated his collaboration with the Japanese. Despite his claims that he had secretly remained loyal to the US throughout the war, and that he, as well as other Axis collaborators, had only been forced to collaborate with Japan under great duress and should therefore all be granted amnesty, the People's Court of the Philippines nonetheless charged Aguinaldo with 11 counts of [[treason]] for his "wholehearted" support for and collaboration with the Empire of Japan.<ref>{{harvnb|Ara|2015|p=184}}</ref> | After US forces [[Philippines campaign (1944–1945)|returned to the Philippines]] in October 1944, Aguinaldo went into hiding in order to avoid being captured and potentially killed. During the [[Battle of Manila (1945)|Battle of Manila]], however, members of the [[Marking Guerrillas]] resistance force were able to track his whereabouts, and arrested him on February 8, 1945. Aguinaldo was then placed under [[house arrest]] as the US Army's [[Counterintelligence Corps]] investigated his collaboration with the Japanese. Despite his claims that he had secretly remained loyal to the US throughout the war, and that he, as well as other Axis collaborators, had only been forced to collaborate with Japan under great duress and should therefore all be granted amnesty, the People's Court of the Philippines nonetheless charged Aguinaldo with 11 counts of [[treason]] for his "wholehearted" support for and collaboration with the Empire of Japan.<ref>{{harvnb|Ara|2015|p=184}}</ref> | ||
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He was conferred an honorary Doctor of Laws, Honoris Causa, by the [[University of the Philippines]] in 1953. | He was conferred an honorary Doctor of Laws, Honoris Causa, by the [[University of the Philippines]] in 1953. | ||
In 1958, when asked by the Filipino journalist Guillermo Gómez Rivera if he regretted anything in his life, Emilio Aguinaldo stated:<ref>{{Cite web |date=June 10, 2024 |title=La confesión más dura del primer presidente de Filipinas: "Me arrepiento de haberme independizado de España" |url=https://www.abc.es/historia/confesion-dura-primer-presidente-filipinas-arrepiento-haberme-20240610095937-nt.html |access-date=August 12, 2024 |website=Diario ABC |language=es}}</ref>{{blockquote|"Yes. I am regretful in large part for having risen up against Spain and, that is why, when the funerals were held in Manila of King Alfonso of Spain, I appeared at the cathedral for the surprise of the Spaniards. And they asked me why I had come to the funeral of the King of Spain against whom I rose up in rebellion... And, I told them that he is still my King because under Spain we were always Spanish subjects, or citizens, but now, under the United States, we are only a consumer market for their exports, if not pariahs, because they never made us citizens of any state of the United States... And the Spaniards made way for me and treated me as their brother on that significant day..."|President Emilio Aguinaldo|title=Interview to Aguinaldo and his wife.|source=December 16th, 1958. Cavite, Philippines.}}On May 12, 1962, President [[Diosdado Macapagal]] changed the celebration of Independence Day from July 4 to June 12 to honor Aguinaldo and the Revolution of 1898, rather than the establishment of the [[Insular Government of the Philippine Islands]] by the United States.<ref name="fVi0V" /><ref name="ezEZw" /> Although in poor health by that point, Aguinaldo attended the 1962 Independence Day observances.<ref name="t7NTz" /> On August 4, 1964, Republic Act No. 4166 officially proclaimed June 12 to be [[Independence Day (Philippines)|Philippine Independence Day]] and renamed the Fourth of July holiday as "Philippine Republic Day".<ref name="RA4166" /> | In 1958, when asked by the Filipino journalist Guillermo Gómez Rivera if he regretted anything in his life, Emilio Aguinaldo stated:<ref>{{Cite web |date=June 10, 2024 |title=La confesión más dura del primer presidente de Filipinas: "Me arrepiento de haberme independizado de España" |url=https://www.abc.es/historia/confesion-dura-primer-presidente-filipinas-arrepiento-haberme-20240610095937-nt.html |access-date=August 12, 2024 |website=Diario ABC |language=es}}</ref>{{blockquote|"Yes. I am regretful in large part for having risen up against Spain and, that is why, when the funerals were held in Manila of King Alfonso of Spain, I appeared at the cathedral for the surprise of the Spaniards. And they asked me why I had come to the funeral of the King of Spain against whom I rose up in rebellion... And, I told them that he is still my King because under Spain we were always Spanish subjects, or citizens, but now, under the United States, we are only a consumer market for their exports, if not pariahs, because they never made us citizens of any state of the United States... And the Spaniards made way for me and treated me as their brother on that significant day..."|President Emilio Aguinaldo|title=Interview to Aguinaldo and his wife.|source=December 16th, 1958. Cavite, Philippines.}} | ||
[[File:President Diosdado Macapagal and Emilio Aguinaldo.jpg|thumb|Aguinaldo (left) shaking hands with President [[Diosdado Macapagal]] (right)]] | |||
On May 12, 1962, President [[Diosdado Macapagal]] changed the celebration of Independence Day from July 4 to June 12 to honor Aguinaldo and the Revolution of 1898, rather than the establishment of the [[Insular Government of the Philippine Islands]] by the United States.<ref name="fVi0V" /><ref name="ezEZw" /> Although in poor health by that point, Aguinaldo attended the 1962 Independence Day observances.<ref name="t7NTz" /> On August 4, 1964, Republic Act No. 4166 officially proclaimed June 12 to be [[Independence Day (Philippines)|Philippine Independence Day]] and renamed the Fourth of July holiday as "Philippine Republic Day".<ref name="RA4166" /> | |||
==Personal life== | ==Personal life== | ||
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On January 1, 1896, he married his first wife, [[Hilaria Aguinaldo|Hilaria del Rosario]] (1877–1921). They had five children: Carmen Aguinaldo-Melencio, Emilio "Jun" R. Aguinaldo Jr., Maria Aguinaldo-Poblete, Cristina Aguinaldo-Suntay, and Miguel Aguinaldo. Hilaria died of pulmonary tuberculosis on March 6, 1921, at the age of 44. Nine years later, on July 14, 1930, Aguinaldo married his second wife, Maria Agoncillo (1879–1963), at [[Barasoain Church]]. She died on May 29, 1963, a year before Aguinaldo himself.<ref name="TPmCK" /> | On January 1, 1896, he married his first wife, [[Hilaria Aguinaldo|Hilaria del Rosario]] (1877–1921). They had five children: Carmen Aguinaldo-Melencio, Emilio "Jun" R. Aguinaldo Jr., Maria Aguinaldo-Poblete, Cristina Aguinaldo-Suntay, and Miguel Aguinaldo. Hilaria died of pulmonary tuberculosis on March 6, 1921, at the age of 44. Nine years later, on July 14, 1930, Aguinaldo married his second wife, Maria Agoncillo (1879–1963), at [[Barasoain Church]]. She died on May 29, 1963, a year before Aguinaldo himself.<ref name="TPmCK" /> | ||
His grandsons Emilio B. Aguinaldo III and [[Reynaldo Aguinaldo]] served three terms as mayor (2007–2016) and vice-mayor of his hometown Kawit, Cavite, respectively. A granddaughter, [[Ameurfina Melencio-Herrera]], was appointed [[Associate Justice]] of the [[Supreme Court of the Philippines]], serving from 1979 to 1992. One of his great-grandsons, [[Joseph Emilio Abaya]], served as a member of the [[House of Representatives of the Philippines|Philippine House of Representatives]] and represented Cavite's [[Legislative districts of Cavite|first district]], which contained their hometown, Kawit, from 2004 to 2012, and he was appointed [[Secretary of Transportation and Communications (Philippines)|Secretary of Transportation and Communications]] in 2012, a post he that served in until 2016. Another great-grandson, Emilio "Orange" M. Aguinaldo IV, married [[ABS-CBN]] news reporter [[Bernadette Sembrano]] in 2007. His great-granddaughter, Lizzie Aguinaldo, is a singer under [[Star Music]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Mercado |first=Josh |title=Meet music newcomer Lizzie Aguinaldo |url=https:// | His grandsons Emilio B. Aguinaldo III and [[Reynaldo Aguinaldo]] served three terms as mayor (2007–2016) and vice-mayor of his hometown Kawit, Cavite, respectively. A granddaughter, [[Ameurfina Melencio-Herrera]], was appointed [[Associate Justice]] of the [[Supreme Court of the Philippines]], serving from 1979 to 1992. One of his great-grandsons, [[Joseph Emilio Abaya]], served as a member of the [[House of Representatives of the Philippines|Philippine House of Representatives]] and represented Cavite's [[Legislative districts of Cavite|first district]], which contained their hometown, Kawit, from 2004 to 2012, and he was appointed [[Secretary of Transportation and Communications (Philippines)|Secretary of Transportation and Communications]] in 2012, a post he that served in until 2016. Another great-grandson, Emilio "Orange" M. Aguinaldo IV, married [[ABS-CBN]] news reporter [[Bernadette Sembrano]] in 2007. His great-granddaughter, Lizzie Aguinaldo, is a singer under [[Star Music]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Mercado |first=Josh |title=Meet music newcomer Lizzie Aguinaldo |url=https://www.abs-cbn.com/entertainment/06/04/23/meet-music-newcomer-lizzie-aguinaldo |date=June 4, 2023 |website=ABS-CBN News |access-date=June 11, 2023}}</ref> | ||
During the revolt against Spain and subsequent conflicts with American forces, Aguinaldo supported the [[Philippine Independent Church]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Indigenous Christian Churches: Iglesia Filipina Independiente (Philippines: A Country Study) |url=http://countrystudies.us/philippines/48.htm |last=Dolan |first=Ronald E. |publisher=Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1991 |website=Country Studies |access-date=November 5, 2022}}</ref> He became a long-time member, but reverted to Roman Catholicism later in life.<ref name="religion"/> | During the revolt against Spain and subsequent conflicts with American forces, Aguinaldo supported the [[Philippine Independent Church]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Indigenous Christian Churches: Iglesia Filipina Independiente (Philippines: A Country Study) |url=http://countrystudies.us/philippines/48.htm |last=Dolan |first=Ronald E. |publisher=Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1991 |website=Country Studies |access-date=November 5, 2022}}</ref> He became a long-time member, but reverted to Roman Catholicism later in life.<ref name="religion"/> | ||
| Line 327: | Line 335: | ||
* 2013 – [[Nico Antonio]] in ''[[Katipunan (TV series)|Katipunan]]''. | * 2013 – [[Nico Antonio]] in ''[[Katipunan (TV series)|Katipunan]]''. | ||
* 2014 – Jun Nayra in ''[[Bonifacio: Ang Unang Pangulo]]''. | * 2014 – Jun Nayra in ''[[Bonifacio: Ang Unang Pangulo]]''. | ||
* 2015 – [[Mon Confiado]] in ''[[Heneral Luna]]'' and its | * 2015 – [[Mon Confiado]] in ''[[Heneral Luna]]'' and its sequels, ''[[Goyo: The Boy General]]'' (2018) and ''[[Quezon (film)|Quezon]]'' (2025). | ||
* 2018 – Gonzalo Gonzalez in ''[[Quezon's Game]]''. | * 2018 – Gonzalo Gonzalez in ''[[Quezon's Game]]''. | ||
* 2018 – [[Jolo Revilla]] in ''Agosto Uno, Kasaysayang Nakalimutan'' a documentary film. | * 2018 – [[Jolo Revilla]] in ''Agosto Uno, Kasaysayang Nakalimutan'' a documentary film. | ||
| Line 346: | Line 354: | ||
<ref name="ooikg1-129">{{Cite book | editor1-last = OOI | editor1-first = Keat Gin | year = 2004 | title = Southeast Asia: a historical encyclopedia, from Angkor Wat to East Timor (3 vols) | url = http://www.ebook3000.com/dictionary/Southeast-Asia--A-Historical-Encyclopedia--From-Angkor-Wat-to-East-Timor--3-Volume-Set-_132751.html | publisher = [[ABC-CLIO]] | location = Santa Barbara | oclc = 646857823 | isbn = 978-1576077702 | page = [https://books.google.com/books?id=QKgraWbb7yoC&pg=PA129 129] | access-date = April 27, 2015 | archive-date = August 8, 2016 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160808051416/http://www.ebook3000.com/dictionary/Southeast-Asia--A-Historical-Encyclopedia--From-Angkor-Wat-to-East-Timor--3-Volume-Set-_132751.html | url-status = dead }}</ref> | <ref name="ooikg1-129">{{Cite book | editor1-last = OOI | editor1-first = Keat Gin | year = 2004 | title = Southeast Asia: a historical encyclopedia, from Angkor Wat to East Timor (3 vols) | url = http://www.ebook3000.com/dictionary/Southeast-Asia--A-Historical-Encyclopedia--From-Angkor-Wat-to-East-Timor--3-Volume-Set-_132751.html | publisher = [[ABC-CLIO]] | location = Santa Barbara | oclc = 646857823 | isbn = 978-1576077702 | page = [https://books.google.com/books?id=QKgraWbb7yoC&pg=PA129 129] | access-date = April 27, 2015 | archive-date = August 8, 2016 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160808051416/http://www.ebook3000.com/dictionary/Southeast-Asia--A-Historical-Encyclopedia--From-Angkor-Wat-to-East-Timor--3-Volume-Set-_132751.html | url-status = dead }}</ref> | ||
<ref name="turoth1">{{Cite book | last1 = Turot | first1 = Henri |trans-title=Emilio Aguinaldo, first Filipino president, 1898–1901 | url = http://quod.lib.umich.edu/p/philamer/ack8437.0001.001 | language = fr | title = Les hommes de révolution Aguinaldo et les Philippins | others = préface par Jean Jaures; translated by Mitchell Abidor | year = 1900 | publisher = Librairie Léopold Cerf | location = Paris | oclc = 838009722 | isbn = 978-1146599917}}</ref> | <ref name="turoth1">{{Cite book | last1 = Turot | first1 = Henri |trans-title=Emilio Aguinaldo, first Filipino president, 1898–1901 | url = http://quod.lib.umich.edu/p/philamer/ack8437.0001.001 | language = fr | title = Les hommes de révolution Aguinaldo et les Philippins | others = préface par Jean Jaures; translated by Mitchell Abidor | year = 1900 | publisher = Librairie Léopold Cerf | location = Paris | oclc = 838009722 | isbn = 978-1146599917}}</ref> | ||
<ref name=" | <ref name="Library">{{cite web|url=http://malacanang.gov.ph/presidents/first-republic/emilio-aguinaldo/ |title=Emilio Aguinaldo|work=Presidential Museum and Library|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121104144908/http://malacanang.gov.ph/presidents/first-republic/emilio-aguinaldo/|archive-date=November 4, 2012}}</ref> | ||
<ref name="iIBcw">{{cite web|url=http://malacanang.gov.ph/presidents/first-republic/emilio-aguinaldo/ |title=Emilio Aguinaldo|work=Malacaňan Palace Presidential Museum and Library|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121104144908/http://malacanang.gov.ph/presidents/first-republic/emilio-aguinaldo/|archive-date=November 4, 2012}}</ref> | <ref name="iIBcw">{{cite web|url=http://malacanang.gov.ph/presidents/first-republic/emilio-aguinaldo/ |title=Emilio Aguinaldo|work=Malacaňan Palace Presidential Museum and Library|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121104144908/http://malacanang.gov.ph/presidents/first-republic/emilio-aguinaldo/|archive-date=November 4, 2012}}</ref> | ||
<!-- | <!-- | ||
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* {{cite web |url=http://www.filipiniana.net/read_content.jsp?filename=PRR004000011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080527163125/http://www.filipiniana.net/read_content.jsp?filename=PRR004000011 |archive-date=May 27, 2008 |title=General Emilio Aguinaldo's 'Confession'|year=1948|language=tl|author=Emilio Aguinaldo}} | * {{cite web |url=http://www.filipiniana.net/read_content.jsp?filename=PRR004000011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080527163125/http://www.filipiniana.net/read_content.jsp?filename=PRR004000011 |archive-date=May 27, 2008 |title=General Emilio Aguinaldo's 'Confession'|year=1948|language=tl|author=Emilio Aguinaldo}} | ||
* {{Gutenberg author|id=5462|name=Emilio Aguinaldo}} | * {{Gutenberg author|id=5462|name=Emilio Aguinaldo}} | ||
* {{Internet Archive author|sname=Emilio | * {{Internet Archive author|sname=Emilio Aguinaldo}} | ||
{{s-start-collapsible|title=Offices and distinctions}} | {{s-start-collapsible|title=Offices and distinctions}} | ||
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{{Philippine presidents}} | {{Philippine presidents}} | ||
{{Unofficial Philippine Presidents}} | {{Unofficial Philippine Presidents}} | ||
{{ | {{Candidates in the 1935 Philippine presidential election}} | ||
{{Symbols of the Philippines}} | {{Symbols of the Philippines}} | ||
{{QSC Recipients}} | {{QSC Recipients}} | ||
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[[Category:Articles containing video clips]] | [[Category:Articles containing video clips]] | ||
[[Category:Aguinaldo family|Emilio]] | [[Category:Aguinaldo family|Emilio]] | ||
[[Category:National Socialist Party (Philippines) politicians]] | |||
[[Category:Candidates in the 1935 Philippine presidential election]] | [[Category:Candidates in the 1935 Philippine presidential election]] | ||
[[Category:Chiefs of staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines]] | [[Category:Chiefs of staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines]] | ||
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[[Category:Presidents of the Philippines]] | [[Category:Presidents of the Philippines]] | ||
[[Category:Recipients of the Quezon Service Cross]] | [[Category:Recipients of the Quezon Service Cross]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Filipino Roman Catholics]] | ||
[[Category:Tagalog people]] | [[Category:Tagalog people]] | ||
[[Category:World War II political leaders]] | [[Category:World War II political leaders]] | ||
[[Category:Recipients of the Presidential Medal of Merit (Philippines)]] | [[Category:Recipients of the Presidential Medal of Merit (Philippines)]] | ||
[[Category:People from the Spanish East Indies]] | [[Category:People from the Spanish East Indies]] | ||
Latest revision as of 02:01, 18 November 2025
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "redirect hatnote". Template:Family name hatnote Template:Use mdy dates Template:Use Philippine English Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Emilio Aguinaldo y Famy Template:Post-nominalsTemplate:Efn (Script error: No such module "IPA".: March 22, 1869Template:SpndFebruary 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. He led the Philippine forces first against Spain in the Philippine Revolution (1896–1898), then in the Spanish–American War (1898), and finally against the United States during the Philippine–American War (1899–1901). He is regarded in the Philippines as having been the country's first president during the period of the First Philippine Republic,[1] though he was not recognized as such outside of the revolutionary Philippines.
Aguinaldo is known as a national hero in the Philippines.[2] However, he was also known to be somewhat controversial due to his alleged involvement in the deaths of the revolutionary leader Andrés Bonifacio and general Antonio Luna, and for his collaboration with the Empire of Japan during their occupation of the Philippines in World War II.[3] Script error: No such module "anchor".
Early life and career
Emilio Aguinaldo was born on March 22, 1869Template:Efn in Cavite el Viejo (present-day Kawit) in the province of Cavite to Carlos Aguinaldo y Jamir and Trinidad Villanueva,Template:Efn a couple that had eight children, the seventh of whom was Emilio. He was baptized and raised in Roman Catholicism.[4] The Aguinaldo family was quite well-to-do as his father, Carlos Aguinaldo, was the community's appointed Gobernadorcillo (municipal governor) in the Spanish Viceregal administration.[5] He studied at Colegio de San Juan de Letran, but could not finish his studies due to an outbreak of cholera in 1882. On April 30th, 1888, he entered the lottery of the Spanish auxiliary conscription with number 221.[6]
He became a cabeza de barangay in 1893, before the Maura Law called for the reorganization of local governments. At the age of 25, Aguinaldo became Cavite el Viejo's first Gobernadorcillo Capitan Municipal (municipal governor-captain) while he was on a business trip in Mindoro.
Philippine Revolution
On January 1, 1895, Aguinaldo became a Freemason, joining Pilar Lodge No. 203, Imus, Cavite by the codename "Colon".[7]
On March 7, 1895, Santiago Alvarez, whose father was a Capitan Municipal (Mayor) of Noveleta, encouraged Aguinaldo to join the "Katipunan", a secret organization led by Andrés Bonifacio that was dedicated to the expulsion of the Spanish and the independence of the Philippines through armed force.Template:Sfn Aguinaldo joined the organization and used the nom de guerre Magdalo in honor of Mary Magdalene. The local chapter of Katipunan in Cavite was established and named Sangguniang Magdalo, and Aguinaldo's cousin Baldomero Aguinaldo was appointed leader.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
The Katipunan-led Philippine Revolution against the Spanish began in the last week of August 1896 in San Juan del Monte (now part of Metro Manila).Template:Sfn However, Aguinaldo and other Cavite rebels initially refused to join in the offensive for lack of arms.Template:Sfn Bonifacio and other rebels were forced to resort to guerrilla warfare, but Aguinaldo and the Cavite rebels won major victories in carefully planned and well-timed set-piece battles and temporarily drove the Spanish out of their area.Template:Sfn On August 31, 1896, Aguinaldo started the assault by beginning as a skirmish to the full-blown revolt Kawit Revolt. He marched with his army of bolomen to the town center of Kawit. Prior to the battle, Aguinaldo had strictly ordered his men not to kill anyone in his hometown. Upon his men's arrival at the town center, the guards, armed with Remingtons and unaware of the preceding events, were caught completely by surprise and surrendered immediately. The guns there were captured by the Katipuneros, and the revolt was a major success for Aguinaldo and his men. Later that afternoon, they raised the Magdalo flag at the town hall to a large crowd of people from Kawit that had assembled after it heard of the city's liberation.
The Magdalo faction of the Katipunan, which also operated in Cavite under Gen. Aguinaldo, used flags similar to those used by the Magdiwang faction and featuring a white sun with a red baybayin symbol for Ka.
The symbol has recently been revived by a breakaway group of army officers to show the end of war with Spain after the peace agreement. The flag became the first official banner of the revolutionary forces and was blessed in a crowd celebrating at Imus. Aguinaldo referred to this flag in his proclamation of October 31, 1896: "Filipino people!! The hour has arrived to shed blood for the conquest of our liberty. Assemble and follow the flag of the Revolution – it stands for Liberty, Equality and Fraternity."[8]
Battle of Imus
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".In August 1896, as coordinated attacks broke out and sparked the revolution beginning in Manila. Aguinaldo marched from Kawit with 600 men and launched a series of skirmishes at Imus that eventually ended in open hostilities against Spanish troops stationed there. On September 1, with the aid of Captain Jose Tagle of Imus, they laid siege against Imus to draw the Spanish out. A Spanish relief column commanded by Brigadier-General Ernesto de Aguirre had been dispatched from Manila to aid the beleaguered Spanish defenders of Imus. Supported only by 100 troops and by cavalry, Aguirre gave the impression that he had been sent out to suppress a minor disturbance. Aguinaldo and his men counterattacked but suffered heavy losses that almost cost his own life. Despite the success, Aguirre did not press the attack, felt the inadequacy of his troops, and hastened back to Manila to get reinforcements. During the lull in the fighting, Aguinaldo's troops reorganized and prepared for another Spanish attack. On September 3, Aguirre came back with a much larger force of 3,000 men. When Spanish troops arrived at the Isabel II Bridge, they were fired upon by the concealed rebels. The Spanish force was routed, withdrawing in disorder with substantial casualties. Among the abandoned Spanish weapons was Aguirre's sword, which was carried by Aguinaldo in future battles.[9]Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Battles of Binakayan–Dalahican
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Alarmed by a previous siege, led by General Aguinaldo in Imus, in September 1896, Governor-General Ramón Blanco y Erenas ordered the 4th Battalion of Cazadores from Spain to aid him in quelling the rebellion in Cavite. On November 3, 1896, the battalion arrived carrying a squadron of 1,328 men and some 55 officers.[10] Also, Blanco ordered about 8,000 men who recently came from Cuba and Spain to join in suppressing the rebellion. Prior to the land attacks, Spanish naval raids were conducted on the shores of Cavite, where cannons bombarded the revolutionary fortifications in Bacoor, Noveleta, Binakayan, and Cavite Viejo. The most fortified locations in Noveleta were the Dalahican and Dagatan shores, defended by Magdiwang soldiers commanded by General Santiago Alvarez, and the adjacent fishing village of Binakayan in Kawit was fortified by Magdalo under General Aguinaldo. Spanish naval operations were determined to crush the fortifications in these areas, mainly because the lake around Dalahican was strategic by connecting to the interior of Cavite. Apart from defending Binakayan, the Magdalo soldiers also kept the lower part of Dagatan up to Cavite's border near Manila province.[11] Between the barrios of Binakayan and Dalahican, the Spanish forces lost decisively since the Filipino rebels, led by Aguinaldo and Alvarez, routed them back to Cavite Nuevo in which the remaining Spanish troops would eventually surrender. The successful defenses of Binakayan and Dalahican was considered to be the first major victory of the Filipinos over a colonial power.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Battle of Zapote Bridge
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Newly appointed Governor-General Camilo de Polavieja, was now fully aware that the main weight of the revolution was in Cavite and so decided to launch a two-pronged assault to defeat the revolutionaries, led by Aguinaldo. He ordered General José de Lachambre with a much bigger force to march against Silang to take on the Katipuneros from the rear, and he would engage the Filipinos head on. On February 13, 1897, Aguinaldo ordered soldiers to plant dynamite along the bridge and to place pointed bamboo sticks in the river beds below the bridge. Several hours later, 12,000 Spaniards began to cross the bridge. The trap was sprung, and the dynamite was detonated, which killed several Spanish troops and injured many more. The rebels then emerged from the bushes, fought hand to hand, and repelled consecutive waves of enemy troops charging across the river. Edilberto Evangelista was shot in the head and died. Cavite Province gradually emerged as the Revolution's hotbed, and the Aguinaldo-led Katipuneros had a string of victories there. After the battle, the demoralized Spanish soldiers retreated towards Muntinlupa.
Spanish Cavite offensive and Battle of Perez Dasmariñas
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". While Polavieja was poised to strike at Zapote, another Spanish contingent is marching towards Aguinaldo's rear. On February 15, 1897, the Spaniards launched the powerful Cavite offensive to drive and crush Filipino revolutionaries under Aguinaldo and his Magdalo forces that held numerous victories against the Spanish in the early stages of the revolution. Renewed and fully equipped with 100 cannons, 23,000 Spanish cazadores forces under Major General Jose de Lachambre saw town after town fall back to the Crown. Starting the offensive at Pamplona, Cavite, and Bayungyungan, Batangas, Lachambre's men later marched deep into the heart of Aguinaldo's home province.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Having just won the Battle of Zapote Bridge, Aguinaldo turned his attention at the new Spanish threat and was determined to recapture most of Cavite. Aguinaldo decided to deploy his forces at Pasong Santol, a bottleneck of Perez Dasmariñas on the way to Imus, which rendered the Spanish immobile and served the revolutionaries by its natural defensive positions. On February 19, Silang fell to the Spanish juggernaut despite attempts by Filipino forces to defend and then to recover it. Nine days later, Spanish forces marched into Dasmariñas to reclaim the town. A week later, Spanish troops used artillery pieces well to attack again as they moved towards Aguinaldo's capital, Imus. Meanwhile, on March 22 at the Tejeros Convention, Aguinaldo was voted in absentia as president of the reorganized revolutionary government. Colonel Vicente Riego de Dios was sent by the assembly to fetch Aguinaldo, who was in Pasong Santol. Aguinaldo refused to come and Crispulo Aguinaldo, his older brother, was sent to talk to him. Crispulo greeted and talked to his brother and explained his purpose, but Aguinaldo was hesitant to leave his post because of the pending attack of the Spanish in Dasmariñas. Crispulo took over Aguinaldo's leadership in the battle, which had been stalemated since March 7, and Aguinaldo traveled to San Francisco de Malabon (now General Trias, Cavite) to take his oath as president.[12]
Tejeros Convention
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Conflict within the ranks of the Katipunan factions, specifically between the Magdalo and Magdiwang, led to the Imus assembly in Cavite Province, presided over by Bonifacio.Template:Sfn The rebels of Cavite were rumored to have made overtures to establish a revolutionary government in place of the Katipunan.Template:Sfn Though Bonifacio already considered the Katipunan to be a government, he acquiesced and presided over a convention held on March 22, 1897, in Tejeros, San Francisco de Malabon, Cavite. Aguinaldo was elected president, even though he was occupied with military matters in Imus and not in attendance. Mariano Trias was elected as vice-president, Artemio Ricarte as captain-general, Emiliano Riego de Dios as the director of war, and Andres Bonifacio as director of the interior. The results were questioned by Daniel Tirona for Bonifacio's qualifications for that position. Bonifacio was insulted and declared, "I, as chairman of this assembly, and as President of the Supreme Council of the Katipunan, as all of you do not deny, declare this assembly dissolved, and I annul all that has been approved and resolved."Template:Sfn Regardless of the nullification, Aguinaldo traveled surreptitiously to San Francisco de Malabon where, on the evening of March 23, he took an oath assuming the office to which he had been elected as Generalissimo of the Philippine Islands.[13][12]
Biak-na-Bato and exile
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". The Spanish Army launched an attack that forced the revolutionary forces under Aguinaldo into a retreat. On June 24, 1897, Aguinaldo arrived at Biak-na-Bato, San Miguel, Bulacan, and established a headquarters there in what is now called "Aguinaldo Cave" in Biak-na-Bato National Park. In late October 1897, Aguinaldo convened an assembly of generals at Biak-na-Bato that decided to establish a constitutional republic. A constitution, patterned closely after the Cuban Constitution, was drawn up by Isabelo Artacho and Felix Ferrer and provided for the creation of a Supreme Council composed of a president, a vice president, a Secretary of War, and a Secretary of the Treasury. Aguinaldo was named president.Template:Sfn
In March 1897, Fernando Primo de Rivera, 1st Marquis of Estella, the Spanish Governor-General of the Philippines, had been encouraging prominent Filipinos to contact Aguinaldo for a peaceful settlement of the conflict. On August 9, the Manila lawyer Pedro Paterno met with Aguinaldo at Biak-na-Bato with a proposal for peace based on reforms and amnesty. In the succeeding months, Paterno conducted shuttle diplomacy, acting as an intermediary between de Rivera and Aguinaldo. On December 14–15, 1897, Aguinaldo signed the Pact of Biak-na-Bato under which Aguinaldo effectively agreed to end hostilities and to dissolve his government in exchange for amnesty and "₱800,000 (Mexican)" (Aguinaldo's description of the $MXN800,000Template:Efn amount) as an indemnity.Template:Sfn[14] The documents were signed on December 14–15, 1897. On December 23, Aguinaldo and other revolutionary officials departed for Hong Kong to enter voluntary exile. MXN$400,000,Template:Efn representing the first installment of the indemnity, was deposited into Hong Kong banks. In exile, Aguinaldo reorganized his revolutionary government into the "Hong Kong Junta" and enlarged it into the "Supreme Council of the Nation".Template:Sfn
Return to the Philippines
On April 25, the Spanish–American War began. The war mostly focused on Cuba, but the US Navy's Asiatic Squadron was in Hong Kong and, commanded by Commodore George Dewey, it sailed for the Philippines. On May 1, 1898, in the Battle of Manila Bay, the squadron engaged attacked and destroyed the Spanish Army and Navy's Pacific Squadron and proceeded to blockade Manila.Template:Sfn Several days later, Dewey agreed to transport Aguinaldo from Hong Kong to the Philippines aboard the USS McCulloch, which left Hong Kong with Aguinaldo on May 16 and arrived in Cavite on May 19.Template:Sfn Aguinaldo promptly resumed the command of revolutionary forces and besieged Manila.Template:Sfn
Dictatorial government and Battle of Alapan
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Aguinaldo had brought with him the draft constitution of Mariano Ponce for the establishment of federal revolutionary republic upon his return to Manila, but on May 24, 1898, in Cavite, Aguinaldo issued a proclamation upon the advice of his war counselor Ambrosio Rianzares Bautista, and Aguinaldo assumed the command of all Philippine forces and established a dictatorial government with himself as titular dictator and power vested upon him to administer decrees promulgated under his sole responsibility. The dictatorial government was provisional in character until peace was established and unrestrained liberty attained.[15] Dean Worcester wrote, "although the title of 'president' was assumed by Aguinaldo, as more likely to be favourably considered in the United States than 'dictator', the tendency of his followers who had not been educated in Europe was to speak of and to regard him not as a president, but as an overlord holding all power in his hands."[16]
On May 28, 1898, Aguinaldo gathered a force of about 18,000 troops and fought against a small garrison of Spanish troops in Alapan, Imus, Cavite. The battle lasted from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. After the victory at Alapan, Aguinaldo unfurled the Philippine flag for the first time and hoisted it at the Teatro Caviteño in Cavite Nuevo (present-day Cavite City) in front of Filipino revolutionaries and more than 300 captured Spanish troops. A group of American sailors of the US Asiatic Squadron also witnessed the unfurling. Flag Day is celebrated every May 28 to honor the battle.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Declaration of independence and revolutionary government
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". On June 12, Aguinaldo promulgated the Philippine Declaration of Independence from Spain in his own mansion house in Cavite El Viejo, believing that declaration would inspire the Filipino people to eagerly rise against the Spaniards. On June 18, he issued a decree formally establishing his dictatorial government in which he also provided for the organization of the local government and the establishment and the composition of the Revolutionary Congress.[17]
On June 23, Aguinaldo issued a decree replacing his dictatorial government with a revolutionary government with himself as president upon the recommendation of his adviser Apolinario Mabini. The decree defined the organization of the central government and the establishment and the election of delegates to the Revolutionary Congress and to prepare for the shift from a revolutionary government to a republic.[18][19]
Arrival of American troops
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". By May 1898, Filipino troops had cleared Cavite of Spanish forces. In late June 1898, Aguinaldo, with the help of American allies, who were now landing in Cavite, was now preparing to drive the Spaniards out of Manila. The first contingent of American troops arrived in Cavite on June 30, the second under General Francis V. Greene on July 17, and the third under General Arthur MacArthur Jr on July 30.[20] By then, 12,000 US troops had landed in the Philippines.[21]
Aguinaldo had presented surrender terms to Spanish Governor-General of the Philippines Basilio Augustín, who refused them initially since he believed that more Spanish troops would be sent to lift the siege.[22]Template:Sfn As the combined forces of Filipinos and Americans were closing in, Augustín realized that his position was hopeless, secretly continued to negotiate with Aguinaldo, and even offered ₱1 million, but Aguinaldo refused. When the Spanish Cortes learned of Augustín's attempt to negotiate the surrender of his army to Filipinos under Aguinaldo, it was furious and relieved Augustín of his duties effective July 24. He was replaced by Fermin Jáudenes. On June 16, warships departed Spain to lift the siege, but they altered course for Cuba where a Spanish fleet was imperiled by the US Navy.Template:Sfn
In August 1898, life in Intramuros, the walled center of Manila, had become unbearable, and the normal population of about 10,000 was now 70,000. Realizing that it was only a matter of time before the city fell and fearing vengeance and looting if the city fell to Filipino revolutionaries, Jáudenes, suggested to Dewey, through the Belgian consul, Édouard André, for the city to be surrendered to the Americans after a short, "mock" battle. Dewey had initially rejected the suggestion because he lacked the troops to block Filipino revolutionary forces, which numbered 40 000, but when Merritt's troops became available, he sent a message to Jáudenes, agreeing to the mock battle. A bloodless mock battle had been planned, but Spanish troops opened fire in a skirmish that left six Americans and forty-nine Spaniards dead after Filipino revolutionaries, thinking that the attack was genuine, joined advancing US troops.[23] Besides the unplanned casualties, the battle went according to plan. The Spanish surrendered the city to the Americans, and it did not fall to the Filipino revolutionaries, who felt betrayed.[24] By the end of September, Aguinaldo's forces had captured over 9,000 Spanish prisoners, who were relieved of their weapons. They were generally free to move around but remained within the control of Aguinaldo. Aguinaldo did not know that on December 10, 1898, the Treaty of Paris had been signed; it transferred the Philippines from Spain to the United States for the sum of $20 million.[25]
First Philippine Republic
The First Philippine Republic was formally established with the proclamation of the Malolos Constitution on January 21, 1899, in Malolos, Bulacan and endured until capture of Aguinaldo by the American forces on March 23, 1901, in Palanan, Isabela, which effectively dissolved the First Republic. Aguinaldo wrote in Tarlac during the First Republic the Tagalog manuscript of his autobiographical work, which would later be translated by Felipe Buencamino into Spanish and released as Reseña Veridica de la Revolucion Filipina (in English, True Account of the Philippine Revolution).[26]
On August 13, 1898, American forces had captured Manila during the "mock" Battle of Manila and on August 14, 1898, established the United States Military Government of the Philippine Islands, with Major-General Wesley Merritt as the first American Military Governor.Template:Sfn On the night of February 4, 1899, a Filipino was shot by an American sentry. That incident was considered to be the beginning of the Philippine–American War and culminated in the 1899 Battle of Manila between American and Filipino forces. Superior American military technology drove Filipino troops away from the city, and Aguinaldo's government had to move from one place to another as defeats mounted.Template:Sfn At the Battle of Marilao River, Aguinaldo himself took command in a desperate attempt to prevent American crossings. The Americans gained superiority in the battle only after severe fighting and the use of gunboats in the river that "made great execution" of Filipino soldiers.[27] On November 13, 1899, Aguinaldo issued an order disbanding the remnants of the Filipino national army; in the same order, he formulated a strategy of guerrilla warfare. Aguinaldo subsequently fled to Northern Luzon, where he continued to exercise command.[28]
National cabinet
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Capture and declaration of allegiance to the U.S.
On March 23, 1901, with the aid of Macabebe Scouts forces led by General Frederick Funston, Aguinaldo was captured in his headquarters in Palanan, Isabela.[29] On April 19, 1901, Aguinaldo took an oath of allegiance to the United States, formally ending the First Republic and recognizing the sovereignty of the United States over the Philippines.Template:Sfn He published a manifesto in which he acknowledged that most of the Filipino people had united around the United States, declaring "unmistakably in favor of peace", said, "a complete termination of hostilities and lasting peace are not only desirable, but absolutely essential to the welfare of the Philippine Islands." In this manifesto, he acknowledged and accepted U.S. sovereignty throughout the Philippines.[30][31]
Controversies
As president of a sovereign, independent Philippines
Template:Main article Aguinaldo is described as president of the Philippines in some official and authoritative sources in connection with insurgent governments he headed in revolution against outside sovereignties holding the Philippines as a territorial possession.Template:Efn[32][33]
Execution of Bonifacio brothers
Bonifacio refused to recognize the revolutionary government that was elected in the Tejeros Convention and reasserted his authority via the Acta de Tejeros and the Naic Military Agreement. He accused the Magdalo faction of treason and issued orders that are contradictory and contravention to the revolutionary government.Template:Sfn On April 25, 1897, several complaints were sent to Aguinaldo, notably by Severino de las Alas, a known supporter and loyalist of Bonifacio, along with Jose Coronel, and many others, that Bonifacio and his men ransacked, pillaged and burned the town of Indang, stealing the carabaos and other work animals by force and killed them for food and terrorized the townspeople for being unable to give enough supplies and other provisions due to poor harvest.[34][35][36] Aguinaldo was then forced to order the arrest of Bonifacio. After the trials, Andrés and his brother, Procopio, were ordered by the Consejo de la Guerra (Council of War) to be executed by firing squad under the command of Major Lazaro Macapagal on May 10, 1897, near Mount Nagpatong, Mount Buntis, Mount Pumutok, and Maragondon, Cavite.[37] Aguinaldo had pardoned the Bonifacio brothers and that they should be exiled in Pico de Loro, but Pío del Pilar and Mariano Noriel, both former supporters and loyalist of Bonifacio, along with other high-ranking generals of the revolution, forced Aguinaldo to withdraw the order for the sake of preserving unity.Template:Sfn According to Aguinaldo, in his two books "Mga Gunita ng Himagsikan" and "A Second Look at America", he stated that his withdrawal of the commutation order/exile did not mean immediate implementation of the death verdict, that Noriel had misconstrued this and acted hastily. He says he wanted a little more time for a cooling-off period so that eventually the Bonifacio brothers would be forgiven and pardoned.
Assassination of Luna
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Antonio Luna was a highly regarded general in the revolution who was sometimes at odds with Aguinaldo. On June 2, 1899, Luna received one telegram (he failed to receive two others) sent by Aguinaldo himself. According to Ambeth Ocampo, the message that Aguinaldo sent stated "Felipe Buencamino is detained without ordering the formation of the case. I await your reply to my previous telegram where I request the basis for your accusation. Beseech urgency."[38]
Luna wrote to Arcadio Maxilom, military commander of Cebu, to stand firm in the war.Template:Sfn Luna set off from Bayambang, first by train, then on horseback, and eventually in three carriages, to Nueva Ecija with 25 of his men. [39][40] During the journey, two of the carriages broke down and so he proceeded with just one carriage with Colonel Francisco Román and Captain Eduardo Rusca, having earlier shed his cavalry escort.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". On June 4, Luna sent a telegram to Aguinaldo to confirm his arrival. Upon arriving at Cabanatuan on June 5, Luna alone proceeded to headquarters to communicate with the president. As he went up the stairs, he ran into two men: Felipe Buencamino, Minister of Foreign Affairs and a member of the Cabinet; and Captain Pedro Janolino. The commander of the Kawit Battalion, Janolino was an old enemy whom Luna had disarmed for insubordination, and once threatened with arrest for favoring American autonomy. General Luna was told that Aguinaldo had left for San Isidro in Nueva Ecija. (He had actually gone to Bamban in Tarlac.) Enraged, Luna asked why he had not been told that the meeting had been canceled.Template:Sfn
The general and the captain exchanged heated words as Luna was about to depart. In the plaza, a rifle shot rang out. Still outraged and furious, Luna rushed down the stairs and met Janolino, accompanied by some elements of the Kawit Battalion. Janolino swung his bolo at Luna, wounding him in the head. Janolino's men fired at Luna while others started stabbing him even as he tried to fire his revolver at one of his attackers.Template:Sfn He staggered out into the plaza where Román and Rusca were rushing to his aid, but as he lay dying, they too were set upon and shot, with Román being killed and Rusca being severely wounded. Luna received more than 30 woundsTemplate:Sfn and uttered "Traitors! Assassins!"Template:Sfn He was hurriedly buried in the churchyard, and Aguinaldo relieved Luna's officers and men from the field, including General Venacio Concepción, whose headquarters in Angeles, Pampanga, Aguinaldo besieged the same day that Luna was assassinated.
Immediately after Luna's death, confusion reigned on both sides. The Americans even thought that Luna had taken over to replace Aguinaldo.Template:Sfn Luna's death was publicly declared only by June 8, and a circular providing details of the event was released by June 13. Investigations were supposedly made concerning Luna's death, but not one person was convicted.Template:Sfn Later, General Pantaleón García said in 1921 that he was verbally ordered by Aguinaldo to conduct the assassination of Luna at Cabanatuan. His sickness then prevented his participation in the assassination.[41] Aguinaldo would be firm in his stand that he had nothing to do with the assassination of Luna.[42]
American era
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During the American period, Aguinaldo largely retired from public life, though continued to support groups that advocated for immediate independence and helped veterans of the struggle. He organized the Asociación de los Veteranos de la Revolución (Association of Veterans of the Revolution) to secure pensions for its members and made arrangements for them to buy land by installments from the government.
Displaying the Philippine flag was declared illegal by the Sedition Act of 1907, but it was amended on October 30, 1919.[43] Then, Aguinaldo transformed his home in Kawit into a monument to the flag, the revolution, and the Declaration of Independence. After Aguinaldo's death, the government declared the mansion as a National Shrine in June 1964.[44][45]
1935 Philippine presidential election
In 1935, the Philippines became a commonwealth, and presidential elections were held as part of a ten-year transition to complete independence. Aguinaldo returned to public life and ran for the presidency as the candidate of the National Socialist Party (no relation to the German Nazi Party) against the highly popular Nacionalista Party candidate Manuel L. Quezon and Republican Party candidate Gregorio Aglipay. However, Aguinaldo's capture by the Americans in 1901 as well as his allegations in the deaths of Bonifacio and Luna had since made him an unpopular figure among the Filipino people, and he lost to Quezon in a landslide, gaining only 17.5% of the popular vote.
Despite his decisive defeat, however, Aguinaldo refused to accept the results of the election, asserting that it was rigged against him.[46] In Cavite, the only province he had won, Aguinaldo's supporters plotted a rally in Manila to disrupt Quezon's inauguration and even assassinate him. However, this planned event was never actually carried out. Aguinaldo continued to criticize Quezon throughout the latter's presidency, expressing anti-semitic views when opposing Quezon's plan to shelter Jews fleeing from the Holocaust.[47] In 1939, Aguinaldo vigorously expressed his antisemitism by echoing bigoted notions that Jewish people were "dangerous" and "selfishly materialistic".[48]
The two men formally reconciled in 1941, when Quezon moved Flag Day to June 12 to commemorate the proclamation of Philippine independence.[43]
World War II
Collaboration with Japan and Second Republic
On December 8, 1941, the Imperial Japanese Army invaded the Philippines. The invasion came ten hours after the attack on Pearl Harbor that had brought the United States into World War II. Aguinaldo, a longtime admirer of the Japanese Empire, sided with them, as he had previously supported groups that demanded the immediate independence of the Philippines, and entrusted that Japan would free the islands from American occupation. In January 1942, Aguinaldo met with General Masami Maeda at the former's Cavite residence to discuss the creation of a pro-Japanese provisional government.[3] On February 1, Aguinaldo delivered a radio address calling upon General Douglas MacArthur and all American and Filipino troops fighting in the Battle of Bataan to surrender to the Japanese army.
Following the retreat of American forces, Aguinaldo continued his collaboration with the Japanese. He was appointed as a member of both the provisional Council of State as well as the Preparatory Committee for Philippine Independence, which was tasked with creating a new constitution for a Japanese puppet state in the Philippines. Aguinaldo also played a key role in the Kempeitai's campaign to suppress anti-Japanese resistance, urging guerrilla fighters to lay down their arms and surrender to Japan.[49] Aguinaldo was present at the inauguration ceremony of the Second Philippine Republic on October 14, 1943, raising the flag with Artemio Ricarte, who had returned to the Philippines from Japan at the request of Japanese Prime Minister Hideki Tojo. The Japanese had considered making Aguinaldo president of the republic, a proposal which was supported by Aguinaldo himself, but he was ultimately passed up in favor of former Supreme Court justice Jose P. Laurel.
Capture, investigation, and amnesty
After US forces returned to the Philippines in October 1944, Aguinaldo went into hiding in order to avoid being captured and potentially killed. During the Battle of Manila, however, members of the Marking Guerrillas resistance force were able to track his whereabouts, and arrested him on February 8, 1945. Aguinaldo was then placed under house arrest as the US Army's Counterintelligence Corps investigated his collaboration with the Japanese. Despite his claims that he had secretly remained loyal to the US throughout the war, and that he, as well as other Axis collaborators, had only been forced to collaborate with Japan under great duress and should therefore all be granted amnesty, the People's Court of the Philippines nonetheless charged Aguinaldo with 11 counts of treason for his "wholehearted" support for and collaboration with the Empire of Japan.[50]
Aguinaldo was 77 when the US government recognized Philippine independence in the Treaty of Manila on July 4, 1946, in accordance with the Tydings–McDuffie Act of 1934. On January 28, 1948, Philippine president Manuel Roxas granted amnesty to all Filipinos who had collaborated with the Empire of Japan and as a result, Aguinaldo's charges were dropped and his trial was never held.[51][52][53]
Independence era
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On July 4, 1946, after the end of World War II and Japanese occupation of the Philippines, the U.S. recognized the Philippines as an independent and sovereign nation.
In 1950, President Elpidio Quirino appointed Aguinaldo as a member of the Philippine Council of State, where he served a full term. He returned to retirement soon afterward and dedicated his time and attention to veteran soldiers' "interests and welfare."
He was conferred an honorary Doctor of Laws, Honoris Causa, by the University of the Philippines in 1953.
In 1958, when asked by the Filipino journalist Guillermo Gómez Rivera if he regretted anything in his life, Emilio Aguinaldo stated:[54]<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
"Yes. I am regretful in large part for having risen up against Spain and, that is why, when the funerals were held in Manila of King Alfonso of Spain, I appeared at the cathedral for the surprise of the Spaniards. And they asked me why I had come to the funeral of the King of Spain against whom I rose up in rebellion... And, I told them that he is still my King because under Spain we were always Spanish subjects, or citizens, but now, under the United States, we are only a consumer market for their exports, if not pariahs, because they never made us citizens of any state of the United States... And the Spaniards made way for me and treated me as their brother on that significant day..."
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On May 12, 1962, President Diosdado Macapagal changed the celebration of Independence Day from July 4 to June 12 to honor Aguinaldo and the Revolution of 1898, rather than the establishment of the Insular Government of the Philippine Islands by the United States.[55][56] Although in poor health by that point, Aguinaldo attended the 1962 Independence Day observances.[57] On August 4, 1964, Republic Act No. 4166 officially proclaimed June 12 to be Philippine Independence Day and renamed the Fourth of July holiday as "Philippine Republic Day".[58]
Personal life
On January 1, 1896, he married his first wife, Hilaria del Rosario (1877–1921). They had five children: Carmen Aguinaldo-Melencio, Emilio "Jun" R. Aguinaldo Jr., Maria Aguinaldo-Poblete, Cristina Aguinaldo-Suntay, and Miguel Aguinaldo. Hilaria died of pulmonary tuberculosis on March 6, 1921, at the age of 44. Nine years later, on July 14, 1930, Aguinaldo married his second wife, Maria Agoncillo (1879–1963), at Barasoain Church. She died on May 29, 1963, a year before Aguinaldo himself.[59]
His grandsons Emilio B. Aguinaldo III and Reynaldo Aguinaldo served three terms as mayor (2007–2016) and vice-mayor of his hometown Kawit, Cavite, respectively. A granddaughter, Ameurfina Melencio-Herrera, was appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines, serving from 1979 to 1992. One of his great-grandsons, Joseph Emilio Abaya, served as a member of the Philippine House of Representatives and represented Cavite's first district, which contained their hometown, Kawit, from 2004 to 2012, and he was appointed Secretary of Transportation and Communications in 2012, a post he that served in until 2016. Another great-grandson, Emilio "Orange" M. Aguinaldo IV, married ABS-CBN news reporter Bernadette Sembrano in 2007. His great-granddaughter, Lizzie Aguinaldo, is a singer under Star Music.[60]
During the revolt against Spain and subsequent conflicts with American forces, Aguinaldo supported the Philippine Independent Church.[61] He became a long-time member, but reverted to Roman Catholicism later in life.[4]
Death and legacy
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"We are confident that his struggle for Philippine independence, his love of freedom and his devotion to country will continue to inspire his people. His monument is the Republic of the Philippines."
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"He was the very incarnation of the Filipino desire for liberty and freedom, and his country owes him much. He was a lifelong friend of mine and his death saddens me."
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Aguinaldo was rushed to Veterans Memorial Medical Center (VMMC) in Quezon City on October 5, 1962, under the care of Dr. Juana Blanco Fernandez, where he stayed for 469 days. He died of coronary thrombosis on February 6, 1964, at 3:05 am PHT,[63] one month before his 95th birthday.[64] Although Aguinaldo had renounced his Roman Catholic faith when battling against Spanish rule, he reconciled with the Church and received the last rites from VMMC's Catholic chaplain.[4] A year before his death, he had donated his lot and mansion to the government. The property now serves as a shrine to "perpetuate the spirit of the Revolution of 1896."[65]
Philippine President Diosdado Macapagal declared February 6 to 20, 1964 as "period of national mourning" over Aguinaldo's death.[66] Aguinaldo was accorded a state funeral.[67] His remains lay in state at his residence in Kawit from February 6 to 11, and then at Malacañang Palace from February 11 to 14. On February 14, his remains were brought to Manila Cathedral for a requiem mass in the morning presided over by Manila Archbishop, Cardinal Rufino Santos, and then to the Legislative Building for public viewing and necrological service on the next day. From Manila, his remains were returned to Kawit on February 15 for a vigil mass and a final requiem mass in the morning of the next day at Kawit Church. His remains were finally interred at the grounds of his residence in Kawit, Cavite.[68][69][70]
Aguinaldo's book Mga Gunita ng Himagsikan (Memoirs of the Revolution) was published in 1964. A second publication was made in 1998 for the 100th anniversary of Philippine Independence.
According to Larry M. Henares of the Manila Standard, a consensus had formed by the late 20th century that Aguinaldo was the greatest president in Philippine history for his executory role in the Philippine Revolution's victory against Spain and his struggle to maintain the nation's independence during the Philippine–American War.[71]
Honors
- File:PHL Quezon Service Cross BAR.png: Quezon Service Cross – (June 12, 1956)
- File:PHI Legion of Honor 2003 Chief Commander BAR.svg: Philippine Legion of Honor, Chief Commander – (1957)
- File:PHL Blue White Red.png: Presidential Medal of Merit – (July 2, 1955)[72]
- File:Order of the Knights of Rizal Ribbon.png: The Order of the Knights of Rizal, Knight Grand Cross of Rizal – KGCR.[73]
Commemoration
- In 1957, Emilio Aguinaldo College was established as a private, non-sectarian institute of education and named after Aguinaldo. The EAC Generals are its varsity teams on which the nicknamed Generals is to honors President-General Emilio Aguinaldo.
- In 1965, Camp Murphy, a military general headquarters (GHQ) of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, was legally renamed after Aguinaldo.[74]
- In 1965, President Diosdado Macapagal signed Republic Act No. 4346, which renamed the municipality of Bailen, Cavite as General Emilio Aguinaldo.[75]
- In 1985, BRP General Emilio Aguinaldo was launched and became the lead ship of the General Emilio Aguinaldo class patrol vessel of the Philippine Navy. The ship, along with her only sistership BRP General Antonio Luna, was made in the Cavite Naval Ship Yard.[76]
- In 1985, Aguinaldo Museum was established as history museum in Baguio by Cristina Suntay.
- In 1985, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas issued a new 5-peso bill depicting a portrait of Aguinaldo on the obverse side. The reverse side features the declaration of the Philippine independence on June 12, 1898. Printing was discontinued in 1995, to give way for the release of ₱5.00 coin on December of that year with an obverse side featuring a profile of Aguinaldo. In 2017, Andres Bonifacio officially replaced Aguinaldo on the same coin.[77]
- In 1999, Aguinaldo International School Manila was established as a private school in Ermita, Manila and is named after Aguinaldo.
- In 2018, President Rodrigo Duterte declared March 22, 2019, as "Emilio Aguinaldo Day" to commemorate Aguinaldo's birth anniversary.[78]
- The Aguinaldo Highway is a highway passing through the busiest towns and cities of Cavite.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
- The Aguinaldo Hill, located at Barangay Asibanglan-Pinukpuk Road at Allaguia junction, was used as a common post by Aguinaldo during the Philippine–American War.[79]
Written works
- Reseña verídica de la revolución filipina, 1899[80]
- Talang Buhay ng Supremo And. Bonifacio sa Kabite, 1940's[81]
- A Second Look at America, 1957
- Mga Gunita ng Himagsikan, 1964
- My Memoirs, 1967
Portrayals
In 1931, an American Pre-Code documentary film, Around the World in 80 Minutes with Douglas Fairbanks, had Douglas Fairbanks pose and speak for the camera as he talked with Aguinaldo.[82]
Aguinaldo was also portrayed in various films that featured or centered on the Revolution. He was portrayed by the following actors in these films:
- 1926 – Charles Stevens in Across the Pacific
- 1993 – Mike Lloren in Sakay
- 1996 – Raymond Alsona in Bayani.
- 1997 – Joel Torre in Tirad Pass: The Story of Gen. Gregorio del Pilar.
- 2008 – Johnny Solomon in Baler.
- 2010 – Lance Raymundo in Ang Paglilitis ni Andres Bonifacio.
- 2010 – Dennis Trillo in the official "Lupang Hinirang" music video produced by GMA Network.
- 2011 – Carlos Morales in Watawat.
- 2012 – Jericho Ejercito and E.R. Ejercito in El Presidente
- 2013 – Nico Antonio in Katipunan.
- 2014 – Jun Nayra in Bonifacio: Ang Unang Pangulo.
- 2015 – Mon Confiado in Heneral Luna and its sequels, Goyo: The Boy General (2018) and Quezon (2025).
- 2018 – Gonzalo Gonzalez in Quezon's Game.
- 2018 – Jolo Revilla in Agosto Uno, Kasaysayang Nakalimutan a documentary film.
See also
Notes
References
Bibliography
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- Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". Vol 1 The Philippine Archipelago; Vol 2 The earliest Filipinos; Vol 3 The Spanish conquest; Vol 4 Life in the colony; Vol 5 Reform and revolution; Vol 6 Under stars and stripes; Vol 7 The Japanese occupation; Vol 8 Up from the ashes; Vol 9 A nation reborn; Vol 10 A timeline of Philippine history.
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Further reading
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- Escalante, Rene. "Collapse of the Malolos Republic." Philippine Studies 46#4 (1998), pp. 452–76. JSTOR 42634284 blames Aguinaldo's incompetence for loss of public support and collapse of his regime.
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External links
Template:Sister project Template:Wikisource/outer coreScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
- The Philippine Presidency Project
- Template:Webarchive [in Tagalog] A decree dated January 2, 1899, signed by Emilio Aguinaldo establishing a council of government.
- Template:Webarchive Book written by American Consul Wildman of Hong Kong regarding Emilio Aguinaldo and the Filipino–American War during the early 1900s.
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- Template:Internet Archive author
Template:S-start-collapsible |- ! colspan="3" style="border-top: 5px solid #ccccff;" | Political offices
|-
| style="width: 30%; text-align: center;" rowspan="1"|New title
| style="width: 40%; text-align: center;" rowspan="1"| President of the Philippines
1898–1901 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-vac
|-
! colspan="3" style="border-top: 5px solid #CF9C65;" | Military offices
|- style="text-align:center;"
|style="width:30%;" rowspan="1"|Preceded by
| style="width: 40%; text-align: center;" rowspan="1"| Commanding General of the Philippine Revolutionary Army
1899–1901 Template:S-ttl/check
| style="width: 30%; text-align: center;" rowspan="1"| Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by
as Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines
Template:Emilio Aguinaldo Template:Navboxes Template:Authority control
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- ↑ Philippine Supreme Court decisions G.R. No. 192935, identifying Aguinaldo as the beginning of presidential succession, and G.R. No. 248395, identifying the 1899 constitution as the beginning of constitutional succession.
- ↑ comments by 1935 Constitutional Convention delegate Jose Aruego
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- ↑ Valmero, Anna (April 8, 2011). [1] "Revisiting the Aguinaldo Shrine"] . GoBacoor. Retrieved on October 17, 2011.
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