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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/38269-8.txt b/38269-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..733d40e --- /dev/null +++ b/38269-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9107 @@ +Project Gutenberg's A History of the Philippines, by David P. Barrows + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: A History of the Philippines + +Author: David P. Barrows + +Release Date: December 11, 2011 [EBook #38269] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF THE PHILIPPINES *** + + + + +Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project +Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously +made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + + + + A HISTORY OF THE PHILIPPINES + + By + + DAVID P. BARROWS, Ph.D. + + General Superintendent of Public Instruction + for the Philippine Islands + + + + New York · Cincinnati · Chicago + + American Book Company + + + + + + + +PREFACE + + +This book has been prepared at the suggestion of the educational +authorities for pupils in the public high schools of the Philippines, +as an introduction to the history of their country. Its preparation +occupied about two years, while the author was busily engaged in other +duties,--much of it being written while he was traveling or exploring +in different parts of the Archipelago. No pretensions are made to an +exhaustive character for the book. For the writer, as well as for the +pupil for whom it is intended, it is an introduction into the study +of the history of Malaysia. + +Considerable difficulty has been experienced in securing the necessary +historical sources, but it is believed that the principal ones have +been read. The author is greatly indebted to the Honorable Dr. Pardo +de Tavera for the use of rare volumes from his library, and he wishes +to acknowledge also the kindness of Mr. Manuel Yriarte, Chief of the +Bureau of Archives, for permission to examine public documents. The +occasional reprints of the old Philippine histories have, however, +been used more frequently than the original editions. The splendid +series of reprinted works on the Philippines, promised by Miss Blair +and Mr. Robertson, was not begun in time to be used in the preparation +of this book. The appearance of this series will make easy a path +which the present writer has found comparatively difficult, and will +open the way for an incomparably better History of the Philippines +than has ever yet been made. + +The drawings of ethnographic subjects, which partly illustrate this +book, were made from objects in the Philippine Museum by Mr. Anselmo +Espiritu, a teacher in the public schools of Manila. They are very +accurate. + +Above every one else, in writing this book, the author is under +obligations to his wife, without whose constant help and encouragement +it could not have been written. + + + David P. Barrows. + + Manila, Philippine Islands, + March 1st, 1903. + + + + + + + +CONTENTS. + + + Page + + I. The Philippines as a Subject for Historical Study 9 + II. The Peoples of the Philippines 25 + III. Europe and the Far East about 1400 A.D. 42 + IV. The Great Geographical Discoveries 61 + V. Filipino People Before the Arrival of the Spaniards 88 + VI. The Spanish Soldier and the Spanish Missionary 108 + VII. Period of Conquest and Settlement, 1565-1600 125 + VIII. The Philippines Three Hundred Years Ago 156 + IX. The Dutch and Moro Wars, 1600-1663 187 + X. A Century of Obscurity and Decline, 1633-1762 212 + XI. The Philippines During the Period of European + Revolution, 1762-1837 231 + XII. Progress and Revolution, 1837-1897 259 + XIII. America and the Philippines 287 + Appendix 321 + Index 325 + + + + + +LIST OF MAPS. + + + Page + + Philippine Islands 6, 7 + Countries and Peoples of Malaysia 26, 27 + Races and Tribes of the Philippines 30 + The Spread of Mohammedanism 39 + Europe about 1400 AD. 44 + Routes of Trade to the Far East 50 + The Countries of the Far East 58 + Restoration of Toscanelli's Map 69 + Early Spanish Discoveries in the Philippines 77 + The New World and the Indies as divided between + Spain and Portugal 85 + Conquest and Settlement by the Spaniards in the + Philippines, 1505-1590 124 + Straits of Manila 133 + The City of Manila 134 + Luzon 158, 159 + Mindanao, Visayas, and Paragua 288, 289 + American Campaigns in Northern Luzon 302 + + + + + + + +HISTORY OF THE PHILIPPINES. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +THE PHILIPPINES AS A SUBJECT FOR HISTORICAL STUDY. + + +Purpose of this Book.--This book has been written for the young +men and young women of the Philippines. It is intended to introduce +them into the history of their own island country. The subject of +Philippine history is much broader and more splendid than the size +and character of this little book reveal. Many subjects have only +been briefly touched upon, and there are many sources of information, +old histories, letters and official documents, which the writer had +not time and opportunity to study in the preparation of this work. It +is not too soon, however, to present a history of the Philippines, +even though imperfectly written, to the Philippine people themselves; +and if this book serves to direct young men and young women to a study +of the history of their own island country, it will have fulfilled +its purpose. + +The Development of the Philippines and of Japan.--In many ways the +next decade of the history of the Philippine Islands may resemble +the splendid development of the neighboring country of Japan. Both +countries have in past times been isolated more or less from the +life and thought of the modern world. Both are now open to the full +current of human affairs. Both countries promise to play an important +part in the politics and commerce of the Far East. Geographically, +the Philippines occupy the more central and influential position, +and the success of the institutions of the Philippines may react upon +the countries of southeastern Asia and Malaysia, to an extent that +we cannot appreciate or foresee, Japan, by reason of her larger +population, the greater industry of her people, a more orderly +social life, and devoted public spirit, is at the present time far +in the lead. + +The Philippines.--But the Philippines possess certain advantages which, +in the course of some years, may tell strongly in her favor. There are +greater natural resources, a richer soil, and more tillable ground. The +population, while not large, is increasing rapidly, more rapidly, in +fact, than the population of Japan or of Java. And in the character of +her institutions the Philippines have certain advantages. The position +of woman, while so unfortunate in Japan, as in China and nearly all +eastern countries, in the Philippines is most fortunate, and is certain +to tell effectually upon the advancement of the race in competition +with other eastern civilizations. The fact that Christianity is the +established religion of the people makes possible a sympathy and +understanding between the Philippines and western countries. + +Japan.--Yet there are many lessons which Japan can teach the +Philippines, and one of these is of the advantages and rewards +of fearless and thorough study. Fifty years ago, Japan, which had +rigorously excluded all intercourse with foreign nations, was forced to +open its doors by an American fleet under Commodore Perry. At that time +the Japanese knew nothing of western history, and had no knowledge of +modern science. Their contact with the Americans and other foreigners +revealed to them the inferiority of their knowledge. The leaders of +the country awoke to the necessity of a study of western countries +and their great progress, especially in government and in the sciences. + +Japan had at her service a special class of people known as the +samurai, who, in the life of Old Japan, were the free soldiers of +the feudal nobility, and who were not only the fighters of Japan, +but the students and scholars as well. The young men of this samurai +class threw themselves earnestly and devotedly into the study of the +great fields of knowledge, which had previously been unknown to the +Japanese. At great sacrifice many of them went abroad to other lands, +in order to study in foreign universities. Numbers of them went to +the United States, frequently working as servants in college towns +in order to procure the means for the pursuit of their education. + +The Japanese Government in every way began to adopt measures for +the transformation of the knowledge of the people. Schools were +opened, laboratories established, and great numbers of scientific +and historical books were translated into Japanese. A public school +system was organized, and finally a university was established. The +Government sent abroad many young men to study in almost every +branch of knowledge and to return to the service of the people. The +manufacturers of Japan studied and adopted western machinery and modern +methods of production. The government itself underwent revolution +and reorganization upon lines more liberal to the people and more +favorable to the national spirit of the country. The result has been +the transformation, in less than fifty years, of what was formerly +an isolated and ignorant country. + +The Lesson for the Filipinos.--This is the great lesson which Japan +teaches the Philippines. If there is to be transformation here, with +a constant growth of knowledge and advancement, and an elevation of +the character of the people as a whole, there must be a courageous +and unfaltering search for the truth: and the young men and young +women of the Philippines must seek the advantages of education, not +for themselves, but for the benefit of their people and their land; +not to gain for themselves a selfish position of social and economic +advantage over the poor and less educated Filipinos, but in order +that, having gained these advantages for themselves, they may in turn +give them to their less fortunate countrymen. The young Filipino, +man or woman, must learn the lessons of truthfulness, courage, and +unselfishness, and in all of his gaining of knowledge, and in his +use of it as well, he must practice these virtues, or his learning +will be an evil to his land and not a blessing. + +The aim of this book is to help him to understand, first of all, the +place that the Philippines occupy in the modern history of nations, so +that he may understand how far and from what beginnings the Filipino +people have progressed, toward what things the world outside has +itself moved during this time, and what place and opportunities the +Filipinos, as a people, may seek for in the future. + +The Meaning of History.--History, as it is written and understood, +comprises many centuries of human life and achievement, and we must +begin our study by discussing a little what history means. Men may +live for thousands of years without having a life that may be called +historical; for history is formed only where there are credible +written records of events. Until we have these records, we have no +ground for historical study, but leave the field to another study, +which we call Archeology, or Prehistoric Culture. + +Historical Races.--Thus there are great races which have no history, +for they have left no records. Either the people could not write, +or their writings have been destroyed, or they told nothing about +the life of the people. The history of these races began only with +the coming of a historical, or more advanced race among them. + +Thus, the history of the black, or negro, race begins only with +the exploration of Africa by the white race, and the history of the +American Indians, except perhaps of those of Peru and Mexico, begins +only with the white man's conquest of America. The white, or European, +race is, above all others, the great historical race; but the yellow +race, represented by the Chinese, has also a historical life and +development, beginning many centuries before the birth of Christ. + +The European Race.--For thousands of years the white race was confined +to the countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea. It had but little +contact with other races of men and almost no knowledge of countries +beyond the Mediterranean shores. The great continents of America and +Australia and the beautiful island-world of the Pacific and Indian +oceans were scarcely dreamed of. This was the status of the white race +in Europe a little more than five hundred years ago. How different +is the position of this race to-day! It has now explored nearly the +entire globe. The white people have crossed every continent and every +sea. On every continent they have established colonies and over many +countries their power. + +During these last five centuries, besides this spread of geographical +discoveries, the mingling of all the races, and the founding of great +colonies, has come also the development of scientific knowledge--great +discoveries and inventions, such as the utilization of steam and +electricity, which give to man such tremendous power over the material +world. Very important changes have also marked the religious and +political life of the race. Within these years came the Protestant +revolt from the Roman Catholic Church, destroying in some degree the +unity of Christendom; and the great revolutions of Europe and America, +establishing democratic and representative governments. + +The European Race and the Filipino People.--This expansion and progress +of the European race early brought it into contact with the Filipino +people, and the historical life of the Philippines dates from this +meeting of the two races. Thus the history of the Philippines has +become a part of the history of nations. During these centuries the +people of these islands, subjects of a European nation, have progressed +in social life and government, in education and industries, in numbers, +and in wealth. They have often been stirred by wars and revolutions, +by centuries of piratical invasion, and fear of conquest by foreign +nations. But these dangers have now passed away. + +There is no longer fear of piratical ravage nor of foreign invasion, +nor is there longer great danger of internal revolt; for the +Philippines are at the present time under a government strong enough +to defend them against other powers, to put down plunder and ravage, +and one anxious and disposed to afford to the people such freedom +of opportunity, such advantages of government and life, that the +incentive to internal revolution will no longer exist. Secure from +external attack and rapidly progressing toward internal peace, the +Philippines occupy a position most fortunate among the peoples of the +Far East. They have representative government, freedom of religion, +and public education, and, what is more than all else to the aspiring +or ambitious race or individual, freedom of opportunity. + +How History is Written.--One other thing should be explained +here. Every child who reads this book should understand a little how +history is written. A most natural inquiry to be made regarding any +historical statement is, "How is this known?" And this is as proper a +question for the school boy as for the statesman. The answer is, that +history rests for its facts largely upon the written records made by +people who either lived at the time these things took place, or so +near to them that, by careful inquiry, they could learn accurately +of these matters and write them down in some form, so that we to-day +can read their accounts, and at least know how these events appeared +to men of the time. + +But not all that a man writes, or even puts in a book, of things +he has seen and known, is infallibly accurate and free from error, +partiality, and untruthfulness. So the task of the historian is not +merely to read and accept all the contemporary records, but he must +also compare one account with another, weighing all that he can find, +making due allowance for prejudice, and on his own part trying to +reach a conclusion that shall be true. Of course, where records are +few the task is difficult indeed, and, on the other hand, material +may be so voluminous as to occupy a writer a lifetime, and make it +impossible for any one man completely to exhaust a subject. + +Historical Accounts of the Philippines.--For the Philippines we +are so fortunate as to have many adequate sources of a reliable and +attractive kind. In a few words some of these will be described. Nearly +all exist in at least a few libraries in the Philippines, where they +may sometime be consulted by the Filipino student, and many of them, +at least in later editions, may be purchased by the student for his +own possession and study. + +The Voyages of Discovery.--European discovery of the Philippines began +with the great voyage of Magellan; and recounting this discovery of +the islands, there is the priceless narrative of one of Magellan's +company, Antonio Pigafetta. His book was written in Italian, but was +first published in a French translation. The original copies made +by Pigafetta have disappeared, but in 1800 a copy was discovered in +the Ambrosian Library of Milan, Italy, and published. Translations +into English and other languages exist. It may be found in several +collections of Voyages, and there is a good Spanish translation and +edition of recent date. (El Primer Viaje alrededor del Mundo, por +Antonio Pigafetta, traducido por Dr. Carlos Amoretti y anotado por +Manuel Walls y Merino, Madrid, 1899.) There are several other accounts +of Magellan's voyage; but Pigafetta's was the only one written by +an eye-witness, and his descriptions of the Bisaya Islands, Cebu, +Borneo, and the Moluccas are wonderfully interesting and accurate. + +There were several voyages of discovery between Magellan's time (1521) +and Legaspi's time (1565). These include the expeditions of Loaisa, +Saavedra, and Villalobos, and accounts of them are to be found in +the great series of publications made by the Spanish Government and +called Coleccion de documentos ineditos, and, in another series, +Navarrete's Coleccion de los viajes y descubrimientos. + +Spanish Occupation and Conquest.--As we come to the history of Spanish +occupation and conquest of the Philippines, we find many interesting +letters and reports sent by both soldiers and priests to the king, or +to persons in Spain. The first complete book on the Philippines was +written by a missionary about 1602, Father Predo Chirino's Relacion +de las Islas Filipinas, printed in Rome in 1604. This important and +curious narrative is exceedingly rare, but a reprint, although rude +and poor, was made in Manila in 1890, which is readily obtainable. The +Relacion de las Islas Filipinas was followed in 1609 by the work of +Judge Antonio de Morga, Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas. This very +rare work was printed in Mexico. In 1890 a new edition was brought +out by Dr. José Rizal, from the copy in the British Museum. There is +also an English translation. + +These two works abound in curious and valuable information upon +the Filipino people as they were at the time of the arrival of the +Spaniards, as does also a later work, the Conquista de las Islas +Filipinas, by Friar Gaspar de San Augustin, printed in Madrid in +1698. This latter is perhaps the most interesting and most important +early work on the Philippine Islands. + +As we shall see, the history of the Philippines is closely connected +with that of the East Indian Spice Islands. When the Spanish forces +took the rich island of Ternate in 1606, the triumph was commemorated +by a volume, finely written, though not free from mistakes, the +Conquista de las Islas Moluccas, by Leonardo de Argensola, Madrid, +1609. There is an old English translation, and also French and Dutch +translations. + +To no other religious order do we owe so much historical information as +to the Jesuits. The scholarship and literary ability of the Company +have always been high. Chirino was a Jesuit, as was also Father +Francisco Colin, who wrote the Labor Evangelica, a narrative of +the Jesuit missions in the Philippines, China, and Japan, which was +printed in Madrid in 1663. This history was continued years later by +Father Murillo Velarde, who wrote what he called the Segunda Parte, +the Historia de la Provincia de Filipinas de la Compania de Jesus, +Manila, 1749. + +There is another notable Jesuit work to which we owe much of the +early history of the great island of Mindanao: this is the Historia de +Mindanao y Jolo, by Father Francisco Combes. The year 1663 marked, as +we shall see, an epoch in the relations between the Spaniards and the +Mohammedan Malays. In that year the Spaniards abandoned the fortress +of Zamboanga, and retired from southern Mindanao. The Jesuits had +been the missionaries in those parts of the southern archipelago, +and they made vigorous protests against the abandonment of Moro +territory. One result of their efforts to secure the reoccupancy +of these fortresses was the notable work mentioned above. It is the +oldest and most important writing about the island and the inhabitants +of Mindanao. It was printed in Madrid in 1667. A beautiful and exact +edition was brought out a few years ago, by Retana. + +A Dominican missionary, Father Diego Aduarte, wrote a very important +work, the Historia de la Provincia del Sancto Rosario de la Orden de +Predicadores en Filipinas, Japon y China, which was printed in Manila +at the College of Santo Tomas in 1640. + +We may also mention as containing a most interesting account of +the Philippines about the middle of the seventeenth century, the +famous work on China, by the Dominican, Father Fernandez Navarrete, +Tratados historicos, politicos, ethnicos, y religiosos de la Monarchia +de China, Madrid, 1767. Navarrete arrived in these islands in 1648, +and was for a time a cura on the island of Mindoro. Later he was a +missionary in China, and then Professor of Divinity in the University +of Santo Tomas. His work is translated into English in Churchill's +Collection of Voyages and Travels, London, 1744, second volume. + +The eighteenth century is rather barren of interesting historical +matter. There was considerable activity in the production of grammars +and dictionaries of the native languages, and more histories of the +religious orders were also produced. These latter, while frequently +filled with sectarian matter, should not be overlooked. + +Between the years 1788 and 1792 was published the voluminous Historia +General de Filipinas, in fourteen volumes, by the Recollect friar, +Father Juan de la Concepcion. The work abounds in superfluous matter +and trivial details, yet it is a copious source of information, +a veritable mine of historical data, and is perhaps the best known +and most frequently used work upon the Philippine Islands. There +are a number of sets in the Philippines which can be consulted by +the student. + +Some years after, and as a sort of protest against so extensive +a treatment of history, the sane and admirable Augustinian, Father +Joaquin Martinez de Zuņiga, wrote his Historia de las Islas Filipinas, +a volume of about seven hundred pages. It was printed in Sampaloc, +Manila, in 1803. This writer is exceptional for his fairmindedness, +his freedom from the narrow prejudices which have characterized +most of the writers on the Philippines. His language is terse and +spirited, and his volume is the most readable and, in many ways, the +most valuable attempt at a history of the Philippines. His narrative +closes with the English occupation of Manila in 1763. + +Recent Histories and Other Historical Materials.--The sources for +the conditions and history of the islands during the last century +differ somewhat from the preceding. The documentary sources in the +form of public papers and reports are available, and there is a +considerable mass of pamphlets dealing with special questions in +the Philippines. The publication of the official journal of the +Government, the Gazeta de Manila, commenced in 1861. It contains +all acts of legislation, orders of the Governors, pastoral letters, +and other official matters, down to the end of Spanish rule. + +A vast amount of material, for the recent civil history of the +islands exists in the Archives of the Philippines, at Manila, but +these documents have been very little examined. Notable among these +original documents is the series of Royal Cedulas, each bearing the +signature of the King of Spain, "Yo, el Rey." They run back from the +last years of sovereignty to the commencement of the seventeenth +century. The early cedulas, on the establishment of Spanish rule, +are said to have been carried away by the British army in 1763, +and to be now in the British Museum. + +Of the archives of the Royal Audiencia at Manila, the series of +judgments begins with one of 1603, which is signed by Antonia +de Morga. From this date they appear to be complete. The earliest +records of the cases which came before this court that can be found, +date from the beginning of the eighteenth century. + +Of modern historical writings mention must be made of the Historia +de Filipinas, three volumes, 1887, by Montero y Vidal, and the +publications of W. E. Retana. To the scholarship and enthusiasm of +this last author much is owed. His work has been the republication +of rare and important sources. His edition of Combes has already +been mentioned, and there should also be mentioned, and if possible +procured, his Archivo del Bibliofilo, four volumes, a collection of +rare papers on the islands, of different dates; and his edition, the +first ever published, of Zuņiga's Estadismo de las Islas Filipinas, +an incomparable survey of the islands made about 1800, by the priest +and historian whose history was mentioned above. + +Accounts of Voyagers Who Visited the Philippines.--These references +give some idea of the historical literature of the Philippines. They +comprise those works which should be chiefly consulted. There should +not be omitted the numerous accounts of voyagers who have visited +these islands from time to time, and who frequently give us very +valuable information. The first of these are perhaps the English and +Dutch freebooters, who prowled about these waters to waylay the richly +laden galleons. One of these was Dampier, who, about 1690, visited +the Ladrones and the Philippines. His New Voyage Around the World was +published in 1697. There was also Anson, who in 1743 took the Spanish +galleon off the coast of Samar, and whose voyage is described in a +volume published in 1745. There was an Italian physician, Carreri, +who visited the islands in 1697, in the course of a voyage around the +world, and who wrote an excellent description of the Philippines, which +is printed in English translation in Churchill's Collection of Voyages. + +A French expedition visited the East between 1774 and 1781, and the +Commissioner, M. Sonnerat, has left a brief account of the Spanish +settlements in the islands as they then appeared. (Voyage aux Indes +Orientales et ā la Chine, Paris, 1782, Vol. 3.) + +There are a number of travellers' accounts written in the last century, +of which may be mentioned Sir John Bowring's Visit to the Philippine +Islands, 1859, and Jagor's Reisen in der Philippinen, travels in the +year 1859 and 1860, which has received translation into both English +and Spanish. + +Bibliographies.--For the historical student a bibliographical guide +is necessary. Such a volume was brought out in 1898, by Retana, +Catalogo abreviado de la Biblioteca Filipina. It contains a catalogue +of five thousand seven hundred and eighty works, published in or upon +the Philippines. A still more exact and useful bibliography has been +prepared by the Honorable T. H. Pardo de Tavera, Biblioteca Filipina, +and is published by the United States Government. + +It is lamentable that the Philippines Government possesses no library +of works on the Archipelago. The foundation of such an institution +seems to have been quite neglected by the Spanish Government, and works +on the Philippines are scarcely to be found, except as they exist in +private collections. The largest of these is said to be that of the +Compaņia General de Tabacos, at Barcelona, which has also recently +possessed itself of the splendid library of Retana. In Manila the +Honorable Dr. Pardo de Tavera possesses the only notable library in +the islands. + +Since the above was written the Philippines Government has commenced +the collection of historic works in the Philippines, and a talented +young Filipino scholar, Mr. Zulueta, has gone to Spain for extensive +search, both of archives and libraries, in order to enrich the public +collection in the Philippines. + +The publication of a very extensive series of sources of Philippine +history has also been begun by the Arthur H. Clark Company in +the United States, under the editorship of Miss E. H. Blair and +Mr. J. A. Robertson. The series will embrace fifty-five volumes, and +will contain in English translations all available historical material +on the Philippines, from the age of discovery to the nineteenth +century. This notable collection will place within the reach of the +student all the important sources of his country's history, and will +make possible a more extensive and accurate writing of the history +of the islands than has ever before been possible. + +In addition to the published works, there repose numerous unstudied +documents of Philippine history in the Archives of the Indies at +Seville. + +Historical Work for the Filipino Student.--After reading this book, +or a similar introductory history, the student should procure, one +by one, as many as he can of the volumes which have been briefly +described above, and, by careful reading and patient thought, try +to round out the story of his country and learn the lessons of the +history of his people. He will find it a study that will stimulate +his thought and strengthen his judgment; but always he must search +for the truth, even though the truth is sometimes humiliating and +sad. If there are regrettable passages in our own lives, we cannot +find either happiness or improvement in trying to deny to ourselves +that we have done wrong, and so conceal and minimize our error. So if +there are dark places in the history of our land and people, we must +not obscure the truth in the mistaken belief that we are defending +our people's honor, for, by trying to conceal the fact and excuse +the fault, we only add to the shame. It is by frank acknowledgment +and clear depiction of previous errors that the country's honor will +be protected now and in the future. + +Very interesting and important historical work can be done by the +Filipino student in his own town or province. The public and parish +records have in many towns suffered neglect or destruction. In +all possible cases these documents should be gathered up and cared +for. For many things, they are worthy of study. They can show the +growth of population, the dates of erection of the public buildings, +the former system of government, and social conditions. + +This is a work in which the patriotism of every young man and +woman can find an expression. Many sites throughout the islands are +notable for the historic occurrences which they witnessed. These +should be suitably marked with tablets or monuments, and the exact +facts of the events that took place should be carefully collected, +and put in writing. Towns and provinces should form public libraries +containing, among other works, books on the Philippines; and it +should be a matter of pride to the young Filipino scholar to build +up such local institutions, and to educate his townsmen in their use +and appreciation. + +But throughout such studies the student should remember that his town +or locality is of less importance, from a patriotic standpoint, than +his country as a whole; that the interests of one section should never +be placed above those of the Archipelago; and that, while his first and +foremost duty is to his town and to his people, among whom he was born +and nurtured, he owes a greater obligation to his whole country and +people, embracing many different islands and different tongues, and to +the great Government which holds and protects the Philippine Islands, +and which is making possible the free development of its inhabitants. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +THE PEOPLES OF THE PHILIPPINES. + + +The Study of Ethnology.--The study of races and peoples forms a +separate science from history, and is known as ethnology, or the +science of races. Ethnology informs us how and where the different +races of mankind originated. It explains the relationships between +the races as well as the differences of mind, of body, and of mode +of living which different people exhibit. + +All such knowledge is of great assistance to the statesman as he +deals with the affairs of his own people and of other peoples, +and it helps private individuals of different races to understand +one another and to treat each other with due respect, kindness, and +sympathy. Inasmuch, too, as the modern history which we are studying +deals with many different peoples of different origin and race, and +as much of our history turns upon these differences, we must look +for a little at the ethnology of the Philippines. + +The Negritos.--Physical Characteristics.--The great majority of the +natives of our islands belong to what is usually called the Malayan +race, or the Oceanic Mongols. There is, however, one interesting +little race scattered over the Philippines, which certainly has no +relationship at all with Malayans. These little people are called by +the Tagálog, "Aeta" or "Ita." The Spaniards, when they arrived, called +them "Negritos," or "little negroes," the name by which they are best +known. Since they were without question the first inhabitants of these +islands of whom we have any knowledge, we shall speak of them at once. + +They are among the very smallest peoples in the world, the average +height of the men being about 145 centimeters, or the height of +an American boy of twelve years; the women are correspondingly +smaller. They have such dark-brown skins that many people suppose +them to be quite black; their hair is very wooly or kinky, and forms +thick mats upon their heads. In spite of these peculiarities, they +are not unattractive in appearance. Their eyes are large and of a +fine brown color, their features are quite regular, and their little +bodies often beautifully shaped. + +The appearance of these little savages excited the attention of the +first Spaniards, and there are many early accounts of them. Padre +Chirino, who went as a missionary in 1592 to Panay, begins the +narrative of his labors in that island as follows: "Among the Bisayas, +there are also some Negroes. They are less black and ugly than those +of Guinea, and they are much smaller and weaker, but their hair and +beard are just the same. They are much more barbarous and wild than +the Bisayas and other Filipinos, for they have neither houses nor +any fixed sites for dwelling. They neither plant nor reap, but live +like wild beasts, wandering with their wives and children through +the mountains, almost naked. They hunt the deer and wild boar, +and when they kill one they stop right there until all the flesh is +consumed. Of property they have nothing except the bow and arrow." [1] + +Manners and Customs.--The Negritos still have this wild, timid +character, and few have ever been truly civilized in spite of the +efforts of some of the Spanish missionaries. They still roam through +the mountains, seldom building houses, but making simply a little +wall and roof of brush to keep off the wind and rain. They kill deer, +wild pigs, monkeys, and birds, and in hunting they are very expert; +but their principal food is wild roots and tubers, which they roast +in ashes. Frequently in traveling through the mountains, although one +may see nothing of these timid little folk, he will see many large, +freshly dug holes from each of which they have taken out a root. + +The Negritos ornament their bodies by making little rows of cuts on the +breast, back, and arms, and leaving the scars in ornamental patterns; +and some of them also file their front teeth to points. In their hair +they wear bamboo combs with long plumes of hair or of the feathers +of the mountain cock. They have curious dances, and ceremonies for +marriage and for death. + +Distribution.--The Negritos have retired from many places where they +lived when the Spaniards first arrived, but there are still several +thousand in Luzon, especially in the Cordillera Zambales, on the +Pacific coast, and in the Sierra Madre range; and in the interior of +Panay, Negros, Tablas, and in Surigao of Mindanao. + +Relation of the Negritos to Other Dwarfs of the World.--Although the +Negritos have had very little effect on the history of the Philippines, +they are of much interest as a race to scientists, and we can not +help asking, Whence came these curious little people, and what does +their presence here signify? While science can not at present fully +answer these questions, what we do actually know about these pygmies +is full of interest. + +The Aetas of the Philippines are not the only black dwarfs in the +world. A similar little people, who must belong to the same race, +live in the mountains and jungles of the Malay peninsula. On the +Andaman Islands in the Indian Ocean, all the aboriginal inhabitants +are similar pygmies, called "Mincopies." Some traces of their former +existence are reported from many other places in the East Indies. + +Thus it may be that there was a time when these little men and women +had much of this island-world quite to themselves, and their race +stretched unbrokenly from the Philippines across Malacca to the Indian +Ocean. As it would have been impossible for so feeble a people to force +their way from one island to another after the arrival of the stronger +races, who have now confined them to the mountainous interiors, we +are obliged to believe that the Negritos were on the ground first, +and that at one time they were more numerous. The Indian archipelago +was then a world of black pygmies. It may be that they were even more +extensive than this, for one of the most curious discoveries of modern +times has been the finding of similar little blacks in the equatorial +forests of Africa. + +The Negritos must not be confused with the black or negro race of +New Guinea or Melanesia, who are commonly called Papuans; for those +Negroes are of tall stature and belong with the true Negroes of +Africa, though how the Negro race thus came to be formed of two so +widely separated branches we do not know. + +The Malayan Race.--Origin of the Race.--It is thought that the Malayan +race originated in southeastern Asia. From the mainland it spread +down into the peninsula and so scattered southward and eastward over +the rich neighboring islands. Probably these early Malayans found +the little Negritos in possession and slowly drove them backward, +destroying them from many islands until they no longer exist except +in the places we have already named. + +With the beginning of this migratory movement which carried them from +one island to another of the great East Indian Archipelago, these +early Malayans must have invented the boats and praos for which they +are famed, and have become skillful sailors living much upon the sea. + +Effect of the Migration.--Life for many generations, upon these +islands, so warm, tropical, and fruitful, gradually modified these +emigrants from Asia, until they became in mind and body quite a +different race from the Mongol inhabitants of the mainland. + +Characteristics.--The Malayan peoples are of a light-brown color, +with a light yellowish undertone on some parts of the skin, with +straight black hair, dark-brown eyes, and, though they are a small +race in stature, they are finely formed, muscular, and active. The +physical type is nearly the same throughout all Malaysia, but the +different peoples making up the race differ markedly from one another +in culture. They are divided also by differences in religion. There +are many tribes which are pagan. On Bali and Lombok, little islands +south of Java, the people are still Brahmin, like most inhabitants +of India. In other parts of Malaysia they are Mohammedans, while in +the Philippines alone they are mostly Christians. + +The Wild Malayan Tribes.--Considering first the pagan or the wild +Malayan peoples, we find that in the interior of the Malay Peninsula +and of many of the islands, such as Sumatra, Borneo and the Celebes, +there are wild Malayan tribes, who have come very little in contact +with the successive civilizing changes that have passed over this +archipelago. The true Malays call these folk "Orang benua," or +"men of the country," Many are almost savages, some are cannibals, +and others are headhunters like some of the Dyaks of Borneo. + +In the Philippines, too, we find what is probably this same class of +wild people living in the mountains. They are warlike, savage, and +resist approach. Sometimes they eat human flesh as a ceremonial act, +and some prize above all other trophies the heads of their enemies, +which they cut from the body and preserve in their homes. It is +probable that these tribes represent the earliest and rudest epoch +of Malayan culture, and that these were the first of this race to +arrive in the Philippines and dispute with the Negritos for the +mastery of the soil. In such wild state of life, some of them, like +the Manguianes of Mindoro, have continued to the present day. + +The Tribes in Northern Luzon.--In northern Luzon, in the great +Cordillera Central, there are many of these primitive tribes. These +people are preëminently mountaineers. They prefer the high, cold, +and semi-arid crests and valleys of the loftiest ranges. Here, +with great industry, they have made gardens by the building of +stone-walled terraces on the slopes of the hills. Sometimes hundreds +of these terraces can be counted in one valley, and they rise one +above the other from the bottom of a caņon for several miles almost +to the summit of a ridge. These terraced gardens are all under +most careful irrigation. Water is carried for many miles by log +flumes and ditches, to be distributed over these little fields. The +soil is carefully fertilized with the refuse of the villages. Two +and frequently three crops are produced each year. Here we find +undoubtedly the most developed and most nearly scientific agriculture +in the Philippines. They raise rice, cotton, tobacco, the taro, +maize, and especially the camote, or sweet potato, which is their +principal food. These people live in compact, well-built villages, +frequently of several hundred houses. Some of these tribes, like +the Igorrotes of Benguet and the Tinguianes of Abra, are peaceable +as well as industrious. In Benguet there are fine herds of cattle, +much excellent coffee, and from time immemorial the Igorrotes here +have mined gold. + +Besides these peaceful tribes there are in Bontoc, and in the northern +parts of the Cordillera, many large tribes, with splendid mountain +villages, who are nevertheless in a constant and dreadful state of +war. Nearly every town is in feud with its neighbors, and the practice +of taking heads leads to frequent murder and combat. A most curious +tribe of persistent head hunters are the Ibilao, or Ilongotes, who live +in the Caraballo Sur Mountains between Nueva Ecija and Nueva Vizcaya. + +On other islands of the Philippines there are similar wild tribes. On +the island of Paragua there are the Tagbanúa and other savage folk. + +Characteristics of the Tribes of Mindanao.--In Mindanao, there are many +more tribes. Three of these tribes, the Aetas, Mandaya, and Manobo, +are on the eastern coast and around Mount Apo. In Western Mindanao, +there is quite a large but scattered tribe called the Subanon. These +people make clearings on the hillsides and support themselves by +raising maize and mountain rice. They also raise hemp, and from the +fiber they weave truly beautiful blankets and garments, artistically +dyed in very curious patterns. These peoples are nearly all pagans, +though a few are being gradually converted to Mohammedanism, and some +to Christianity. The pagans occasionally practice the revolting rites +of human sacrifice and ceremonial cannibalism. + +The Civilized Malayan Peoples.--Their Later Arrival.--At a later +date than the arrival of these primitive Malayan tribes, there came +to the Philippines others of a more developed culture and a higher +order of intelligence. These peoples rapidly mastered the low country +and the coasts of all the islands, driving into the interior the +earlier comers and the aboriginal Negritos. These later arrivals, +though all of one stock, differed considerably, and spoke different +dialects belonging to one language family. They were the ancestors +of the present civilized Filipino people. + +Distribution of These Peoples.--All through the central islands, +Panay, Negros, Leyte, Samar, Marinduque, and northern Mindanao, are +the Bisaya, the largest of these peoples. At the southern extremity +of Luzon, in the provinces of Sorsogon and the Camarines, are the +Bicol. North of these, holding central Luzon, Batangas, Cavite, +Manila, Laguna, Bataan, Bulacan, and Nueva Ecija, are the Tagálog, +while the great plain of northern Luzon is occupied by the Pampango +and Pangasinan. All the northwest coast is inhabited by the Ilocano, +and the valley of the Cagayan by a people commonly called Cagayanes, +but whose dialect is Ibanag. In Nueva Vizcaya province, on the Batanes +Islands and the Calamianes, there are other distinct branches of +the Filipino people, but they are much smaller in numbers and less +important than the tribes marked above. + +Importance of These Peoples.--They form politically and historically +the Filipino people. They are the Filipinos whom the Spaniards ruled +for more than three hundred years. All are converts to Christianity, +and all have attained a somewhat similar stage of civilization. + +Early Contact of the Malays and Hindus.--These people at the time +of their arrival in the Philippines were probably not only of a +higher plane of intelligence than any who had preceded them in the +occupation of the islands, but they appear to have had the advantages +of contact with a highly developed culture that had appeared in the +eastern archipelago some centuries earlier. + +Early Civilization in India.--More than two thousand years ago, +India produced a remarkable civilization. There were great cities of +stone, magnificent palaces, a life of splendid luxury, and a highly +organized social and political system. Writing, known as the Sanskrit, +had been developed, and a great literature of poetry and philosophy +produced. Two great religions, Brahminism and Buddhism, arose, the +latter still the dominant religion of Tibet, China, and Japan. The +people who produced this civilization are known as the Hindus. Fourteen +or fifteen hundred years ago Hinduism spread over Burma, Siam, and +Java. Great cities were erected with splendid temples and huge idols, +the ruins of which still remain, though their magnificence has gone +and they are covered to-day with the growth of the jungle. + +Influence of Hindu Culture on the Malayan Peoples.--This powerful +civilization of the Hindus, established thus in Malaysia, greatly +affected the Malayan people on these islands, as well as those who +came to the Philippines. Many words in the Tagálog have been shown to +have a Sanskrit origin, and the systems of writing which the Spaniards +found in use among several of the Filipino peoples had certainly been +developed from the alphabet then in use among these Hindu peoples +of Java. + +The Rise of Mohammedanism.--Mohammed.--A few hundred years later +another great change, due to religious faith, came over the Malayan +race,--a change which has had a great effect upon the history of +the Philippines, and is still destined to modify events far into the +future. This was the conversion to Mohammedanism. Of all the great +religions of the world, Mohammedanism was the last to arise, and +its career has in some ways been the most remarkable. Mohammed, its +founder, was an Arab, born about 572 A.D. At that time Christianity +was established entirely around the Mediterranean and throughout +most of Europe, but Arabia was idolatrous. Mohammed was one of those +great, prophetic souls which arise from time to time in the world's +history. All he could learn from Hebrewism and Christianity, together +with the result of his own thought and prayers, led him to the belief +in one God, the Almighty, the Compassionate, the Merciful, who as he +believed would win all men to His knowledge through the teachings of +Mohammed himself. Thus inspired, Mohammed became a teacher or prophet, +and by the end of his life he had won his people to his faith and +inaugurated one of the greatest eras of conquest the world has seen. + +Spread of Mohammedanism to Africa and Europe.--The armies of Arabian +horsemen, full of fanatical enthusiasm to convert the world to their +faith, in a century's time wrested from Christendom all Judea, Syria, +and Asia Minor, the sacred land where Jesus lived and taught, and the +countries where Paul and the other apostles had first established +Christianity. Thence they swept along the north coast of Africa, +bringing to an end all that survived of Roman power and religion, +and by 720 they had crossed into Europe and were in possession of +Spain. For nearly the eight hundred years that followed, the Christian +Spaniards fought to drive Mohammedanism from the peninsula, before +they were successful. + +The Conversion of the Malayans to Mohammedanism.--Not only did +Mohammedanism move westward over Africa and Europe, it was carried +eastward as well. Animated by their faith, the Arabs became the +greatest sailors, explorers, merchants, and geographers of the +age. They sailed from the Red Sea down the coast of Africa as far as +Madagascar, and eastward to India, where they had settlements on both +the Malabar and Coromandel coasts. Thence Arab missionaries brought +their faith to Malaysia. + +At that time the true Malays, the tribe from which the common term +"Malayan" has been derived, were a small people of Sumatra. At least +as early as 1250 they were converted to Mohammedanism, brought to +them by these Arabian missionaries, and under the impulse of this +mighty faith they broke from their obscurity and commenced that +great conquest and expansion that has diffused their power, language, +and religion throughout the East Indies. + +Mohammedan Settlement in Borneo.--A powerful Mohammedan Malay +settlement was established on the western coasts of Borneo certainly +as early as 1400. The more primitive inhabitants, like the Dyaks, +who were a tribe of the primitive Malayans, were defeated, and the +possession of the coast largely taken from them. From this coast of +Borneo came many of the adventurers who were traversing the seas of +the Philippines when the Spaniards arrived. + +The Mohammedan Population of Mindanao and Jolo owes something +certainly to this same Malay migration which founded the colony +of Borneo. But the Maguindanao and Illano Moros seem to be largely +descendants of primitive tribes, such as the Manobo and Tiruray, who +were converted to Mohammedanism by Malay and Arab proselyters. The +traditions of the Maguindanao Moros ascribe their conversion to +Kabunsuan, a native of Johore, the son of an Arab father and Malay +mother. He came to Maguindanao with a band of followers, and from him +the datos of Maguindanao trace their lineage. Kabunsuan is supposed +to be descended from Mohammed through his Arab father, Ali, and so +the datos of Maguindanao to the present day proudly believe that in +their veins flows the blood of the Prophet. + +The Coming of the Spaniards.--Mohammedanism was still increasing in +the Philippines when the Spaniards arrived. The Mohammedans already +had a foothold on Manila Bay, and their gradual conquest of the +archipelago was interrupted only by the coming of the Europeans. It +is a strange historical occurrence that the Spaniards, having fought +with the Mohammedans for nearly eight centuries for the possession of +Spain, should have come westward around the globe to the Philippine +Islands and there resumed the ancient conflict with them. Thus the +Spaniards were the most determined opponents of Mohammedanism on both +its western and eastern frontiers. Their ancient foes who crossed +into Spain from Morocco had been always known as "Moros" or "Moors," +and quite naturally they gave to these new Mohammedan enemies the +same title, and Moros they are called to the present day. + +Summary.--Such, then, are the elements which form the population of +these islands,--a few thousands of the little Negritos; many wild +mountain tribes of the primitive Malayans; a later immigration of +Malayans of higher cultivation and possibilities than any that preceded +them, who had been influenced by the Hinduism of Java and who have +had in recent centuries an astonishing growth both in numbers and in +culture; and last, the fierce Mohammedan sea-rovers, the true Malays. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +EUROPE AND THE FAR EAST ABOUT 1400 A.D. + + +The Mediæval Period in Europe.--Length of the Middle Age.--By the +Middle Ages we mean the centuries between 500 and 1300 A.D. This +period begins with the fall of the Roman Empire and the looting of +the Imperial City by the rude German tribes, and ends with the rise +of a new literature, a new way of looking at the world in general, +and a passion for discovery of every kind. + +These eight hundred years had been centuries of cruel struggle, +intellectual darkness, and social depression, but also of great +religious devotion. Edward Gibbon, one of the greatest historians, +speaks of this period as "the triumph of barbarism and religion." + +The population of Europe was largely changed, during the first few +centuries of the Christian Era, as the Roman Empire, that greatest +political institution of all history, slowly decayed. New peoples +of German or Teutonic origin came, fighting their way into western +Europe and settling wherever the land attracted them. Thus Spain and +Italy received the Goths; France, the Burgundians and Franks; England, +the Saxons and Angles or English. + +These peoples were all fierce, warlike, free, unlettered +barbarians. Fortunately, they were all converted to Christianity by +Roman priests and missionaries. They embraced this faith with ardor, +at the same time that other peoples and lands were being lost to +Christendom. Thus it has resulted that the countries where Christianity +arose and first established itself, are now no longer Christian, and +this religion, which had an Asiatic and Semitic origin, has become the +distinguishing faith of the people of western Europe. For centuries the +countries of Europe were fiercely raided and disturbed by pillaging +and murdering hordes; by the Huns, who followed in the Germans from +the East; by the Northmen, cruel pirating seamen from Scandinavia; +and, as we have already seen, by the Mohammedans, or Saracens as they +were called, who came into central Europe by way of Spain. + +Character of the Life during this Period.--Feudalism.--Life was so +beset with peril that independence or freedom became impossible, +and there was developed a society which has lasted almost down to +the present time, and which we call Feudalism. The free but weak man +gave up his freedom and his lands to some stronger man, who became +his lord. He swore obedience to this lord, while the lord engaged to +furnish him protection and gave him back his lands to hold as a "fief," +both sharing in the product. This lord swore allegiance to some still +more powerful man, or "overlord," and became his "vassal," pledged +to follow him to war with a certain number of armed men; and this +overlord, on his part, owed allegiance to the prince, who was, perhaps, +a duke or bishop (bishops at this time were also feudal lords), +or to the king or emperor. Thus were men united into large groups +or nations for help or protection. There was little understanding +of love of country. Patriotism, as we feel it, was replaced by the +passion of fidelity or allegiance to one's feudal superior. + +Disadvantages of Feudalism.--The great curse of this system was that +the feudal lords possessed the power to make war upon one another, +and so continuous were their jealousies and quarrelings that the land +was never free from armed bands, who laid waste an opponent's country, +killing the miserable serfs who tilled the soil, and destroying their +homes and cattle. + +There was little joy in life and no popular learning. If a man did not +enjoy warfare, but one other life was open to him, and that was in the +Church. War and religion were the pursuits of life, and it is no wonder +that many of the noblest and best turned their backs upon a life that +promised only fighting and bloodshed and, renouncing the world, became +monks. Monasticism developed in Europe under such conditions as these, +and so strong were the religious feelings of the age that at one time +a third of the land of France was owned by the religious orders. + +The Town.--The two typical institutions of the early Middle Age were +the feudal castle, with its high stone walls and gloomy towers, +with its fierce bands of warriors armed in mail and fighting on +horseback with lance and sword, and the monastery, which represented +inn, hospital, and school. Gradually, however, a third structure +appeared. This was the town. And it is to these mediæval cities, with +their busy trading life, their free citizenship, and their useful +occupations, that the modern world owes much of its liberty and its +intellectual light. + +The Renaissance.--Changes in Political Affairs.--By 1400, however, +the Middle Age had nearly passed and a new life had appeared, a new +epoch was in progress, which is called the Renaissance, which means +"rebirth." In political affairs the spirit of nationality had arisen, +and feudalism was already declining. Men began to feel attachment to +country, to king, and to fellow-citizens; and the national states, +as we now know them, each with its naturally bounded territory, +its common language, and its approximately common race, were appearing. + +France and England were, of these states, the two most advanced +politically just previous to the fifteenth century. At this distant +time they were still engaged in a struggle which lasted quite a +century and is known as the Hundred Years' War. In the end, England +was forced to give up all her claims to territory on the continent, +and the power of France was correspondingly increased. In France +the monarchy (king and court) was becoming the supreme power in the +land. The feudal nobles lost what power they had, while the common +people gained nothing. In England, however, the foundations for a +representative government had been laid. The powers of legislation and +government were divided between the English king and a Parliament. The +Parliament was first called in 1265 and consisted of two parts,--the +Lords, representing the nobility; and the Commons, composed of persons +chosen by the common people. + +Germany was divided into a number of small principalities,--Saxony, +Bavaria, Franconia, Bohemia, Austria, the Rhine principalities, and +many others,--which united in a great assembly, or Diet, the head of +which was some prince, chosen to be emperor. + +Italy was also divided. In the north, in the valley of the Po, +or Lombardy, were the duchy of Milan and the Republic of Venice; +south, on the western coast, were the Tuscan states, including the +splendid city of Florence. Thence, stretching north and south across +the peninsula, were states of the church, whose ruler was the pope, +for until less than fifty years ago the pope was not only the head +of the church but also a temporal ruler. Embracing the southern part +of the peninsula was the principality of Naples. + +In the Spanish peninsula Christian states had arisen,--in the west, +Portugal, in the center and east, Castile, Aragon, and Leon, from all +of which the Mohammedans had been expelled. But they still held the +southern parts of Spain, including the beautiful plain of Andalusia +and Grenada. + +The Mohammedans, in the centuries of their life in Spain, had +developed an elegant and prosperous civilization. By means of +irrigation and skillful planting, they had converted southern Spain +into a garden. They were the most skillful agriculturists and breeders +of horses and sheep in Europe, and they carried to perfection many +fine arts, while knowledge and learning were nowhere further advanced +than here. Through contact with this remarkable people the Christian +Spaniards gained much. Unfortunately, however, the spirit of religious +intolerance was so strong, and the hatred engendered by the centuries +of religious war was so violent, that in the end the Spaniard became +imbued with so fierce a fanaticism that he has ever since appeared +unable properly to appreciate or justly to treat any who differed +from him in religious belief. + +The Conquests of the Mohammedans.--In the fifteenth century, +religious toleration was but little known in the world, and the +people of the great Mohammedan faith still threatened to overwhelm +Christian Europe. Since the first great conquests of Islam in the +eighth century had been repulsed from central Europe, that faith had +shown a wonderful power of winning its way. In the tenth century Asia +Minor was invaded by hordes of Seljuks, or Turks, who poured down from +central Asia in conquering bands. These tribes had overthrown the +Arab's power in Mesopotamia and Asia Minor only to become converts +to his faith. With freshened zeal they hurled themselves upon the +old Christian empire, which at Constantinople had survived the fall +of the rest of the Roman world. + +The Crusades.--The Seljuk Turks had conquered most of Asia Minor, +Syria, and the Holy Land. A great fear came over the people of Europe +that the city of Constantinople would be captured and they, too, be +overwhelmed by these new Mohammedan enemies. The passionate religious +zeal of the Middle Age also roused the princes and knights of Europe +to try to wrest from the infidel the Holy Land of Palestine, where +were the birthplace of Christianity and the site of the Sepulcher of +Christ. Palestine was recovered and Christian states were established +there, which lasted for over a hundred and eighty years. Then the Arab +power revived and, operating from Egypt, finally retook Jerusalem and +expelled the Christian from the Holy Land, to which he has never yet +returned as a conqueror. + +Effects of the Crusades.--These long, holy wars, or "Crusades," had a +profound effect upon Europe. The rude Christian warrior from the west +was astonished and delighted with the splendid and luxurious life which +he met at Constantinople and the Arabian East. Even though he was a +prince, his life at home was barren of comforts and beauty. Glass, +linen, rugs, tapestries, silk, cotton, spices, and sugar were some +of the things which the Franks and the Englishmen took home with +them from the Holy Land. Demand for these treasures of the East +became irresistible, and trade between western Europe and the East +grew rapidly. + +The Commercial Cities of Italy.--The cities of Italy developed this +commerce. They placed fleets upon the Mediterranean. They carried the +crusaders out and brought back the wares that Europe desired. In this +way these cities grew and became very wealthy. On the west coast, +where this trade began, were Amalfi, Pisa, Genoa, and Florence, and +on the east, at the head of the Adriatic, was Venice. The rivalry +between these cities of Italy was very fierce. They fought and +plundered one another, each striving to win a monopoly for itself of +this invaluable trade. + +Venice, finally, was victorious. Her location was very favorable. From +her docks the wares could be carried easily and by the shortest +routes up the Po River and thence into France or northward over the +Alps to the Danube. In Bavaria grew up in this trade the splendid +German cities of Augsburg and Nuremberg, which passed these goods on +to the cities of the Rhine, and so down this most beautiful river +to the coast. Here the towns of Flanders and of the Low Countries, +or Holland, received them and passed them on again to England and +eastward to the countries of the Baltic. + +Development of Modern Language.--Thus commerce and trade grew up +in Europe, and, with trade and city life, greater intelligence, +learning, and independence. Education became more common, and the +universities of Europe were thronged. Latin in the Middle Age had +been the only language that was written by the learned class. Now +the modern languages of Europe took their form and began to be used +for literary purposes. Italian was the first to be so used by the +great Dante, and in the same half-century the English poet Chaucer +sang in the homely English tongue, and soon in France, Germany, and +Spain national literatures appeared. With this went greater freedom +of expression. Authority began to have less weight. + +Men began to inquire into causes and effects, to doubt certain things, +to seek themselves for the truth, and so the Renaissance came. With +it came a greater love for the beautiful, a greater joy in life, a +fresh zest for the good of this world, a new passion for discovery, +a thirst for adventure, and, it must also be confessed a new laxity of +living and a new greed for gold. Christian Europe was about to burst +its narrow bounds. It could not be repressed nor confined to its old +limitations. It could never turn backward. Of all the great changes +which have come over life and thought, probably none are greater than +those which saw the transition from the mediæval to the modern world. + +Trade with the East.--Articles of Trade.--Now we must go back for +a moment and pursue an old inquiry further. Whence came all these +beautiful and inviting wares that had produced new tastes and passions +in Europe? The Italian traders drew them from the Levant, but the +Levant had not produced them. Neither pepper, spices, sugarcane, costly +gems, nor rich silks, were produced on the shores of the Mediterranean. + +Only the rich tropical countries of the East were capable of growing +these rare plants, and up to that time of delivering to the delver +many precious stones. India, the rich Malaysian archipelago, the +kingdom of China,--these are the lands and islands which from time +immemorial have given up their treasures to be forwarded far and wide +to amaze and delight the native of colder and less productive lands. + +Routes of Trade to the Far East.--Three old sailing and caravan routes +connect the Mediterranean with the Far East. They are so old that we +can not guess when men first used them. They were old in the days of +Solomon and indeed very ancient when Alexander the Great conquered the +East. One of these routes passed through the Black Sea, and across +the Caspian Sea to Turkestan to those strange and romantic ancient +cities, Bokhara and Samarkand. Thence it ran northeasterly across Asia, +entering China from the north. Another crossed Syria and went down +through Mesopotamia to the Indian Ocean, A third began in Egypt and +went through the Red Sea, passing along the coast of Arabia to India. + +All of these had been in use for centuries, but by the year 1400 two +had been closed. A fresh immigration of Turks, the Ottomans, in the +fourteenth century came down upon the scourged country of the Euphrates +and Syria, and although these Turks also embraced Mohammedanism, +their hostility closed the first two routes and commerce over them +has never since been resumed. + +Venetian Monopoly of Trade.--Thus all interest centered upon the +southern route. By treaty with the sultan or ruler of Egypt, Venice +secured a monopoly of the products which came over this route. Goods +from the East now came in fleets up the Red Sea, went through the +hands of the sultan of Egypt, who collected a duty for them, and +then were passed on to the ships of the wealthy Venetian merchant +princes, who carried them throughout Europe. Although the object of +intense jealousy, it seemed impossible to wrest this monopoly from +Venice. Her fleet was the strongest on the Mediterranean, and her +rule extended along the Adriatic to the Grecian islands. All eager +minds were bent upon the trade with the East, but no way was known, +save that which now Venice had gained. + +Extent of Geographical Knowledge.--The Maps of this Period.--To +realize how the problem looked to the sailor of Genoa or the merchant +of Flanders at that time, we must understand how scanty and erroneous +was the geographical knowledge of even the fifteenth century. It +was believed that Jerusalem was the center of the world, a belief +founded upon a biblical passage. The maps of this and earlier dates +represent the earth in this way: In the center, Palestine, and beneath +it the Mediterranean Sea, the only body of water which was well known; +on the left side is Europe; on the right, Africa; and at the top, +Asia--the last two continents very indefinitely mapped. Around the +whole was supposed to flow an ocean, beyond the first few miles of +which it was perilous to proceed lest the ship be carried over the +edge of the earth or encounter other perils. + +Ideas about the Earth.--The Greek philosophers before the time of +Christ had discovered that the world is a globe, or ball, and had +even computed rudely its circumference. But in the Middle Ages this +knowledge had been disputed and contradicted by a geographer named +Cosmas, who held that the world was a vast plane, twice as long as +it was broad and surrounded by an ocean. This belief was generally +adopted by churchmen, who were the only scholars of the Middle Ages, +and came to be the universal belief of Christian Europe. + +The Renaissance revived the knowledge of the writings of the old Greek +geographers who had demonstrated the earth's shape to be round and had +roughly calculated its size; but these writings did not have sufficient +circulation in Europe to gain much acceptance among the Christian +cosmographers. The Arabs, however, after conquering Egypt, Syria and +northern Africa, translated into their own tongue the wisdom of the +Greeks and became the best informed and most scientific geographers +of the Middle Age, so that intercourse with the Arabs which began with +the Crusades helped to acquaint Europe somewhat with India and China. + +The Far East.--The Tartar Mongols.--Then in the thirteenth century +all northern Asia and China fell under the power of the Tartar +Mongols. Russia was overrun by them and western Europe threatened. At +the Danube, however, this tide of Asiatic conquest stopped, and then a +long period when Europe came into diplomatic and commercial relations +with these Mongols and through them learned something of China. + +Marco Polo Visits the Great Kaan.--Several Europeans visited the +court of the Great Kaan, or Mongol king, and of one of them, Marco +Polo, we must speak in particular. He was a Venetian, and when a +young man started in 1271 with his father and uncle on a visit to +the Great Kaan. They passed from Italy to Syria, across to Bagdad, +and so up to Turkestan, where they saw the wonderful cities of this +strange oasis, thence across the Pamirs and the Desert of Gobi to +Lake Baikal, where the Kaan had his court. Here in the service of +this prince Marco Polo spent over seventeen years. So valuable indeed +were his services that the Kaan would not permit him to return. Year +after year he remained in the East. He traversed most of China, and +was for a time "taotai," or magistrate, of the city of Yang Chan near +the Yangtze River. He saw the amazing wonders of the East. He heard of +"Zipangu," or Japan. He probably heard of the Philippines. + +Finally the opportunity came for the three Venetians to return. The +Great Kaan had a relative who was a ruler of Persia, and ambassadors +came from this ruler to secure a Mongol princess for him to marry. The +dangers and hardships of the travel overland were considered too +difficult for the delicate princess, and it was decided to send her +by water. Marco Polo and his father and uncle were commissioned to +accompany the expedition to Persia. + +History of Marco Polo's Travels.--They sailed from the port of Chin +Cheu, probably near Amoy, [2] in the year 1292. They skirted the +coasts of Cambodia and Siam and reached the eastern coasts of Sumatra, +where they waited five months for the changing of the monsoon. Of +the Malay people of Sumatra, as well as of these islands, their +animals and productions, Marco Polo has left us most interesting and +quite accurate accounts. The Malays on Sumatra were beginning to be +converted to Mohammedanism, for Marco Polo says that many of them were +"Saracens." He gained a good knowledge of the rich and mysterious +Indian Isles, where the spices and flavorings grew. It was two years +before the party, having crossed the Indian Ocean, reached Persia +and the court of the Persian king. When they arrived they found that +while they were making this long voyage the Persian king had died; +but they married the Mongol princess to his son, the young prince, +who had succeeded him, and that did just as well. + +From Persia the Venetians crossed to Syria and thence sailed to +Italy, and at last reached home after an absence of twenty-six +years. But Marco Polo's adventures did not end with his return to +Venice. In a fierce sea fight between the Venetians and Genoese, +he was made a prisoner and confined in Genoa. Here a fellow captive +wrote down from Marco's own words the story of his eastern adventures, +and this book we have to-day. It is a record of adventure, travel, +and description, so wonderful that for years it was doubted and +its accuracy disbelieved. But since, in our own time, men have been +able to traverse again the routes over which Marco Polo passed, fact +after fact has been established, quite as he truthfully stated them +centuries ago. To have been the first European to make this mighty +circuit of travel is certainly a strong title to enduring fame. + +Countries of the Far East.--India.--Let us now briefly look at the +countries of the Far East, which by the year 1400 had come to exercise +over the mind of the European so irresistible a fascination. First +of all, India, as we have seen, had for centuries been the principal +source of the western commerce. But long before the date we are +considering, the scepter of India had fallen from the hand of the +Hindu. From the seventh century, India was a prey to Mohammedan +conquerors, who entered from the northwest into the valley of the +Indus. At first these were Saracens or Arabs; later they were the +same Mongol converts to Mohammedanism, whose attacks upon Europe we +have already noticed. + +In 1398 came the furious and bloody warrior, the greatest of all +Mongols,--Timour, or Tamerlane. He founded, with capital at Delhi, +the empire of the Great Mogul, whose rule over India was only broken +by the white man. Eastward across the Ganges and in the Dekkan, +or southern part of India, were states ruled over by Indian princes. + +China.--We have seen how, at the time of Marco Polo, China also was +ruled by the Tartar Mongols. The Chinese have ever been subject to +attack from the wandering horse-riding tribes of Siberia. Two hundred +years before Christ one of the Chinese kings built the Great Wall that +stretches across the northern frontier for one thousand three hundred +miles, for a defense against northern foes. Through much of her history +the Chinese have been ruled by aliens, as they are to-day. About 1368, +however, the Chinese overthrew the Mongol rulers and established the +Ming dynasty, the last Chinese house of emperors, who ruled China until +1644, when the Manchus, the present rulers, conquered the country. + +China was great and prosperous under the Mings. Commerce flourished +and the fleets of Chinese junks sailed to India, the Malay Islands, +and to the Philippines for trade. The Grand Canal, which connects +Peking with the Yangtze River basin and Hangchau, was completed. It +was an age of fine productions of literature. + +The Chinese seem to have been much less exclusive then than they +are at the present time; much less a peculiar, isolated people than +now. They did not then shave their heads nor wear a queue. These +customs, as well as that hostility to foreign intercourse which they +have to-day, has been forced upon China by the Manchus. China appeared +at that time ready to assume a position of enormous influence among +the peoples of the earth,--a position for which she was well fitted +by the great industry of all classes and the high intellectual power +of her learned men. + +Japan.--Compared with China or India, or even some minor states, +the development of Japan at this time was very backward. Her people +were divided and there was constant civil war. The Japanese borrowed +their civilization from the Chinese. From them they learned writing +and literature, and the Buddhist religion, which was introduced +about 550 A.D. But in temperament they are a very different people, +being spirited, warlike, and, until recent years, despising trading +and commerce. + +Since the beginning of her history, Japan has been an empire. The +ruler, the Mikado, is believed to be of heavenly descent; but in the +centuries we are discussing the government was controlled by powerful +nobles, known as the Shogun, who kept the emperors in retirement in +the palaces of Kyoto, and themselves directed the State. The greatest +of these shoguns was Iyeyásu, who ruled Japan about 1600, soon after +Manila was founded. They developed in Japan a species of feudalism, +the great lords, or "daimios," owning allegiance to the shoguns, and +about the daimios, as feudal retainers, bodies of samurai, who formed +a partly noble class of their own. The samurai carried arms, fought +at their lords' command, were students and literati, and among them +developed that proud, loyal, and elevated code of morality known as +"Búshido," which has done so much for the Japanese people. It is this +samurai class who in modern times have effected the immense revolution +in the condition and power of Japan. + +The Malay Archipelago.--If now we look at the Malay Islands, we find, +as we have already seen, that changes had been effected there. Hinduism +had first elevated and civilized at least a portion of the race, and +Mohammedanism and the daring seamanship of the Malay had united these +islands under a common language and religion. There was, however, +no political union. The Malay peninsula was divided. Java formed a +central Malay power. Eastward among the beautiful Celebes and Moluccas, +the true Spice Islands, were a multitude of small native rulers, rajas +or datos, who surrounded themselves with retainers, kept rude courts, +and gathered wealthy tributes of cinnamon, pepper, and cloves. The +sultans of Ternate, Tidor, and Amboina were especially powerful, +and the islands they ruled the most rich and productive. + +Between all these islands there was a busy commerce. The Malay is +an intrepid sailor, and an eager trader. Fleets of praos, laden with +goods, passed with the changing monsoons from part to part, risking the +perils of piracy, which have always troubled this archipelago. Borneo, +while the largest of all these islands, was the least developed, and +down to the present day has been hardly explored. The Philippines +were also outside of most of this busy intercourse and had at that +date few products to offer for trade. Their only connection with the +rest of the Malay race was through the Mohammedan Malays of Jolo +and Borneo. The fame of the Spice Islands had long filled Europe, +but the existence of the Philippines was unknown. + +Summary.--We have now reviewed the condition of Europe and of +farther Asia as they were before the period of modern discovery +and colonization opened. The East had reached a condition of quiet +stability. Mohammedanism, though still spreading, did not promise to +effect great social changes. The institutions of the East had become +fixed in custom and her peoples neither made changes nor desired +them. On the other hand western Europe had become aroused to an excess +of ambition. New ideas, new discoveries and inventions were moving +the nations to activity and change. That era of modern discovery and +progress, of which we cannot yet perceive the end, had begun. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +THE GREAT GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERIES. + + +An Eastern Passage to India.--The Portuguese.--We have seen in the +last chapter how Venice held a monopoly of the only trading-route +with the Far East. Some new way of reaching India must be sought, +that would permit the traders of other Christian powers to reach the +marts of the Orient without passing through Mohammedan lands. This +surpassing achievement was accomplished by the Portuguese. So low at +the present day has the power of Portugal fallen that few realize the +daring and courage once displayed by her seamen and soldiers and the +enormous colonial empire that she established. + +Portugal freed her territory of the Mohammedan Moors nearly a century +earlier than Spain; and the vigor and intelligence of a great king, +John I., brought Portugal, about the year 1400, to an important place +among the states of Europe. This king captured from the Moors the city +of Ceuta, in Morocco; and this was the beginning of modern European +colonial possessions, and the first bit of land outside of Europe to +be held by a European power since the times of the Crusades. King +John's youngest son was Prince Henry, famous in history under the +title of "the Navigator." This young prince, with something of the +same adventurous spirit that filled the Crusaders, was ardent to +extend the power of his father's kingdom and to widen the sway of the +religion which he devotedly professed. The power of the Mohammedans in +the Mediterranean was too great for him hopefully to oppose and so he +planned the conquest of the west coast of Africa, and its conversion +to Christianity. With these ends in view, he established at Point +Sagres, on the southwestern coast of Portugal, a naval academy and +observatory. Here he brought together skilled navigators, charts, +and geographies, and all scientific knowledge that would assist in +his undertaking. [3] + +He began to construct ships larger and better than any in use. To +us they would doubtless seem very clumsy and small, but this was the +beginning of ocean ship-building. The compass and the astrolabe, or +sextant, the little instrument with which, by calculating the height +of the sun above the horizon, we can tell distance from the equator, +were just coming into use. These, as well as every other practicable +device for navigation known at that time, were supplied to these ships. + +Exploration of the African Coast.--Thus equipped and ably manned, the +little fleets began the exploration of the African coast, cautiously +feeling their way southward and ever returning with reports of progress +made. Year after year this work went on. In 1419 the Madeira Islands +were rediscovered and colonized by Portuguese settlers. The growing of +sugarcane was begun, and vines were brought from Burgundy and planted +there. The wine of the Madeiras has been famous to this day. Then +were discovered the Canaries and in 1444 the Azores. The southward +exploration of the coast of the mainland steadily continued until +in 1445 the Portuguese reached the mouth of the Senegal River. Up to +this point the African shore had not yielded much of interest to the +Portuguese explorer or trader. Below Morocco the great Sahara Desert +reaches to the sea and renders barren the coast for hundreds of miles. + +South of the mouth of the Senegal and comprising the whole Guinea +coast, Africa is tropical, well watered, and populous. This is the home +of the true African Negro. Here, for almost the first time, since the +beginning of the Middle Ages, Christian Europe came in contact with +a race of ruder culture and different color than its own. This coast +was found to be worth exploiting; for it yielded, besides various +desirable resinous gums, three articles which have distinguished the +exploitation of Africa, namely, gold, ivory, and slaves. + +Beginning of Negro Slavery in Europe.--At this point begins the +horrible and revolting story of European Negro slavery. The ancient +world had practiced this ownership of human chattels, and the Roman +Empire had declined under a burden of half the population sunk +in bondage. To the enormous detriment and suffering of mankind, +Mohammed had tolerated the institution, and slavery is permitted +by the Koran. But it is the glory of the mediæval church that it +abolished human slavery from Christian Europe. However dreary and +unjust feudalism may have been, it knew nothing of that institution +which degrades men and women to the level of cattle and remorselessly +sells the husband from his family, the mother from her child. + +Slaves in Portugal.--The arrival of the Portuguese upon the coast of +Guinea now revived not the bondage of one white man to another, but +that of the black to the white. The first slaves carried to Portugal +were regarded simply as objects of peculiar interest, captives to +represent to the court the population of those shores which had been +added to the Portuguese dominion. But southern Portugal, from which +the Moors had been expelled, had suffered from a lack of laborers, +and it was found profitable to introduce Negroes to work these fields. + +Arguments to Justify Slavery.--So arose the institution of Negro +slavery, which a century later upon the shores of the New World was +to develop into so tremendous and terrible a thing. Curiously enough, +religion was evoked to justify this enslavement of the Africans. The +Church taught that these people, being heathen, were fortunate to +be captured by Christians, that they might thereby be brought to +baptism and conversion; for it is better for the body to perish than +for the soul to be cast into hell. At a later age, when the falsity +of this teaching had been realized, men still sought to justify the +institution by arguing that the Almighty had created the African of +a lower state especially that he might serve the superior race. + +The coast of Guinea continued to be the resort of slavers down to the +middle of the last century, and such scenes of cruelty, wickedness, +and debauchery have occurred along its shores as can scarcely be +paralleled in brutality in the history of any people. + +The Portuguese can hardly be said to have colonized the coast in the +sense of raising up there a Portuguese population. As he approached +the equator the white man found that, in spite of his superior +strength, he could not permanently people the tropics. Diseases new +to his experience attacked him. His energy declined. If he brought +his family with him, his children were few or feeble and shortly his +race had died out. + +The settlements of the Portuguese were largely for the purposes of +trade. At Sierra Leone, Kamerun, or Loango, they built forts and +established garrisons, mounting pieces of artillery that gave them +advantage over the attacks of the natives, and erecting warehouses +and the loathsome "barracoon," where the slaves were confined to +await shipment. Such decadent little settlements still linger along +the African coast, although the slave-trade happily has ended. + +The Successful Voyage of Vasco da Gama.--Throughout the century Prince +Henry's policy of exploration was continued. Slowly the middle coast +of Africa became known. At last in 1486, Bartholomew Diaz rounded +the extremity of the continent. He named it the Cape of Storms; but +the Portuguese king, with more prophetic sight, renamed it the Cape +of Good Hope. It was ten years, however, before the Portuguese could +send another expedition. Then Vasco da Gama rounded the cape again, +followed up the eastern coast until the Arab trading-stations were +reached. Then he struck across the sea, landed at the Malabar coast +of India, and in 1498 arrived at Calcutta. The end dreamed of by +all of Europe had been achieved. A sea-route to the Far East had +been discovered. + +Results of Da Gama's Voyage.--The importance of this performance +was instantly recognized in Europe. Venice was ruined. "It was a +terrible day," said a contemporary writer, "when the word reached +Venice. Bells were rung, men wept in the streets, and even the bravest +were silent." The Arabs and the native rulers made a desperate effort +to expel the Portuguese from the Indian Ocean, but their opponents were +too powerful. In the course of twenty years Portugal had founded an +empire that had its forts and trading-marts from the coast of Arabia +to Malaysia. Zanzibar, Aden, Oman, Goa, Calicut, and Madras were all +Portuguese stations, fortified and secured. In the Malay peninsula was +founded the colony of Malacca. It retained its importance and power +until in the last century, when it dwindled before the competition +of Singapore. + +The work of building up this great domain was largely that of one man, +the intrepid Albuquerque. Think what his task was! He was thousands of +miles from home and supplies, he had only such forces and munitions as +he could bring with him in his little ships, and opposed to him were +millions of inhabitants and a multitude of Mohammedan princes. Yet this +great captain built up an Indian empire. Portugal at one bound became +the greatest trading and colonizing power in the world. Her sources +of wealth appeared fabulous, and, like Venice, she made every effort +to secure her monopoly. The fleets of other nations were warned that +they could not make use of the Cape of Good Hope route, on penalty +of being captured or destroyed. + +Reaching India by Sailing West.--The Earth as a Sphere.--Meanwhile, +just as Portugal was carrying to completion her project of reaching +India by sailing east, Europe was electrified by the supposed +successful attempt of reaching India by sailing directly west, +across the Atlantic. This was the plan daringly attempted in 1492 by +Christopher Columbus. Columbus was an Italian sailor and cosmographer +of Genoa. The idea of sailing west to India did not originate with +him, but his is the immortal glory of having persistently sought the +means and put the idea into execution. + +The Portuguese discoveries along the African coast gradually +revealed the extension of this continent and the presence of people +beyond the equator, and the possibility of passing safely through +the tropics. This knowledge was a great stimulus to the peoples +of Europe. The geographical theory of the Greeks, that the world +is round, was revived. The geographers, however, in making their +calculations of the earth's circumference, had fallen into an error +of some thousands of miles; that is, instead of finding that it is +fully twelve thousand miles from Europe around to the East Indies, +they had supposed it about four thousand, or even less. Marco Polo +too had exaggerated the distance he had traveled and from his accounts +men had been led to believe that China, Japan, and the Spice Islands +lie much further to the east than they actually do. + +By sailing west across one wide ocean, with no intervening lands, it +was thought that one could arrive at the island-world off the continent +of Asia. This was the theory that was revived in Italy and which clung +in men's minds for years and years, even after America was discovered. + +An Italian, named Toscanelli, drew a map showing how this voyage could +be made, and sent Columbus a copy. By sailing first to the Azores, a +considerable portion of the journey would be passed, with a convenient +resting-stage. Then about thirty-five days' favorable sailing would +bring one to the islands of "Cipango," or Japan, which Marco Polo +had said lay off the continent of Asia. From here the passage could +readily be pursued to Cathay and India. + +The Voyage of Christopher Columbus.--The romantic and inspiring story +of Columbus is told in many books,--his poverty, his genius, his +long and discouraging pursuit of the means to carry out his plan. He +first applied to Portugal; but, as we have seen, this country had been +pursuing another plan steadily for a century, and, now that success +appeared almost at hand, naturally the Portuguese king would not turn +aside to favor Columbus's plan. + +For years Columbus labored to interest the Spanish court. A great event +had happened in Spanish history. Ferdinand, king of Aragon, had wedded +Isabella of Castile, and this marriage united these two kingdoms into +the modern country of Spain. Soon the smaller states except Portugal +were added, and the war for the expulsion of the Moors was prosecuted +with new vigor. In 1492, Grenada, the last splendid stronghold of +the Mohammedans in the peninsula, surrendered, and in the same year +Isabella furnished Columbus with the ships for his voyage of discovery. + +Columbus sailed from Palos, August 3, 1492, reached the Canaries +August 24, and sailed westward on September 6. Day after day, pushed +by the strong winds, called the "trades," they went forward. Many +doubts and fears beset the crews, but Columbus was stout-hearted. At +the end of thirty-four days from the Canaries, on October 12, they +sighted land. It was one of the groups of beautiful islands lying +between the two continents of America. But Columbus thought that he +had reached the East Indies that really lay many thousands of miles +farther west. Columbus sailed among the islands of the archipelago, +discovered Cuba and Hispaniola (Haiti), and then returned to convulse +Europe with excitement over the new-found way to the East. He had +not found the rich Spice Islands, the peninsula of India, Cathay or +Japan, but every one believed that these must be close to the islands +on which Columbus had landed. + +The tall, straight-haired, copper-colored natives, whom Columbus met on +the islands, he naturally called "Indians"; and this name they still +bear. Afterwards the islands were called the "West Indies." Columbus +made three more voyages for Spain. On the fourth, in 1498, he touched +on the coast of South America. Here he discovered the great Orinoco +River. Because of its large size, he must have realized that a large +body of land opposed the passage to the Orient. He died in 1506, +disappointed at his failure to find India, but never knowing what he +had found, nor that the history of a new hemisphere had begun with him. + +The Voyage of the Cabots.--In the same year that Columbus discovered +the Orinoco, Sebastian Cabot, of Italian parentage, like Columbus, +secured ships from the king of England, hoping to reach China and +Japan by sailing west on a northern route. What he did discover was +a rugged and uninviting coast, with stormy headlands, cold climate, +and gloomy forests of pine reaching down to the sandy shores. For nine +hundred miles he sailed southward, but everywhere this unprofitable +coast closed the passage to China. It was the coast of Labrador and +the United States. Yet for years and years it was not known that a +continent three thousand miles wide and the greatest of all oceans +lay between Cathay and the shore visited by Cabot's ships. This land +was thought to be a long peninsula, an island, or series of islands, +belonging to Asia. No one supposed or could suppose that there was +a continent here. + +Naming the New World.--But in a few years Europe did realize that a +new continent had been discovered in South America. If you will look +at your maps, you will see that South America lies far to the eastward +of North America and in Brazil approaches very close to Africa. This +Brazilian coast was visited by a Portuguese fleet on the African route +in 1499, and two years later an Italian fleet traversed the coast from +the Orinoco to the harbor of Rio Janeiro. Their voyage was a veritable +revelation. They entered the mighty current of the Amazon, the greatest +river of the earth. They saw the wondrous tropical forests, full of +monkeys, great snakes, and stranger animals. They dealt and fought +with the wild and ferocious inhabitants, whose ways startled and +appalled the European. All that they saw filled them with greatest +wonder. This evidently was not Asia, nor was it the Indies. Here, +in fact, was a new continent, a veritable "Mundus Novus." + +The pilot of this expedition was an Italian, named Amerigo Vespucci. On +the return this man wrote a very interesting letter or little pamphlet, +describing this new world, which was widely read, and brought the +writer fame. A few years later a German cosmographer, in preparing +a new edition of Ptolemy's geography, proposed to give to this new +continent the name of the man who had made known its wonders in Europe, +So it was called "America." Long after, when the northern shores were +also proved to be those of a continent, this great land was named +"North America." No injustice was intended to Columbus when America +was so named. It was not then supposed that Columbus had discovered +a continent. The people then believed that Columbus had found a new +route to India and had discovered some new islands that lay off the +coast of Asia. + +Spain Takes Possession of the New Lands.--Of these newly found islands +and whatever wealth they might be found to contain, Spain claimed +the possession by right of discovery. And of the European nations, +it was Spain which first began the exploration and colonization of +America. Spain was now free from her long Mohammedan wars, and the +nation was being united under Ferdinand and Isabella. The Spaniards +were brave, adventurous, and too proud to engage in commerce or +agriculture, but ready enough to risk life and treasure in quest of +riches abroad. The Spaniards were devotedly religious, and the Church +encouraged conquest, that missionary work might be extended. So Spain +began her career that was soon to make her the foremost power of Europe +and one of the greatest colonial empires the world has seen. It is +amazing what the Spaniards accomplished in the fifty years following +Columbus's first voyage. + +Hispaniola was made the center from which the Spaniards extended +their explorations to the continents of both North and South +America. On these islands of the West Indies they found a great tribe +of Indians,--the Caribs. They were fierce and cruel. The Spaniards +waged a warfare of extermination against them, killing many, and +enslaving others for work in the mines. The Indian proved unable to +exist as a slave. And his sufferings drew the attention of a Spanish +priest, Las Casas, who by vigorous efforts at the court succeeded in +having Indian slavery abolished and African slavery introduced to +take its place. This remedy was in the end worse than the disease, +for it gave an immense impetus to the African slave-trade and peopled +America with a race of Africans in bondage. + +Other Spanish Explorations and Discoveries.--Meanwhile, the Spanish +soldier, with incredible energy, courage, and daring, pushed his +conquests. In 1513, Florida was discovered, and in the same year, +Balboa crossed the narrow isthmus of Panama and saw the Pacific +Ocean. Contrary to what is often supposed, he did not dream of its vast +extent, but supposed it to be a narrow body of water lying between +Panama, and the Asian islands. He named it the "South Sea," a name +that survived after its true character was revealed by Magellan. Then +followed the two most romantic and surprising conquests of colonial +history,--that of Mexico by Cortes in 1521, and of Peru by Pizarro +in 1533-34. These great countries were inhabited by Indians, the +most advanced and cultured on the American continents. And here the +Spaniards found enormous treasures of gold and silver. Then, the +discovery of the mines of Bogota opened the greatest source of the +precious metal that Europe had ever known. Spaniards flocked to the +New World, and in New Spain, as Mexico was called, was established a +great vice-royalty. Year after year enormous wealth was poured into +Spain from these American possessions. + +Emperor Charles V.--Meanwhile great political power had been added +to Spain in Europe. In 1520 the throne of Spain fell to a young man, +Charles, the grandson of Ferdinand and Isabella. His mother was Juana, +the Spanish princess, and his father was Philip the Handsome, of +Burgundy. Philip the Handsome was the son of Maximilian, the Archduke +of Austria. Now it curiously happened that the thrones of each of these +three countries was left without other heirs than Charles, and in 1520 +he was King of Spain, Archduke of Austria, and Duke of Burgundy and +the Low Countries, including the rich commercial cities of Holland +and Belgium. In addition to all this, the German princes elected him +German emperor, and although he was King Charles the First of Spain, +he is better known in history as Emperor Charles the Fifth. [4] + +He was then an untried boy of twenty years, and no one expected to +find in him a man of resolute energy, cold persistence, and great +executive ability. But so it proved, and this was the man that +made of Spain the greatest power of the time. He was in constant +warfare. He fought four wars with King Francis I. of France, five +wars with the Turks, both in the Danube valley and in Africa, and +an unending succession of contests with the Protestant princes of +Germany. For Charles, besides many other important changes, saw the +rise of Protestantism, and the revolt of Germany, Switzerland, and +England from Catholicism. The first event in his emperorship was the +assembling of the famous German Diet at Worms, where was tried and +condemned the real founder of the Protestant religion, Martin Luther. + +The Voyage of Hernando Magellan.--In the mean time a way had at last +been found to reach the Orient from Europe by sailing west. This +discovery, the greatest voyage ever made by man, was accomplished, in +1521, by the fleet of Hernando Magellan. Magellan was a Portuguese, who +had been in the East with Albuquerque. He had fought with the Malays +in Malacca, and had helped to establish the Portuguese power in India. + +On his return to Portugal, the injustice of the court drove him from +his native country, and he entered the service of Spain. Charles the +Fifth commissioned him to attempt a voyage of discovery down the +coast of South America, with the hope of finding a passage to the +East. This was Magellan's great hope and faith,--that south of the +new continent of America must lie a passage westward, by which ships +could sail to China. As long as Portugal was able to keep closed the +African route to all other ships than her own, the discovery of some +other way was imperative. + +On the 20th of September, 1519, Magellan's fleet of five ships set +sail from Seville, which was the great Spanish shipping-port for the +dispatch of the colonial fleets. On December 13 they reached the coast +of Brazil and then coasted southward. They traded with the natives, +and at the mouth of the Rio de la Plata stayed some days to fish. + +The weather grew rapidly colder and more stormy as they went farther +south, and Magellan decided to stop and winter in the Bay of San +Julian. Here the cold of the winter, the storms, and the lack of +food caused a conspiracy among his captains to mutiny and return to +Spain. Magellan acted with swift and terrible energy. He went himself +on board one of the mutinous vessels, killed the chief conspirator with +his own hand, executed another, and then "marooned," or left to their +fate on the shore, a friar and one other, who were leaders in the plot. + +The Straits of Magellan.--The fleet sailed southward again in August +but it was not until November 1, 1520, that Magellan entered the +long and stormy straits that bear his name and which connect the +Atlantic and Pacific oceans. South of them were great bleak islands, +cold and desolate. They were inhabited by Indians, who are probably +the lowest and most wretched savages on the earth. They live on fish +and mussels. As they go at all times naked, they carry with them in +their boats brands and coals of fire. Seeing the numerous lights on +the shore, Magellan named these islands Tierra del Fuego (the Land +of Fire). For twenty days the ships struggled with the contrary and +shifting winds that prevail in this channel, during which time one +ship deserted and returned to Spain. Then the remaining four ships +passed out onto the boundless waters of the Pacific. + +Westward on the Pacific Ocean.--But we must not make the mistake +of supposing that Magellan and his followers imagined that a great +ocean confronted them. They expected that simply sailing northward to +the latitude of the Spice Islands would bring them to these desired +places. This they did, and then turned westward, expecting each day +to find the Indies; but no land appeared. The days lengthened into +weeks, the weeks into months, and still they went forward, carried +by the trade winds over a sea so smooth and free from tempests that +Magellan named it the "Pacific." + +But they suffered horribly from lack of food, even eating in their +starvation the leather slings on the masts. It was a terrible trial +of their courage. Twenty of their number died. The South Pacific +is studded with islands, but curiously their route lay just too far +north to behold them. From November 28, when they emerged from the +Straits of Magellan, until March 7, when they reached the Ladrones, +they encountered only two islands, and these were small uninhabited +rocks, without water or food, which in their bitter disappointment +they named las Desventuradas (the Unfortunate Islands). + +The Ladrone Islands.--Their relief must have been inexpressible when, +on coming up to land on March the 7th, they found inhabitants and +food, yams, cocoanuts, and rice. At these islands the Spaniards +first saw the prao, with its light outrigger, and pointed sail. So +numerous were these craft that they named the group las Islas de las +Velas (the Islands of Sails); but the loss of a ship's boat and other +annoying thefts led the sailors to designate the islands Los Ladrones +(the Thieves), a name which they still retain. + +The Philippine Islands.--Samar.--Leaving the Ladrones Magellan +sailed on westward looking for the Moluccas, and the first land +that he sighted was the eastern coast of Samar. Pigafetta says: +"Saturday, the 16th of March, we sighted an island which has very +lofty mountains. Soon after we learned that it was Zamal, distant +three hundred leagues from the islands of the Ladrones." [5] + +Homonhón.--On the following day the sea-worn expedition, landed on +a little uninhabited island south of Samar which Pigafetta called +Humunu, and which is still known as Homonhón or Jomonjól. + +It was while staying at this little island that the Spaniards first +saw the people of the Philippines. A prao which contained nine men +approached their ship. They saw other boats fishing near and learned +that all of these people came from the island of Suluan, which lies +off to the eastward from Jomonjól about twenty kilometres. In their +life and appearance these fishing people were much like the present +Samal laut of southern Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago. + +Limasaua.--Pigafetta says that they stayed on the island of Jomonjól +eight days but had great difficulty in securing food. The natives +brought them a few cocoanuts and oranges, palm wine, and a chicken +or two, but this was all that could be spared, so, on the 25th, +the Spaniards sailed again, and near the south end of Leyte landed +on the little island of Limasaua. Here there was a village, where +they met two chieftains, whom Pigafetta calls "kings," and whose +names were Raja Calambú and Raja Ciagu. These two chieftains were +visiting Limasaua and had their residences one at Butúan and one +at Cagayan on the island of Mindanao. Some histories have stated +that the Spaniards accompanied one of these chieftains to Butúan, +but this does not appear to have been the case. + +On the island of Limasaua the natives had dogs, cats, hogs, goats, +and fowls. They were cultivating rice, maize, breadfruit, and had +also cocoanuts, oranges, bananas, citron, and ginger. Pigafetta tells +how he visited one of the chieftains at his home on the shore. The +house was built as Filipino houses are today, raised on posts and +thatched. Pigafetta thought it looked "like a haystack." + +It had been the day of San Lazarus when the Spaniards first reached +these islands, so that Magellan gave to the group the name of the +Archipelago of Saint Lazarus, the name under which the Philippines were +frequently described in the early writings, although another title, +Islas del Poniente or Islands of the West, was more common up to the +time when the title Filipinas became fixed. + +Cebu.--Magellan's people were now getting desperately in need of +food, and the population on Limasaua had very inadequate supplies; +consequently the natives directed him to the island of Cebu, and +provided him with guides. + +Leaving Limasaua the fleet sailed for Cebu, passing several large +islands, among them Bohol, and reaching Cebu harbor on Sunday, the +7th of April. A junk from Siam was anchored at Cebu when Magellan's +ships arrived there; and this, together with the knowledge that the +Filipinos showed of the surrounding countries, including China on +the one side and the Moluccas on the other, is additional evidence +of the extensive trade relations at the time of the discovery. + +Cebu seems to have been a large town and it is reported that more +than two thousand warriors with their lances appeared to resist the +landing of the Spaniards, but assurances of friendliness finally won +the Filipinos, and Magellan formed a compact with the dato of Cebu, +whose name was Hamalbar. + +The Blood Compact.--The dato invited Magellan to seal this compact in +accordance with a curious custom of the Filipinos. Each chief wounded +himself in the breast and from the wound each sucked and drank the +other's blood. It is not certain whether Magellan participated in this +"blood compact," as it has been called; but later it was observed many +times in the Spanish settlement of the islands, especially by Legaspi. + +The natives were much struck by the service of the mass, which the +Spaniards celebrated on their landing, and after some encouragement +desired to be admitted to the Spaniards' religion. More than eight +hundred were baptized, including Hamalbar. The Spaniards established +a kind of "factory" or trading-post on Cebu, and for some time a +profitable trade was engaged in. The Filipinos well understood trading, +had scales, weights, and measures, and were fair dealers. + +Death of Magellan.--And now follows the great tragedy of +the expedition. The dato of Cebu, or the "Christian king," as +Pigafetta called their new ally, was at war with the islanders of +Mactán. Magellan, eager to assist one who had adopted the Christian +faith, landed on Mactán with fifty men and in the battle that ensued +was killed by an arrow through the leg and spear-thrust through the +breast. So died the one who was unquestionably the greatest explorer +and most daring adventurer of all time. "Thus," says Pigafetta, +"perished our guide, our light, and our support." It was the crowning +disaster of the expedition. + +The Fleet Visits Other Islands.--After Magellan's death, the natives of +Cebu rose and killed the newly elected leader, Serrano, and the fleet +in fear lifted its anchors and sailed southward from the Bisayas. They +had lost thirty-five men and their numbers were reduced to one hundred +and fifteen. One of the ships was burned, there being too few men +surviving to handle three vessels. After touching at western Mindanao, +they sailed westward, and saw the small group of Cagayan Sulu. The few +inhabitants they learned were Moros, exiled from Borneo. They landed +on Paragua, called Puluan (hence Palawan), where they observed the +sport of cock-fighting, indulged in by the natives. + +From here, still searching for the Moluccas, they were guided to +Borneo, the present city of Brunei. Here was the powerful Mohammedan +colony, whose adventurers were already in communication with Luzon and +had established a colony on the site of Manila. The city was divided +into two sections, that of the Mohammedan Malays, the conquerors, and +that of the Dyaks, the primitive population of the island. Pigafetta +exclaims over the riches and power of this Mohammedan city. It +contained twenty-five thousand families, the houses built for most +part on piles over the water. The king's house was of stone, and +beside it was a great brick fort, with over sixty brass and iron +cannon. Here the Spaniards saw elephants and camels, and there was +a rich trade in ginger, camphor, gums, and in pearls from Sulu. + +Hostilities cut short their stay here and they sailed eastward +along the north coast of Borneo through the Sulu Archipelago, +where their cupidity was excited by the pearl fisheries, and on +to Maguindanao. Here they took some prisoners, who piloted them +south to the Moluccas, and finally, on November 8, they anchored +at Tidor. These Molucca islands, at this time, were at the height +of the Malayan power. The ruler, or raja of Tidor was Almanzar, +of Ternate Corala; the "king" of Gilolo was Yusef. With all these +rulers the Spaniards exchanged presents, and the rajas are said by +the Spaniards to have sworn perpetual amnesty to the Spaniards and +acknowledged themselves vassals of the king. In exchange for cloths, +the Spaniards laid in a rich cargo of cloves, sandalwood, ginger, +cinnamon, and gold. They established here a trading-post and hoped +to hold these islands against the Portuguese. + +The Return to Spain.--It was decided to send one ship, the "Victoria," +to Spain by way of the Portuguese route and the Cape of Good Hope, +while the other would return to America. Accordingly the "Victoria," +with a little crew of sixty men, thirteen of them natives, under +the command of Juan Sebastian del Cano, set sail. The passage was +unknown to the Spaniards and full of perils. They sailed to Timor +and thence out into the Indian Ocean. They rounded Africa, sailing +as far south as 42 degrees. Then they went northward, in constant +peril of capture by some Portuguese fleet, encountering storms and +with scarcity of food. Their distress must have been extreme, for on +this final passage twenty-one of their small number died. + +At Cape Verdi they entered the Portuguese port for supplies, +trusting that at so northern a point their real voyage would +not be suspected. But some one of the party, who went ashore for +food, in an hour of intoxication boasted of the wonderful journey +they had performed and showed some of the products of the Spice +Islands. Immediately the Portuguese governor gave orders for the +seizure of the Spanish vessel and El Cano, learning of his danger, left +his men, who had gone on shore, raised sail, and put out for Spain. + +On the 6th of September, 1522, they arrived at San Lucar, at the mouth +of the Guadalquivir River, on which is situated Seville, one ship +out of the five, and eighteen men out of the company of 234, who had +set sail almost three full years before. Spain welcomed her worn and +tired seamen with splendid acclaim. To El Cano was given a title of +nobility and the famous coat-of-arms, showing the sprays of clove, +cinnamon, and nutmeg, and the effigy of the globe with the motto, +the proudest and worthiest ever displayed on any adventurer's shield, +"Hic primus circumdedisti me." + +The First Circumnavigation of the Earth.--Thus with enormous suffering +and loss of life was accomplished the first circumnavigation of the +earth. It proved that Asia could be reached, although by a long and +circuitous route, by sailing westward from Europe. It made known to +Europe that the greatest of all oceans lies between the New World and +Asia, and it showed that the earth is incomparably larger than had been +believed and supposed. It was the greatest voyage of discovery that has +ever been accomplished, and greater than can ever be performed again. + +New Lands Divided between Spain and Portugal.--By this discovery of the +Philippines and a new way to the Spice Islands, Spain became engaged +in a long dispute with Portugal. At the beginning of the modern age, +there was in Europe no system of rules by which to regulate conduct +between states. That system of regulations and customs which we +call International Law, and by which states at the present time are +guided in their dealings, had not arisen. During the middle age, +disputes between sovereigns were frequently settled by reference to +the emperor or to the pope, and the latter had frequently asserted +his right to determine all such questions as might arise. The pope +had also claimed to have the right of disposing of all heathen and +newly discovered lands and peoples. + +So, after the discovery of the East Indies by Portugal and of the West +Indies by Spain, Pope Alexander VI., divided the new lands between +them. He declared that all newly discovered countries halfway around +the earth to the east of a meridian 100 leagues west of the Azores +should be Portuguese, and all to the west Spanish. Subsequently he +shifted this line to 270 leagues west of the Azores. This division, +it was supposed, would give India and the Malay islands to Portugal, +and to Spain the Indies that Columbus had discovered, and the New +World, except Brazil. + +As a matter of fact, 180 degrees west of the meridian last set by +the pope extended to the western part of New Guinea, and not quite +to the Moluccas; but in the absence of exact geographical knowledge +both parties claimed the Spice Islands. Portugal denied to Spain all +right to the Philippines as well, and, as we shall see, a conflict in +the Far East began, which lasted nearly through the century. Portugal +captured the traders, whom El Cano had left at Tidor, and broke up the +Spanish station in the Spice Islands. The "Trinidad," the other ship, +which was intended to return to America, was unable to sail against +the strong winds, and had to put back to Tidor, after cruising through +the waters about New Guinea. + +Effect of the Century of Discoveries.--This circumnavigation of the +globe completed a period of discovery which had begun a hundred years +before with the timid, slow attempts of the Portuguese along the coast +of Africa. In these years a new era had opened. At its beginning the +European knew little of any peoples outside of his own countries, +and he held not one mile of land outside the continent of Europe. At +the end of a hundred years the earth had become fairly well known, +the African race, the Malay peoples, the American Indians, and the +Pacific islanders had all been seen and described, and from now on the +history of the white race was to be connected with that of these other +races. The age of colonization, of world-wide trade and intercourse, +had begun. The white man, who had heretofore been narrowly pressed +in upon Europe, threatened again and again with conquest by the +Mohammedan, was now to cover the seas with his fleets and all lands +with his power. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +THE FILIPINO PEOPLE BEFORE THE ARRIVAL OF THE SPANIARDS. + + +Position of Tribes.--On the arrival of the Spaniards, the population +of the Philippines seems to have been distributed by tribes in much +the same manner as at present. Then, as now, the Bisaya occupied the +central islands of the archipelago and some of the northern coast of +Mindanao. The Bicol, Tagálog, and Pampango were in the same parts of +Luzon as we find them to-day. The Ilocano occupied the coastal plain +facing the China Sea, but since the arrival of the Spaniards they +have expanded considerably and their settlements are now numerous in +Pangasinan, Nueva Vizcaya, and the valley of the Cagayan. + +The Number of People.--These tribes which to-day number nearly +7,000,000 souls, at the time of Magellan's discovery were, probably, +not more than 500,000. The first enumeration of the population made +by the Spaniards in 1591, and which included practically all of these +tribes, gives a population of less than 700,000. (See Chapter VIII., +The Philippines Three Hundred Years Ago.) + +There are other facts too that show us how sparse the population must +have been. The Spanish expeditions found many coasts and islands in +the Bisayan group without inhabitants. Occasionally a sail or a canoe +would be seen, and then these would disappear in some small "estero" +or mangrove swamp and the land seem as unpopulated as before. At +certain points, like Limasaua, Butúan, and Bohol, the natives were +more numerous, and Cebu was a large and thriving community; but the +Spaniards had nearly everywhere to search for settled places and +cultivated lands. + +The sparsity of population is also well indicated by the great scarcity +of food. The Spaniards had much difficulty in securing sufficient +provisions. A small amount of rice, a pig and a few chickens, +were obtainable here and there, but the Filipinos had no large +supplies. After the settlement of Manila was made, a large part of +the food of the city was drawn from China. The very ease with which +the Spaniards marched where they willed and reduced the Filipinos +to obedience shows that the latter were weak in numbers. Laguna and +the Camarines seem to have been the most populous portions of the +archipelago. All of these things and others show that the Filipinos +were but a small fraction of their present number. + +On the other hand, the Negritos seem to have been more numerous, +or at least more in evidence. They were immediately noticed on the +island of Negros, where at the present they are few and confined to +the interior; and in the vicinity of Manila and in Batangas, where they +are no longer found, they were mingling with the Tagálog population. + +Conditions of Culture.--The culture of the various tribes, which +is now quite the same throughout the archipelago, presented some +differences. In the southern Bisayas, where the Spaniards first entered +the archipelago, there seem to have been two kinds of natives: the +hill dwellers, who lived in the interior of the islands in small +numbers, who wore garments of tree bark and who sometimes built +their houses in the trees; and the sea dwellers, who were very much +like the present day Moro tribes south of Mindanao, who are known as +the Sámal, and who built their villages over the sea or on the shore +and lived much in boats. These were probably later arrivals than the +forest people. From both of these elements the Bisaya Filipinos are +descended, but while the coast people have been entirely absorbed, +some of the hill-folk are still pagan and uncivilized, and must be +very much as they were when the Spaniards first came. + +The highest grade of culture was in the settlements where there was +regular trade with Borneo, Siam, and China, and especially about +Manila, where many Mohammedan Malays had colonies. + +Languages of the Malayan Peoples.--With the exception of the Negrito, +all the languages of the Philippines belong to one great family, +which has been called the "Malayo-Polynesian." All are believed to +be derived from one very ancient mother-tongue. It is astonishing how +widely this Malayo-Polynesian speech has spread. Farthest east in the +Pacific there is the Polynesian, then in the groups of small islands, +known as Micronesian; then Melanesian or Papuan; the Malayan throughout +the East Indian archipelago, and to the north the languages of the +Philippines. But this is not all; for far westward on the coast of +Africa is the island of Madagascar, many of whose languages have no +connection with African but belong to the Malayo-Polynesian family. [6] + +The Tagálog Language.--It should be a matter of great interest to +Filipinos that the great scientist, Baron William von Humboldt, +considered the Tagálog to be the richest and most perfect of all +the languages of the Malayo-Polynesian family, and perhaps the type +of them all. "It possesses," he said, "all the forms collectively +of which particular ones are found singly in other dialects; and it +has preserved them all with very trifling exceptions unbroken, and in +entire harmony and symmetry." The Spanish friars, on their arrival in +the Philippines, devoted themselves at once to learning the native +dialects and to the preparation of prayers and catechisms in these +native tongues. They were very successful in their studies. Father +Chirino tells us of one Jesuit who learned sufficient Tagálog in +seventy days to preach and hear confession. In this way the Bisayan, +the Tagálog, and the Ilocano were soon mastered. + +In the light of the opinion of Von Humboldt, it is interesting to +find these early Spaniards pronouncing the Tagálog the most difficult +and the most admirable. "Of all of them," says Padre Chirino, "the +one which most pleased me and filled me with admiration was the +Tagálog. Because, as I said to the first archbishop, and afterwards +to other serious persons, both there and here, I found in it four +qualities of the four best languages of the world: Hebrew, Greek, +Latin, and Spanish; of the Hebrew, the mysteries and obscurities; of +the Greek, the articles and the precision not only of the appellative +but also of the proper nouns; of the Latin, the wealth and elegance; +and of the Spanish, the good breeding, politeness, and courtesy." [7] + +An Early Connection with the Hindus.--The Malayan languages contain +also a considerable proportion of words borrowed from the Sanskrit, +and in this the Tagálog, Bisayan, and Ilocano are included. Whether +these words were passed along from one Malayan group to another, +or whether they were introduced by the actual presence and power of +the Hindu in this archipelago, may be fair ground for debate; but the +case for the latter position has been so well and brilliantly put by +Dr. Pardo de Tavera that his conclusions are here given in his own +words. "The words which Tagálog borrowed," he says, "are those which +signify intellectual acts, moral conceptions, emotions, superstitions, +names of deities, of planets, of numerals of high number, of botany, +of war and its results and consequences, and finally of titles and +dignities, some animals, instruments of industry, and the names +of money." + +From the evidence of these works, Dr. Pardo argues for a period +in the early history of the Filipinos, not merely of commercial +intercourse, like that of the Chinese, but of Hindu political and +social domination. "I do not believe," he says, "and I base my opinion +on the same words that I have brought together in this vocabulary, +that the Hindus were here simply as merchants, but that they dominated +different parts of the archipelago, where to-day are spoken the +most cultured languages,--the Tagálo, the Visayan, the Pampanga, +and the Ilocano; and that the higher culture of these languages comes +precisely from the influence of the Hindu race over the Filipino." + +The Hindus in the Philippines.--"It is impossible to believe that the +Hindus, if they came only as merchants, however great their number, +would have impressed themselves in such a way as to give to these +islanders the number and the kind of words which they did give. These +names of dignitaries, of caciques, of high functionaries of the court, +of noble ladies, indicate that all of these high positions with +names of Sanskrit origin were occupied at one time by men who spoke +that language. The words of a similar origin for objects of war, +fortresses, and battle-songs, for designating objects of religious +belief, for superstitions, emotions, feelings, industrial and farming +activities, show us clearly that the warfare, religion, literature, +industry, and agriculture were at one time in the hands of the Hindus, +and that this race was effectively dominant in the Philippines." [8] + +Systems of Writing among the Filipinos.--When the Spaniards arrived in +the Philippines, the Filipinos were using systems of writing borrowed +from Hindu or Javanese sources. This matter is so interesting that +one can not do better than to quote in full Padre Chirino's account, +as he is the first of the Spanish writers to mention it and as his +notice is quite complete. + +"So given are these islanders to reading and writing that there is +hardly a man, and much less a woman, that does not read and write in +letters peculiar to the island of Manila, very different from those +of China, Japan, and of India, as will be seen from the following +alphabet. + +"The vowels are three; but they serve for five, and are, + + + a e, i o, u + + +The consonants are no more than twelve, and they serve to write both +consonant and vowel, in this form. The letter alone, without any +point either above or below, sounds with a. + + + Ba ca da ga ha la + ma na pa sa ta ya + + +Placing the point above, each one sounds with e or with i. + + + Bi qui di gui hi li + be que de gue he le + + mi ni pi si ti yi + me ne pe se te ye + + +Placing the point below, it sounds with o or with u. + + + bo co do go ho lo + bu cu du gu hu lu + + mo no po so to yo + mu nu pu su tu yu + + +For instance, in order to say 'cama,' the two letters alone suffice. + + + ca ma + + +If to the ka there is placed a point above, it will say + + + que ma + + +If it is given to both below, it will say + + + co mo + + +The final consonants are supplied or understood in all cases, and so +to say 'cantar,' they write + + + ca ta + + +barba, + + + ba ba + + +But with all, and that without many evasions, they make themselves +understood, and they themselves understand marvellously. And the +reader supplies, with much skill and ease, the consonants that are +lacking. They have learned from us to write running the lines from +the left hand to the right, but formerly they only wrote from above +downwards, placing the first line (if I remember rightly) at the left +hand, and continuing with the others to the right, the opposite of +the Chinese and Japanese.... They write upon canes or on leaves of a +palm, using for a pen a point of iron. Nowadays in writing not only +their own but also our letters, they use a feather very well cut, +and paper like ourselves. + +They have learned our language and pronunciation, and write as well +as we do, and even better; for they are so bright that they learn +everything with the greatest ease. I have brought with me handwriting +with very good and correct lettering. In Tigbauan, I had in school a +very small child, who in three months' time learned, by copying from +well-written letters that I set him, to write enough better than I, +and transcribed for me writings of importance very faithfully, and +without errors or mistakes. But enough of languages and letters; +now let us return to our occupation with human souls." [9] + +Sanskrit Source of the Filipino Alphabet.--Besides the Tagálog, +the Bisaya, Pampango, Pangasinan, and Ilocano had alphabets, or +more properly syllabaries similar to this one. Dr. Pardo de Tavera +has gathered many data concerning them, and shows that they were +undoubtedly received by the Filipinos from a Sanskrit source. + +Early Filipino Writings.--The Filipinos used this writing for setting +down their poems and songs, which were their only literature. None +of this, however, has come down to us, and the Filipinos soon adopted +the Spanish alphabet, forming the syllables necessary to write their +language from these letters. As all these have phonetic values, +it is still very easy for a Filipino to learn to pronounce and so +read his own tongue. These old characters lingered for a couple of +centuries, in certain places. Padre Totanes [10] tells us that it was +rare in 1705 to find a person who could use them; but the Tagbanua, +a pagan people on the island of Paragua, use a similar syllabary +to this day. Besides poems, they had songs which they sang as they +rowed their canoes, as they pounded the rice from its husk, and as +they gathered for feast or entertainment; and especially there were +songs for the dead. In these songs, says Chirino, they recounted the +deeds of their ancestors or of their deities. + +Chinese in the Philippines.--Early Trade.--Very different from the +Hindu was the early influence of the Chinese. There is no evidence +that, previous to the Spanish conquest, the Chinese settled or +colonized in these islands at all; and yet three hundred years +before the arrival of Magellan their trading-fleets were coming here +regularly and several of the islands were well known to them. One +evidence of this prehistoric trade is in the ancient Chinese jars and +pottery which have been exhumed in the vicinity of Manila, but the +Chinese writings themselves furnish us even better proof. About the +beginning of the thirteenth century, though not earlier than 1205, +a Chinese author named Chao Ju-kua wrote a work upon the maritime +commerce of the Chinese people. One chapter of his work is devoted to +the Philippines, which he calls the country of Mayi. [11] According +to this record it is indicated that the Chinese were familiar with +the islands of the archipelago seven hundred years ago. [12] + +Chinese, Description of the People.--"The country of Mayi," says this +interesting classic, "is situated to the north of Poni (Burney, or +Borneo). About a thousand families inhabit the banks of a very winding +stream. The natives clothe themselves in sheets of cloth resembling +bed sheets, or cover their bodies with sarongs. (The sarong is the +gay colored, typical garment of the Malay.) Scattered through the +extensive forests are copper Buddha images, but no one knows how they +got there. [13] + +"When the merchant (Chinese) ships arrive at this port they anchor +in front of an open place ... which serves as a market, where they +trade in the produce of the country. When a ship enters this port, +the captain makes presents of white umbrellas (to the mandarins). The +merchants are obliged to pay this tribute in order to obtain the +good will of these lords." The products of the country are stated to +be yellow wax, cotton, pearls, shells, betel nuts, and yuta cloth, +which was perhaps one of the several cloths still woven of abacá, +or piņa. The articles imported by the Chinese were "porcelain, trade +gold, objects of lead, glass beads of all colors, iron cooking-pans, +and iron needles." + +The Negritos.--Very curious is the accurate mention in this Chinese +writing, of the Negritos, the first of all accounts to be made of +the little blacks. "In the interior of the valleys lives a race +called Hai-tan (Acta). They are, of low stature, have round eyes of +a yellow color, curly hair, and their teeth are easily seen between +their lips. (That is, probably, not darkened by betel-chewing or +artificial stains.) They build their nests in the treetops and in +each nest lives a family, which only consists of from three to five +persons. They travel about in the densest thickets of the forests, and, +without being seen themselves, shoot their arrows at the passers-by; +for this reason they are much feared. If the trader (Chinese) throws +them a small porcelain bowl, they will stoop down to catch it and +then run away with it, shouting joyfully." + +Increase in Chinese Trade.--These junks also visited the more central +islands, but here traffic was conducted on the ships, the Chinese +on arrival announcing themselves by beating gongs and the Filipinos +coming out to them in their light boats. Among other things here +offered by the natives for trade are mentioned "strange cloth," +perhaps cinamay or jusi, and fine mats. + +This Chinese trade continued probably quite steadily until the arrival +of the Spaniards. Then it received an enormous increase through the +demand for Chinese food-products and wares made by the Spaniards, +and because of the value of the Mexican silver which the Spaniards +offered in exchange. + +Trade with the Moro Malays of the South.--The spread of Mohammedanism +and especially the foundation of the colony of Borneo brought the +Philippines into important commercial relations with the Malays of the +south. Previous to the arrival of the Spaniards these relations seem +to have been friendly and peaceful. The Mohammedan Malays sent their +praos northward for purposes of trade, and they were also settling +in the north Philippines as they had in Mindanao. + +When Legaspi's fleet, soon after its arrival, lay near the island +of Bohol, the "Maestro de Campo" had a hard fight with a Moro vessel +which had come up for trade, and took six prisoners. One of them, whom +they call the "pilot," was closely interrogated by the Adelantado +and some interesting information obtained, which is recorded by +Padre San Augustin. [14] Legaspi had a Malay slave interpreter with +him and San Augustin says that Padre Urdaneta "knew well the Malayan +language." The pilot said that "those of Borneo brought for trade with +the Filipinos, copper and tin, which was brought to Borneo from China, +porcelain, dishes, and bells made in their fashion, very different from +those that the Christians use, and benzoin, and colored blankets from +India, and cooking-pans made in China, and that they also brought iron +lances very well tempered, and knives and other articles of barter, +and that in exchange for them they took away from the islands gold, +slaves, wax, and a kind of small seashell which they call 'sijueyes,' +and which passes for money in the kingdom of Siam and other places; +and also they carry off some white cloths, of which there is a great +quantity in the islands." + +Butúan, on the north coast of Mindanao, seems to have been quite a +trading-place resorted to by vessels from all quarters. This country, +like many other parts of the Philippines, has produced from time +immemorial small quantities of gold, and all the early voyagers +speak of the gold earrings and ornaments of the natives. Butúan +also produced sugarcane and was a trading-port for slaves. This +unfortunate traffic in human life seems to have been not unusual, +and was doubtless stimulated by the commerce with Borneo. Junks from +Siam trading with Cebu were also encountered by the Spaniards. + +Result of this Intercourse and Commerce.--This intercourse and +traffic had acquainted the Filipinos with many of the accessories +of civilized life long before the arrival of the Spaniards. Their +chiefs and datos dressed in silks, and maintained some splendor of +surroundings; nearly the whole population of the tribes of the coast +wrote and communicated by means of a syllabary; vessels from Luzon +traded as far south as Mindanao and Borneo, although the products of +Asia proper came through the fleets of foreigners; and perhaps what +indicates more clearly than anything else the advance the Filipinos +were making through their communication with outside people is their +use of firearms. Of this point there is no question. Everywhere in +the vicinity of Manila, on Lubang, in Pampanga, at Cainta and Laguna +de Bay, the Spaniards encountered forts mounting small cannon, or +"lantakas." [15] The Filipinos seem to have understood, moreover, +the arts of casting cannon and of making powder. The first gun-factory +established by the Spaniards was in charge of a Filipino from Pampanga. + +Early Political and Social Life.--The Barangay.--The weakest side +of the culture of the early Filipinos was their political and social +organization, and they were weak here in precisely the same way that +the now uncivilized peoples of northern Luzon are still weak. Their +state did not embrace the whole tribe or nation; it included simply +the community. Outside of the settlers in one immediate vicinity, +all others were enemies or at most foreigners. There were in the +Philippines no large states, nor even great rajas and sultans such +as were found in the Malay Archipelago, but instead on every island +were a multitude of small communities, each independent of the other +and frequently waging war. + +The unit of their political order was a little cluster of houses from +thirty to one hundred families, called a "barangay," and which still +exists in the Philippines as the "barrio." At the head of each barangay +was a chief known as the "dato," a word no longer used in the northern +Philippines, though it persists among the Moros of Mindanao. The +powers of these datos within their small areas appear to have been +great, and they were treated with utmost respect by the people. + +The barangays were grouped together in tiny federations including +about as much territory as the present towns, whose affairs were +conducted by the chiefs or datos, although sometimes they seem to have +all been in obedience to a single chief, known in some places as the +"hari," at other times by the Hindu word "raja," or the Mohammedan +term "sultan." Sometimes the power of one of these rajas seems to +have extended over the whole of a small island, but usually their +"kingdoms" embraced only a few miles. + +Changes Made by the Spaniards.--The Spaniards, in enforcing their +authority through the islands, took away the real power from the +datos, grouping the barangays into towns, or "pueblos," but making +the datos "cabezas de barrio," or "gobernadorcillos." Something of +the old distinction between the dato, or "principal," and the common +man may be still represented in the "gente illustrada," or the more +wealthy, educated, and influential class found in each town, and the +"gente baja," or the poor and uneducated. + +Classes of Filipinos under the Datos.--Beneath the datos, according +to Chirino and Morga, there were three classes of Filipinos; the +free persons, or "maharlica," who paid no tribute to the dato, +but who accompanied him to war, rowed his boat when he went on a +journey, and attended him in his house. This class is called by Morga +"timauas." [16] + +Then there was a very large class, who appear to have been freedmen or +liberated slaves, who had acquired their own homes and lived with their +families, but who owed to dato or maharlica heavy debts of service; +to sow and harvest in his ricefields, to tend his fish-traps, to +row his canoe, to build his house, to attend him when he had guests, +and to perform any other duties that the chief might command. These +semi-free were called "aliping namamahay," and their condition of +bondage descended to their children. + +Beneath these existed a class of slaves. These were the +"siguiguiliris," and they were numerous. Their slavery arose in several +ways. Some were those who as children had been captured in war and +their lives spared. Some became slaves by selling their freedom in +times of hunger. But most of them became slaves through debt, which +descended from father to son. The sum of five or six pesos was enough +in some cases to deprive a man of his freedom. + +These slaves were absolutely owned by their lord, who could +theoretically sell them like cattle; but, in spite of its bad +possibilities, this Filipino slavery was ordinarily not of a cruel +or distressing nature. The slaves frequently associated on kindly +relations with their masters and were not overworked. This form of +slavery still persists in the Philippines among the Moros of Mindanao +and Jolo. Children of slaves inherited their parents' slavery. If +one parent was free and the other slave, the first, third, and fifth +children were free and the second, fourth, and sixth slaves. This +whole matter of inheritance of slavery was curiously worked out in +minute details. + +Life in the Barangay.--Community feeling was very strong within the +barangay. A man could not leave his own barangay for life in another +without the consent of the community and the payment of money. If a man +of one barrio married a woman of another, their children were divided +between the two barangays. The barangay was responsible for the good +conduct of its members, and if one of them suffered an injury from +a man outside, the whole barangay had to be appeased. Disputes and +wrongs between members of the same barangay were referred to a number +of old men, who decided the matter in accordance with the customs of +the tribe, which were handed down by tradition. [17] + +The Religion of the Filipinos.--The Filipinos on the arrival of +the Spaniards were fetish-worshipers, but they had one spirit whom +they believed was the greatest of all and the creator or maker of +things. The Tagálog called this deity Bathala, [18] the Bisaya, +Laon, and the Ilocano, Kabunian. They also worshiped the spirits +of their ancestors, which were represented by small images called +"anitos." Fetishes, which are any objects believed to possess +miraculous power, were common among the people, and idols or images +were worshiped. Pigafetta describes some idols which he saw in Cebu, +and Chirino tells us that, within the memory of Filipinos whom he knew, +they had idols of stone, wood, bone, or the tooth of a crocodile, +and that there were some of gold. + +They also reverenced animals and birds, especially the crocodile, +the raven, and a mythical bird of blue or yellow color, which was +called by the name of their deity Bathala. [19] They had no temples +or public places of worship, but each one had his anitos in his own +house and performed his sacrifices and acts of worship there. As +sacrifices they killed pigs or chickens, and made such occasions +times of feasting, song, and drunkenness. The life of the Filipino +was undoubtedly filled with superstitious fears and imaginings. + +The Mohammedan Malays.--The Mohammedans outside of southern Mindanao +and Jolo, had settled in the vicinity of Manila Bay and on Mindoro, +Lubang, and adjacent coasts of Luzon. The spread of Mohammedanism +was stopped by the Spaniards, although it is narrated that for a +long time many of those living on the shores of Manila Bay refused to +eat pork, which is forbidden by the Koran, and practiced the rite of +circumcision. As late as 1583, Bishop Salazar, in writing to the king +of affairs in the Philippines, says the Moros had preached the law +of Mohammed to great numbers in these islands and by this preaching +many of the Gentiles had become Mohammedans; and further he adds, +"Those who have received this foul law guard it with much persistence +and there is great difficulty in making them abandon it; and with +cause too, for the reasons they give, to our shame and confusion, +are that they were better treated by the preachers of Mohammed than +they have been by the preachers of Christ." [20] + +Material Progress of the Filipinos.--The material surroundings of +the Filipino before the arrival of the Spaniards were in nearly every +way quite as they are to-day. The "center of population" of each town +to-day, with its great church, tribunal, stores and houses of stone +and wood, is certainly in marked contrast; but the appearance of a +barrio a little distance from the center is to-day probably much as it +was then. Then, as now, the bulk of the people lived in humble houses +of bamboo and nipa raised on piles above the dampness of the soil; +then, as now, the food was largely rice and the excellent fish which +abound in river and sea. There were on the water the same familiar +bancas and fish corrals, and on land the rice fields and cocoanut +groves. The Filipinos had then most of the present domesticated +animals,--dogs, cats, goats, chickens, and pigs,--and perhaps in Luzon +the domesticated buffalo, although this animal was widely introduced +into the Philippines from China after the Spanish conquest. Horses came +with the Spaniards and their numbers were increased by the bringing +in of Chinese mares, whose importation is frequently mentioned. + +The Spaniards introduced also the cultivation of tobacco, coffee, +and cacao, and perhaps also the native corn of America, the maize, +although Pigafetta says they found it already growing in the Bisayas. + +The Filipino has been affected by these centuries of Spanish +sovereignty far less on his material side than he has on his spiritual, +and it is mainly in the deepening and elevating of his emotional and +mental life and not in the bettering of his material condition that +advance has been made. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +THE SPANISH SOLDIER AND THE SPANISH MISSIONARY. + + +History of the Philippines as a Part of the History of the Spanish +Colonies.--We have already seen how the Philippines were discovered by +Magellan in his search for the Spice Islands. Brilliant and romantic +as is the story of that voyage, it brought no immediate reward to +Spain. Portugal remained in her enjoyment of the Eastern trade and +nearly half a century elapsed before Spain obtained a settlement +in these islands. But if for a time he neglected the Far East, the +Spaniard from the Peninsula threw himself with almost incredible +energy and devotion into the material and spiritual conquest of +America. All the greatest achievements of the Spanish soldier and +the Spanish missionary had been secured within fifty years from the +day when Columbus sighted the West Indies. + +In order to understand the history of the Philippines, we must not +forget that these islands formed a part of this great colonial empire +and were under the same administration; that for over two centuries +the Philippines were reached through Mexico and to a certain extent +governed by Mexico; that the same governors, judges, and soldiers held +office in both hemispheres, passing from America to the Philippines +and being promoted from the Islands to the higher official positions of +Mexico and Peru. So to understand the rule of Spain in the Philippines, +we must study the great administrative machinery and the great body +of laws which she developed for the government of the Indies. [21] + +Character of the Spanish Explorers.--The conquests themselves +were largely effected through the enterprise and wealth of private +individuals; but these men held commissions from the Spanish crown, +their actions were subject to strict royal control, and a large +proportion of the profits and plunder of their expeditions were +paid to the royal treasury. Upon some of these conquerors the crown +bestowed the proud title of "adelantado." The Spanish nobility threw +themselves into these hazardous undertakings with the courage and +fixed determination born of their long struggle with the Moors. Out +of the soul-trying circumstances of Western conquest many obscure men +rose, through their brilliant qualities of spirit, to positions of +eminence and power; but the exalted offices of viceroy and governor +were reserved for the titled favorites of the king. + +The Royal Audiencia.--Very early the Spanish court, in order +to protect its own authority, found it necessary to succeed the +ambitious and adventurous conqueror by a ruler in close relationship +with and absolute dependence on the royal will. Thus in Mexico, +Cortes the conqueror was removed and replaced by the viceroy Mendoza, +who established upon the conquests of the former the great Spanish +colony of New Spain, to this day the most successful of all the states +planted by Spain in America. + +To limit the power of the governor or viceroy, as well as to act as +a supreme court for the settlement of actions and legal questions, +Spain created the "Royal Audiencia." This was a body of men of noble +rank and learned in the law, sent out from Spain to form in each +country a colonial court; but their powers were not alone judicial; +they were also administrative. In the absence of the governor they +assumed his duties. + +Treatment of the Natives by the Spanish.--In his treatment of +the natives, whose lands he captured, the Spanish king attempted +three things,--first, to secure to the colonist and to the crown +the advantages of his labor, second, to convert the Indians to the +Christian religion as maintained by the Roman Catholic Church, and +third, to protect them from cruelty and inhumanity. Edict after +edict, law after law, issued from the Spanish throne with these +ends in view. As they stand upon the greatest of colonial law-books, +the Recopilacion de Leyes de las Indias, they display an admirable +sensitiveness to the needs of the Indian and an appreciation of the +dangers to which he was subjected; but in the actual practice these +beneficent provisions were largely useless. + +The first and third of Spain's purposes in her treatment of the native +proved incompatible. History has shown that liberty and enlightenment +can not be taken from a race with one hand and protection given it +with the other. All classes of Spain's colonial government were +frankly in pursuit of wealth. Greed filled them all, and was the +mainspring of every discovery and every settlement. The king wanted +revenue for his treasury; the noble and the soldier, booty for their +private purse; the friar, wealth for his order; the bishop, power +for his church. All this wealth had to come out of the native toiler +on the lands which the Spanish conqueror had seized; and while noble +motives were probably never absent and at certain times prevailed, +yet in the main the native of America and of the Philippines was a +sufferer under the hand and power of the Spaniard. + +"The Encomenderos."--Spain's system of controlling the lives and +the labor of the Indians was based to a certain extent on the feudal +system, still surviving in the Peninsula at the time of her colonial +conquests. The captains and soldiers and priests of her successful +conquests had assigned to them great estates or fruitful lands with +their native inhabitants, which they managed and ruled for their own +profit. Such estates were called first "repartimientos." But very +soon it became the practice, in America, to grant large numbers of +Indians to the service of a Spaniard, who had over them the power +of a master and who enjoyed the profits of their labor. In return +he was supposed to provide for the conversion of the Indians and +their religious instruction. Such a grant of Indians was called an +"encomienda." The "encomendero" was not absolute lord of the lives +and properties of the Indians, for elaborate laws were framed for the +latter's protection. Yet the granting of subjects without the land +on which they lived made possible their transfer and sale from one +encomendero to another, and in this way thousands of Indians of America +were made practically slaves, and were forced into labor in the mines. + +As we have already seen, the whole system was attacked by the Dominican +priest, Las Casas, a truly noble character in the history of American +colonization, and various efforts were made in America to limit the +encomiendas and to prevent their introduction into Mexico and Peru; +but the great power of the encomendero in America, together with +the influence of the Church, which held extensive encomiendas, had +been sufficient to extend the institution, even against Las Casas' +impassioned remonstrances. Its abolition in Mexico was decreed in +1544, but "commissioners representing the municipality of Mexico and +the religious orders were sent to Spain to ask the king to revoke at +least those parts of the 'New Laws' which threatened the interests +of the settlers. By a royal decree of October 20, 1545, the desired +revocation was granted. This action filled the Spanish settlers with +joy and the enslaved Indians with despair." [22] + +Thus was the institution early established as a part of the colonial +system and came with the conquerors to the Philippines. + +Restrictions on Colonization and Commerce.--For the management of all +colonial affairs the king created a great board, or bureau, known as +the "Council of the Indies," which sat in Madrid and whose members +were among the highest officials of Spain. The Spanish government +exercised the closest supervision over all colonial matters, and +colonization was never free. All persons, wares, and ships, passing +from Spain to any of her colonial possessions, were obliged to pass +through Seville, and this one port alone. + +This wealthy ancient city, situated on the river Guadalquivir in +southwestern Spain, was the gateway to the Spanish Empire. From this +port went forth the mailed soldier, the robed friar, the adventurous +noble, and the brave and highborn Spanish ladies, who accompanied their +husbands to such great distances over the sea. And back to this port +were brought the gold of Peru, the silver of Mexico, and the silks +and embroideries of China, dispatched through the Philippines. + +It must be observed that all intercourse between Spain and her colonies +was rigidly controlled by the government. Spain sought to create and +maintain an exclusive monopoly of her colonial trade. To enforce and +direct this monopoly, there was at Seville the Commercial House, or +"Casa de Contratacion." No one could sail from Spain to a colonial +possession without a permit and after government registration. No one +could send out goods or import them except through the Commercial House +and upon the payment of extraordinary imposts. Trade was absolutely +forbidden to any except Spaniards. And by her forts and fleets Spain +strove to isolate her colonies from the approach of Portuguese, Dutch, +or English, whose ships, no less daringly manned than those of Spain +herself, were beginning to traverse the seas in search of the plunder +and spoils of foreign conquest and trade. + +Summary of the Colonial Policy of Spain.--Spain sought foreign +colonies, first, for the spoils of accumulated wealth that could be +seized and carried away at once, and, secondly, for the income that +could be procured through the labor of the inhabitants of the lands she +gained. In framing her government and administration of her colonies, +she sought primarily the political enlightenment and welfare neither +of the Spanish colonist nor the native race, but the glory, power, +and patronage of the crown. The commercial and trade regulations were +devised, not to develop the resources and increase the prosperity of +the colonies, but to add wealth to the Peninsula. Yet the purposes of +Spain were far from being wholly selfish. With zeal and success she +sought the conversion of the heathen natives, whom she subjected, +and in this showed a humanitarian interest in advance of the Dutch +and English, who rivaled her in colonial empire. + +The colonial ideals under which the policy of Spain was framed were +those of the times. In the centuries that have succeeded, public wisdom +and conscience on these matters have immeasurably improved. Nations no +longer make conquests frankly to exploit them, but the public opinion +of the world demands that the welfare of the colonial subject be +sought and that he be protected from official greed. There is great +advance still to be made. It can hardly be said that the world yet +recognizes that a stronger people should assist a weaker without +assurance of material reward, but this is the direction in which +the most enlightened feeling is advancing. Every undertaking of the +white race, which has such aims in view, is an experiment worthy of +the most profound interest and most solicitous sympathy. + +Result of the Voyage of Magellan and El Cano.--The mind of the +Spanish adventurer was greatly excited by the results of Sebastian +del Cano's voyage. Here was the opportunity for rich trade and great +profit. Numerous plans were laid before the king, one of them for +the building of an Indian trading-fleet and an annual voyage to the +Moluccas to gather a great harvest of spices. + +Portugal protested against this move until the question of her +claim to the Moluccas, under the division of Pope Alexander, could be +settled. The exact longitude of Ternate west from the line 370 leagues +beyond the Verde Islands was not well known. Spaniards argued that +it was less than 180 degrees, and, therefore, in spite of Portugal's +earlier discovery, belonged to them. The pilot, Medina, for example, +explained to Charles V. that from the meridian 370 leagues west of +San Anton (the most westerly island of the Verde group) to the city +of Mexico was 59 degrees, from Mexico to Navidad, 9 degrees, and from +this port to Cebu, 100 degrees, a total of only 168 degrees, leaving +a margin of 12 degrees; therefore by the pope's decision the Indies, +Moluccas, Borneo, Gilolo, and the Philippines were Spain's. [23] +A great council of embassadors and cosmographers was held at Badajoz +in 1524, but reached no agreement. Spain announced her resolution to +occupy the Moluccas, and Portugal threatened with death the Spanish +adventurers who should be found there. + +The First Expedition to the Philippines.--Spain acted immediately +upon her determination, and in 1525 dispatched an expedition under +Jofre de Loaisa to reap the fruits of Magellan's discoveries. [24] +The captain of one vessel was Sebastian del Cano, who completed the +voyage of Magellan. On his ship sailed Andres de Urdaneta, who later +became an Augustinian friar and accompanied the expedition of Legaspi +that finally effected the settlement of the Philippines. Not without +great hardship and losses did the fleet pass the Straits of Magellan +and enter the Pacific Ocean. In mid-ocean Loaisa died, and four days +later the heroic Sebastian del Cano. Following a route somewhat similar +to that of Magellan, the fleet reached first the Ladrone Islands and +later the coast of Mindanao. From here they attempted to sail to Cebu, +but the strong northeast monsoon drove them southward to the Moluccas, +and they landed on Tidor the last day of the year 1526. + +The Failure of the Expedition.--The Portuguese were at this +moment fighting to reduce the native rajas of these islands to +subjection. They regarded the Spaniards as enemies, and each party of +Europeans was shortly engaged in fighting and in inciting the natives +against the other. The condition of the Spaniards became desperate +in the extreme, and indicates at what cost of life the conquests of +the sixteenth century were made. Their ships had become so battered +by storm as to be no longer sea-worthy. The two officers, who had +successively followed Loaisa and El Cano in command, had likewise +perished. Of the 450 men who had sailed from Spain, but 120 now +survived. These, under the leadership of Hernando de la Torre, threw +up a fort on the island of Tidor, unable to go farther or to retire, +and awaited hoped-for succor from Spain. + +Relief came, not from the Peninsula, but from Mexico. Under +the instructions of the Spanish king, in October, 1527, Cortes +dispatched from Mexico a small expedition in charge of D. Alvaro de +Saavedra. Swept rapidly by the equatorial trades, in a few months +Saavedra had traversed the Carolines, reprovisioned on Mindanao, +and reached the survivors on Tidor. Twice they attempted to return +to New Spain, but strong trade winds blow without cessation north and +south on either side of the equator for the space of more than twelve +hundred miles, and the northern latitude of calms and prevailing +westerly winds were not yet known. + +Twice Saavedra beat his way eastward among the strange islands of +Papua and Melanesia, only to be at last driven back upon Tidor and +there to die. The survivors were forced to abandon the Moluccas. By +surrendering to the Portuguese they were assisted to return to Europe +by way of Malacca, Ceylon, and Africa, and they arrived at Lisbon +in 1536, the survivors of Loaisa's expedition, having been gone from +Spain eleven years. + +The efforts of the Spanish crown to obtain possession of the Spice +Islands, the Celebes and Moluccas, with their coveted products of +nutmeg, cinnamon, and pepper, were for the time being ended. By the +Treaty of Zaragoza (1529) the Emperor, Charles V., for the sum of +three hundred and fifty thousand gold ducats, renounced all claim +to the Moluccas. For thirteen years the provisions of this treaty +were respected by the Spaniards, and then another attempt was made +to obtain a foothold in the East Indies. + +The Second Expedition to the Philippines.--The facts that disaster +had overwhelmed so many, that two oceans must be crossed, and that +no sailing-route from Asia back to America was known, did not deter +the Spaniards from their perilous conquests; and in 1542 another +expedition sailed from Mexico, under command of Lopez de Villalobos, +to explore the Philippines and if possible to reach China. + +Across the Pacific they made a safe and pleasant voyage. In the +warm waters of the Pacific they sailed among those wonderful coral +atolls, rings of low shore, decked with palms, grouped in beautiful +archipelagoes, whose appearance has never failed to delight the +navigator, and whose composition is one of the most interesting +subjects known to students of the earth's structure and history. Some +of these coral islands Villalobos took possession of in the name of +Spain. These were perhaps the Pelew Islands or the Carolines. + +At last Villalobos reached the east coast of Mindanao, but after +some deaths and sickness they sailed again and were carried south by +the monsoon to the little island of Sarangani, south of the southern +peninsula of Mindanao. The natives were hostile, but the Spaniards +drove them from their stronghold and made some captures of musk, +amber, oil, and gold-dust. In need of provisions, they planted the +maize, or Indian corn, the wonderful cereal of America, which yields +so bounteously, and so soon after planting. Food was greatly needed +by the Spaniards and was very difficult to obtain. + +The Naming of the Islands.--Villalobos equipped a small vessel and +sent it northward to try to reach Cebu. This vessel reached the +coast of Samar. Villalobos gave to the island the name of Filipina, +in honor of the Spanish Infante, or heir apparent, Philip, who was +soon to succeed his father Charles V. as King Philip the Second of +Spain. Later in his correspondence with the Portuguese Villalobos +speaks of the archipelago as Las Filipinas. Although for many years +the title of the Islas del Poniente continued in use, Villalobos' +name of Filipinas gradually gained place and has lived. + +The End of the Expedition.--While on Sarangani demands were made by +the Portuguese, who claimed that Mindanao belonged with the Celebes, +that the Spaniards should leave. Driven from Mindanao by lack of +food and hostility of the natives, Villalobos was blown southward +by storms to Gilolo. Here, after long negotiations, the Portuguese +compelled him to surrender. The survivors of the expedition dispersed, +some remaining in the Indies, and some eventually reaching Spain; +but Villalobos, overwhelmed by discouragement, died on the island of +Amboyna. The priest who ministered to him in his last hours was the +famous Jesuit missionary to the Indies, Saint Francis Xavier. + +Twenty-three years were to elapse after the sailing of Villalobos' +fleet before another Spanish expedition should reach the +Philippines. The year 1565 dates the permanent occupation of the +archipelago by the Spanish. + +Increase in Political Power of the Church.--Under Philip the Second, +the champion of ecclesiasticism, the Spanish crown cemented the +union of the monarchy with the church and devoted the resources of +the empire, not only to colonial acquisition, but to combating the +Protestant revolution on the one hand and heathenism on the other. The +Spanish king effected so close a union of the church and state in +Spain, that from this time on churchmen rose higher and higher in the +Spanish councils, and profoundly influenced the policy and fate of +the nation. The policy of Philip the Second, however, brought upon +Spain the revolt of the Dutch Lowlands and the wars with England, +and her struggle with these two nations drained her resources both on +land and sea, and occasioned a physical and moral decline. But while +Spain was constantly losing power and prestige in Europe, the king +was extending his colonial domain, lending royal aid to the ambitious +adventurer and to the ardent missionary friar. Spain's object being +to christianize as well as to conquer, the missionary became a very +important figure in the history of every colonial enterprise, and +these great orders to whom missions were intrusted thus became the +central institutions in the history of the Philippines. + +The Rise of Monasticism.--Monasticism was introduced into Europe from +the East at the very commencement of the Middle Ages. The fundamental +idea of the old monasticism was retirement from human society in the +belief that the world was bad and could not be bettered, and that men +could lead holier lives and better please God by forsaking secular +employments and family relations, and devoting all their attention +to purifying their characters. The first monastic order in Europe +were the Benedictines, organized in the seventh century, whose rule +and organization were the pattern for those that followed. + +The clergy of the church were divided thus into two groups,--first, +the parish priests, or ministers, who lived among the people over +whom they exercised the care of souls, and who, because they were of +the people themselves and lived their lives in association with the +community, were known as the "secular clergy," and second, the monks, +or "regular clergy," were so called because they lived under the +"rule" of their order. + +In the early part of the thirteenth century monasticism, which had +waned somewhat during the preceding two centuries, received a new +impetus and inspiration from the organization of new orders known +as brethren or "Friars." The idea underlying their organization was +noble, and above that of the old monasticism; for it was the idea of +service, of ministry both to the hearts and bodies of depressed and +suffering men. + +The Dominicans.--The Order of Dominicans was organized by Saint +Dominic, an Italian, about 1215. The primary object of its members +was to defend the doctrines of the Church and, by teaching and +preaching, destroy the doubts and protests which in the thirteenth +century were beginning to disturb the claims of the Catholic Church +and the Papacy. The Dominican friars did not live in communities, but +traveled about, humbly clad, preaching in the villages and towns, and +seeking to expose and punish the heretic. The mediæval universities, +through their study of philosophy and the Roman law, were producing +a class of men disposed to hold opinions contrary to the teachings +of the Church. The Dominicans realized the importance of these great +centers of instruction and entered them as teachers and masters, and +by the beginning of the fifteenth century had made them strongholds +of conservatism and orthodoxy. + +The Franciscans.--A few years after this organization, the Order of +Franciscans was founded by Saint Francis of Assisi, of Spain. The aims +of this order were not only to preach and administer the sacraments, +but to nurse the sick, provide for the destitute, and alleviate the +dreadful misery which affected whole classes in the Middle Ages. They +took vows of absolute poverty, and so humble was the garb prescribed +by their rule that they went barefooted from place to place. + +The Augustinian Order was founded by Pope Alexander IV., in 1265, +and still other orders came later. + +The Degeneration of the Orders.--Without doubt the early ministrations +of these friars were productive of great good both on the religious +and humanitarian sides. But, as the orders became wealthy, the friars +lost their spirituality and their lives grew vicious. By the beginning +of the sixteenth century the administration of the Church throughout +Europe had become so corrupt, the economic burden of the religious +orders so great, and religious teaching and belief so material, that +the best and noblest minds in all countries were agitating for reform. + +The Reformation.--In addition to changes in church administration, +many Christians were demanding a greater freedom of religious thinking +and radical changes in the Church doctrine which had taken form in +the Middle Ages. Thus, while all the best minds in the Church were +united in seeking a reformation of character and of administration, +great differences arose between them as to the possibility of change +in Church doctrines. These differences accordingly separated them +into two parties, the Papacy adhering strongly to the doctrine as +it was then accepted, while various leaders in the north of Europe, +including Martin Luther in Germany, Swingli in Switzerland, and John +Calvin in France and Geneva, broke with the authority of the Pope +and declared for a liberation of the individual conscience. + +Upon the side of the Papacy, the Emperor Charles the Fifth threw the +weight of the Spanish monarchy, and to enforce the Papal authority +he attacked the German princes by force of arms. The result was +a great revolt from the Roman Catholic Church, which spread all +over northern Germany, a large portion of Switzerland, the lowlands +of the Rhine, and England, and which included a numerous and very +influential element among the French people. These countries, with +the exception of France, have remained Protestant to the present day; +and the great expansion of the English people in America and the East +has established Protestantism in all parts of the world. + +Effects of the Reformation in the Roman Catholic Church.--The reform +movement, which lasted through the century, brought about a great +improvement in the Roman Catholic Church. Many, who remained devoted +to Roman Catholic orthodoxy, were zealous for administrative reform. A +great assembly of Churchmen, the Council of Trent, for years devoted +itself to legislation to correct abuses. The Inquisition was revived +and put into force against Protestants, especially in the dominions +of Spain, and the religious orders were reformed and stimulated to +new sacrifices and great undertakings. + +But greater, perhaps, than any of these agencies in re-establishing +the power of the Pope and reviving the life of the Roman Catholic +Church was the organization of a new order, the "Society of Jesus." The +founder was a Spaniard, Ignatius Loyola, The Jesuits devoted themselves +especially to education and missionary activity. Their schools soon +covered Europe, while their mission stations were to be found in both +North and South America, India, the East Indies, China, and Japan. + +The Spanish Missionary.--The Roman Catholic Church, having lost a large +part of Europe, thus strove to make up the loss by gaining converts +in heathen lands. Spain, being the power most rapidly advancing her +conquests abroad, was the source of the most tireless missionary +effort. From the time of Columbus, every fleet that sailed to gain +plunder and lands for the Spanish kingdom carried bands of friars +and churchmen to convert to Christianity the heathen peoples whom +the sword of the soldier should reduce to obedience. + +"The Laws of the Indies" gave special power and prominence to the +priest. In these early days of Spain's colonial empire many priests +were men of piety, learning, and unselfish devotion. Their efforts +softened somewhat the violence and brutality that often marred the +Spanish treatment of the native, and they became the civilizing agents +among the peoples whom the Spanish soldiers had conquered. + +In Paraguay, California, and the Philippines the power and importance +of the Spanish missionary outweighed that of the soldier or governor +in the settlement of those countries and the control of the native +inhabitants. Churchmen, full of the missionary spirit, pressed upon +the king the duties of the crown in advancing the cross, and more than +one country was opened to Spanish settlement through the enthusiasm +of the priest. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +PERIOD OF CONQUEST AND SETTLEMENT, 1565-1600. + + +Cause of Settlement and Conquest of the Philippines.--The previous +Spanish expeditions whose misfortunes have been narrated, seemed +to have proved to the Court of Spain that they could not drive the +Portuguese from the Moluccas. But to the east of the Moluccas lay +great unexplored archipelagoes, which might lie within the Spanish +demarcation and which might yield spices and other valuable articles +of trade; and as the Portuguese had made no effective occupation of +the Philippines, the minds of Spanish conquerors turned to this group +also as a coveted field of conquest, even though it was pretty well +understood that they lay in the latitude of the Moluccas, and so were +denied by treaty to Spain. + +In 1559 the Spanish king, Felipe II., commanded the viceroy of Mexico +to undertake again the discovery of the islands lying "toward the +Moluccas," but the rights of Portugal to islands within her demarcation +were to be respected. Five years passed before ships and equipments +could be prepared, and during these years the objects of the expedition +received considerable discussion and underwent some change. + +The king invited Andres de Urdaneta, who years before had been a +captain in the expedition of Loaisa, to accompany the expedition as +a guide and director. Urdaneta, after his return from the previous +expedition, had renounced military life and had become an Augustinian +friar. He was known to be a man of wise judgment, with good knowledge +of cosmography, and as a missionary he was able to give to the +expedition that religious strength which characterized all Spanish +undertakings. + +It was Urdaneta's plan to colonize, not the Philippines, but New +Guinea; but the Audiencia of Mexico, which had charge of fitting +out the expedition, charged it in minute instructions to reach +and if possible colonize the Philippines, to trade for spices +and to discover the return sailing route back across the Pacific +to New Spain. The natives of the islands were to be converted to +Christianity, and missionaries were to accompany the expedition. In +the quaint language of Fray Gaspar de San Augustin, there were sent +"holy guides to unfurl and wave the banners of Christ, even to the +remotest portions of the islands, and to drive the devil from the +tyrannical possession, which he had held for so many ages, usurping +to himself the adoration of those peoples." [25] + +The Third Expedition to the Philippines.--The expedition sailed from +the port of Natividad, Mexico, November 21, 1564, under the command +of Miguel Lopez de Legaspi. The ships followed for a part of the +way a course further south than was necessary, and touched at some +inhabited islands of Micronesia. About the 22d of January they reached +the Ladrones and had some trouble with the natives. They reached the +southern end of Samar about February the 13th. Possession of Samar +was taken by Legaspi in the name of the king, and small parties were +sent both north and south to look for villages of the Filipinos. + +A few days later they rounded the southern part of Samar, crossed the +strait to the coast of southern Leyte, and the field-marshal, Goyti, +discovered the town of Cabalian, and on the 5th of March the fleet +sailed to this town. Provisions were scarce on the Spanish vessels, +and great difficulty was experienced in getting food from the few +natives met in boats or in the small settlements discovered. + +Legaspi at Bohol.--About the middle of March the fleet arrived at +Bohol, doubtless the southern or eastern shore. While near here Goyti +in a small boat captured a Moro prao from Borneo and after a hard +fight brought back the Moros as prisoners to Legaspi. There proved +to be quite a trade existing between the Moros from Borneo and the +natives of Bohol and Mindanao. + +Here on Bohol they were able to make friendly terms with the natives, +and with Sicatuna, the dato of Bohol, Legaspi performed the ceremony +of blood covenant. The Spanish leader and the Filipino chief each +made a small cut in his own arm or breast and drank the blood of the +other. According to Gaspar de San Augustin, the blood was mixed with +a little wine or water and drunk from a goblet. [26] This custom was +the most sacred bond of friendship among the Filipinos, and friendship +so pledged was usually kept with great fidelity. + +Legaspi in Cebu.--On the 27th of April, 1565, Legaspi's fleet reached +Cebu. Here, in this beautiful strait and fine anchoring-ground, +Magellan's ships had lingered until the death of their leader +forty-four years before. A splendid native settlement lined the +shore, so Father Chirino tells us, for a distance of more than a +league. The natives of Cebu were fearful and greatly agitated, and +seemed determined to resist the landing of the Spaniards. But at the +first discharge of the guns of the ships, the natives abandoned the +shore, and, setting fire to the town, retreated into the jungles and +hills. Without loss of life the Spaniards landed, and occupied the +harbor and town. + +Finding of "the Holy Child of Cebu."--The Spanish soldiers found in +one of the houses of the natives a small wooden image of the Child +Jesus. A similar image, Pigafetta tells us, he had himself given to +a native while in the island with Magellan. It had been preserved by +the natives and was regarded by them as an object of veneration. To +the pious Spaniards the discovery of this sacred object was hailed +as an event of great good fortune. It was taken by the monks, and +carried to a shrine especially erected for it. It still rests in the +church of the Augustinians, an object of great devotion. + +Settlement Made at Cebu.--In honor of this image this first settlement +of the Spaniards in the Philippines received the name of "City of +the Most Holy Name of Jesus." Here Legaspi established himself, and, +by great tact and skill, gradually won the confidence and friendship +of the inhabitants. A formal peace was at last concluded in which the +dato, Tupas, recognized the sovereignty of Spain; and the people of +Cebu and the Spaniards bound themselves to assist each other against +the enemies of either. + +They had some difficulty in understanding one another, but the +Spaniards had with them a Mohammedan Malay of Borneo, called Cid-Hamal, +who had been taken from the East Indies to the Peninsula and thence +to Mexico and Legaspi's expedition. The languages of Malaysia and +the Philippines are so closely related that this man was able to +interpret. Almost immediately, however, the missionaries began the +study of the native dialect, and Padre Chirino tells us that Friar +Martin Herrada made here the first Filipino vocabulary, and was soon +preaching the Gospel to the natives in their own language. + +The great difficulty experienced by Legaspi was to procure sufficient +food for his expedition. At different times he sent a ship to the +nearest islands, and twice his ship went south to Mindanao to procure +a cargo of cinnamon to be sent back to New Spain. + +Thus month by month the Spaniards gained acquaintance with the +beautiful island sea of the archipelago, with its green islands +and brilliant sheets of water, its safe harbors and picturesque +settlements. + +The Bisayans.--In 1569, Legaspi discovered the great island of +Panay. Here they were fortunate in securing a great abundance +of supplies and the friendship of the natives, who received them +well. These beautiful central islands of the Philippines are inhabited +by Bisaya. The Spaniards found this tribe tattooing their bodies +with ornamental designs, a practice widespread throughout Oceanica, +and which still is common among the tribes of northern Luzon. This +practice caused the Spaniards to give to the Bisayas the title of +"Islas de los Pintados" (the Islands of the Painted). + +Discovery of the Northern Return Route across the Pacific.--Before +the arrival of the expedition in the Philippines, the captain of one +of Legaspi's ships, inspired by ungenerous ambition and the hopes +of getting a reward, outsailed the rest of the fleet. Having arrived +first in the islands, he started at once upon the return voyage. Unlike +preceding captains who had tried to return to New Spain by sailing +eastward from the islands against both wind and ocean current, this +captain sailed northward beyond the trades into the more favorable +westerly winds, and found his way back to America and New Spain. + +Soon after arriving in the Philippines, Legaspi's instructions +required him to dispatch at least one vessel on the return voyage to +New Spain. Accordingly on June 1st the San Pablo set sail, carrying +about two hundred men, including Urdenata and another friar. This +vessel also followed the northern route across the Pacific, and +after a voyage of great hardship, occupying three and a half months, +it reached the coast of North America at California and followed it +southward to Acapulco. + +The discovery made by these captains of a favorable route for vessels +returning from the islands to New Spain safe from capture by the +Portuguese, completed the plans of the Spanish for the occupation +of the Philippines. In 1567 another vessel was dispatched by Legaspi +and made this voyage successfully. + +The sailing of these vessels left Legaspi in Cebu with a colony +of only one hundred and fifty Spaniards, poorly provided with +resources, to commence the conquest of the Philippines. But he won the +friendship and respect of the inhabitants, and in 1568 two galleons +with reinforcements arrived from Acapulco. From this time on nearly +yearly communication was maintained, fresh troops with munitions and +supplies arriving with each expedition. + +The First Expedition against the Moro Pirates.--Pirates of +Mindoro.--The Spaniards found the Straits of San Bernardino and the +Mindoro Sea swarming with the fleets of Mohammedan Malays from Borneo +and the Jolo Archipelago. To a race living so continuously upon the +water, piracy has always possessed irresistible attractions. In the +days of Legaspi, the island of Mindoro had been partially settled by +Malays from the south, and many of these settlements were devoted +to piracy, preying especially upon the towns on the north coast of +Panay. In January, 1570, Legaspi dispatched his grandson, Juan de +Salcedo, to punish these marauders. [27] + +Capture of Pirate Strongholds.--Salcedo had a force of forty Spaniards +and a large number of Bisaya. He landed on the western coast of +Mindoro and took the pirate town of Mamburao. The main stronghold of +the Moros he found to be on the small island of Lubang, northwest of +Mindanao. Here they had three strong forts with high walls, on which +were mounted small brass cannon, or "lantakas." Two of these forts +were surrounded by moats. There were several days of fighting before +Lubang was conquered. The possession of Lubang brought the Spaniards +almost to the entrance of Manila Bay, Meanwhile, a captain, Enriquez +de Guzman, had discovered Masbate, Burias, and Ticao, and had landed +on Luzon in the neighborhood of Albay, called then, "Italon." + +Conquest of the Moro City of Manila.--Expedition from Panay.--Reports +had come to Legaspi of an important Mohammedan settlement named +"May-nila," on the shore of a great bay, and a Mohammedan chieftain, +called Maomat, was procured to guide the Spaniards on their conquest +of this region. [28] For this purpose Legaspi sent his field-marshal, +Martin de Goiti, with Salcedo, one hundred and twenty Spanish soldiers, +and fourteen or fifteen boats filled with Bisayan allies. They left +Panay early in May, and, after stopping at Mindoro, came to anchor +in Manila Bay, off the mouth of the Pasig River. + +The Mohammedan City.--On the south bank of the river was the fortified +town of the Mohammedan chieftain, Raja Soliman; on the north bank was +the town of Tondo, under the Raja Alcandora, or Lacandola. Morga [29] +tells us that these Mohammedan settlers from the island of Borneo had +commenced to arrive on the island only a few years before the coming +of the Spaniards. They had settled and married among the Filipino +population already occupying Manila Bay, and had introduced some of the +forms and practices of the Mohammedan religion. The city of Manila was +defended by a fort, apparently on the exact sight of the present fort +of Santiago. It was built of the trunks of palms, and had embrasures +where were mounted a considerable number of cannon, or lantakas. + +Capture of the City.--The natives received the foreigners at first +with a show of friendliness, but after they had landed on the banks of +the Pasig, Soliman, with a large force, assaulted them. The impetuous +Spaniards charged, and carried the fortifications, and the natives +fled, setting fire to their settlement. When the fight was over the +Spaniards found among the dead the body of a Portuguese artillerist, +who had directed the defense. Doubtless he was one who had deserted +from the Portuguese garrison far south in the Indian archipelago +to cast in his fortunes with the Malays. It being the commencement +of the season of rains and typhoons, the Spaniards decided to defer +the occupation of Manila, and, after exploring Cavite harbor, they +returned to Panay. + +A year was spent in strengthening their hold on the Bisayas and in +arranging for their conquest of Luzon. On Masbate was placed a friar +and six soldiers, so small was the number that could be spared. + +Founding of the Spanish City of Manila.--With a force of 280 men +Legaspi returned in the spring of 1571 to the conquest of Luzon. It was +a bloodless victory. The Filipino rajas declared themselves vassals +of the Spanish king, and in the months of May and June the Spaniards +established themselves in the present site of the city. + +At once Legaspi gave orders for the reconstruction of the fort, the +building of a palace, a convent for the Augustinian monks, a church, +and 150 houses. The boundaries of this city followed closely the +outlines of the Tagálog city "Maynila," and it seems probable that the +location of buildings then established have been adhered to until the +present time. This settlement appeared so desirable to Legaspi that +he at once designated it as the capital of the archipelago. Almost +immediately he organized its governing assembly, or ayuntamiento. + +The First Battle on Manila Bay.--In spite of their ready submission, +the rajas, Soliman and Lacandola, did not yield their sovereignty +without a struggle. They were able to secure assistance in the Tagálog +and Pampanga settlements of Macabebe and Hagonoy. A great fleet of +forty war-praos gathered in palm-lined estuaries on the north shore +of Manila Bay, and came sweeping down the shallow coast to drive the +Spaniards from the island. Against them were sent Goiti and fifty +men. The protective mail armor, the heavy swords and lances, the +horrible firearms, coupled with the persistent courage and fierce +resolution of the Spanish soldier of the sixteenth century, swept +back this native armament. The chieftain Soliman was killed. + +The Conquest of Central Luzon.--Goiti continued his marching and +conquering northward until nearly the whole great plain of central +Luzon, that stretches from Manila Bay to the Gulf of Lingayen, +lay submissive before him. A little later the raja Lacandola died, +having accepted Christian baptism, and the only powerful resistance +on the island of Luzon was ended. + +Goiti was sent back to the Bisayas, and the command of the army of +Luzon fell to Salcedo, the brilliant and daring grandson of Legaspi, +at this time only twenty-two years of age. This young knight led +his command up the Pasig River. Cainta and Taytay, at that time +important Tagálog towns, were conquered, and then the country south +of Laguna de Bay. The town of Cainta was fortified and defended by +small cannon, and although Salcedo spent three days in negotiations, +it was only taken by storm, in which four hundred Filipino men and +women perished. [30] From here Salcedo marched over the mountains to +the Pacific coast and south into the Camarines, where he discovered +the gold mines of Paracale and Mamburao. + +At about this time the Spaniards conquered the Cuyos and Calamianes +islands and the northern part of Paragua. + +Exploration of the Coast of Northern Luzon.--In 1572, Salcedo, with a +force of only forty-five men, sailed northward from Manila, landed in +Zambales and Pangasinan, and on the long and rich Ilocos coast effected +a permanent submission of the inhabitants. He also visited the coast +farther north, where the great and fertile valley of the Cagayan, +the largest river of the archipelago, reaches to the sea. From here he +continued his adventurous journey down the Pacific coast of Luzon to +the island of Polillo, and returned by way of Laguna de Bay to Manila. + +Death of Legaspi.--He arrived in September, 1572, to find that his +grandfather and commander, Legaspi, had died a month before (August 20, +1572). After seven years of labor the conqueror of difficulties was +dead, but almost the entire archipelago had been added to the crown +of Spain. Three hundred years of Spanish dominion secured little +more territory than that traversed and pacified by the conquerors +of those early years. In spite of their slender forces, the daring +of the Spaniards induced them to follow a policy of widely extending +their power, effecting settlements, and enforcing submission wherever +rich coasts and the gathering of population attracted them. + +Within a single year's time most of the coast country of Luzon had +been traversed, important positions seized, and the inhabitants +portioned out in encomiendas. On the death of Legaspi, the command +fell to Guido de Lavezares. + +Reasons for this Easy Conquest of the Philippines.--The explanation of +how so small a number of Europeans could so rapidly and successfully +reduce to subjection the inhabitants of a territory like the +Philippines, separated into so many different islands, is to be found +in several things. + +First.--The expedition had a great leader, one of those knights +combining sagacity with resolution, who glorify the brief period when +Spanish prestige was highest. No policy could ever be successful in the +Philippines which did not depend for its strength upon giving a measure +of satisfaction to the Filipino people. Legaspi did this. He appears +to have won the native datos, treating them with consideration, and +holding out to them the expectations of a better and more prosperous +era, which the sovereignty of the Spaniard would bring. Almost from +the beginning, the natives of an island already reduced flocked to +his standard to assist in the conquest of another. The small forces +of the Spanish soldiers were augmented by hundreds of Filipino allies. + +Second.--Another reason is found in the wonderful courage and great +fighting power of the Spanish soldier. Each man, splendidly armored +and weaponed, deadly with either sword or spear, carrying in addition +the arquebus, the most efficient firearm of the time, was equal in +combat to many natives who might press upon him with their naked +bodies and inferior weapons. + +Third.--Legaspi was extremely fortunate in his captains, who included +such old campaigners as the field-marshal Martin de Goiti, who had +been to the Philippines before with Villalobos, and such gallant +youths as Salcedo, one of the most attractive military figures in +all Spanish history. + +Fourth.--In considering this Spanish conquest, we must understand +that the islands were far more sparsely inhabited than they are +to-day. The Bisayan islands, the rich Camarines, the island of Luzon, +had, in Legaspi's time, only a small fraction of their present great +populations. This population was not only small, but it was also +extremely disunited. Not only were the great tribes separated by +the differences of language, but, as we have already seen, each tiny +community was practically independent, and the power of a dato very +limited. There were no great princes, with large forces of fighting +retainers whom they could call to arms, such as the Portuguese had +encountered among the Malays south in the Moluccas. + +Fifth.--But certainly one of the greatest factors in the yielding +of the Filipino to the Spaniard was the preaching of the missionary +friars. No man is so strong with an unenlightened and barbarous race as +he who claims power from God. And the preaching of the Catholic faith, +with its impressive and dramatic services, its holy sacraments, its +power to arrest the attention and to admit at once the rude mind into +the circle of its ministry, won the heart of the Filipino. Without +doubt he was ready and eager for a loftier and truer religious belief +and ceremonial. There was no powerful native priesthood to oppose +the introduction of Christianity. The preaching of the faith and the +baptism of converts proceeded almost as rapidly as the marching of +Salcedo's soldiers. + +The Dangers of the Spanish Occupation.--Such conditions assured the +success of the Spanish occupation, provided the small colony could +be protected from outside attacks. But even from the beginning the +position of this little band of conquerors was perilous. Their numbers +were small and of necessity much scattered, and their only source +of succor lay thousands of miles away, across the greatest body of +water on the earth, in a land itself a colony newly wrested from +the hand of the Indian. Across the narrow waters of the China Sea, +only a few days' distant, even in the slow-sailing junks, lay the +teeming shores of the most populous country in the world, in those +days not averse to foreign conquest. + +Attempt of the Chinese under Limahong to Capture Manila.--Activity of +the Southern Chinese.--It was from the Chinese that the first heavy +blow fell. The southeastern coast of China, comprising the provinces of +Kwangtung and Fukien, has always exhibited a restlessness and passion +for emigration not displayed by other parts of the country. From these +two provinces, through the ports of Amoy and Canton, have gone those +Chinese traders and coolies to be found in every part of the East +and many other countries of the world. Two hundred years before the +arrival of the Spaniards, Chinese junks traversed the straits and +seas and visited regularly the coast of Mindanao. + +Limahong's Expedition to the Philippines.--This coast of China has +always been notorious for its piracy. The distance of the capital at +Peking and the weakness of the provincial viceroys have made impossible +its suppression. It was one of these bold filibusters of the China Sea, +called Limahong, who two years after the death of Legaspi attempted +the conquest of the Philippines. The stronghold of this corsair was the +island of Pehon, where he fortified himself and developed his power. + +Here, reports of the prosperous condition of Manila reached him, +and he prepared a fleet of sixty-two war-junks, with four thousand +soldiers and sailors. The accounts even state that a large number of +women and artisans were taken on board to form the nucleus of the +settlement, as soon as the Spaniards should be destroyed. In the +latter part of November, 1574, this powerful fleet came sweeping +down the western coast of Luzon and on the 29th gathered in the +little harbor of Mariveles, at the entrance to Manila Bay. Eight +miles south of Manila is the town of Paraņaque, on an estuary which +affords a good landing-place for boats entering from the bay. Here +on the night following, Limahong put ashore six hundred men, under +one of his generals, Sioco, who was a Japanese. + +The Attack upon Manila.--From here they marched rapidly up the beach +and fell furiously upon the city. Almost their first victim was the +field-marshal Goiti. The fort of Manila was at this date a weak affair, +without ditches or escarpment, and it was here that the struggle took +place. The Spaniards, although greatly outnumbered, were able to +drive back the Chinese; but they themselves lost heavily. Limahong +now sent ashore heavy reinforcements, and prepared to overwhelm the +garrison. The Spaniards were saved from defeat by the timely arrival +of Salcedo with fifty musketeers. From his station at Vigan he had +seen the sails of Limahong's fleet, cruising southward along the Luzon +coast, and, suspecting that so great an expedition could have no other +purpose than the capture of Manila, he embarked in seven small boats, +and reached the city in six days, just in time to participate in the +furious battle between the Spaniards and the entire forces of the +Chinese pirate. The result was the complete defeat of the Chinese, +who were driven back upon their boats at Paraņaque. + +The Result of Limahong's Expedition.--Although defeated in his attack +on Manila, Limahong was yet determined on a settlement in Luzon, and, +sailing northward, he landed in Pangasinan and began constructing +fortifications at the mouth of the river Lingayen. The Spaniards +did not wait for him to strengthen himself and to dispute with them +afresh for the possession of the island, but organized in March an +expedition of two hundred and fifty Spaniards and fifteen hundred +Filipinos under Salcedo. They landed suddenly in the Gulf of Lingayen, +burned the entire fleet of the Chinese, and scattered a part of the +forces in the surrounding mountains. The rest, though hemmed in by +the Spaniards, were able to construct small boats, in which they +escaped from the islands. + +Thus ended this formidable attack, which threatened for a time to +overthrow the power of Spain in the East. It was the beginning, +however, of important relations with China. Before Limahong's escape +a junk arrived from the viceroy of Fukien, petitioning for the +delivery of the Chinese pirate. Two Augustinian friars accompanied +his junk back to China, eager for such great fields of missionary +conquest. They carried letters from Lavezares inviting Chinese +friendship and intercourse. + +Beginning of a New Period of Conquest.--In the spring of 1576, Salcedo +died at Vigan, at the age of twenty-seven. With his death may be said +to close the first period of the history in the Philippines,--that of +the Conquest, extending from 1565 to 1576. For the next twenty-five +years the ambitions of the Spaniards were not content with the +exploration of this archipelago, but there were greater and more +striking conquests, to which the minds of both soldier and priest +aspired. + +Despite the settlement with Portugal, the rich Spice Islands to the +south still attracted them, and there were soon revealed the fertile +coasts of Siam and Cambodia, the great empire of China, the beautiful +island of Formosa, and the Japanese archipelago. These, with their +great populations and wealth, were more alluring fields than the poor +and sparsely populated coasts of the Philippines. So, for the next +quarter of a century, the policy of the Spaniards in the Philippines +was not so much to develop these islands themselves, as to make them +a center for the commercial and spiritual conquest of the Orient. [31] + +A Treaty with the Chinese.--The new governor arrived in the Islands +in August, 1575. He was Dr. Francisco La-Sande. In October there +returned the ambassadors who had been sent to China by Lavezares. The +viceroy of Fukien had received them with much ceremony. He had not +permitted the friars to remain, but had forwarded the governor's +letter to the Chinese emperor. In February following came a Chinese +embassy, granting a port of the empire with which the Spaniards could +trade. This port, probably, was Amoy, which continued to be the chief +port of communication with China to the present day. + +It was undoubtedly commerce and not the missionaries that the Chinese +desired. Two Augustinians attempted to return with this embassy to +China, but the Chinese on leaving the harbor of Manila landed on +the coast of Zambales, where they whipped the missionaries, killed +their servants and interpreter, and left the friars bound to trees, +whence they were rescued by a small party of Spaniards who happened +to pass that way. + +Sir Francis Drake's Noted Voyage.--The year 1577 is notable for the +appearance in the East of the great English sea-captain, freebooter, +and naval hero, Francis Drake. England and Spain, at this moment, while +not actually at war, were rapidly approaching the conflict which made +them for centuries traditional enemies. Spain was the champion of Roman +ecclesiasticism. Her king, Philip the Second, was not only a cruel +bigot, but a politician of sweeping ambition. His schemes included the +conquest of France and England, the extermination of Protestantism, +and the subjection of Europe to his own and the Roman authority. + +The English people scented the danger from afar, and while the two +courts nominally maintained peace, the daring seamen of British Devon +were quietly putting to sea in their swift and terrible vessels, +for the crippling of the Spanish power. The history of naval warfare +records no more reckless adventures than those of the English mariners +during this period. Audacity could not rise higher. + +Drake's is the most famous and romantic figure of them all. In the +year 1577, he sailed from England with the avowed purpose of sweeping +the Spanish Main. He passed the Straits of Magellan, and came up the +western coast of South America, despoiling the Spanish shipping from +Valparaiso to Panama. Thence he came on across the Pacific, touched +the coast of Mindanao, and turned south to the Moluccas. + +The Portuguese had nominally annexed the Moluccas in 1522, but at +the time of Drake's visit they had been driven from Ternate, though +still holding Tidor. Drake entered into friendly relations with the +sultan of Ternate, and secured a cargo of cloves. From here he sailed +boldly homeward, daring the Portuguese fleets, as he had defied the +Spanish, and by way of Good Hope returned to England, his fleet the +first after Magellan's to circumnavigate the globe. + +A Spanish Expedition to Borneo.--The appearance of Drake in the +Moluccas roused La-Sande to ambitious action. The attraction of +the southern archipelagoes was overpowering, and at this moment the +opportunity seemed to open to the governor to force southward his +power. One of the Malay kings of Borneo, Sirela, arrived in Manila, +petitioning aid against his brother, and promising to acknowledge the +sovereignty of the king of Spain over the island of Borneo. La-Sande +went in person to restore this chieftain to power. He had a fleet of +galleys and frigates, and, according to Padre Gaspar de San Augustin, +more than fifteen hundred Filipino bowmen from Pangasinan, Cagayan, +and the Bisayas accompanied the expedition. He landed on the coast +of Borneo, destroyed the fleet of praos and the city of the usurper, +and endeavored to secure Sirela in his principality. Sickness among +his fleet and the lack of provisions forced him to return to Manila. + +The First Attack upon the Moros of Jolo.--On his return he sent an +officer against the island of Jolo. This officer forced the Joloanos +to recognize his power, and from there he passed to the island of +Mindanao, where he further enforced obedience upon the natives. This +was the beginning of the Spanish expeditions against the Moros, which +had the effect of arousing in these Mohammedan pirates such terrible +retaliatory vengeance. Under La-Sande the conquest of the Camarines was +completed by Captain Juan Chavés and the city of Nueva Caceres founded. + +The Appointment of Governor Ronquillo.--It was the uniform policy of +the Spanish government to limit the term of office of the governor +to a short period of years. This was one of the futile provisions by +which Spain attempted to control both the ambition and the avarice +of her colonial captains. But Don Gonzalo Ronquillo had granted to +him the governorship of the Philippines for life, on the condition of +his raising and equipping a force of six hundred in Spain, largely at +his own expense, for the better protection and pacification of the +archipelago. This Ronquillo did, bringing his expedition by way of +Panama. He arrived in April, 1580, and although he died at the end +of three years, his rule came at an important time. + +The Spanish and the Portuguese Colonies Combined.--In 1580, Philip +II, conquered and annexed to Spain the kingdom of Portugal, and with +Portugal came necessarily to the Spanish crown those rich eastern +colonies which the valor of Da Gama and Albuquerque had won. Portugal +rewon her independence in 1640, but for years Manila was the capital +of a colonial empire, extending from Goa in India to Formosa. + +Events of Ronquillo's Rule.--Ronquillo, under orders from the crown, +entered into correspondence with the captain of the Portuguese +fortress on the island of Tidor, and the captain of Tidor petitioned +Ronquillo for assistance in reconquering the tempting island of +Ternate. Ronquillo sent south a considerable expedition, but after +arriving in the Moluccas the disease of beri-beri in the Spanish +camp defeated the undertaking. Ronquillo also sent a small armada to +the coasts of Borneo and Malacca, where a limited amount of pepper +was obtained. + +The few years of Ronquillo's reign were in other ways important. A +colony of Spaniards was established at Oton, on the island of Panay, +which was given the name of Arévalo (Iloilo). And under Ronquillo +was pacified for the first time the great valley of the Cagayan. At +the mouth of the river a Japanese adventurer, Tayfusa, or Tayzufu, +had established himself and was attempting the subjugation of this +important part of northern Luzon. Ronquillo sent against him Captain +Carreon, who expelled the intruder and established on the present +site of Lao-lo the city of Nueva Segovia. Two friars accompanied +this expedition and the occupation of this valley by the Spaniards +was made permanent. + +The First Conflicts between the Church and the State.--In March, 1581, +there arrived the first Bishop of Manila, Domingo de Salazar. Almost +immediately began those conflicts between the spiritual and civil +authorities, and between bishop and the regular orders, which have +filled to such an extent the history of the islands. The bishop +was one of those authoritative, ambitious, and arrogant characters, +so typical in the history of the Church. It was largely due to his +protests against the autocratic power of the governor that the king +was induced to appoint the first Audiencia. The character and power +of these courts have already been explained. The president and judges +arrived the year following the death of Ronquillo, and the president, +Dr. Santiago de Vera, became acting governor during the succeeding +five years. + +In 1587, the first Dominicans, fifteen in number, arrived, and founded +their celebrated mission, La Provincia del Santisimo Rosario. + +Increasing Strength of the Malays.--De Vera continued the policy of +his predecessors and another fruitless attack was made on Ternate +in 1585. The power of the Malay people was increasing, while that of +the Europeans was decreasing. The sultans had expelled their foreign +masters, and neither Spaniard nor Portuguese were able to effect +the conquest of the Moluccas. There were uprisings of the natives in +Manila and in Cagayan and Ilocos. + +The Decree of 1589.--Affairs in the Islands did not yet, however, +suit Bishop Salazar, and as the representative of both governor and +bishop, the Jesuit, Alonso Sanchez, was dispatched in 1586 to lay the +needs of the colony before the king. Philip was apparently impressed +with the necessity of putting the government of the Islands upon a +better administrative basis. To this end he published the important +decree of 1589. + +The governor now became a paid officer of the crown, at a salary of +ten thousand ducats. For the proper protection of the colony and the +conquest of the Moluccas, a regular force of four hundred soldiers +accompanied the governor. His powers were extended to those of an +actual viceregent of the king, and the Audiencia was abolished. The man +selected to occupy this important post was Don Gomez Perez Dasmariņas, +who arrived with the new constitution in May, 1590. So great was +the chagrin of the bishop at the abolition of the Audiencia and the +increase of the governor's power, that he himself set out for Spain +to lay his wishes before the court. + +The Missionary Efforts of the Friars.--Twenty-four Franciscans came +with Dasmariņas and the presence of the three orders necessitated the +partition of the Islands among them. The keenest rivalry and jealousy +existed among them over the prosecution of missions in still more +foreign lands. To the missionaries of this age it seemed a possible +thing to convert the great and conservative nations of China and +Japan to the Western religion. + +In the month of Dasmariņas' arrival, a company of Dominicans attempted +to found a mission in China, and, an embassy coming from Japan to +demand vassalage from the Philippines, four of the newly arrived +Franciscans accompanied the Japanese on their return. + +A year later, in 1592, another embassy from the king of Cambodia +arrived, bringing gifts that included two elephants, and petitioning +for succor against the king of Siam. This was the beginning of an +alliance between Cambodia and the Philippines which lasted for many +years, and which occasioned frequent military aid and many efforts +to convert that country. + +Death of Dasmariņas.--But the center of Dasmariņas' ambitions was the +effective conquest of the East Indies and the extension of Spanish +power and his own rule through the Moluccas. With this end in view, +for three years he made preparations. For months the shores were lined +with the yards of the shipbuilders, and the great forests of Bulacan +fell before the axes of the Indians. More than two hundred vessels, +"galeras," "galeotas," and "virrayes," were built, and assembled +at Cavite. + +In the fall of 1593, the expedition, consisting of over nine +hundred Spaniards, Filipino bowmen and rowers, was ready. Many of the +Filipinos, procured to row these boats, were said to have been slaves, +purchased through the Indian chiefs by the Spanish encomenderos. The +governor sent forward this great fleet under the command of his son, +Don Luis, and in the month of October he himself set sail in a galley +with Chinese rowers. But on the night of the second day, while off the +island of Maricaban, the Chinese oarsmen rose against the Spaniards, +of whom there were about forty on the ship, and killed almost the +entire number, including the governor. They then escaped in the boat +to the Ilocos coast and thence to China. + +The murder of this active and illustrious general was a determining +blow to the ambitious projects for the conquest of the East +Indies. Among other papers which Dasmariņas brought from Spain was a +royal cedula giving him power to nominate his successor, who proved to +be his son, Don Luis, who after some difficulty succeeded temporarily +to his father's position. + +Arrival of the Jesuits.--In June, 1595, there arrived Don Antonio de +Morga, who had been appointed assessor and lieutenant-governor of +the Islands, to succeed Don Luis. With Morga came the first Jesuit +missionaries. He was also the bearer of an order granting to the +Jesuits the exclusive privilege of conducting missions in China and +Japan. The other orders were forbidden to pass outside the Islands. + +An attempt to Colonize Mindanao.--In the year 1596, the Captain +Rodriguez de Figueroa received the title of governor of Mindanao, +with exclusive right to colonize the island for "the space of +two lives." He left Iloilo in April with 214 Spaniards, two Jesuit +priests, and many natives. They landed in the Rio Grande of Mindanao, +where the defiant dato, Silonga, fortified himself and resisted +them. Almost immediately Figueroa rashly ventured on shore and was +killed by Moros. Reinforcements were sent under Don Juan Ronquillo, +who, after nearly bringing the datos to submission, abandoned all he +had gained. The Spaniards burned their forts on the Rio Grande and +retired to Caldera, near Zamboanga, where they built a presidio. + +Death of Franciscans in Japan.--The new governor, Don Francisco +Tello de Guzman, arrived on June 1, 1596. He had previously been +treasurer of the Casa de Contratacion in Seville. Soon after his +arrival an important and serious tragedy occurred in Japan. The ship +for Acapulco went ashore on the Japanese coast and its rich cargo was +seized by the feudal prince where the vessel sought assistance. The +Franciscans had already missions in these islands, and a quarrel +existed between them and the Portuguese Jesuits over this missionary +field. The latter succeeded in prejudicing the Japanese court against +the Franciscans, and when they injudiciously pressed for the return +of the property of the wrecked galleon, "San Felipe," the emperor, +greedy for the rich plunder, and exasperated by their preaching, +met their petitions with the sentence of death. They were horribly +crucified at the port of Nagasaki, February 5, 1597. This emperor was +the proud and cruel ruler, Taycosama. He was planning the conquest +of the Philippines themselves, when death ended his plans. + +The First Archbishop in the Philippines.--Meanwhile the efforts of +Salazar at the Spanish court had effected further important changes +for the Islands. The reëstablishment of the Royal Audiencia was +ordered, and his own position was elevated to that of archbishop, +with the three episcopal sees of Ilocos, Cebu, and the Camarines. He +did not live to assume this office, and the first archbishop of the +Philippines was Ignacio Santibaņez, who also died three months after +his arrival, on May 28, 1598. + +Reëstablishment of the Audiencia.--The Audiencia was reëstablished with +great pomp and ceremony. The royal seal was borne on a magnificently +caparisoned horse to the cathedral, where a Te Deum was chanted, +and then to the Casas Reales, where was inaugurated the famous court +that continued without interruption down to the end of Spanish +rule. Dr. Morga was one of the first oidores, and the earliest +judicial record which can now be found in the archives of this court +is a sentence bearing his signature. + +The Rise of Moro Piracy.--The last years of De Guzman's governorship +were filled with troubles ominous for the future of the Islands. The +presidio of Caldera was destroyed by the Moros. Following this +victory, in the year 1599, the Moros of Jolo and Maguindanao equipped +a piratical fleet of fifty caracoas, and swept the coasts of the +Bisayas. Cebu, Negros, and Panay were ravaged, their towns burned, +and their inhabitants carried off as slaves. + +The following year saw the return of a larger and still more dreadful +expedition. The people of Panay abandoned their towns and fled into +the mountains, under the belief that these terrible attacks had been +inspired by the Spaniards. To check these pirates, Juan Gallinato, +with a force of two hundred Spaniards, was sent against Jolo, +but, like so many expeditions that followed his, he accomplished +nothing. The inability of the Spaniards was now revealed and the +era of Moro piracy had begun. "From this time until the present day" +(about the year 1800), wrote Zuņiga, "these Moros have not ceased to +infest our colonies; innumerable are the Indians they have captured, +the towns they have looted, the rancherias they have destroyed, the +vessels they have taken. It seems as if God has preserved them for +vengeance on the Spaniards that they have not been able to subject +them in two hundred years, in spite of the expeditions sent against +them, the armaments sent almost very year to pursue them. In a very +little while we conquered all the islands of the Philippines; but the +little island of Jolo, a part of Mindanao, and other islands near by +we have not been able to subjugate to this day." [32] + +Battle at Mariveles with the Dutch.--In October, 1600, two Dutch +vessels appeared in the Islands; it was the famous expedition of +the Dutch admiral, Van Noort. They had come through the Straits of +Magellan, on a voyage around the world. The Dutch were in great need of +provisions. As they were in their great enemy's colony, they captured +and sunk several boats, Spanish and Chinese, bound for Manila with +rice, poultry, palm-wine, and other stores of food. At Mariveles, +a Japanese vessel from Japan was overhauled. Meanwhile in Manila +great excitement and activity prevailed. The Spaniards fitted up two +galleons and the "Oidor" Morga himself took command with a large crew +of fighting men. + +On November 14, they attacked the Dutch, whose crews were greatly +reduced to only eighty men on both ships. The vessel commanded by +Morga ran down the flagship of Van Noort, and for hours the ships lay +side by side while a hand-to-hand fight raged on the deck and in the +hold. The ships taking fire, Morga disengaged his ship, which was so +badly shattered that it sank, with great loss of life; but Morga and +some others reached the little island of Fortuna. Van Noort was able +to extinguish the fire on his vessel, and escape from the Islands. He +eventually reached Holland. His smaller vessel was captured with its +crew of twenty-five men, who were all hung at Cavite. [33] + +Other Troubles of the Spanish.--In the year 1600, two ships sailed +for Acapulco, but one went down off the Catanduanes and the other was +shipwrecked on the Ladrones. "On top of all other misfortunes, Manila +suffered, in the last months of this government, a terrible earthquake, +which destroyed many houses and the church of the Jesuits." [34] + +The Moros, the Dutch, anxieties and losses by sea, the visitations +of God,--how much of the history of the seventeenth century in the +Philippines is filled with these four things! + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +THE PHILIPPINES THREE HUNDRED YEARS AGO. + + +Condition of the Archipelago at the Beginning of the Seventeenth +Century.--The Spanish Rule Completely Established.--At the close +of the sixteenth century the Spaniards had been in possession of +the Philippines for a generation. In these thirty-five years the +most striking of all the results of the long period of Spanish +occupation were accomplished. The work of these first soldiers and +missionaries established the limits and character of Spanish rule as +it was to remain for 250 years. Into this first third of a century +the Spaniard crowded all his heroic feats of arms, exploration, +and conversion. Thereafter, down to 1850, new fields were explored, +and only a few new tribes Christianized. + +The survey of the archipelago given by Morga soon after 1600 reads +like a narrative of approximately modern conditions. It reveals to +us how great had been the activities of the early Spaniard and how +small the achievements of his countrymen after the seventeenth century +began. All of the large islands, except Paragua and the Moro country, +were, in that day, under encomiendas, their inhabitants paying tributes +and for the most part professing the Catholic faith. + +The smaller groups and islets were almost as thoroughly exploited. Even +of the little Catanduanes, lying off the Pacific coast of Luzon, +Morga could say, "They are well populated with natives,--a good +race, all encomended to Spaniards, with doctrine and churches, and +an alcalde-mayor, who does justice among them." + +He says of the Babuyanes at the extreme north of the archipelago, +"They are not encomended, nor is tribute collected among them, nor +are there Spaniards among them, because they are of little reason and +politeness, and there have neither been Christians made among them, +nor have they justices." They continued in this condition until a few +years before the end of Spanish rule. In 1591, however, the Babuyanes +had been given in encomienda to Esteban de la Serna and Francisco +Castillo. They are put as having two thousand inhabitants and five +hundred "tributantes," but all unsubdued ("todos alįados"). + +On some islands the hold of the Spaniards was more extensive in Morga's +day than at a later time. Then the island of Mindoro was regarded as +important, and in the early years and decades of Spanish power appears +to have been populous along the coasts. Later it was desolated by the +Moro pirates and long remained wild and almost uninhabited except by +a shifting population from the mainland of Luzon. + +The Encomiendas.--The first vessels that followed the expedition of +Legaspi had brought orders from the king that the Islands should be +settled, and divided in encomiendas to those who had conquered and +won them. [35] On this instruction, Legaspi had given the Filipinos +in encomienda to his captains and soldiers as fast as the conquest +proceeded. + +We are fortunate to have a review of these encomiendas, made in 1591, +about twenty-five years after the system was introduced into the +Islands. [36] There were then 267 encomiendas in the Philippines, +of which thirty-one were of the king, and the remainder of private +persons. + +Population under the Encomiendas.--From the enumeration of these +encomiendas, we learn that the most populous parts of the archipelago +were La Laguna, with 24,000 tributantes and 97,000 inhabitants, and the +Camarines, which included all the Bicol territory, and the Catanduanes, +where there were 21,670 tributantes and a population of over 86,000, In +the vicinity of Manila and Tondo, which included Cavite and Marigondon, +the south shore of the bay, and Pasig and Taguig, there were collected +9,410 tributes, and the population was estimated at about 30,000. In +Ilocos were reported 17,130 tributes and 78,520 souls. + +The entire valley of the Cagayan had been divided among the soldiers +of the command which had effected the conquest. In the list of +encomiendas a few can be recognized, such as Yguig and Tuguegarao, +but most of the names are not to be found on maps of to-day. Most of +the inhabitants were reported to be "rebellious" (alįados), and some +were apparently the same wild tribes which still occupy all of this +water-shed, except the very banks of the river; but none the less +had the Spaniards divided them off into "repartimientos." One soldier +had even taken as an encomienda the inhabitants of the upper waters +of the river, a region which is called in the Relacion "Pugao," with +little doubt the habitat of the same Igorrote tribe as the Ipugao, +who still dwell in these mountains. The upper valley of the Magat, +or Nueva Vizcaya, does not appear to have been occupied and probably +was not until the missions of the eighteenth century. + +The population among the Bisayan islands was quite surprisingly +small, considering its present proportions. Masbate, for example, +had but 1,600 souls; Burias, a like number; the whole central group, +leaving out Panay, only 15,833 tributes, or about 35,000 souls. There +was a single encomienda in Butúan, Mindanao, and another on the Caraga +coast. There were a thousand tributes collected in the encomienda of +Cuyo, and fifteen hundred in Calamianes, which, says the Relacion, +included "los negrillos," probably the mixed Negrito population of +northern Palawan. + +The entire population under encomiendas is set down as 166,903 +tributes, or 667,612 souls. This is, so far as known, the earliest +enumeration of the population of the Philippines. Barring the Igorrotes +of northern Luzon and the Moros and other tribes of Mindanao, it is +a fair estimate of the number of the Filipino people three hundred +years ago. + +It will be noticed that the numbers assigned to single encomenderos +in the Philippines were large. In America the number was limited. As +early as 1512, King Ferdinand had forbidden any single person, of +whatever rank or grade, to hold more than three hundred Indians on +one island. [37] But in the Philippines, a thousand or twelve hundred +"tributantes" were frequently held by a single Spaniard. + +Condition of the Filipinos under the Encomiendas.--Frequent +Revolts.--That the Filipinos on many of these islands bitterly +resented their condition is evidenced by the frequent uprisings +and rebellions. The encomenderos were often extortionate and cruel, +and absolutely heedless of the restrictions and obligations imposed +upon them by the Laws of the Indies. Occasionally a new governor, +under the first impulse of instructions from Mexico or Spain, did +something to correct abuses. Revolts were almost continuous during +the year 1583, and the condition of the natives very bad, many +encomenderos regarding them and treating them almost as slaves, and +keeping them at labor to the destruction of their own crops and the +misery of their families. Gov. Santiago de Vera reached the Islands +the following year and made a characteristic attempt to improve the +system, which is thus related by Zuņiga:-- + +"As soon as he had taken possession of the government, he studied to +put into effect the orders which he brought from the king, to punish +certain encomenderos, who had abused the favor they had received in +being given encomiendas, whereby he deposed Bartolomé de Ledesma, +encomendero of Abuyo (Leyte), and others of those most culpable, +and punished the others in proportion to the offenses which they had +committed, and which had been proven. + +"In the following year of 1585, he sent Juan de Morones and Pablo de +Lima, with a well equipped squadron, to the Moluccas, which adventure +was as unfortunate as those that had preceded it, and they returned to +Manila without having been able to take the fortress of Ternate. The +governor felt it very deeply that the expedition had failed, and wished +to send another armada in accordance with the orders which the king +had given him; but he could not execute this because the troops from +New Spain did not arrive, and because of the Indians, who lost no +occasion which presented itself to shake off the yoke of the Spaniards. + +"The Pampangos and many inhabitants of Manila confederated with the +Moros of Borneo, who had come for trade, and plotted to enter the city +by night, set it on fire, and, in the confusion of the conflagration, +slay all the Spaniards. This conspiracy was discovered through an +Indian woman, who was married to a Spanish soldier, and measures to +meet the conspiracy were taken, before the mine exploded, many being +seized and suffering exemplary punishment. + +"The islands of Samar, Ybabao, and Leyte were also in disturbance, +and the encomendero of Dagami, pueblo of Leyte, was in peril of losing +his life, because the Indians were incensed by his thievings in the +collection of tribute, which was paid in wax, and which he compelled +them to have weighed with a steelyard which he had made double the +legal amount, and wanted to kill him. They would have done so if he +had not escaped into the mountains and afterwards passed by a banca +to the island of Cebu. The governor sent Captain Lorenzo de la Mota +to pacify these disturbances; he made some punishments, and with +these everything quieted down." [38] + +Three years later, however, the natives of Leyte were again in +revolt. In 1589 Cagayan rose and killed many Spaniards. The revolt +seems to have spread from here to the town of Dingras, Ilocos, where +the natives rose against the collectors of tribute, and slew six +Spaniards of the pueblo of Fernandina. (Zuņiga, Historia de Filipinas, +p. 165.) [39] + +Effects of the Spanish Government.--The Spanish occupation had brought +ruin and misery to some parts of the country. Salazar describes with +bitterness the evil condition of the Filipinos. In the rich fields +of Bulacan and Pampanga, great gangs of laborers had been impressed, +felling the forests for the construction of the Spanish fleets and +manning these fleets at the oars, on voyages which took them for +four and six months from their homes. The governor, Don Gonzalez de +Ronquillo, had forced many Indians of Pampanga into the mines of +Ilocos, taking them from the sowing of their rice. Many had died +in the mines and the rest returned so enfeebled that they could +not plant. Hunger and famine had descended upon Pampanga, and on +the encomienda of Guido de Lavazares over a thousand had died from +starvation. [40] + +The Taxes.--The taxes were another source of abuse. Theoretically, +the tax upon Indians was limited to the "tributo," the sum of eight +reales (about one dollar) yearly from the heads of all families, +payable either in gold or in produce of the district. But in fixing the +prices of these commodities there was much extortion, the encomenderos +delaying the collection of the tribute until the season of scarcity, +when prices were high, but insisting then on the same amount as +at harvest-time. + +The principal, who occupied the place of the former dato, +or "maharlica," like the gobernadorcillo of recent times, was +responsible for the collecting of the tribute, and his lot seems +to have been a hard one. "If they do not give as much as they ask, +or do not pay for as many Indians as they say there are, they abuse +the poor principal, or throw him into the pillory (cepo de cabeza), +because all the encomenderos, when they go to make collections, take +their pillories with them, and there they keep him and torment him, +until forced to give all they ask. They are even said to take the wife +and daughter of the principal, when he can not be found. "Many are the +principales who have died under these torments, according to reports." + +Salazar further states that he has known natives to be sold into +slavery, in default of tribute. Neither did they impose upon adults +alone, but "they collect tribute from infants, the aged and the slaves, +and many do not marry because of the tribute, and others slay their +children." [41] + +Scarcity of Food.--Salazar further charges that the alcaldes mayores +(the alcaldes of provinces), sixteen in number, were all corrupt, +and, though their salaries were small, they accumulated fortunes. For +further enumeration of economic ills, Salazar details how prices had +evilly increased. In the first years of Spanish occupation, food was +abundant. There was no lack of rice, beans, chickens, pigs, venison, +buffalo, fish, cocoanuts, bananas, and other fruits, wine and honey; +and a little money bought much. A hundred gantas (about three hundred +pints) of rice could then be bought for a toston (a Portuguese coin, +worth about a half-peso), eight to sixteen fowls for a like amount, a +fat pig for from four to six reales. In the year of his writing (about +1583), products were scarce and prices exorbitant. Rice had doubled, +chickens were worth a real, a good pig six to eight pesos. Population +had decreased, and whole towns were deserted, their inhabitants having +fled into the hills. + +General Improvement under Spanish Rule.--This is one side of the +picture. It probably is overdrawn by the bishop, who was jealous of the +civil authority and who began the first of those continuous clashes +between the church and political power in the Philippines. Doubtless +if we could see the whole character of Spanish rule in these decades, +we should see that the actual condition of the Filipino had improved +and his grade of culture had arisen. No one can estimate the actual +good that comes to a people in being brought under the power of a +government able to maintain peace and dispense justice. Taxation is +sometimes grievous, corruption without excuse; but almost anything +is better than anarchy. + +Before the coming of the Spaniards, it seems unquestionable that +the Filipinos suffered greatly under two terrible grievances that +inflict barbarous society,--in the first place, warfare, with its +murder, pillage, and destruction, not merely between tribe and tribe, +but between town and town, such as even now prevails in the wild +mountains of northern Luzon, among the primitive Malayan tribes; +and in the second place, the weak and poor man was at the mercy of +the strong and rich. + +The establishment of Spanish sovereignty had certainly mitigated, if +it did not wholly remedy, these conditions. "All of these provinces," +Morga could write, "are pacified and are governed from Manila, +having alcaldes mayores, corregidors, and lieutenants, each one of +whom governs in his district or province and dispenses justice. The +chieftains (principales), who formerly held the other natives in +subjection, no longer have power over them in the manner which they +tyrannically employed, which is not the least benefit these natives +have received in escaping from such slavery." [42] + +Old Social Order of the Filipinos but Little Disturbed.--Some governors +seem to have done their utmost to improve the condition of the people +and to govern them well. Santiago de Vera, as we have seen, even went +so far as to commission the worthy priest, Padre Juan de Plasencia, +to investigate the customs and social organization of the Filipinos, +and to prepare an account of their laws, that they might be more +suitably governed. This brief code--for so it is--was distributed +to alcaldes, judges, and encomenderos, with orders to pattern their +decisions in accordance with Filipino custom. [43] + +In ordering local affairs, the Spaniards to some extent left the +old social order of the Filipinos undisturbed. The several social +classes were gradually suppressed, and at the head of each barrio, +or small settlement, was appointed a head, or cabeza de barangay. As +these barangays were grouped into pueblos, or towns, the former datos +were appointed captains and gobernadorcillos. + +The Payment of Tribute.--The tribute was introduced in 1570. [44] +It was supposed to be eight reales or a peso of silver for each +family. Children under sixteen and those over sixty were exempt. In +1590 the amount was raised to ten reales. To this was added a real +for the church, known as "sanctorum," and, on the organization of the +towns, a real for the caja de communidad or municipal treasury. Under +the encomiendas the tribute was paid to the encomenderos, except +on the royal encomiendas; but after two or three generations, as +the encomiendas were suppressed, these collections went directly +to the insular treasury. There was, in addition to the tribute, +a compulsory service of labor on roads, bridges, and public works, +known as the "corvee," a feudal term, or perhaps more generally as the +"polos y servicios." Those discharging this enforced labor were called +"polistas." + +Conversion of the Filipinos to Christianity.--The population had +been very rapidly Christianized. All accounts agree that almost +no difficulty was encountered in baptizing the more advanced +tribes. "There is not in these islands a province," says Morga, +"which resists conversion and does not desire it." [45] Indeed, +the Islands seem to have been ripe for the preaching of a higher +faith, either Christian or Mohammedan. For a time these two great +religions struggled together in the vicinity of Manila, [46] but +at the end of three decades Spanish power and religion were alike +established. Conversion was delayed ordinarily only by the lack of +sufficient numbers of priests. We have seen that this conversion of +the people was the work of the missionary friars. In 1591 there were +140 in the Islands, but the Relacion de Encomiendas calls for 160 +more to properly supply the peoples which had been laid under tribute. + +Coming of the Friars.--The Augustinians had been the first to come, +accompanying Legaspi. Then came the barefooted friars of the Order of +Saint Francis. The first Jesuits, padres Antonio Sedeņo and Alonzo +Sanchez, came with the first bishop of the Islands, Domingo de +Salazar, in 1580. They came apparently without resources. Even their +garments brought from Mexico had rotted on the voyage. They found +a little, poor, narrow house in a suburb of Manila, called Laguio +(probably Concepcion). "So poorly furnished was it," says Chirino, +"that the same chest which held their books was the table on which +they ate. Their food for many days was rice, cooked in water, without +salt or oil or fish or meat or even an egg, or anything else except +that sometimes as a regalo they enjoyed some salt sardines." [47] +After the Jesuits, came, as we have seen, the friars of the Dominican +order, and lastly the Recollects, or unshod Augustinians. + +Division of the Archipelago among the Religious Orders.--The +archipelago was districted among these missionary bands. The +Augustinians had many parishes in the Bisayas, on the Ilocano coast, +some in Pangasinan, and all of those in Pampanga. The Dominicans +had parts of Pangasinan and all of the valley of Cagayan. The +Franciscans controlled the Camarines and nearly all of southern Luzon, +and the region of Laguna de Bay. All of these orders had convents +and monasteries both in the city of Manila and in the country round +about. The imposing churches of brick and stone, which now characterize +nearly every pueblo, had not in those early decades been erected; +but Morga tells us that "the churches and monasteries were of wood, +and well built, with furniture and beautiful ornaments, complete +service, crosses, candlesticks, and chalices of silver and gold." [48] + +The First Schools.--Even in these early years there seem to have +been some attempts at the education of the natives. The friars had +schools in reading and writing for boys, who were also taught to +serve in the church, to sing, to play the organ, the harp, guitar, +and other instruments. We must remember, however, that the Filipino +before the arrival of the Spaniard had a written language, and even +in pre-Spanish times there must have been instruction given to the +child. The type of humble school, that is found to-day in remote +barrios, conducted by an old man or woman, on the floor or in the +yard of a home, where the ordinary family occupations are proceeding, +probably does not owe its origin to the Spaniards, but dates from +a period before their arrival. The higher education established by +the Spaniards appears to have been exclusively for the children of +Spaniards. In 1601 the Jesuits, pioneers of the Roman Catholic orders +in education, established the College of San José. + +Establishment of Hospitals.--The city early had notable foundations +of charity. The high mortality which visited the Spaniards in +these islands and the frequency of diseases early called for the +establishment of institutions for the orphan and the invalid. In +Morga's time there were the orphanages of San Andres and Santa +Potenciana. There was the Royal Hospital, in charge of three +Franciscans, which burned in the conflagration of 1603, but was +reconstructed. There was also a Hospital of Mercy, in charge of +Sisters of Charity from Lisbon and the Portuguese possessions of India. + +Close by the Monastery of Saint Francis stood then, where it stands +to-day, the hospital for natives, San Juan de Dios. It was of +royal patronage, but founded by a friar of the Franciscan order, +Juan Clemente. "Here," says Morga, "are cured a great number of +natives of all kinds of sicknesses, with much charity and care. It +has a good house and offices of stone, and is administered by the +barefooted religious of Saint Francis. Three priests are there and +four lay-brethren of exemplary life, who, with the doctors, surgeons, +and apothecaries, are so dexterous and skilled that they work with +their hands marvelous cures, both in medicine and surgery." [49] + +Mortality among the Spaniards.--Mortality in the Philippines in +these years of conquest was frightfully high. The waste of life in +her colonial adventures, indeed, drained Spain of her best and most +vigorous manhood. In the famous old English collection of voyages, +published by Hakluyt in 1598, there is printed a captured Spanish +letter of the famous sea-captain, Sebastian Biscaino, on the Philippine +trade. Biscaino grieves over the loss of life which had accompanied +the conquest of the Philippines, and the treacherous climate of the +tropics. "The country is very unwholesome for us Spaniards. For within +these 20 years, of 14,000 which have gone to the Philippines, there +are 13,000 of them dead, and not past 1,000 of them left alive." [50] + +The Spanish Population.--The Spanish population of the Islands +was always small,--at the beginning of the seventeenth century +certainly not more than two thousand, and probably less later in +the century. Morga divides them into five classes: the prelates and +ecclesiastics; the encomenderos, colonizers, and conquerors; soldiers +and officers of war and marine; merchants and men of business; and +the officers of his Majesty's government. "Very few are living now," +he says, "of those first conquistadores who won the land and effected +the conquest with the Adelantado Miguel Lopez de Legaspi." [51] + +The Largest Cities.--Most of this Spanish population dwelt in Manila +or in the five other cities which the Spaniards had founded in the +first three decades of their occupation. Those were as follows:-- + +The City of Nueva Segovia, at the mouth of the Cagayan, was founded +in the governorship of Ronquillo, when the valley of the Cagayan was +first occupied and the Japanese colonists, who had settled there, +were expelled. It had at the beginning of the seventeenth century two +hundred Spaniards, living in houses of wood. There was a fort of stone, +where some artillery was mounted. Besides the two hundred Spanish +inhabitants there were one hundred regular Spanish soldiers, with +their officers and the alcalde mayor of the province. Nueva Segovia +was also the seat of a bishopric which included all northern Luzon. The +importance of the then promising city has long ago disappeared, and the +pueblo of Lallo, which marks its site, is an insignificant native town. + +The City of Nueva Caceres, in the Camarines, was founded by Governor +La-Sande. It, too, was the seat of a bishopric, and had one hundred +Spanish inhabitants. + +The Cities of Cebu and Iloilo.--In the Bisayas were the Cities of +the Holy Name of God (Cebu), and on the island of Panay, Arévalo (or +Iloilo). The first maintained something of the importance attaching +to the first Spanish settlement. It had its stone fort and was also +the seat of a bishopric. It was visited by trading-vessels from the +Moluccas, and by permit of the king enjoyed for a time the unusual +privilege of sending annually a ship loaded with merchandise to New +Spain. Arévalo had about eighty Spanish inhabitants, and a monastery +of the Augustinians. + +The City of Fernandina, or Vigan, which Salcedo had founded, was nearly +without Spanish inhabitants. Still, it was the political center of the +great Ilocano coast, and it has held this position to the present day. + +Manila.--But all of these cities were far surpassed in importance +by the capital on the banks of the Pasig. The wisdom of Legaspi's +choice had been more than justified. Manila, at the beginning of the +seventeenth century, was unquestionably the most important European +city of the East. As we have already seen, in 1580 Portugal had been +annexed by Spain and with her had come all the Portuguese possessions +in India, China, and Malaysia. After 1610, the Dutch were almost +annually warring for this colonial empire, and Portugal regained her +independence in 1640. But for the first few years of the seventeenth +century, Manila was the political mistress of an empire that stretched +from Goa to Formosa and embraced all those coveted lands which for +a century and a half had been the desire of European states. + +The governor of the Philippines was almost an independent +king. Nominally, he was subordinate to the viceroy of Mexico, but +practically he waged wars, concluded peaces, and received and sent +embassies at his own discretion. The kingdom of Cambodia was his ally, +and the states of China and Japan were his friends. + +The Commercial Importance of Manila.--Manila was also the commercial +center of the Far East, and the entrepôt through which the kingdoms +of eastern Asia exchanged their wares. Here came great fleets of +junks from China laden with stores. Morga fills nearly two pages +with an enumeration of their merchandise, which included all manner +of silks, brocades, furniture, pearls and gems, fruits, nuts, tame +buffalo, geese, horses and mules, all kinds of animals, "even to +birds in cages, some of which talk and others sing, and which they +make perform a thousand tricks; there are innumerable other gew-gaws +and knickknacks, which among Spaniards are in much esteem." [52] + +Each year a fleet of thirty to forty vessels sailed with the new moon +in March. The voyage across the China Sea, rough with the monsoons, +occupied fifteen or twenty days, and the fleet returned at the end of +May or the beginning of June. Between October and March there came, +each year, Japanese ships from Nagasaki which brought wheat, silks, +objects of art, and weapons, and took away from Manila the raw silk +of China, gold, deer horns, woods, honey, wax, palm-wine, and wine +of Castile. + +From Malacca and India came fleets of the Portuguese subjects of Spain, +with spices, slaves, Negroes and Kafirs, and the rich productions of +Bengal, India, Persia, and Turkey. From Borneo, too, came the smaller +craft of the Malays, who from their boats sold the fine palm mats, +the best of which still come from Cagayan de Sulu and Borneo, slaves, +sago, water-pots and glazed earthenware, black and fine. From Siam +and Cambodia also, but less often, there came trading-ships. Manila +was thus a great emporium for all the countries of the East, the +trade of which seems to have been conducted largely by and through +the merchants of Manila. + +Trade with Mexico and Spain Restricted.--The commerce between the +Philippines, and Mexico and Spain, though it was of vast importance, +was limited by action of the crown. It was a commerce which apparently +admitted of infinite expansion, but the shortsighted merchants and +manufacturers of the Peninsula clamored against its development, +and it was subjected to the severest limitations. Four galleons +were at first maintained for this trade, which were dispatched two +at a time in successive years from Manila to the port of Acapulco, +Mexico. The letter on the Philippine trade, already quoted, states that +these galleons were great ships of six hundred and eight hundred tons +apiece. [53] They went "very strong with soldiers," and they carried +the annual mail, reinforcements, and supplies of Mexican silver for +trade with China, which has remained the commercial currency of the +East to the present day. Later the number of galleons was reduced +to one. + +The Rich Cargoes of the Galleons.--The track of the Philippine galleon +lay from Luzon northeastward to about the forty-second degree of +latitude, where the westerly winds prevail, thence nearly straight +across the ocean to Cape Mendocino in northern California, which +was discovered and mapped by Biscaino in 1602. Thence the course lay +down the western coast of North America nearly three thousand miles +to the port of Acapulco. + +We can imagine how carefully selected and rich in quality were the +merchandises with which these solitary galleons were freighted, +the pick of all the rich stores which came to Manila. The profits +were enormous,--six and eight hundred per cent. Biscaino wrote that +with two hundred ducats invested in Spanish wares and some Flemish +commodities, he made fourteen hundred ducats; but, he added, in 1588 +he lost a ship,--robbed and burned by Englishmen. On the safe arrival +of these ships depended how much of the fortunes of the colony! + +Capture of the Galleons.--For generations these galleons were probably +the most tempting and romantic prize that ever aroused the cupidity of +privateer. The first to profit by this rich booty was Thomas Cavendish, +who in 1584 came through the Straits of Magellan with a fleet of five +vessels. Like Drake before him, he ravaged the coast of South America +and then steered straight away across the sea to the Moluccas. Here +he acquired information about the rich commerce of the Philippines +and of the yearly voyage of the galleon. Back across the Pacific went +the fleet of Cavendish for the coast of California. + +In his own narrative he tells how he beat up and down between Capes +San Lucas and Mendocino until the galleon, heavy with her riches, +appeared. She fell into his hands almost without a fray. She carried +one hundred and twenty-two thousand pesos of gold and a great and +rich store of satins, damask, and musk. Cavendish landed the Spanish +on the California coast, burned the "Santa Anna," and then returned +to the Philippines and made an attack upon the shipyard of Iloilo, +but was repulsed. He sent a letter to the governor at Manila, boasting +of his capture, and then sailed for the Cape of Good Hope and home. + +There is an old story that tells how his sea-worn ships came up +the Thames, their masts hung with silk and damask sails. From this +time on the venture was less safe. In 1588 there came to Spain the +overwhelming disaster of her history,--the destruction of the Great +Armada. From this date her power was gone, and her name was no longer +a terror on the seas. English freebooters controlled the oceans, +and in 1610 the Dutch appeared in the East, never to withdraw. + +The City of Manila Three Hundred Years Ago.--We can hardly close this +chapter without some further reference to the city of Manila as it +appeared three hundred years ago. Morga has fortunately left us a +detailed description from which the following points in the main are +drawn. As we have already seen, Legaspi had laid out the city on the +blackened site of the town and fortress of the Mohammedan prince, +which had been destroyed in the struggle for occupation. He gave it +the same extent and dimensions that it possesses to this day. + +Like other colonial capitals in the Far East, it was primarily a +citadel and refuge from attack. On the point between the sea and +the river Legaspi had built the famous and permanent fortress of +Santiago. In the time of the great Adelantado it was probably only a +wooden stockade, but under the governor Santiago de Vera it was built +up of stone. Cavendish (1587) describes Manila as "an unwalled town and +of no great strength," but under the improvements and completions made +by Dasmariņas about 1590 it assumed much of its present appearance. Its +guns thoroughly commanded the entrance to the river Pasig and made +the approach of hostile boats from the harbor side impossible. + +It is noteworthy, then, that all the assaults that have been made +upon the city, from that of Limahong, to those of the British in 1763, +and of the Americans in 1898, have been directed against the southern +wall by an advance from Paraņaque. Dasmariņas also inclosed the city +with a stone wall, the base from which the present noble rampart has +arisen. It had originally a width of from seven and a half to nine +feet. Of its height no figure is given, Morga says simply that with +its buttresses and turrets it was sufficiently high for the purposes +of defense. + +The Old Fort.--There was a stone fort on the south side facing Ermita, +known as the Fortress of Our Lady of Guidance; and there were two +or more bastions, each with six pieces of artillery,--St. Andrew's, +now a powder magazine at the southeast corner, and St. Gabriel's, +over-looking the Parian district, where the Chinese were settled. + +The three principal gates to the city, with the smaller wickets and +posterns, which opened on the river and sea, were regularly closed +at night by the guard which made the rounds. At each gate and wicket +was a permanent post of soldiers and artillerists. + +The Plaza de Armas adjacent to the fort had its arsenal, stores, +powder-works, and a foundry for the casting of guns and artillery. The +foundry, when established by Ronquillo, was in charge of a Pampangan +Indian called Pandapira. + +The Spanish Buildings of the City.--The buildings of the city, +especially the Casas Reales and the churches and monasteries, had been +durably erected of stone. Chirino claims that the hewing of stone, the +burning of lime, and the training of native and Chinese artisans for +this building, were the work of the Jesuit father, Sedeņo. He himself +fashioned the first clay tiles and built the first stone house, and so +urged and encouraged others, himself directing, the building of public +works, that the city, which a little before had been solely of timber +and cane, had become one of the best constructed and most beautiful +in the Indies. [54] He it was also who sought out Chinese painters +and decorators and ornamented the churches with images and paintings. + +Within the walls, there were some six hundred houses of a private +nature, most of them built of stone and tile, and an equal number +outside in the suburbs, or "arrabales," all occupied by Spaniards +("todos son vivienda y poblacion de los Espaņoles"). [55] + +This gives some twelve hundred Spanish families or establishments, +exclusive of the religious, who in Manila numbered at least one +hundred and fifty, [56] the garrison, at certain times, about four +hundred trained Spanish soldiers who had seen service in Holland and +the Low Countries, and the official classes. + +The Malecon and the Luneta.--It is interesting at this early date to +find mention of the famous recreation drive, the Paseo de Bagumbayan, +now commonly known as the Malecon and Luneta. "Manila," says our +historian, "has two places of recreation on land; the one, which is +clean and wide, extends from the point called Our Lady of Guidance +for about a league along the sea, and through the street and village +of natives, called Bagumbayan, to a very devout hermitage (Ermita), +called the Hermitage of Our Lady of Guidance, and from there a good +distance to a monastery and mission (doctrina) of the Augustinians, +called Mahalat (Malate)." [57] The other drive lay out through the +present suburb of Concepcion, then called Laguio, to Paco, where was +a monastery of the Franciscans. + +The Chinese in Manila.--Early Chinese Commerce.--We have seen that +even as long ago as three hundred years Manila was a metropolis of +the Eastern world. Vessels from many lands dropped anchor at the +mouth of the Pasig, and their merchants set up their booths within +her markets. Slaves from far-distant India and Africa were sold under +her walls. Surely it was a cosmopolitan population that the shifting +monsoons carried to and from her gates. + +But of all these Eastern races only one has been a constant and +important factor in the life of the Islands. This is the Chinese. It +does not appear that they settled in the country or materially affected +the life of the Filipinos until the establishment of Manila by the +Spaniards. The Spaniards were early desirous of cultivating friendly +relations with the Empire of China. Salcedo, on his first punitive +expedition to Mindoro, had found a Chinese junk, which had gone +ashore on the western coast. He was careful to rescue these voyagers +and return them to their own land, with a friendly message inviting +trading relations. Commerce and immigration followed immediately the +founding of the city. + +The Chinese are without question the most remarkable colonizers in the +world. They seem able to thrive in any climate. They readily marry with +every race. The children that follow such unions are not only numerous +but healthy and intelligent. The coasts of China teem with overcrowding +populations. Emigration to almost any land means improvement of the +Chinese of poor birth. These qualities and conditions, with their +keen sense for trade and their indifference to physical hardship and +danger, make the Chinese almost a dominant factor wherever political +barriers have not been raised against their entrance. + +The Chinese had early gained an important place in the commercial and +industrial life of Manila. A letter to the king from Bishop Salazar +shows that he befriended them and was warm in their praise. [58] +This was in 1590, and there were then in Manila and Tondo about +seven thousand resident Chinese, and they were indispensable to the +prosperity of the city. + +Importance of Chinese Labor and Trade.--In the early decades +of Spanish rule, the Philippines were poor in resources and the +population was sparse, quite insufficient for the purposes of the +Spanish colonizers. Thus the early development of the colony was +based upon Chinese labor and Chinese trade. As the early writers are +fond of emphasizing, from China came not only the finished silks and +costly wares, which in large part were destined for the trade to New +Spain and Europe, but also cattle, horses and mares, foodstuffs, +metals, fruits, and even ink and paper. "And what is more," says +Chirino, "from China come those who supply every sort of service, +all dexterous, prompt, and cheap, from physicians and barbers to +burden-bearers and porters. They are the tailors and shoemakers, +metal-workers, silversmiths, sculptors, locksmiths, painters, masons, +weavers, and finally every kind of servitors in the commonwealth." [59] + +Distrust of the Chinese.--In those days, not only were the +Chinese artisans and traders, but they were also farmers and +fishermen,--occupations in which they are now not often seen. But in +spite of their economic necessity, the Chinese were always looked +upon with disfavor and their presence with dread. Plots of murder +and insurrection were supposedly rife among them. Writers object that +their numbers were so great that there was no security in the land; +their life was bad and vicious; through intercourse with them the +natives advanced but little in Christianity and customs; they were +such terrible eaters that they made foods scarce and prices high. + +If permitted, they went everywhere through the Islands and committed +a thousand abuses and offenses. They explored every spot, river, +estero, and harbor, and knew the country better even than the Spaniard +himself, so that if any enemy should come they would be able to cause +infinite mischief. [60] When we find so just and high-minded a man as +the president of the Audiencia, Morga, giving voice to such charges, +we may be sure that the feeling was deep and terrible, and practically +universal among all Spanish inhabitants. + +The First Massacre of the Chinese.--Each race feared and suspected the +other, and from this mutual cowardice came in 1603 a cruel outbreak +and massacre. Three Chinese mandarins arrived in that year, stating +that they had been sent by the emperor to investigate a report that +there was a mountain in Cavite of solid precious metal. This myth was +no more absurd than many pursued by the Spaniards themselves in their +early conquests, and it doubtless arose from the fact that Chinese +wares were largely purchased by Mexican bullion; but the Spaniards +were at once filled with suspicion of an invasion, and their distrust +turned against the Chinese in the Islands. + +How far these latter were actually plotting sedition and how far they +were driven into attack by their fears at the conduct of the Spaniards +can hardly be decided. But the fact is, that on the evening of Saint +Francis day the Chinese of the Parian rose. The dragon banners were +raised, war-gongs were beaten, and that night the pueblos of Quiapo +and Tondo were burned and many Filipinos murdered. + +In the morning a force of 130 Spaniards, under Don Luis Dasmariņas and +Don Tomas Bravo, were sent across the river, and in the fight nearly +every Spaniard was slain. The Chinese then assaulted the city, but, +according to the tradition of the priests, they were driven back in +terror by the apparition on the walls of Saint Francis. They threw up +forts on the site of the Parian and in Dilao, but the power of their +wild fury was gone and the Spaniards were able to dislodge and drive +them into the country about San Pablo de Monte. From here they were +dispersed with great slaughter. Twenty-three thousand Chinese are +reported by Zuņiga to have perished in this sedition. If his report +is true, the number of Chinese in the Islands must have increased +very rapidly between 1590 and 1603. + +Restriction of Chinese Immigration and Travel.--Commerce and +immigration began again almost immediately. The number of Chinese, +however, allowed to remain was reduced. The Chinese ships that came +annually to trade were obliged to take back with them the crews and +passengers which they brought. Only a limited number of merchants and +artisans were permitted to live in the Islands. They were confined +to three districts in the city of Manila, and to the great market, +the Alcayceria or Parian. + +The word "Parian" seems to have been also used for the Chinese quarter +in and adjoining the walled city, but here is meant the district in +Binondo about the present Calle San Fernando. A block of stores with +small habitations above them had been built as early as the time of +Gonsalez. It was in the form of a square, and here were the largest +numbers of shops and stores. + +They could not travel about the Islands, nor go two leagues from the +city without a written license, nor remain over night within the city +after the gates were closed, on penalty of their lives. They had their +own alcalde and judge, a tribunal and jail; and on the north side of +the river Dominican friars, who had learned the Chinese language, +had erected a mission and hospital. There was a separate barrio +for the baptized Chinese and their families, to the number of about +five hundred. + +The Chinese in the Philippines from the earliest time to the present +have been known by the name of "Sangleyes." The derivation of this +curious word is uncertain; but Navarrete, who must have understood +Chinese well, says that the word arose from a misapprehension of +the words spoken by the Chinese who first presented themselves at +Manila. "Being asked what they came for, they answered, 'Xang Lei,' +that is, 'We come to trade.' The Spaniards, who understood not their +language, conceiving it to be the name of a country, and putting the +two words together, made one of them, by which they still distinguish +the Chinese, calling them Sangleyes." + +The Japanese Colony.--There was also in those early years quite a +colony of Japanese. Their community lay between the Parian and the +barrio of Laguio. There were about five hundred, and among them the +Franciscans claimed a goodly number of converts. + +The Filipino District of Tondo.--We have described at some length +the city south of the river and the surrounding suburbs, most of them +known by the names they hold to-day. North of the Pasig was the great +district of Tondo, the center of that strong, independent Filipino +feeling which at an early date was colored with Mohammedanism and to +this day is strong in local feeling. This region has thriven and built +up until it has long been by far the most important and populous part +of the metropolis, but not until very recent times was it regarded as +a part of the city of Manila, which name was reserved for the walled +citadel alone. + +A bridge across the Pasig, on the site of the present Puente de Espaņa, +connected the two districts at a date later than Morga's time. It was +one of the first things noticed by Navarrete, who, without describing +it well, says it was very fine. It was built during the governorship +of Niņo de Tabora, who died in 1632. [61] Montero states that it was +of stone, and that this same bridge stood for more than two centuries, +resisting the incessant traffic and the strength of floods. [62] + +The Decline of Manila during the Next Century.--Such was Manila +thirty-five and forty years after its foundation. It was at the zenith +of its importance, the capital of the eastern colonies, the mart of +Asia, more splendid than Goa, more powerful than Malacca or Macao, more +populous and far more securely held than Ternate and Tidor. "Truly," +exclaimed Chirino, "it is another Tyre, so magnified by Ezekiel." It +owed its great place to the genius and daring of the men who founded +it, to the freedom of action which it had up to this point enjoyed, +and to its superlative situation. + +In the years that followed we have to recount for the most part only +the process of decline. Spain herself was fast on the wane. A few +years later and the English had almost driven her navies from the +seas, the Portuguese had regained their independence and lost empire, +the Dutch were in the East, harrying Portuguese and Spaniard alike +and fast monopolizing the rich trade. The commerce and friendly +relations with the Chinese, on which so much depended, were broken +by massacre and reprisal; and, most terrible and piteous of all, the +awful wrath and lust of the Malay pirate, for decade after decade, +was to be visited upon the archipelago. + +The colonial policy of the mother-land, selfish, shortsighted, and +criminal, was soon to make its paralyzing influence felt upon trade +and administration alike. These things were growing and taking place +in the next period which we have to consider,--the years from 1600 +to 1663. They left the Philippines despoiled and insignificant for a +whole succeeding century, a decadent colony and an exploited treasure. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +THE DUTCH AND MORO WARS. 1600-1663. + + +Loss of the Naval Power of Spain and Portugal.--The seizure of +Portugal by Philip II. in 1580 was disastrous in its consequences to +both Portugal and Spain. For Portugal it was humiliation and loss +of colonial power. Spain was unequal to the task of defending the +Portuguese possessions, and her jealousy of their prosperity seems to +have caused her deliberately to neglect their interests and permit +their decline. In one day Portugal lost possession of that splendid +and daring navy which had first found a way to the Indies. Several +hundred Portuguese ships, thousands of guns, and large sums of money +were appropriated by Spain upon the annexation of Portugal. [63] +Most of these ill-fated ships went down in the English Channel with +the Great Armada. + +When the terrible news of the destruction of this powerful armament, +on which rested Spanish hopes for the conquest and humiliation of +England, was brought to the Escorial, the magnificent palace where +the years of the king were passed, Philip II., that strange man, +whose countenance never changed at tidings of either defeat or +victory, is reported to have simply said, "I thank God that I have +the power to replace the loss." He was fatuously mistaken. The loss +could never be made good. The navies of Spain and Portugal were never +fully rebuilt. In that year (1588), preëminence on the sea passed to +the English and the Dutch. + +The Netherlands Become an Independent Country.--Who were these Dutch, +or Hollanders? How came they to wrest from Spain and Portugal a +colonial empire, which they hold to-day without loss of prosperity or +evidence of decline? In the north of Europe, facing the North Sea, +is a low, rich land, intersected by rivers and washed far into its +interior by the tides, known as Holland, the Low Countries, or the +Netherlands. Its people have ever been famed for their industry and +hardihood. In manufacture and trade in the latter Middle Age, they +stood far in the lead in northern Europe, Their towns and cities were +the thriftiest, most prosperous, and most cleanly. + +We have already explained the curious facts of succession by which +these countries became a possession of the Spanish king, Emperor +Charles the Fifth. The Low Countries were always greatly prized by +Charles, and in spite of the severities of his rule he held their +affection and loyalty until his death. It was in the city of Antwerp +that he formally abdicated in favor of his son, Philip II., and, +as described by contemporary historians, this solemn and imposing +ceremony was witnessed with every mark of loyalty by the assembly. + +The Rebellion.--But the oppressions and persecutions of Philip's +reign drove the people to rebellion. The Netherlands had embraced the +Protestant religion, and when, in addition to plunder, intimidation, +the quartering of Spanish soldiery, and the violation of sovereign +promises, Philip imposed that terrible and merciless institution, +the Spanish Inquisition, the Low Countries faced the tyrant in a +passion of rebellion. + +War, begun in 1556, dragged on for years. There was pitiless cruelty, +and the sacking of cities was accompanied by fearful butchery. In +1575 the seven Dutch counties declared their independence, and formed +the republic of the Netherlands. Although the efforts of Spain to +reconquer the territory continued until the end of the century, +practical independence was gained some years before. + +Trade between Portugal and the Netherlands Forbidden.--A large portion +of the commerce of the Low Countries had been with Lisbon. The +Portuguese did not distribute to Europe the products which their +navies brought from the Indies. Foreign merchants purchased in Lisbon +and carried these wares to other lands, and to a very large degree +this service had been performed by the Dutch. But on the annexation +of Portugal, Philip forbade all commerce and trade between the two +countries. By this act the Dutch, deprived of their Lisbon trade, +had to face the alternative of commercial ruin or the gaining of those +Eastern products for themselves. They chose the latter course with all +its risks. It was soon made possible by the destruction of the Armada. + +The Dutch Expeditions to the Indies.--In 1595 their first expedition, +led by one Cornelius Houtman, who had sailed in Portuguese galleons, +rounded the Cape of Good Hope and entered the Indian domain. The +objective point was Java, where an alliance was formed with the +native princes and a cargo of pepper secured. Two things were shown +by the safe return of this fleet,--the great wealth and profit of +the Indian trade, and the inability of Spain and Portugal to maintain +their monopoly. + +In 1598 the merchants of Amsterdam defeated a combined Spanish and +Portuguese fleet in the East, and trading settlements were secured +in Java and Johore. In 1605 they carried their factories to Amboina +and Tidor. + +Effect of the Success of the Dutch.--The exclusive monopoly over the +waters of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, which Portugal and Spain +had maintained for a century, was broken. With the concurrence of +the Roman See, they had tried to divide the New World and the Orient +between them. That effort was now passed. They had claimed the right +to exclude from the vast oceans they had discovered the vessels of +every other nation but their own. + +This doctrine in the History of International Law is known as that +of mare clausum, or "closed sea." The death-blow to this domination +was given by the entrance of the Dutch into the Indies, and it is +not a mere coincidence that we find the doctrine of closed sea itself +scientifically assailed, a few years later, by the great Dutch jurist, +Grotius, the founder of the system of international law in his work, +De Libero Mare. + +The Trading Methods of the Dutch.--The Dutch made no attempts in the +Indies to found great colonies for political domination and religious +conversion. Commerce was their sole object. Their policy was to form +alliances with native rulers, promising to assist them against the +rule of the Portuguese or Spaniard in return for exclusive privileges +of trade. In this they were more than successful. + +In 1602 they obtained permission to establish a factory at +Bantam, on the island of Java. This was even then a considerable +trading-point. "Chinese, Arabs, Persians, Moors, Turks, Malabars, +Peguans, and merchants from all nations were established there," +the principal object of trade being pepper. [64] + +The character of the treaty made by the Dutch with the king of Bantam +is stated by Raffles. "The Dutch stipulated to assist him against +foreign invaders, particularly Spaniards and Portuguese; and the king, +on his side, agreed to make over to the Dutch a good and strong fort, +a free trade, and security for "their persons and property without +payment of any duties or taxes, and to allow no other European nation +to trade or reside in his territories." + +Spanish Expedition against the Dutch in the Moluccas.--The Spaniards, +however, did not relinquish the field to these new foes without +a struggle, and the conflict fills the history of the eighteenth +century. When the Dutch expelled the Portuguese from Amboina and Tidor +in February, 1605, many of the Portuguese came to the Philippines +and enlisted in the Spanish forces. The governor, Don Pedro Bravo de +Acuņa, filled with wrath at the loss of these important possessions, +with great activity organized an expedition for their conquest. + +In the previous year there had arrived from Spain eight hundred +troops, two hundred of them being native Mexicans. Thus Acuņa was +able to organize a powerful fleet that mounted seventy-five pieces +of artillery and carried over fourteen hundred Spaniards and sixteen +hundred Indians. [65] The fleet sailed in January, 1606. Tidor was +taken without resistance and the Dutch factory seized, with a great +store of money, goods, and weapons. The Spaniards then assailed +Ternate; the fort and plaza were bombarded, and then the town was +carried by storm. + +Thus, at last was accomplished the adventure which for nearly a +century had inspired the ambitions of the Spaniards, which had drawn +the fleet of Magellan, which had wrecked the expeditions of Loyasa and +Villalobos, for which the Spaniards in the Philippines had prepared +expedition after expedition, and for which Governor Dasmariņas had +sacrificed his life. At last the Moluccas had been taken by the forces +of Spain. + +Capture of a Dutch Fleet at Mariveles.--So far from disposing of +their enemies, however, this action simply brought the Dutch into +the Philippines. In 1609, Juan de Silva became governor of the +Islands and in the same year arrived the Dutch admiral, Wittert, +with a squadron. After an unsuccessful attack on Iloilo, the Dutch +fleet anchored off Mariveles, to capture vessels arriving for the +Manila trade. + +At this place, on the 25th of April, 1610, the Spanish fleet, which had +been hastily fitted at Cavite, attacked the Dutch, killing the admiral +and taking all the ships but one, two hundred and fifty prisoners, and +a large amount of silver and merchandise. These prisoners seem to have +been treated with more mercy than the captives of Van Noort's fleet, +who were hung at Cavite. The wounded are said to have been cared for, +and the friars from all the religious orders vied with one another +to convert these "Protestant pirates" from their heresy. + +An Expedition against the Dutch in Java.--Spain made a truce of her +European wars with Holland in 1609, but this cessation of hostilities +was never recognized in the East. The Dutch and Spanish colonists +continued to war upon and pillage each other until late in the +century. Encouraged by his victory over Wittert, Silva negotiated with +the Portuguese allies in Goa, India, to drive the Dutch from Java. A +powerful squadron sailed from Cavite in 1616 for this purpose. It +was the largest fleet which up to that date had ever been assembled +in the Philippines. The expedition, however, failed to unite with +their Portuguese allies, and in April, Silva died at Malacca of +malignant fever. + +The Dutch Fleets.--Battles near Corregidor.--The fleet returned +to Cavite to find that the city, while stripped of soldiers and +artillery, had been in a fever of anxiety and apprehension over the +proximity of Dutch vessels. They were those of Admiral Spilbergen, +who had arrived by way of the Straits of Magellan and the Pacific. He +has left us a chart of the San Bernadino Straits, which is reproduced +here. Spilbergen bombarded Ilolio and then sailed for the Moluccas. + +A year later he returned, met a Spanish fleet of seven galleons and +two galleras near Manila and suffered a severe defeat. [66] The battle +began with cannonading on Friday, April 13, and continued throughout +the day. On the following day the vessels came to close quarters, +the Spaniards boarded the Dutch vessels, and the battle was fought +out with the sword. + +The Dutch were overwhelmed. Probably their numbers were few. The +Relacion states they had fourteen galleons, but other accounts put +the number at ten, three vessels of which were destroyed or taken by +the Spaniards. One of them, the beautiful ship, "The Sun of Holland," +was burned. This combat is known as the battle of Playa Honda. Another +engagement took place in the same waters of Corregidor, late in 1624, +when a Dutch fleet was driven away without serious loss to either side. + +The Dutch Capture Chinese Junks, and Galleons.--But through +the intervening years, fleets of the Hollanders were continually +arriving, both by the way of the Cape of Good Hope and the Straits +of Magellan. Those that came across the Pacific almost invariably +cruised up the Strait of San Bernadino, securing the fresh provisions +so desirable to them after their long voyage. + +The prizes which they made of Chinese vessels, passing Corregidor +for Manila, give us an idea of how considerably the Spaniards in the +Philippines relied upon China for their food. Junks, or "champans," +were continually passing Corregidor, laden with chickens, hogs, rice, +sugar, and other comestibles. [67] + +The Mexican galleons were frequently destroyed or captured by these +lurking fleets of the Dutch, and for a time the route through the +Straits of San Bernadino had to be abandoned, the galleons reaching +Manila by way of Cape Engano, or sometimes landing in Cagayan, +and more than once going ashore on the Pacific side of the island, +at Binangonan de Lampon. + +The Dutch in Formosa.--The Dutch also made repeated efforts to wrest +from Portugal her settlement and trade in China. As early as 1557 +the Portuguese had established a settlement on the island of Macao, +one of these numerous islets that fill the estuary of the river of +Canton. This is the oldest European settlement in China and has been +held continuously by the Portuguese until the present day, when it +remains almost the last vestige of the once mighty Portuguese empire +of the East. It was much coveted by the Dutch because of its importance +in the trade with Canton and Fukien. + +In 1622 a fleet from Java brought siege to Macao, and, being +repulsed, sailed to the Pescadores Islands, where they built a +fort and established a post, which threatened both the Portuguese +trade with Japan and the Manila trade with Amoy. Two years later, on +the solicitation of the Chinese government, the Dutch removed their +settlement to Formosa, where they broke up the Spanish mission stations +and held the island for the succeeding thirty-five years. Thus, +throughout the century, these European powers harassed and raided +one another, but no one of them was sufficiently strong to expel the +others from the East. + +The Portuguese Colonies.--In 1640 the kingdom of Portugal freed +itself from the domination of Spain. With the same blow Spain lost +the great colonial possessions that came to her with the attachment of +the Portuguese. "All the places," says Zuņiga, "which the Portuguese +had in the Indies, separated themselves from the crown of Castile and +recognized as king, Don Juan of Portugal." "This same year," he adds, +"the Dutch took Malacca." [68] + +The Moros.--Increase of Moro Piracy.--During all these years the raids +of the Moros of Maguindanao and Jolo had never ceased. Their piracies +were almost continuous. There was no security; churches were looted, +priests killed, people borne away for ransom or for slavery. Obviously, +this piracy could only be met by destroying it at its source. Defensive +fortifications and protective fleets were of no consequence, when +compared with the necessity of subduing the Moro in his own lairs. In +1628 and 1630 punitive expeditions were sent against Jolo, Basilan, and +Mindanao, which drove the Moros from their forts, burned their towns, +and cut down their groves of cocoanut trees. But such expeditions +served only to inflame the more the wrathful vengeance of the Moro, +and in 1635 the government resolved upon a change of policy and the +establishment of a presidio at Zamboanga. + +Founding of a Spanish Post at Zamboanga.--This brings us to a new +phase in the Moro wars. The governor, Juan Cerezo de Salamanca, +was determined upon the conquest and the occupation of Mindanao and +Jolo. In taking this step, Salamanca, like Corcuera, who succeeded him, +acted under the influence of the Jesuits. Their missions in Bohol and +northern Mindanao made them ambitious to reserve for the ministrations +of their society all lands that were conquered and occupied, south +of the Bisayas. + +The Jesuits were the missionaries on Ternate and Siao and wherever in +the Moluccas and Celebes the Spanish and Portuguese had established +their power. The Jesuits had accompanied the expedition of Rodriguez +de Figueroa in 1595, and from that date they never ceased petitioning +the government for a military occupation of these islands and for +their own return, as the missionaries of these regions. The Jesuits +were brilliant and able administrators. For men of their ambition, +Mindanao, with its rich soil, attractive productions, and comparatively +numerous populations, was a most enticing field for the establishment +of such a theocratic commonwealth as the Jesuits had created and +administered in America. [69] + +On the other hand, the occupation of Zamboanga was strenuously +opposed by the other religious orders; but the Jesuits, ever +remarkable for their ascendancy in affairs of state, were able to +effect the establishment of Zamboanga, though they could not prevent +its abandonment a quarter of a century later. + +Erection of the Forts.--The presidio was founded in 1635, by a force +under Don Juan de Chaves. His army consisted of three hundred Spaniards +and one thousand Bisaya, The end of the peninsula was swept of Moro +inhabitants and their towns destroyed by fire. In June the foundations +of the stone fort were laid under the direction of the Jesuit, Father +Vera, who is described as being experienced in military engineering +and architecture. + +To supply the new site with water, a ditch was built from the river +Tumaga, a distance of six or seven miles, which brought a copious +stream to the very walls of the fort. The advantage or failure of +this expensive fortress is very hard to determine. Its planting was +a partisan measure, and it was always subject to partisan praise +and partisan blame. Sometimes it seemed to have checked the Moros +and sometimes seemed only to be stirring them to fresh anger and +aggression. + +The same year that saw the establishment of Zamboanga, Hortado de +Corcuera became governor of the Philippines. He was much under the +influence of the Jesuits and confirmed their policy of conquest. + +Defeat of the Moro Pirate Tagal.--A few months later a notable fleet +of pirates, recruited from Mindanao, Jolo, and Borneo, and headed by +a chieftain named Tagal, a brother of the notorious Correlat, sultan +of Maguindanao, went defiantly past the new presidio and northward +through the Mindoro Sea. For more than seven months they cruised the +Bisayas. The islands of the Camarines especially felt their ravages. In +Cuyo they captured the corregidor and three friars. Finally, with +650 captives and rich booty, including the ornaments and services of +churches, Tagal turned southward on his return. + +The presidio of Zamboanga had prepared to intercept him and a fierce +battle took place off the Punta de Flechas, thirty leagues to the +northeast of Zamboanga. According to the Spanish writers, this point +was one held sacred by Moro superstitions. A deity inhabited these +waters, whom the Moros were accustomed to propitiate on the departure +and arrival of their expeditions, by throwing into the sea lances and +arrows. The victory was a notable one for the Spanish arms. Tagal +and more than 300 Moros were killed, and 120 Christian captives +were released. + +Corcuera's Expedition against the Moros at Lamítan.--Corcuera had +meanwhile been preparing an expedition, which had taken on the +character of a holy war. Jesuit and soldier mingled in its company +and united in its direction. The Jesuit saint, Francis Xavier, was +proclaimed patron of the expedition, and mass was celebrated daily +on the ships. Corcuera himself accompanied the expedition, and at +Zamboanga, where they arrived February 22, 1637, he united a force +of 760 Spaniards and many Bisayans and Pampangas. + +From Zamboanga the force started for Lamítan, the stronghold of +Correlat, and the center of the power of the Maguindanao. It seems +to have been situated on the coast, south of the region of Lake +Lanao. The fleet encountered rough weather and contrary winds off Punta +de Flechas, which they attributed to the influence of the Moro demon. + +To rid the locality of this unholy influence, Padre Marcello, the +Jesuit superior, occupied himself for two days. Padre Combés has left +us an account of the ceremony. [70] The demon was dispossessed by +exorcism. Mass was celebrated. Various articles, representing Moro +infidelity, including arrows, were destroyed and burnt. Holy relics +were thrown into the waters, and the place was finally sanctified by +baptism in the name of Saint Sebastian. + +On the 14th of March the expedition reached Lamítan, fortified and +defended by two thousand Moro warriors. The Spanish force, however, +was overwhelming, and the city was taken by storm. Here were captured +eight bronze cannon, twenty-seven "versos" (a kind of small howitzer), +and over a hundred muskets and arquebuses and a great store of Moro +weapons. Over one hundred vessels were destroyed, including a fleet +of Malay merchant praos from Java. Sixteen villages were burned, and +seventy-two Moros were hung. Correlat, though pursued and wounded, +was not captured. [71] + +The Conquest of Jolo.--Corcuera returned to Zamboanga and organized an +expedition for the conquest of Jolo. Although defended by four thousand +Moro warriors and by allies from Basílan and the Celebes, Corcuera took +Jolo after some months of siege. The sultan saved himself by flight, +but the sultana was taken prisoner. Corcuera reconstructed the fort, +established a garrison of two hundred Spaniards and an equal number +of Pampangas, left some Jesuit fathers, and, having nominated Major +Almonte chief of all the forces in the south, returned in May, 1638, +to Manila, with all the triumph of a conqueror. + +Almonte continued the work of subjugation. In 1639 he conquered the +Moro dato of Buhayen, in the valley of the Rio Grande, where a small +presidio was founded. And in the same year the Jesuits prevailed upon +him to invade the territory of the Malanao, now known as the Laguna +de Lanao. This expedition was made from the north through Iligan, +and for a time brought even this warlike and difficult territory +under the authority of the governor and the spiritual administration +of the Jesuits. + +Loss of the Spanish Settlement on Formosa.--The full military success +of Corcuera's governorship was marred by the loss of Macao and the +capture of the Spanish settlement on the island of Formosa by the +Dutch. In the attempt to hold Macao, Corcuera sent over the encomendero +of Pasig, Don Juan Claudio. The populace of Macao, however, rose in +tumult, assassinated the governor, Sebastian Lobo, and pronounced in +favor of Portugal. Later, by decree of the Portuguese governor of Goa, +all the Spanish residents and missionaries were expelled. The Dutch +seizure of Formosa, a year later, has already been described. + +The Archipelago and the Religious Orders.--During these decades, +conflict was almost incessant between the archbishop of Manila and +the regular orders. In the Philippines the regulars were the parish +curates, and the archbishop desired that all matters of their curacy, +touching the administration of the sacraments and other parish duties, +should be subject to the direction of the bishops. This question of +the "diocesan visit" was fought over for nearly two hundred years. + +The Governor and the Archbishop.--Even more serious to the colony +were the conflicts that raged between the governor-general and the +archbishop. All the points of dissension between Church and State, +which vexed the Middle Ages, broke out afresh in the Philippines. The +appointment of religious officers; the distribution of revenue; the +treatment of the natives; the claim of the church to offer asylum to +those fleeing the arm of the law; its claims of jurisdiction, in its +ecclesiastical courts, over a large class of civil offenses--these +disputes and many others, occasioned almost incessant discord between +the heads of civil and ecclesiastical authority. + + +The "Residencia."--We have seen that the power of the governor was +in fact very large. Theoretically, the Audiencia was a limit upon +his authority; but in fact the governor was usually the president of +this body, and the oidores were frequently his abettors and rarely +his opponents. At the end of each governor's rule there took place a +characteristic Spanish institution, called the "Residencia." This was +a court held by the newly elected governor, for an examination into +the conduct of his predecessor. Complaints of every description were +received, and often, in the history of the Philippines, one who had +ruled the archipelago almost as an independent monarch found himself, +at the end of his office, ruined, and in chains. + +It was upon the occasion of the Residencia that the ecclesiastical +powers, after a governorship stormy with disputes, exercised their +power for revenge. Unquestionably many a governor, despite his actual +power, facing, as he did, the Residencia at the termination of his +rule, made peace with his enemies and yielded to their demands. + +Corcuera had continuous troubles with the archbishop and with the +religious orders other than the Jesuits. In 1644, when his successor, +Fajardo, relieved him, the Franciscans, Augustinians, and Recollects +procured his imprisonment and the confiscation of his property. For +five years, the conqueror of the Moros lay a prisoner in the fortresses +of Santiago and Cavite, when he was pardoned by the Council of the +Indies, and appointed governor of the Canaries by the king. + +Weakening of the Governor's Power.--This power of private and +religious classes to intimidate and overawe the responsible head of the +Philippine government was an abuse which continued to the very close +of the Spanish rule. This, together with the relatively short term of +the governor's office, his natural desire to avoid trouble, his all +too frequent purpose of amassing a fortune rather than maintaining the +dignity of his position and advancing the interests of the Islands, +combined decade after decade to make the spiritual authority more +powerful. In the end the religious orders, with their great body of +members, their hold upon the Filipinos, their high influence at the +court, and finally their great landed wealth, governed the Islands. + +The Educational Work of the Religious Orders.--In any criticism of +the evils connected with their administration of the Philippines, +one must not fail to recognize the many achievements of the missionary +friars that were worthy. To the Dominicans and the Jesuits is due the +establishment of institutions of learning. The Jesuits in 1601 had +planted their College of San José. The Dominicans, here as in Europe, +the champions of orthodox learning, had their own institution, the +College of Santo Tomas, inaugurated in 1619, and were the rivals of +the Jesuits for the privilege of giving higher instruction. + +In 1645 the pope granted to the Dominicans the right to bestow higher +degrees, and their college became the "Royal and Pontifical University +of Saint Thomas Aquinas." This splendid name breathes that very spirit +of the Middle Ages which the Dominican order strove to perpetuate in +the Philippines down to modern days. [72] Dominicans also founded +the College of San Juan de Letran, as a preparatory school to the +University. + +We should not pass over the educational work of the religious +orders without mention of the early printing-plants and their +publications. The missionary friars were famous printers, and in the +Philippines, as well as in America, some noble volumes were produced +by their handicraft. + +Founding of Hospitals by the Franciscans.--Nor had the Franciscans +in the Philippines neglected the fundamental purpose of their +foundation,--that of ministration to the sick and unprotected. A +narrative of their order, written in 1649, gives a long list of their +beneficent foundations. [73] Besides the hospital of Manila, they +had an infirmary at Cavite for the native mariners and shipbuilders, +a hospital at Los Baņos, another in the city of Nueva Caceras. Lay +brethren were attached to many of the convents as nurses. + +In 1633 a curious occurrence led to the founding of the leper hospital +of San Lazaro. The emperor of Japan, in a probably ironical mood, +sent to Manila a shipload of Japanese afflicted with this unfortunate +disease. These people were mercifully received by the Franciscans, and +cared for in a home, which became the San Lazaro hospital for lepers. + +Life and Progress of the Filipinos.--Few sources exist that can +show us the life and progress of the Filipino people during these +decades. Christianity, as introduced by the missionary friars, +was wonderfully successful, and yet there were relapses into +heathenism. Old religious leaders and priestesses roused up from +time to time, and incited the natives to rebellion against their new +spiritual masters. The payment of tribute and the labor required for +the building of churches often drove the people into the mountains. + +Religious Revolt at Bohol and Leyte.--In 1621 a somewhat serious +revolt took place on Bohol. The Jesuits who administered the island +were absent in Cebu, attending the fiestas on the canonization +of Saint Francis Xavier. The whisper was raised that the old +heathen deity, Diwata, was at hand to assist in the expulsion of +the Spaniards. The island rose in revolt, except the two towns of +Loboc and Baclayan. Four towns were burned, the churches sacked, and +the sacred images speared. The revolt spread to Leyte, where it was +headed by the old dato, Bancao of Limasaua, who had sworn friendship +with Legaspi. This insurrection was put down by the alcalde mayor of +Cebu and the Filipino leaders were hung. On Leyte, Bancao was speared +in battle, and one of the heathen priests suffered the penalty, +prescribed by the Inquisition for heresy--death by burning. + +Revolt of the Pampangas.--The heavy drafting of natives to fell trees +and build the ships for the Spanish naval expeditions and the Acapulco +trade was also a cause for insurrection. In 1660 a thousand Pampangas +were kept cutting in the forests of that province alone. Sullen at +their heavy labor and at the harshness of their overseers, these +natives rose in revolt. The sedition spread to Pangasinan, Zambales, +and Ilocos, and it required the utmost efforts of the Spanish forces +on land and water to suppress the rebellion. + +Uprising of the Chinese.--In spite of the terrible massacre, that had +been visited upon the Chinese at the beginning of the century, they +had almost immediately commenced returning not only as merchants, but +as colonists. The early restrictions upon their life must have been +relaxed, for in 1639 there were more than thirty thousand living in +the Islands, many of them cultivating lands at Calamba and at other +points on the Laguna de Bay. + +In that year a rebellion broke out, in which the Chinese in Manila +participated. They seized the church of San Pedro Mecati, on the Pasig, +and fortified themselves. From there they were routed by a combined +Filipino and Spanish force. The Chinese then broke up into small +bands, which scattered through the country, looting and murdering, +but being pursued and cut to pieces by the Filipinos. For five months +this pillage and massacre went on, until seven thousand Chinese were +destroyed. By the loss of these agriculturists and laborers Manila +was reduced to great distress. + +Activity of the Moro Pirates.--The task of the Spaniards in controlling +the Moro datos continued to be immensely difficult. During the years +following the successes of Corcuera and Almonte, the Moros were +continually plotting. Aid was furnished from Borneo and the Celebes, +and they were further incited by the Dutch. In spite of the vigilance +of Zamboanga, small piratical excursions continually harassed the +Bisayas and the Camarines. + +Continued Conflicts with the Dutch.--The Dutch, too, from time to time +showed themselves in Manila. In 1646 a squadron attacked Zamboanga, +and then came north to Luzon. The Spanish naval strength was quite +unprepared; but two galleons, lately arrived from Acapulco, were +fitted with heavy guns, Dominican friars took their places among +the gunners, and, under the protection of the Virgin of the Rosary, +successfully encountered the enemy. + +A year later a fleet of twelve vessels entered Manila Bay, and nearly +succeeded in taking Cavite. Failing in this, they landed in Bataan +province, and for some time held the coast of Manila Bay in the +vicinity of Abucay. The narrative of Franciscan missions in 1649, +above cited, gives town after town in southern Luzon, where church +and convent had been burned by the Moros or the Dutch. + +The Abandonment of Zamboanga and the Moluccas.--The threat of the Dutch +made the maintenance of the presidio of Zamboanga very burdensome. In +1656 the administration of the Moluccas was united with that of +Mindanao, and the governor of the former, Don Francisco de Esteybar, +was transferred from Ternate to Zamboanga and made lieutenant-governor +and captain-general of all the provinces of the south. + +Six years later, the Moluccas, so long coveted by the Spaniards, and so +slowly won by them, together with Zamboanga, were wholly abandoned, and +to the Spice Islands the Spaniards were never to return. This sudden +retirement from their southern possessions was not, however, occasioned +by the incessant restlessness of the Moros nor by the plottings of +the Dutch. It was due to a threat of danger from the north. + +Koxinga the Chinese Adventurer.--In 1644, China was conquered by the +Manchus. Pekin capitulated at once and the Ming dynasty was overthrown, +but it was only by many years of fighting that the Manchus overcame +the Chinese of the central and southern provinces. These were years +of turbulence, revolt, and piracy. + +More than one Chinese adventurer rose to a romantic position during +this disturbed time. One of these adventurers, named It Coan, had been +a poor fisherman of Chio. He had lived in Macao, where he had been +converted to Christianity, and had been a cargador, or cargo-bearer, +in Manila. He afterwards went to Japan, and engaged in trade. From +these humble and laborious beginnings, like many another of his +persistent countrymen, he gained great wealth, which on the conquest +of the Manchus he devoted to piracy. + +His son was the notorious Kue-Sing, or Koxinga, who for years resisted +the armies of the Manchus, and maintained an independent power over +the coasts of Fukien and Chekiang. About 1660 the forces of the Manchus +became too formidable for him to longer resist them upon the mainland, +and Koxinga determined upon the capture of Formosa and the transference +of his kingdom to that island. + +For thirty-eight years this island had been dominated by the Dutch, +whose fortresses commanded the channel of the Pescadores. The colony +was regarded as an important one by the Dutch colonial government at +Batavia. The city of Tai-wan, on the west coast, was a considerable +center of trade. It was strongly protected by the fortress of Zealand, +and had a garrison of twenty-two hundred Dutch soldiers. After months +of fighting, Koxinga, with an overpowering force of Chinese, compelled +the surrender of the Hollanders and the beautiful island passed into +his power. + +A Threatened Invasion of the Philippines.--Exalted by his success +against European arms, Koxinga resolved upon the conquest of +the Philippines. He summoned to his service the Italian Dominican +missionary, Ricci, who had been living in the province of Fukien, and +in the spring of 1662 dispatched him as an ambassador to the governor +of the Philippines to demand the submission of the archipelago. + +Manila was thrown into a terrible panic by this demand, and indeed +no such danger had threatened the Spanish in the Philippines since +the invasion of Limahong. The Chinese conqueror had an innumerable +army, and his armament, stores, and navy had been greatly augmented +by the surrender of the Dutch. The Spaniards, however, were united +on resistance. The governor, Don Sabiano Manrique de Lara, returned a +defiant answer to Koxinga, and the most radical measures were adopted +to place the colony in a state of defense. + +All Chinese were ordered immediately to leave the Islands. Fearful +of massacre, these wretched people again broke out in rebellion, +and assaulted the city. Many were slain, and other bands wandered +off into the mountains, where they perished at the hands of the +natives. Others, escaping by frail boats, joined the Chinese colonists +on Formosa. Churches and convents in the suburbs of Manila, which might +afford shelter to the assailant, were razed to the ground. More than +all this, the Moluccas were forsaken, never again to be recovered by +Spaniards; and the presidios of Zamboanga and Cuyo, which served as a +kind of bridle on the Moros of Jolo and Mindanao, were abandoned. All +Spanish troops were concentrated in Manila, fortifications were +rebuilt, and the population waited anxiously for the attack. But the +blow never fell. Before Ricci arrived at Tai-wan, Koxinga was dead, +and the peril of Chinese invasion had passed. + +Effects of These Events.--But the Philippines had suffered +irretrievable loss. Spanish prestige was gone. Manila was no longer, +as she had been at the commencement of the century, the capital of +the East. Spanish sovereignty was again confined to Luzon and the +Bisayas. The Chinese trade, on which rested the economic prosperity +of Manila, had once again been ruined. For a hundred years the history +of the Philippines is a dull monotony, quite unrelieved by any heroic +activity or the presence of noble character. [74] + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +A CENTURY OF OBSCURITY AND DECLINE. 1663-1762. + + +Political Decline of the Philippines.--For the hundred years succeeding +the abandonment of the Moluccas, the Philippines lost all political +significance as a colony. From almost every standpoint they were +profitless to Spain. There were continued deficits, which had to be +made good from the Mexican treasury. The part of Spain in the conquest +of the East was over, and the Philippines became little more than a +great missionary establishment, presided over by the religious orders. + +Death of Governor Salcedo by the Inquisition.--In 1663, Lara was +succeeded by Don Diego de Salcedo. On his arrival, Manila had high +hopes of him, which were speedily disappointed. He loaded the Acapulco +galleon with his own private merchandise, and then dispatched it +earlier than was usual, before the cargoes of the merchants were +ready. He engaged in a wearisome strife with the archbishop, and +seems to have worried the ecclesiastic, who was aged and feeble, +into his grave. At the end of a few years he was hated by every one, +and a conspiracy against him was formed which embraced the religious, +the army, the civil officials, and the merchants. Beyond the reach of +the power of ordinary plotters, he fell a victim to the commissioner +of the Inquisition. + +The Spanish Inquisition, which wrought such cruelty and misery in the +Peninsula, was carried also to the Spanish colonies. As we have seen, +it was primarily the function of the Dominican order to administer +the institution. The powers exercised by an inquisitor can scarcely +be understood at the present day. His methods were secret, the +charges were not made public, the whole proceedings were closeted, +and yet so great were the powers of this court that none could +resist its authority, or inquire into its actions. Spain forbade +any heretics, Jews, or Moors going to the colonies, and did the +utmost to prevent heresy abroad. She also established in America the +Inquisition itself. Fortunately, it never attained the importance in +the Philippines that it had in Spain. In the Philippines there was no +"Tribunal," the institution being represented solely by a commissioner. + +Death of the Governor.--In 1667, when the unpopularity of Governor +Salcedo was at its height, this commissioner professed to discover in +him grounds of heresy from the fact that he had been born in Flanders, +and decided to avenge the Church by encompassing his ruin. By secret +arrangement, the master of the camp withdrew the guard from the palace, +and the commissioner, with several confederates, gained admission. The +door of the governor's room was opened by an old woman, who had been +terrified into complicity, and the governor was seized sleeping, +with his arms lying at the head of his bed. + +The commissioner informed the governor that he was a prisoner of the +Holy Office. He was taken to the convent of the Augustinians. Here he +was kept in chains until he could be sent to Mexico, to appear before +the Tribunal there. The government in Mexico annulled the arrest of +the commissioner, but Salcedo died at sea on the return of the vessel +to the Philippines in 1669. + +Colonization of the Ladrone Islands.--In 1668 a Jesuit mission under +Padre Diego Luis de Sanvítores was established on the Ladrones, the +first of the many mission stations, both Roman Catholic and Protestant, +in the South Pacific. The islands at that time were well populated +and fertile, and had drawn the enthusiasm of Padre Sanvítores in 1662 +when he first sailed to the Philippines. + +The hostility of the Manchus in China, the Japanese persecutions, +and the abandonment of Mindanao had closed many mission fields, +and explains the eagerness with which the Jesuits sought the royal +permission to Christianize these islands, which had been so constantly +visited by Spanish ships but never before colonized. With Padre +Sanvítores and his five Jesuit associates were a number of Christian +Filipino catechists. + +Settlement of Guam.--The mission landed at Guam, and was favorably +received. Society among these islanders was divided into castes. The +chiefs were known as chamorri, which has led to the natives of the +Ladrones being called "Chamorros." A piece of ground was given the +Jesuits for a church at the principal town called Agadna (Agaņa), and +here also a seminary was built for the instruction of young men. The +queen regent of Spain, Maria of Austria, gave an annual sum to this +school, and in her honor the Jesuits changed the name of the islands +to the Marianas. The Jesuits preached on eleven inhabited islands +of the group, and in a year's time had baptized thirteen thousand +islanders and given instruction to twenty thousand. + +Troubles with the Natives at Guam.--This first year was the most +successful in the history of the mission. Almost immediately after, +the Jesuits angered the islanders by compulsory conversions. There were +quarrels in several places, and priests, trying to baptize children +against the wishes of their parents, were killed. In 1670 the Spaniards +were attacked, and obliged to fortify themselves at Agaņa. + +The Jesuits had a guard of a Spanish captain and about thirty Spanish +and Filipino soldiers, who, after some slaughter of the natives, +compelled them to sue for peace. The conditions imposed by the Jesuits +were that the natives should attend mass and festivals, have their +children baptized, and send them to be catechised. The hatred of the +natives was unabated, however, and in 1672 Sanvítores was killed by +them. His biographer claims that at his death he had baptized nearly +fifty thousand of these islanders. [75] + +Depopulation of the Ladrone Islands.--About 1680 a governor was +sent to the islands, and they were organized as a dependency of +Spain. The policy of the governors and the Jesuits was conversion by +the sword. The natives were persecuted from island to island, and in +the history of European settlements there is hardly one that had more +miserable consequences to the inhabitants. Disease was introduced and +swept off large numbers. Others fell resisting the Spaniards, and an +entire island was frequently depopulated by order of the governor, or +the desire of the Jesuits to have the natives brought to Guam. Many, +with little doubt, fled to other archipelagoes. + +If we can trust the Jesuit accounts, there were in the whole group one +hundred thousand inhabitants when the Spaniards arrived. A generation +saw them almost extinct. Dampier, who touched at Guam in 1686, says +then that on the island, where the Spaniards had found thirty thousand +people, there were not above one hundred natives. In 1716 and 1721 +other voyagers announced the number of inhabitants on Guam at two +thousand, but only one other island of the group was populated. When +Anson in 1742 visited Guam, the number had risen to four thousand, +and there were a few hundred inhabitants on Rota; but these seem +to have been the whole population. The original native population +certainly very nearly touched extinction. The islands were from time +to time colonized from the Philippines, and the present population +is very largely of Filipino blood. + +Conflicts between Governor and Archbishop.--Meanwhile, in the +Philippines the conflict of the governor with the archbishop and +the friars continued. The conduct of both sides was selfish and +outrageous. In 1683 the actions of Archbishop Pardo became so violent +and seditious that the Audiencia decreed his banishment to Pangasinan +or Cagayan. He was taken by force to Lingayan, where he was well +accommodated but kept under surveillance. The Dominicans retaliated by +excommunication, and the Audiencia thereupon banished the provincial of +the order from the Islands, and sent several other friars to Mariveles. + +But the year following, Governor Vargas was relieved by the arrival +of his successor, who was favorable to the ecclesiastical side of +the controversy. The archbishop returned and assumed a high hand. He +suspended and excommunicated on all sides. The oidores were banished +from the city, and all died in exile in remote portions of the +archipelago. The ex-governor-general, Vargas, being placed under +the spiritual ban, sued for pardon and begged that his repentance +be recognized. + +The archbishop sentenced him to stand daily for the space of four +months at the entrances to the churches of the city and of the Parian, +and in the thronged quarter of Binondo, attired in the habit of a +penitent, with a rope about his neck and carrying a lighted candle +in his hand. He was, however, able to secure a mitigation of this +sentence, but was required to live absolutely alone in a hut on an +island in the Pasig River. He was sent a prisoner to Mexico in 1689, +but died upon the voyage. + +The various deans and canons who had concurred in the archbishop's +banishment, as well as other religious with whom the prelate had had +dissensions, were imprisoned or exiled. The bodies of two oidores +were, on their death and after their burial, disinterred and their +bones profaned. + +Degeneration of the Colony under Church Rule.--Archbishop Pardo +died in 1689, but the strife and confusion which had been engendered +continued. There were quarrels between the archbishop and the friars, +between the prelate and the governor. All classes seem to have shared +the bitterness and the hatred of these unhappy dissensions. + +The moral tone of the whole colony during the latter part of the +seventeenth century was lowered. Corruption flourished everywhere, +and the vigor of the administration decayed. Violence went unrebuked, +and the way was open for the deplorable tragedy in which this strife of +parties culminated. Certainly no governor could have been more supine, +and shown greater incapacity and weakness of character, than the one +who ruled in the time of Archbishop Pardo and those that succeeded him. + +Improvements Made by Governor Bustamante.--Enrichment of the +Treasury.--In the year 1717, however, came a governor of a different +type, Fernando Manuel de Bustamante. He was an old soldier, stern of +character and severe in his measures. He found the treasury robbed +and exhausted. Nearly the whole population of Manila were in debt +to the public funds. Bustamante ordered these amounts paid, and to +compel their collection he attached the cargo of silver arriving +by the galleon from Acapulco. This cargo was owned by the religious +companies, officials, and merchants, all of whom were indebted to the +government. In one year of his vigorous administration he raised the +sum of three hundred thousand pesos for the treasury. + +With sums of money again at the disposal of the state, Bustamante +attempted to revive the decayed prestige and commerce of the Islands. + +Refounding of Zamboanga.--In 1718 he refounded and rebuilt the +presidio of Zamboanga. Not a year had passed, since its abandonment +years before, that the pirates from Borneo and Mindanao had failed +to ravage the Bisayas. The Jesuits had petitioned regularly for its +reëstablishment, and in 1712 the king had decreed its reoccupation. The +citadel was rebuilt on an elaborate plan under the direction of the +engineer, Don Juan Sicarra. Besides the usual barracks, storehouses, +and arsenals, there were, within the walls, a church, hospital, and +cuartel for the Pampangan soldiers. Sixty-one cannon were mounted upon +the defenses. Upon the petition of the Recollects, Bustamante also +established a presidio at Labo, at the southern point of the island of +Paragua, whose coasts were attacked by the Moros from Sulu and Borneo. + +Treaty with Siam.--In the same year he sent an embassy to Siam, +with the idea of stimulating the commerce which had flourished a +century before. The reception of this embassy was most flattering; +a treaty of peace, friendship, and commerce was made, and on ground +ceded to the Spaniards was begun the erection of a factory. + +Improvements in the City of Manila.--How far this brave and +determined man might have revived the colony it is impossible to +say. The population of Manila, both ecclesiastical and civil, was at +this time so sunk in corruption and so degenerate as to make almost +impossible any recuperation except under the rule of a man equally +determined as Bustamante, but ruling for a long period of time. He +had not hesitated to order investigations into the finances of the +Islands, which disclosed defalcations amounting to seven hundred +thousand pesos. He fearlessly arrested the defaulters, no matter what +their station. The whole city was concerned in these peculations, +consequently the utmost fear and apprehension existed on all sides; +and Bustamante, hated as well as dreaded, was compelled to enforce +his reforms single-handed. + +His Murder.--He was opposed by the friars and defied by the archbishop, +but, notwithstanding ecclesiastical condemnation, he went to the point +of ordering the arrest of the prelate. The city rose in sedition, +and a mob, headed by friars, proceeded to the palace of the governor, +broke in upon him, and, as he faced them alone and without support, +killed him in cold blood (October 11, 1719). + +The archbishop proclaimed himself governor and president of the +Audiencia. The oidores and officials who had been placed under +arrest by Bustamante were released, and his work overthrown. The new +government had neither the courage nor the inclination to continue +Bustamante's policy, and in 1720 the archbishop called a council of +war, which decreed the abandonment of the fort at Labo. + +When the news of this murder reached Spain, the king ordered an +investigation and the punishment of the guilty, and in 1721 Governor +Torre Campo arrived to put these mandates into execution. The culprits, +however, were so high and so influential that the governor did not +dare proceed against them; and although the commands of the king were +reiterated in 1724, the assassins of Bustamante were never brought +to justice. + +Treaty with the Sultan of Jolo.--In spite of the cowardly policy +of the successors of Bustamante, the presidio of Zamboanga was not +abandoned. So poorly was it administered, however, that it was not +effective to prevent Moro piracy, and the attacks upon the Bisaya and +Calamianes continued. In 1721 a treaty was formed with the sultan of +Jolo providing for trade between Manila and Jolo, the return or ransom +of captives, and the restitution to Spain of the island of Basílan. + +The Moro Pirates of Tawi Tawi.--To some extent this treaty seems to +have prevented assaults from Jolo, but in 1730 the Moros of Tawi Tawi +fell upon Paragua and the Calamianes, and in 1731 another expedition +from the south spent nearly a whole year cruising and destroying +among the Bisayas. + +Deplorable State of Spanish Defenses.--The defenses of the Spaniards +during these many decades were continually in a deplorable state, their +arms were wretched, and, except in moments of great apprehension, +no attention was given to fortifications, to the preservation of +artillery, nor to the supply of ammunition. Sudden attacks ever +found the Spaniards unprepared. Military unreadiness was the normal +condition of this archipelago from these early centuries down to the +destruction of the Spanish armament by the American fleet. + +The Economic Policy of Spain.--Restrictions of Trade.--During the +closing years of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the +eighteenth, commerce seemed to have been actually paralyzed. That +brilliant trade which is described by Morga, and which was at its +height about 1605, was a few years later defeated by the miserable +economic policy of Spain, pandering to the demands of the merchants +of Cadiz and Seville. + +Spain's economic policy had only in view benefits to the +Peninsula. "The Laws of the Indies" abound with edicts for the purpose +of limiting and crippling colonial commerce and industry, wherever it +was imagined that it might be prejudicial to the protected industries +of Spain. The manufacturers of Seville wished to preserve the colonies, +both of America and of the Indies, as markets for their monopoly wares; +and in this policy, for two centuries, they had the support of the +crown. The growing trade between Mexico and the Philippines had early +been regarded with suspicion, and legislation was framed to reduce +it to the lowest point compatible with the existence of the colony. + +None of the colonies of America could conduct commerce with the +Philippines except Mexico, and here all communication must pass +through the port of Acapulco. This trade was limited to the passage +of a single vessel a year. In 1605 two galleons were permitted, but +their size was reduced to three hundred tons. They were allowed to +carry out 500,000 pesos of silver, but no more than 250,000 pesos' +worth of Chinese products could be returned. Neither the Spaniards +of Mexico nor any part of America could traffic directly with China, +nor could Spanish vessels pass from Manila to the ports of Asia. Only +those goods could be bought which Chinese merchants themselves brought +to the Philippines. + +Selfishness of Merchants in Spain.--Even these restrictions did +not satisfy the jealousy of the merchants of Spain. They complained +that the royal orders limiting the traffic were not regarded, and +they insisted upon so vexatious a supervision of this commerce, +and surrounded infractions of the law with such terrible penalties, +that the trade was not maintained even to the amount permitted by +law. Spanish merchants even went to the point of petitioning for the +abandonment of the Philippines, on the ground that the importations +from China were prejudicial to the industry of the Peninsula. + +The colonists upon the Pacific coast of America suffered from the +lack of those commodities demanded by civilized life, which could +only reach them as they came from Spain through the port of Porto +Bello and the Isthmus of Panama. Without question, an enormous and +beneficial commerce could have been conducted by the Philippines with +the provinces of western America. [76] + +Trade Between South America and the Philippines Forbidden.--But this +traffic was absolutely forbidden, and to prevent Chinese and Philippine +goods from entering South America, the trade between Mexico and Peru +was in 1636 wholly suppressed by a decree. This decree, as it stands +upon the pages of the great Recopilacion, is an epitome of the insane +economic policy of the Spaniard. It cites that whereas "it had been +permitted that from Peru to New Spain there should go each year two +vessels for commerce and traffic to the amount of two hundred thousand +ducats [which later had been reduced to one hundred thousand ducats], +and because there had increased in Peru to an excessive amount the +commerce in the fabrics of China, in spite of the many prohibitions +that had been imposed, and in order absolutely to remove the occasion +for the future, we order and command the officers of Peru and New +Spain that they invariably prohibit and suppress this commerce and +traffic between the two kingdoms by all the channels through which +it is conducted, maintaining this prohibition firmly and continually +for the future." [77] + +In 1718 the merchants of Seville and Cadiz still complained that their +profits were being injured by even the limited importation of Chinese +silks into Mexico. Thereupon absolute prohibition of import of Chinese +silks, either woven or in thread, was decreed. Only linens, spices, +and supplies of such things as were not produced in Spain could be +brought into Mexico. This order was reaffirmed in 1720, with the +provision that six months would be allowed the people of Mexico to +consume the Chinese silks which they had in their possession, and +thereafter all such goods must be destroyed. + +Ineffectiveness of These Restrictions.--These measures, while ruining +the commerce of the Philippines, were as a matter of fact ineffective +to accomplish the result desired. Contraband trade between China +and America sprang up in violation of the law. Silks to the value +of four million pesos were annually smuggled into America. [78] In +1734 the folly and uselessness of such laws was somewhat recognized +by the Council of the Indies, and a cedula was issued restoring the +permission to trade in Chinese silks and raising the value of cargoes +destined for Acapulco to five hundred thousand pesos, and the quantity +of silver for return to one million pesos. The celebrated traffic of +the galleon was resumed and continued until the year 1815. + +An Attempt to Colonize the Carolines.--Southeastward of the +Philippines, in that part of the Pacific which is known as Micronesia, +there is an archipelago of small islands called the Carolines. The +westernmost portion of the group also bear the name of the Pelews, +or Palaos. Inasmuch as these islands were eventually acquired by +Spain and remained in her possession down to the year 1898, it may +be well to state something at this time of the attempt made by the +Jesuits in 1731 to colonize them. + +Certain of these little islands were seen several times by expeditions +crossing the Pacific as early as the latter part of the sixteenth +century, but after the trade between Mexico and the Philippines had +been definitely settled upon, a fixed course was followed westward +from Acapulco to Guam, from which there was little variation, and +during the seventeenth century these islands passed quite out of mind; +but in the year 1696 a party of natives, twenty men and ten women, +were driven by storms far from their home in the Carolines upon the +eastern coast of Samar. It seems that similar parties of castaways +from the Pelew and Caroline Islands had been known to reach Mindanao +and other parts of the Philippines at an even earlier date. These +last came under the observation of the Jesuit priests on Samar, who +baptized them, and, learning from them of the archipelago from which +they had been carried, were filled with missionary ambition to visit +and Christianize these Pacific islanders. + +This idea was agitated by the Jesuits, until about 1730 royal +permission was granted to the enterprise. A company of Jesuits in +the following year sailed for the Ladrones and thence south until +the Carolines were discovered. They landed on a small island not +far from Yap. Here they succeeded in baptizing numerous natives and +in establishing a mission. Fourteen of their number, headed by the +priest, Padre Cantava, remained on the island while the expedition +returned to secure reënforcements and supplies. Unfortunately, this +succor was delayed for more than a year, and when Spanish vessels +with missionary reënforcements on board again reached the Carolines +in 1733, the mission had been entirely destroyed and the Spaniards, +with Padre Cantava, had been killed. These islands have been frequently +called the "New Philippines." + +Conditions of the Filipinos during the Eighteenth Century.--During the +most of the eighteenth century, data are few upon the condition of the +Filipino people. There seems to have been little progress. Conditions +certainly were against the social or intellectual advance of the +native race. Perhaps, however, their material well-being was quite +as great during these years, when little was attempted, as during +the governorships of the more ambitious and enterprising Spaniards +who had characterized the earlier period of Philippine history. + +Provincial Governments.--Provincial administration seems to have +fallen almost wholly into the hands of the missionaries. The priests +made themselves the local rulers throughout the Christianized portion +of the archipelago. + +Insurrection in Bohol.--Insurrection seems especially to have +troubled the island of Bohol during most of the eighteenth century, +and in 1750 an insurrection broke out which practically established +the independence of a large portion of the island, and which was not +suppressed for thirty-five years. The trouble arose in the town of +Inabanga, where the Jesuit priest Morales had greatly antagonized and +imbittered the natives by his severity. Some apostasized, and went to +the hills. One of these men was killed by the orders of the priest and +his body refused Christian burial, and left uncared for and exposed. + +A brother of this man, named Dagóhoy, infuriated by this indignity, +headed a sedition which shortly included three thousand natives. The +priest was killed, and his own body left by the road unburied. In +spite of the efforts of the alcalde of Cebu, Dagóhoy was able to +maintain himself, and practically established a small native state, +which remained until the occupation of the island by the Recollects, +after the Jesuits had been expelled from the Spanish dominions. + +Activity of the Jesuits.--During the eighteenth century the Jesuits +alone of the religious orders seemed to have been active in prosecuting +their efforts and seeking new fields for conversion. The sloth and +inactivity which overcame the other orders place in greater contrast +the ambition and the activities, both secular and spiritual, of +the Jesuits. + +Conversion of the Sultan Alim ud Din.--In 1747 they established +a mission even on Jolo. They were unable to overcome the intense +antagonism of the Moro panditas and datos, but they apparently won the +young sultan, Alim ud Din, whose strange story and shifting fortunes +have been variously told. One of the Jesuits, Padre Villelmi, was +skilled in the Arabic language, and this familiarity with the language +and literature of Mohammedanism doubtless explains his ascendency +over the mind of the sultan. Alim ud Din was not a strong man. His +power over the subordinate datos was small, and in 1748 his brother, +Bantilan, usurped his place and was proclaimed sultan of Jolo. + +Alim ud Din, with his family and numerous escort, came to Zamboanga, +seeking the aid of the Spanish against his brother. From Zamboanga he +was sent to Manila. On his arrival, January 3, 1749, he was received +with all the pomp and honor due to a prince of high rank. A house for +his entertainment and his retinue of seventy persons was prepared in +Binondo. A public entrance was arranged, which took place some fifteen +days after his reaching the city. Triumphal arches were erected +across the streets, which were lined with more than two thousand +native militia under arms. The sultan was publicly received in the +hall of the Audiencia, where the governor promised to lay his case +before the king of Spain. The sultan was showered with presents, which +included chains of gold, fine garments, precious gems, and gold canes, +while the government sustained the expense of his household. [79] + +Following this reception, steps were taken for his conversion. His +spiritual advisers cited to him the example of the Emperor Constantine +whose conversion enabled him to effect triumphant conquests over +his enemies. Under these representations Alim ud Din expressed his +desire for baptism. The governor-general, who at this time was a +priest, the bishop of Nueva Segovia, was very anxious that the rite +should take place; but this was opposed by his spiritual superior, +the archbishop of Manila, who, with some others, entertained doubts +as to the sincerity of the sultan's profession. + +In order to accomplish his baptism, the governor sent him to his own +diocese, where at Paniqui, on the 29th of April, 1750, the ceremony +took place with great solemnity. On the return of the party to Manila, +the sultan was received with great pomp, and in his honor were held +games, theatrical representations, fire-works, and bull-fights. This +was the high-water mark of the sultan's popularity. + +Failure to Reinstate Alim ud Din.--Meanwhile the usurper, Bantilan, +was giving abundant evidence of his hostility. The Spaniards were +driven from Jolo, and the fleets of the Moros again ravaged the +Bisayas. In July arrived the new governor, the Marquis of Obando, +who determined to restore Alim ud Din and suppress the Moro piracy. + +An expedition set sail, with the sultan on board, and went as far as +Zamboanga, but accomplished nothing. Here the conduct of the sultan +served to confirm the doubts of the Spaniards as to the sincerity of +his friendship. He was arrested, and returned to Manila, and imprisoned +in the fortress of Santiago. With varying treatment he remained in +the hands of the Spaniards until 1763, when he was returned to Jolo +by the English. + +Great Increase in Moro Piracy.--The year 1754 is stated to have been +the bloodiest in the history of Moro piracy. No part of the Bisayas +escaped ravaging in this year, while the Camarines, Batangas, and Albay +suffered equally with the rest. The conduct of the pirates was more +than ordinarily cruel. Priests were slain, towns wholly destroyed, +and thousands of captives were carried south into Moro slavery. The +condition of the Islands at the end of this year was probably the +most deplorable in their history. + +Reforms under General Arandía.--The demoralization and misery with +which Obando's rule closed were relieved somewhat by the capable +government of Arandía, who succeeded him. Arandía was one of the few +men of talent, energy, and integrity who stood at the head of affairs +in these islands during two centuries. + +He reformed the greatly disorganized military force, establishing +what was known as the "Regiment of the King," made up very largely +of Mexican soldiers. He also formed a corps of artillerists composed +of Filipinos. These were regular troops, who received from Arandía +sufficient pay to enable them to live decently and like an army. + +He reformed the arsenal at Cavite, and, in spite of opposition on +all sides, did something to infuse efficiency and honesty into the +government. At the head of the armament which had been sent against +the Moros he placed a Jesuit priest, Father Ducos. A capable officer +was also sent to command the presidio at Zamboanga, and while Moro +piracy was not stopped, heavy retaliation was visited upon the pirates. + +Arandía's most popular act of government was the expulsion of the +Chinese from the provinces, and in large part from the city. They +seem to have had in their hands then, perhaps even more than now, the +commerce or small trade between Manila and provincial towns. To take +over this trade, Arandía founded a commercial company of Spaniards +and mestizos, which lasted only for a year. The Christianized Chinese +were allowed to remain under license, and for those having shops in +Manila Arandía founded the Alcayceria of San Fernando. It consisted +of a great square of shops built about an open interior. It stood +in Binondo, on the present Calle de San Fernando, in what is still +a populous Chinese quarter. + +Death of Arandía and Decline of the Colony.--Arandía died in May, 1759, +and the government was assumed by the bishop of Cebu, who in turn was +forced from his position by the arrival of the archbishop of Manila, +Don Manuel Rojo. The archbishop revoked the celebrated orders of good +government which Arandía had put into force, and the colony promised +to relapse once more into its customary dormant condition. This was, +however, prevented by an event which brought to an end the long period +of obscurity and inertia under which the colony had been gradually +decaying, and introduced, in a way, a new period of its history. This +was the capture of the Philippine Islands by the British in 1762. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +THE PHILIPPINES DURING THE PERIOD OF EUROPEAN REVOLUTION. 1762-1837. + + +The New Philosophy of the Eighteenth Century.--The middle of the +eighteenth century in Europe was a time when ideas were greatly +liberalized. A philosophy became current which professed to +look for its authority not to churches or hereditary custom and +privilege, but to the laws of God as they are revealed in the natural +world. Men taught that if we could only follow nature we could not do +wrong. "Natural law" became the basis for a great amount of political +and social discussion and the theoretical foundation of many social +rights. The savage, ungoverned man was by many European philosophers +and writers supposed to live a freer, more wholesome and more natural +life than the man who is bound by the conventions of society and the +laws of state. + +Most of this reasoning we now know to be scientifically untrue. The +savage and the hermit are not, in actual fact, types of human +happiness and freedom. Ideal life for man is found only in governed +society, where there is order and protection, and where also should be +freedom of opportunity. But to the people of the eighteenth century, +and especially to the scholars of France, where the government was +monarchical and oppressive, and where the people were terribly burdened +by the aristocracy, this teaching was welcomed as a new gospel. Nor +was it devoid of grand and noble ideas--ideas which, carried out in +a conservative way, might have bettered society. + +It is from this philosophy and the revolution which succeeded it that +the world received the modern ideas of liberty, equality, fraternity, +and democracy. These ideas, having done their work in America and +Europe, are here at work in the Philippines today. It remains to +be seen whether a society can be rebuilt here on these principles, +and whether Asia too will be reformed under their influence. + +Colonial Conflicts between the Great European Countries.--During +the latter half of the eighteenth century there culminated the long +struggle for colonial empire between European states which we have +been following. We have seen how colonial conquest was commenced +by the Portuguese, who were very shortly followed by the Spaniards, +and how these two great Latin powers attempted to exclude the other +European peoples from the rich Far East and the great New World which +they had discovered. + +We have seen how this attempt failed, how the Dutch and the English +broke in upon this gigantic reserve, drove the Spanish fleets from +the seas, and despoiled and took of this great empire almost whatever +they would. The Dutch and English then fought between themselves. The +English excluded the Dutch from North America, capturing their famous +colony of New Amsterdam, now New York, and incorporating it (1674) +with their other American colonies, which later became the United +States of America. But in the East Indies the Dutch maintained their +trade and power, gradually extending from island to island, until +they gained--what they still possess--an almost complete monopoly of +spice production. + +War between England and France.--In India, England in the eighteenth +century won great possessions and laid the foundation for what has +been an almost complete subjugation of this Eastern empire. Here, +however, and even more so than in America, England encountered a +royal and brilliant antagonist in the monarch of France. + +French exploration in North America had given France claims to the +two great river systems of the St. Lawrence and the Mississippi, +the latter by far the greatest and richest region of the temperate +zone. So, during much of this eighteenth century, England and France +were involved in wars that had for their prizes the possession of +the continent of North America and the great peninsula of India. + +This conflict reached its climax between 1756 and 1763. Both states +put forth all their strength. France called to her support those +countries whose reigning families were allied to her by blood, +and in this way Spain was drawn into the struggle. The monarchs of +both France and Spain belonged to the great house of Bourbon. War was +declared between England and Spain in 1761. Spain was totally unfitted +for the combat. She could inflict no injury upon England and simply +lay impotent and helpless to retaliate, while English fleets in the +same year took Havana in the west and Manila in the east. + +English Victory over French in India and America.--English power in +India was represented during these years by the greatest and most +striking figure in England's colonial history--Lord Clive. To him is +due the defeat of France in India, the capture of her possessions, and +the founding of the Indian Empire, which is still regarded as England's +greatest possession. The French were expelled from India in the same +year that the great citadel of New France in America--Quebec--was +taken by the English under General Wolfe. + +The Philippines under the English.--Expedition from India to the +Philippines.--Lord Clive was now free to strike a blow at France's +ally, Spain; and in Madras an expedition was prepared to destroy +Spanish power in the Philippines. Notice of the preparation of this +expedition reached Manila from several sources in the spring and summer +of 1762; but with that fatality which pursued the Spaniard to the end +of his history in the Philippines, no preparations were made by him, +until on the 22d of September a squadron of thirteen vessels anchored +in Manila Bay. + +Through the mist, the stupid and negligent authorities of Manila +mistook them for Chinese trading-junks; but it was the fleet of +the English Admiral Cornish, with a force of five thousand British +and Indian soldiers under the command of General Draper. For her +defense Manila had only 550 men of the "Regiment of the King" and +eighty Filipino artillerists. Yet the Spaniards determined to make +resistance from behind the walls of the city. + +Surrender of Manila to the English.--The English disembarked and +occupied Malate. From the churches of Malate, Ermita, and Santiago +the British bombarded Manila, and the Spaniards replied from the +batteries of San Andres and San Diego, the firing not being very +effective on either side. + +On the 25th, Draper summoned the city to surrender; but a council of +war, held by the archbishop, who was also governor, decided to fight +on. Thirty-six hundred Filipino militia from Pampanga, Bulacan, +and Laguna marched to the defense of the city, and on the 3rd of +October two thousand of these Filipinos made a sally from the walls +and recklessly assaulted the English lines, but were driven back with +slaughter. On the night of the 4th of October a breach in the walls +was made by the artillery, and early in the morning of the 5th four +hundred English soldiers entered almost without resistance. A company +of militia on guard at the Puerto Real was bayoneted and the English +then occupied the Plaza, and here received the surrender of the fort +of Santiago. + +The English agreed not to interfere with religious liberty, and honors +of war were granted to the Spanish soldiers. Guards were placed +upon the convent of the nuns of Santa Clara and the beaterios, and +the city was given over to pillage, which lasted for forty hours, +and in which many of the Chinese assisted. + +Independent Spanish Capital under Anda at Bulacan.--The English were +thus masters of the city, but during their period of occupation +they never extended their power far beyond the present limits of +Manila. Previous to the final assault and occupation of Manila, the +authorities had nominated the oidor, Don Simon de Anda y Salazar, +lieutenant-governor and captain-general of the Islands, with +instructions to maintain the country in its obedience to the king of +Spain. Anda left the capital on the night of October 4, passing in a +little banca through the nipa swamps and esteros on the north shore +of Manila Bay to the provincial capital of Bulacan. + +Here he called together the provincial of the Augustinian monks, +the alcalde mayor of the province, and some other Spaniards. They +resolved to form an independent government representing Spain, and +to continue the resistance. This they were able to do as long as +the British remained in the Islands. The English made a few short +expeditions into Bulacan and up the Pasig River, but there was no +hard fighting and no real effort made to pursue Anda's force. The +Chinese welcomed the English and gave them some assistance, and for +this Anda slew and hung great numbers of them. + +The Philippines Returned to Spain.--By the Treaty of Paris in 1763, +peace was made, by which France surrendered practically all her +colonial possessions to England; but England returned to Spain her +captures in Cuba and the Philippines. In March, 1764, there arrived +the Spanish frigate "Santa Rosa," bringing the first "Lieutenant of +the King for the Islands," Don Francisco de la Torre, who brought +with him news of the Treaty of Paris and the orders to the English +to abandon the Islands. + +Resistance of the English by the Friars.--In resistance to the English +and in the efforts to maintain Spanish authority, a leading part had +been taken by the friars. "The sacred orders," says Martinez de Zuņiga, +[80] "had much to do with the success of Seņor Anda. They maintained +the Indians of their respective administrations loyal to the orders; +they inspired the natives with horror against the English as enemies of +the king and of religion, inciting them to die fighting to resist them; +they contributed their estates and their property; and they exposed +their own persons to great dangers." The friars were certainly most +interested in retaining possession of the Islands and had most to +lose by their falling into English hands. + +Increase of the Jesuits in Wealth and Power.--In this zealous movement +for defense, however, the Jesuits bore no part; and there were charges +made against them of treasonable intercourse with the English, which +may have had foundation, and which are of significance in the light +of what subsequently occurred. + +At the close of the eighteenth century, all the governments of +Catholic Europe were aroused with jealousy and suspicious hatred +against the Jesuits. The society, organized primarily for missionary +labor, had gradually taken on much of a secular character. The society +was distinguished, as we have seen in its history in the Philippines, +by men with great capacity and liking for what we may call practical +affairs as distinguished from purely religious or devotional life. The +Jesuits were not alone missionaries and orthodox educators, but they +were scientists, geographers, financiers, and powerful and almost +independent administrators among heathen peoples. They had engaged +so extensively and shrewdly in trade that their estates, warehouses, +and exchanges bound together the fruitful fields of colonial provinces +with the busy marts and money-centers of Europe. Their wealth was +believed to be enormous. Properly invested and carefully guarded, +it was rapidly increasing. + +What, however, made the order exasperating alike to rulers and +peoples were the powerful political intrigues in which members of +the order engaged. Strong and masterful men themselves, the field of +state affairs was irresistibly attractive. Their enemies charged that +they were unscrupulous in the means which they employed to accomplish +political ends. It is quite certain that the Jesuits were not patriotic +in their purposes or plans. They were an international corporation; +their members belonged to no one nation; to them the Society was +greater and more worthy of devotion than any state, in which they +themselves lived and worked. + +Dissolution of the Society of Jesus.--Europe had, however, reached +the belief, to which it adheres today, that a man must be true to +the country in which he lives and finds shelter and protection and +in which he ranks as a political member, or else incur odium and +punishment. Thus it was their indifference to national feeling that +brought about the ruin of the Jesuits. It is significant that the +rulers, the most devoted to Catholicism, followed one another in +decreeing their expulsion from their dominions. In 1759 they were +expelled from Portugal, in 1764 from France, and April 2, 1767, +the decree of confiscation and banishment from Spain and all Spanish +possessions was issued by King Carlos III. Within a year thereafter, +the two most powerful princes of Italy, the king of Naples and the +Duke of Parma, followed, and then the Grand Master of the Knights of +Malta expelled them from that island. The friends of the order were +powerless to withstand this united front of Catholic monarchs, and in +July, 1773, Pope Clement XIV. suppressed and dissolved the society, +which was not restored until 1814. + +The Jesuits Expelled from the Philippines.--The order expelling the +Jesuits from the Philippines was put into effect in the year 1767. The +instructions authorized the governor in case of resistance to use +force of arms as against a rebellion. [81] Besides their colleges in +Manila, Tondo, Cavite, Leyte, Samar, Bohol, and Negros, the Jesuits +administered curacies in the vicinity of Manila, in Cavite province, +in Mindoro and Marinduque, while the islands of Bohol, Samar, and +Leyte were completely under their spiritual jurisdiction. In Mindanao +their missions, a dozen or more in number, were found on both the +northern and southern coasts. Outside of the Philippines proper they +were the missionaries on the Ladrones, or Marianas. Their property in +the Philippines, which was confiscated by the government, amounted to +1,320,000 pesos, although a great deal of their wealth was secreted +and escaped seizure through the connivance of the governor, Raon. + +Governor Anda's Charges against the Religious Orders.--Don Simon +de Anda had been received in Spain with great honor for the defense +which he had made in the Islands, and in 1770 returned as governor +of the Philippines. His appointment was bitterly resented by the +friars. In 1768, Anda had addressed to the king a memorial upon the +disorders in the Philippines, in which he openly charged the friars +with commercialism, neglect of their spiritual duties, oppression +of the natives, opposition to the teaching of the Spanish language, +and scandalous interference with civil officials and affairs. Anda's +remedy for these abuses was the rigorous enforcement of the laws +actually existing for the punishment of such conduct and the return +to Spain of friars who refused to respect the law. + +He was, however, only partially successful in his policy. During the +six years of his rule, he labored unremittingly to restore the Spanish +government and to lift it from the decadence and corruption that had so +long characterized it. There were strong traits of the modern man in +this independent and incorruptible official. If he made many enemies, +it is, perhaps, no less to the credit of his character; and if in the +few years of his official life he was unable to restore the colony, +it must be remembered that he had few assistants upon whom to rely +and was without adequate means. + +The Moro Pirates.--The Moros were again upon their forays, and in +1771 even attacked Aparri, on the extreme northern coast of Luzon, +and captured a Spanish missionary. Anda reorganized the Armada de +Pintados, and toward the end of his life created also the Marina Sutil, +a fleet of light gunboats for the defense of the coasts against the +attacks of pirates. + +Failure of an English Settlement.--The hostility of the Moro rulers +was complicated by the interference of the English, who, after the +evacuation of Manila, continued to haunt the Sulu archipelago with +the apparent object of effecting a settlement. By treaty with the +Moro datos, they secured the cession of the island of Balanbangan, +off the north coast of Borneo. This island was fortified and a factory +was established, but in 1775 the Moros attacked the English with great +fury and destroyed the entire garrison, except the governor and five +others, who escaped on board a vessel, leaving a great quantity of +arms and wealth to the spoils of the Moros. The English factors, who +had taken up business on the island of Jolo, fled in a Chinese junk; +and these events, so unfortunate to the English, ended their attempts +to gain a position in the Jolo archipelago until many years later. + +Increase in Agriculture.--Anda died in October, 1776, and his +successor, Don José Basco de Vargas, was not appointed until July, +1778. With Basco's governorship we see the beginning of those numerous +projects for the encouragement of agriculture and industry which +characterized the last century of Spanish rule. His "Plan general +economico" contemplated the encouragement of cotton-planting, the +propagation of mulberry-trees and silk-worms, and the cultivation of +spices and sugar. Premiums were offered for success in the introduction +of these new products and for the encouragement of manufacturing +industries suitable to the country and its people. + +Out of these plans grew the admirable Sociedad Economica de Amigos del +Pais, which was founded by Basco in 1780. The idea was an excellent +one, and the society, although suffering long periods of inactivity, +lasted for fully a century, and from time to time was useful in the +improvement and development of the country, and stimulated agricultural +experiments through its premiums and awards. + +Establishment of the Tobacco Industry.--Up to this time the Philippine +revenues had been so unproductive that the government was largely +supported by a subsidy of $250,000 a year paid by Mexico. Basco was +the first to put the revenues of the Islands upon a lucrative basis. To +him was due the establishment, in 1782, of the famous tobacco monopoly +(estanco de tabacos) which became of great importance many years +later, as new and rich tobacco lands like the Cagayan were brought +under cultivation. + +Favorable Commercial Legislation.--The change in economic ideas, +which had come over Europe through the liberalizing thought of the +eighteenth century, is shown also by a most radical step to direct into +new channels the commerce of the Philippines. This was the creation +in 1785 of a great trading corporation with special privileges and +crown protection, "The Royal Company of the Philippines." + +The company was given a complete monopoly of all the commerce between +Spain and the Philippines, except the long-established direct traffic +between Manila and Acapulco. All the old laws, designed to prevent +the importation into the Peninsula of wares of the Orient, were swept +away. Philippine products were exempted from all customs duty, either +on leaving Manila or entering Spain. The vessels of the company were +permitted to visit the ports of China, and the ancient and absurd +prohibition, which prevented the merchants of Manila from trading +with India, and China, was removed. + +Though still closing the Philippines against foreign trade, this +step was a veritable revolution in the commercial legislation of the +Philippines. Had the project been ably and heartily supported, it might +have produced a development that would have advanced prosperity half +a century; but the people of Manila did not welcome the opening of +this new line of communication. The ancient commerce with Acapulco +was a valuable monopoly to those who had the right to participate +in it, and their attitude toward the new company was one either of +indifference or hostility. + +In 1789 the port of Manila was opened and made free to the vessels of +all foreign nations for the space of three years, for the importation +and sale exclusively of the wares of Asia; but the products of Europe, +with the exception of Spain, were forbidden. + +The Royal Company was rechartered in 1805, and enjoyed its monopoly +until 1830, when its privileges lapsed and Manila was finally opened +to the ships of foreign nations. + +Conquest of the Igorrote Provinces of Luzon.--Basco was a zealous +governor and organized a number of military expeditions to occupy +the Igorrote country in the north. In 1785 the heathen Igorrotes of +the missions of Ituy and Paniqui in Nueva Vizcaya revolted and had +to be reconquered by a force of musketeers from Cagayan. + +Conquest of the Batanes Islands.--Basco also effected the conquest of +the Batanes Islands to the north of Luzon, establishing garrisons and +definitely annexing them to the colony. The Dominican missionaries +long before this time had attempted to convert these islands to +Christianity; but the poverty of the people and the fierceness of the +typhoons which sweep these little islands prevented the cultivation of +anything more than camotes and taro, and had made them unprofitable +to hold. Basco was honored, however, for his reoccupation of these +islands, and on his return to Spain, at the expiration of his +governorship, received the title of "Count of the Conquest of the +Batanes." [82] + +A Scientific Survey of the Coast of the Islands.--About 1790 the +Philippines were visited by two Spanish frigates, the "Descubierta" and +the "Atrevida," under the command of Captain Malaspina. These vessels +formed an exploring expedition sent out by the Spanish government to +make a hydrographic and astronomic survey of the coasts of Spanish +America, the Ladrones, and the Philippines. It was one of those +creditable enterprises for the widening of scientific knowledge which +modern governments have successively and with great honor conducted. + +The expedition charted the Strait of San Bernardino, the coasts of +several of the Bisayan Islands, and Mindanao. One of the scientists +of the party was the young botanist, Don Antonio Pineda, who died +in Ilocos in 1792, but whose studies in the flora of the Philippines +thoroughly established his reputation. A monument to his memory was +erected near the church in Malate, but it has since suffered from +neglect and is now falling in ruins. + +Establishment of a Permanent Navy in the Philippines.--The intentions +of England in this archipelago were still regarded with suspicion by +the Spanish government, and in 1795 and 1796 a strong Spanish fleet, +sent secretly by way of the coast of South America, was concentrated in +the waters of the Philippines under the command of Admiral Alava. Its +object was the defense of the Islands in case of a new war with +Great Britain. News of the declaration of war between these two +countries reached Manila in March, 1797, but though for many months +there was anxiety, England made no attempt at reoccupation. These +events led, however, to the formation of a permanent naval squadron, +with head-quarters and naval station at Cavite. [83] + +The Climax of Moro Piracy.--The continued presence of the Moros in +Mindoro, where they haunted the bays and rivers of both east and west +coasts for months at a time, stealing out from this island for attack +in every direction, was specially noted by Padre Zuņiga, and indicated +how feebly the Spaniards repulsed these pirates a hundred years ago. + +It was the last severe phase of Malay piracy, when even the strong +merchant ships of England and America dreaded the straits of Borneo and +passed with caution through the China Sea. Northern Borneo, the Sulu +archipelago, and the southern coasts of Mindanao were the centers from +which came these fierce sea-wolves, whose cruel exploits have left +their many traditions in the American and British merchant navies, +just as they periodically appear in the chronicles of the Philippines. + +Five hundred captives annually seem to have been the spoils taken +by these Moros in the Philippines Islands, and as far south as +Batavia and Macassar captive Filipinos were sold in the slave marts +of the Malays. The aged and infirm were inhumanly bartered to the +savage tribes of Borneo, who offered them up in their ceremonial +sacrifices. The measures of the Spanish government, though constant +and expensive, were ineffective. Between 1778 and 1793, a million and +a half of pesos were expended on the fleets and expeditions to drive +back or punish the Moros, but at the end of the century a veritable +climax of piracy was attained. + +Pirates swarmed continually about the coasts of Mindoro, Burias, +and Masbate, and even frequented the esteros of Manila Bay. Some +sort of peace seems to have been established with Jolo and a friendly +commerce was engaged in toward the end of the century, but the Moros +of Mindanao and Borneo were increasing enemies. In 1798 a fleet of +twenty-five Moro bancas passed up the Pacific coast of Luzon and fell +upon the isolated towns of Paler, Casiguran, and Palanan, destroying +the pueblos and taking 450 captives. The cura of Casiguran was ransomed +in Binangonan for the sum of twenty-five hundred pesos. For four years +this pirate fleet had its rendezvous on Burias, whence it raided the +adjacent coasts and the Catanduanes. + +The Great Wars in America and Europe.--The English reoccupied +Balanbangan in 1803, but held the island for only three years, when +it was definitely abandoned. For some years, however, the coasts of +the Philippines were threatened by English vessels, and there was +reflected here in the Far East the tremendous conflicts which were +convulsing Europe at this time. The wars which changed Europe at the +close of the eighteenth century, following the French Revolution, +form one of the most important and interesting periods of European +history, but it is also one of the most difficult periods to judge and +describe. We will say of it here only so much as will be sufficient +to show the effect upon Spain and so upon the Philippines. + +The Revolution of the English Colonies in America.--In 1776 the +thirteen English colonies on the Atlantic coast of North America +declared their independence of Great Britain. In the unfair treatment +of the British king and Parliament they had, they believed, just +grounds for revolution. For nearly eight years a war continued by which +England strove to reduce them again to obedience. But at the end of +that time England, having successively lost two armies of invasion +by defeat and capture, made peace with the American colonists and +recognized their independence. In 1789 the Americans framed their +present constitution and established the United States of America. + +The French Revolution.--Condition of the People in France.--In their +struggle for independence the Americans had been aided by France, +who hoped through this opportunity to cripple her great colonial +rival, England. Between America and France there was close sympathy +of political ideas and theories, although in their actual social +conditions the two countries were as widely separated as could +be. In America the society and government were democratic. All +classes were experienced in politics and government. They had behind +them the priceless heritage of England's long struggle for free and +representative government. There was an abundance of the necessaries +of life and nearly complete freedom of opportunity. + +France, like nearly every other country of continental Europe, was +suffering from the obsolete burden of feudalism. The ownership of the +land was divided between the aristocracy and the church. The great +bulk of the population were serfs bound to the estates, miserably +oppressed, and suffering from lack of food, and despoiled of almost +every blessing which can brighten and dignify human life. The life +of the court and of the nobility grew more luxurious, extravagant, +and selfish as the economic conditions in France became worse. The +king was nearly an absolute monarch. His will was law and the earlier +representative institutions, which in England had developed into the +splendid system of parliamentary government, had in France fallen +into decay. + +In the other countries of Europe--the German States, Austria, Italy, +and Spain--the condition of the people was quite as bad, probably in +some places even worse than it was in France. But it was in France +that the revolt broke forth, and it was France which led Europe in +a movement for a better and more democratic order. Frenchmen had +fought in the armies of America; they had experienced the benefits of +a freer society, and it is significant that in the same year (1789) +that saw the founding of the American state the Revolution in France +began. It started in a sincere and conservative attempt to remedy +the evils under which France was suffering, but the accumulation of +injustice and misery was too great to be settled by slow and hesitating +measures. The masses, ignorant, and bitter with their wrongs, broke +from the control of statesman and reformer, threw themselves upon the +established state and church, both equally detestable to them, and tore +them to pieces. Both king and queen died by beheading. The nobility +were either murdered or expelled. The revolutionary government, if +such it could be called, fell into the hands of wicked and terrible +leaders, who maintained themselves by murder and terrorism. + +Effects of the Revolution.--These are the outward and terrible +expressions of the Revolution which were Seized upon by European +statesmen and which have been most dwelt upon by historical +writers. But, apart from the bloody acts of the years from 1793 +to 1795, the Revolution modernized France and brought incalculable +gains to the French people. By the seizure of the great estates and +their division among the peasantry, the agricultural products of the +country were doubled in a single year, and that terrible condition +of semi-starvation which had prevailed for centuries was ended. + +The other monarchies of Europe regarded the events in France with +horror and alarm. Monarchs felt their own thrones threatened, and a +coalition of European monarchies was formed to destroy the republic +and to restore the French monarchy and old régime. France found herself +invaded by armies upon every frontier. It was then that the remarkable +effects produced by the Revolution upon the people of France appeared. + +With a passionate enthusiasm which was irresistible, the people +responded to the call for war; great armies were enlisted, which by +an almost uninterrupted series of victories threw back the forces of +the allies. Men rose from obscurity to the command of armies, and +there was developed that famous group of commanders, the marshals +of France. Out of this terrible period of warfare there arose, +too, another, who was perhaps, if we except the Macedonian king, +Alexander, the greatest man ever permitted to lead armies and to rule +men--Bonaparte, later the emperor, Napoleon the First. + +The New Republic under Napoleon the First.--From 1795, when Bonaparte +was given command of the invasion of Italy, until 1815, when he was +finally defeated at Waterloo in Belgium, Europe experienced almost +continuous war. The genius of Napoleon reduced to the position of +vassal states Italy, Switzerland, Holland, Belgium, Germany, and +Austria. In all these countries the ancient thrones were humbled, +feudalism was swept away, and the power of a corrupt church and +aristocracy was broken. In spite of the humiliation of national +pride, these great benefits to Europe of Napoleon's conquests can +not be overestimated. Wherever Napoleon's power extended there +followed the results of the Revolution--a better system of law, +the introduction of the liberal "Code Napoleon," the liberation of +the people from the crushing toils of mediævalism, and the founding +of a better society. These are the debts which Europe owes to the +French Revolution. + +The Decline of Spain.--Lack of Progress.--In this advance and progress +Spain did not share. The empire of Napoleon was never established +in the Peninsula. In 1811 the Spaniards, with, the assistance of the +English under the great general, Wellington, repulsed the armies of +the French. This victory, so gratifying to national pride, was perhaps +a real loss to Spain, for the reforms which prevailed in other parts +of Europe were never carried out in Spain, and she remains even yet +unliberated from aristocratic and clerical power. + +A liberal constitutional government was, however, set up in Spain in +1812 by the Cortes; but in 1814 King Ferdinand, aided by the Spanish +aristocracy and clergy, was able to overthrow this representative +government and with tyrannical power to cast reforms aside. Fifty +thousand people were imprisoned for their liberal opinions, +the Inquisition was restored, the Cortes abolished, and its acts +nullified. The effect of these acts upon the Philippines will be +noticed presently. + +Separation of the Philippines from Mexico.--The events of these years +served to separate the Philippines from their long dependency on +Mexico. In 1813 the Cortes decreed the suppression of the subsidized +Acapulco galleon. The Mexican trade had long been waning and voyages +had become less profitable. The last of the galleons left Manila in +1811 and returned from Acapulco in 1815, never again to attempt this +classical voyage. + +The cessation of these voyages only briefly preceded the complete +separation from America. From the first period of settlement, +the Philippines had in many respects been a sub-dependency of New +Spain. Mexico had until late afforded the only means of communication +with the mother-country, the only land of foreign trade. Mexican +officials frequently administered the government of the Islands, +and Mexican Indians formed the larger part of the small standing +army of the Philippines, including the "Regiment of the King." As we +have seen, a large subsidy, the situado, was annually drawn from the +Mexican treasury to support the deficient revenues of the Philippines. + +Rebellion of the South American Countries.--But the grievances of +the Spanish American colonists were very great and very real. The +revolution which had successively stirred North America and Europe +now passed back again to the Spanish countries of the New World, +and between 1810 and 1825 they fought themselves free of Spain. The +last of the colonies from which the Spaniards were forced to retire +was Peru. Mexico achieved her separation in 1820. Spain lost every +possession upon the mainland of both Americas, and the only vestiges +of her once vast American empire were the rich islands of the Greater +Antilles--Cuba and Porto Rico. + +Limited Trade with the Philippines.--The Philippines were now forced to +communicate by ship directly with Spain. The route for the next fifty +years lay by sailing-vessels around the Cape of Good Hope. It occupied +from four to six months, but this route had now become practically a +neutral passage, its winds and currents were well understood, and it +was annually followed by great numbers of vessels of Europe, England, +and the United States. + +Trade was still limited to the ships of the Royal Philippine Company, +and this shipping monopoly lasted until 1835, when a new era in the +commercial and industrial life of the Philippines opened. An English +commercial house was established in Manila as early as 1809. + +Volcanic Eruptions.--The terrible eruptions of Mount Taal, the last +of which occurred in 1754, were followed in the next century by the +destructive activity of Mount Mayon. In 1814 an indescribable eruption +of ashes and lava occurred, and the rich hemp towns around the base +of this mountain were destroyed. Father Francisco Aragoneses, cura of +Cagsaua, an eye-witness, states that twelve thousand people perished; +in the church of Budiao alone two hundred lay dead. [84] + +Rebellions in the Philippines.--The Liberal Spanish Cortes.--Two +revolts in the Philippines that occurred at this period are of much +importance and show the effect in the Philippines of the political +changes in Spain. In 1810 the liberal Spanish Cortes had declared that +"the kingdoms and provinces of America and Asia are, and ought to +have been always, reputed an integral part of the Spanish monarchy, +and for that same, their natives and free inhabitants are equal in +rights and privileges to those of the Peninsula." + +This important declaration, which if carried out would have +completely revolutionized Spain's colonial policy, was published in +the Philippines, and with that remarkable and interesting facility by +which such news is spread, even among the least educated classes of +Filipinos, this proclamation had been widely disseminated and discussed +throughout the Islands. It was welcomed by the Filipino with great +satisfaction, because he believed it exempted him from the enforced +labor of the polos and servicios. These were the unremunerated tasks +required of Filipinos for the construction of public works, bridges, +roads, churches, and convents. + +Effect of the Repeal of the Declaration of the Cortes.--King Ferdinand +VII. in May, 1814, on his return to power, as we have seen, published +the famous decree abolishing constitutional government in Spain and +annulling all the acts of the Cortes, including those which aimed +to liberalize the government of the colonies. These decrees, when +published in the Philippines, appeared to the Filipinos to return +them to slavery, and in many places their disaffection turned to +rebellion. In Ilocos twelve hundred men banded together, sacked +convents and churches, and destroyed the books and documents of +the municipal archives. Their fury seems to have been particularly +directed against the petty tyrants of their own race, the caciques +or principales. + +The result of Spanish civilization in the Philippines had been to +educate, and, to a certain degree, enrich a small class of Filipinos, +usually known as principales or the gente ilustrada. It is this class +which has absorbed the direction of municipal and local affairs, +and which almost alone of the Filipino population has shared in those +benefits and opportunities which civilized life should bring. + +The vast majority of the population have, unfortunately, fallen or +remained in a dependent and almost semi-servile position beneath +the principales. In Ilocos this subordinate class, or dependientes, +is known as kailian, and it was these kailian who now fell upon +their more wealthy masters, burning their houses and destroying +their property, and in some instances killing them. The assignment of +compulsory labor had been left to the principales in their positions +as gobernadorcillos and cabezas de barangay, and these officials had +unquestionably abused their power and had drawn down upon themselves +the vengeance of the kailian. [85] + +This revolt, it will be noticed, was primarily directed neither +against friars nor Spanish authorities, but against the unfortunate +social order which the rule of Spain maintained. + +A Revolt Lead by Spaniards.--A plot, with far more serious motives, +took place in 1823. The official positions in the regiments and +provinces had previously been held almost entirely by Spaniards born +in America or the Philippines. The government now attempted to fill +these positions with Spaniards from Manila. The officials, deprived of +their positions, incited the native troops which they had commanded, +into a revolt, which began in the walled city in Manila. About eight +hundred soldiers followed them, and they gained possession of the +Cuartel of the King, of the Royal Palace, and of the Cabildo, but +they failed to seize the fortress of Santiago. It was not properly a +revolt of Filipinos, as the people were not involved and did not rise, +but it had its influence in inciting later insurrection. + +Insurrection on Bohol.--Since the insurrection on Bohol in 1744, when +the natives had killed the Jesuit missionaries, a large part of the +island had been practically independent under the leader Dagóhoy. After +the expulsion of the Jesuits, Recollects were placed in special +charge of those towns along the seacoast, which had remained loyal to +Spain. An effort was made to secure the submission of the rebels by +the proclamation of a pardon, but the power of the revolt grew rather +than declined, until in 1827 it was determined to reduce the rebellion +by force. An expedition of thirty-two hundred men was formed in Cebu, +and in April, 1828, the campaign took place, which resulted in the +defeat of the rebels and their settlement in the Christian towns. + +The New Provinces of Benguet and Abra.--It is proper to notice +also the slow advances of Spanish authority, which began to be made +about this time among the heathen tribes of northern Luzon. These +fierce and powerful tribes occupy the entire range of the Cordillera +Central. Missionary effort in the latter half of the eighteenth +century had succeeded in partly Christianizing the tribes along the +river Magat in Neuva Vizcaya, but the fierce, head-hunting hillmen +remained unsubdued and unchristianized. + +Between 1823 and 1829 the mission of Pidigan, under an Augustinian +friar, Christianized some thousands of the Tinguianes of the river +Abra. In 1829 an expedition of about sixty soldiers, under Don +Guillermo Galvey, penetrated into the cool, elevated plateau of +Benguet. The diary of the leader recounts the difficult march up the +river Cagaling from Aringay and their delight upon emerging from the +jungle and cogon upon the grassy, pine-timbered slopes of the plateau. + +They saw little cultivated valleys and small clusters of houses and +splendid herds of cattle, carabaos, and horses, which to this day have +continued to enrich the people of these mountains. At times they were +surrounded by the yelling bands of Igorrotes, and several times they +had to repulse attacks, but they nevertheless succeeded in reaching the +beautiful circular depression now known as the valley of La Trinidad. + +The Spaniards saw with enthusiasm the carefully separated and walled +fields, growing camotes, taro, and sugarcane. The village of about +five hundred houses was partly burned by the Spaniards, as the +Igorrotes continued hostile. The expedition returned to the coast, +having suffered only a few wounds. The commandancia of Benguet was +not created until 1846, in which year also Abra was organized as +a province. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +PROGRESS AND REVOLUTION. 1837-1897. + + +Progress during the Last Half-Century of Spanish Rule.--We have +now come to the last half-century and to the last phase of Spanish +rule. In many respects this period was one of economic and social +progress, and contained more of promise than any other in the history +of the Islands. During this last half-century the Spanish rulers +had numerous plans for the development and better administration of +the Philippines, and, in spite of a somewhat wavering policy and the +continual sore of official peculation, this was a period of wonderful +advancement. Revolution and separation from Spain came at last, as +revolutions usually do, not because there was no effort nor movement +for reform, but because progress was so discouragingly slow and so +irritatingly blocked by established interests that desired no change. + +Effect of Opening the Port of Manila to Foreign Trade.--Increase in +Agriculture.--The opening of the port of Manila to foreign trade, in +1837, was followed by a period of rising industry and prosperity. Up +to this time the archipelago had not been a producing and exporting +country, but the freeing of trade led to the raising of great harvests +for foreign export, which have made world-wide the fame of certain +Philippine productions. Chief among these are of course Manila hemp +and tobacco. These were followed by sugar and coffee culture, the +latter plant enriching the province of Batangas, while the planting +of new cocoanut groves yearly made of greater importance the yield +of that excellent product, copra. These rich merchandises had entered +very little into commerce during the early decades of the century. + +Increase in Exports.--In 1810 the entire imports of the Philippines +amounted in value to 5,329,000 dollars, but more than half of this +consisted of silver sent from Mexico. From Europe and the United +States trade amounted to only 175,000 dollars. The exports in the +same year amounted to 4,795,000 dollars, but a million and a half of +this was Mexican silver exported on to China, and the whole amount +of exports to Europe and the United States was only 250,000 dollars. + +In 1831 the exportation of hemp amounted to only 346 tons. But the +effect upon production of opening Manila to foreign trade is seen +in the export six years later of 2,585 tons. By 1858 the exportation +of hemp had risen to 412,000 piculs, or 27,500 tons. Of this amount, +nearly two thirds, or 298,000 piculs, went to the United States. At +this time the North Atlantic seaboard of America was the center of +a most active ship-building and ship-carrying trade. The American +flag was conspicuous among the vessels that frequented these Eastern +ports, and "Manila hemp" was largely sought after by American seamen +to supply the shipyards at home. Of sugar, the export in 1858 amounted +to 557,000 piculs, of which more than half went to Great Britain. + +After 1814 general permission had been given to foreigners to +establish trading-houses in Manila, and by 1858 there were fifteen such +establishments, of which seven were English and three American. [86] + +Other Ports Opened to Foreign Commerce.--In 1855 three other ports +were opened to foreign commerce--Sual in Pangasinan on the Gulf of +Lingayan, Iloilo, and Zamboanga. In 1863, Cebu likewise was made an +open port. The exports of Sual consisted only of rice, and in spite +of its exceptional harbor this port never flourished, and is to-day +no more than an unfrequented village. + +Iloilo exported leaf tobacco, sugar, sapan or dyewood (an industry +long ago ruined), hemp, and hides. Zamboanga through the Chinese had a +small trade with Jolo and the Moro Islands, and exported the produce of +these seas--sea-slug (tripang), shark fins, mother-of-pearl, tortoise +shell, etc. For some years the customs laws in these ports were +trying and vexatious, and prevented full advantage being taken of the +privileges of export; but in 1869 this service was, by royal decree, +greatly liberalized and improved. Since that date the Philippines +have steadily continued to grow in importance in the commercial world. + +The Form of Government under the Spanish.--General Improvements.--This +is perhaps a convenient place to examine for the last time the +political system which the Spaniards maintained in the country. In +1850 there were thirty-four provinces and two politico-military +commandancias. In these provinces the Spanish administration was +still vested solely in the alcalde mayor, who until after 1886 was +both governor or executive officer and the judge or court for the +trial of provincial cases and crimes. + +Many of the old abuses which had characterized the government of +the alcaldes had been at least partially remedied. After 1844 they +had no longer the much-abused monopoly privilege of trade, nor had +they as free a hand in controlling the labor of the inhabitants; but +opportunities for illegal enrichment existed in the administration +of the treasury and tax system, and these opportunities were not +slighted. Up to the very end of Spanish rule the officials, high and +low, are accused of stealing public money. + +The Pueblo.--The unit of administration was the pueblo, or township, +which ordinarily embraced many square miles of country and contained, +numerous villages, or "barrios." The center of the town was naturally +the site where for centuries had stood the great church and the +convent of the missionary friars. These locations had always been +admirably chosen, and about them grew up the market and trading-shops +of Chinese and the fine and durable homes of the more prosperous +Filipinos and mestizos. + +About 1860 the government began to concern itself with the construction +of public buildings and improvements, and the result is seen in many +pueblos in the finely laid-out plazas and well-built municipal edifices +grouped about the square--the "tribunal," or town house, the jail, +and the small but significant schoolhouses. The government of the +town was vested in a "gobernadorcillo" and a council, each of the +"consejales" usually representing a hamlet or barrio. + +But the Spanish friar, who in nearly every pueblo was the parish +curate, continued to be the paternal guardian and administrator of the +pueblo. In general, no matter was too minute for his dictation. Neither +gobernadorcillo nor councillors dared act in opposition to his wishes, +and the alcalde of the province was careful to keep on friendly terms +and leave town affairs largely to his dictation. The friar was the +local inspector of public instruction and ever vigilant to detect +and destroy radical ideas. To the humble Filipino, the friar was the +visible and only representative of Spanish authority. + +The Revolt of 1841.--Repression of the People by the +Friars.--Unquestionably in the past, the work of the friars had been +of very great value; but men as well as institutions may lose their +usefulness, as conditions change, and the time was now approaching when +the autocratic and paternal régime of the friars no longer satisfied +the Filipinos. Their zeal was no longer disinterested, and their +work had become materialized by the possession of the vast estates +upon which their spiritual charges lived and labored as tenants or +dependents. The policy of the religious orders had, in fact, become +one of repression, and as the aspirations of the Filipinos increased, +the friars, filled with doubt and fear, tried to draw still tighter +the bonds of their own authority, and viewed with growing distrust +the rising ambition of the people. + +Apolinario de la Cruz.--The unfortunate revolution of 1841 shows the +wayward and misdirected enthusiasm of the Filipino; and the unwisdom +of the friars. Apolinario de la Cruz, a young Filipino, a native +of Lukban, Tayabas, came up to Manila filled with the ambition to +lead a monastic life, and engaged in theological studies. By his +attendance upon lectures and sermons and by imitation of the friar +preachers of Manila, Apolinario became, himself, quite an orator, +and, as subsequent events showed, was able to arouse great numbers +of his own people by his appeals. + +It was his ambition to enter one of the regular monastic orders, +but this religious privilege was never granted to Filipinos, and he +was refused. He then entered a brotherhood known as the Cofradia, or +Brotherhood of San Juan de Dios, composed entirely of Filipinos. After +some years in this brotherhood, he returned in 1840 to Tayabas and +founded the Cofradia de San José, his aim being to form a special +cult in honor of Saint Joseph and the Virgin. For this he requested +authorization from Manila. It was here that the lack of foresight of +the friars appeared. + +The Opposition of the Friars.--Instead of sympathizing with these +religious aspirations, in which, up to this point, there seems to have +been nothing heretical, they viewed the rise of a Filipino religious +leader with alarm. Their policy never permitted to the Filipino any +position that was not wholly subordinate. They believed that the +permanence of Spanish power in these islands lay in suppressing any +latent ability for leadership in the Filipino himself. Their influence, +consequently, was thrown against Apolinario, and the granting of the +authority for his work. They secured not only a condemnation of his +plan, but an order for the arrest and imprisonment of all who should +attend upon his preaching. + +Apolinario Forced to Rebel.--Apolinario thereupon took refuge +in independent action. His movement had already become a strong +one, and his followers numbered several thousand people of Laguna, +Tayabas, and Batangas. The governor of Tayabas province, Don Joaquin +Ortega, organized an expedition to destroy the schism. Accompanied +by two Franciscan friars, he attacked Apolinario in the month of +October, 1840, and was defeated and killed. One account says that +Apolinario was assisted by a band of Negritos, whose bowmanship was +destructive. There are still a very few of these little blacks in +the woods in the vicinity of Lukban. + +Apolinario was now in the position of an open rebel, and he fortified +himself in the vicinity of Alitao, where he built a fort and chapel. + +His religious movement became distinctly independent and heretical. A +church was formed, of which he was first elected archbishop and then +supreme pontiff. He was also charged with having assumed the title of +"King of the Tagálog." + +Finally a force under the new alcalde, Vital, and General Huet early in +November attacked Apolinario's stronghold and after a fierce struggle +defeated the revolutionists. About a thousand Filipinos perished in +the final battle. Apolinario was captured and executed. He was then +twenty-seven years of age. + +Organization of Municipal Governments.--In 1844 an able and liberal +governor, General Claveria, arrived, and remained until the end of the +year 1849. A better organization of the provincial governments, which +we have seen, followed Claveria's entrance into office, and in October, +1847, came the important decree, organizing the municipalities in +the form which we have already described, and which remained without +substantial modification to the end of Spanish rule, and which has +to a considerable extent been followed in the Municipal Code framed +by the American government. + +Subjection of the Igorrote Tribes.--With Claveria began a decisive +policy of conquest among the Igorrote tribes of northern Luzon, and +by the end of Spanish rule these mountains were dotted with cuartels +and missions for the control of these unruly tribes. The province of +Nueva Vizcaya has been particularly subject to the raids of these +head-hunting peoples. Year after year the Christian towns of the +plains had yielded a distressing sacrifice of life to satisfy the +savage ceremonials of the Igorrotes. [87] + +In 1847, Claveria nominated as governor of Nueva Vizcaya, Don Mariano +Ozcariz, whose severe and telling conquests for the first time checked +these Igorrote outrages and made possible the development of the +great valleys of northern Luzon. + +Spanish Settlements on Mindanao.--Zamboanga.--With Claveria's +governorship we enter also upon the last phase of Moro piracy. In spite +of innumerable expeditions, Spain's occupation of South Mindanao and +the Sulu archipelago was limited to the presidio of Zamboanga. She had +occupied this strategic point continuously since the reëstablishment +of Spanish power in 1763, The great stone fort, which still stands, +had proved impregnable to Moro attack, and had long been unmolested. + +Distributed for a distance of some miles over the rich lands at this +end of the Zamboanga peninsula was a Christian population, which +had grown up largely from the descendants of rescued captives of the +Moros. Coming originally from all parts of the Bisayas, Calamianes, and +Luzon, this mixed population has grown to have a somewhat different +character from that of any other part of the Islands. A corrupt +Spanish dialect, known as the "Chabucano," has become the common +speech, the only instance in the Philippines where the native dialect +has been supplanted. This population, loyal and devotedly Catholic, +never failed to sustain the defense of this isolated Spanish outpost, +and contributed brave volunteers to every expedition against the +Moro islands. + +Activity of Other Nations.--But Spain's maintenance of Zamboanga was +insufficient to sustain her claims of sovereignty over the Sulu and +Tawi-Tawi groups. Both the Dutch and English planned various moves for +their occupation and acquisition, and in 1844 a French fleet entered +the archipelago and concluded a treaty with the sultan of Sulu for +the cession of the island of Basilan for the sum of one million +dollars. Writings of the French minister and historian, M. Guizot, +show that France hoped, by the acquisition of this island, to obtain +a needed naval base in the East and found a great commercial port +within the sphere of Chinese trade. [88] + +Conquest of the Gulf of Davao.--But this step roused the Spaniards +to activity and the occupation of the island. A naval vessel subdued +the towns along the north coast, and then proceeding to the mouth of +the Rio Grande, secured from the sultan of Maguindanao the cession +of the great Gulf of Davao. Spain took no immediate steps to occupy +this gulf, but in 1847 a Spaniard, Don José Oyanguran, proposed to +the governor, Claveria, to conquer the region at his own expense, +if he could be furnished with artillery and munitions and granted a +ten years' government of Davao, with the exclusive privilege of trade. + +His offer was accepted by the governor and the Audiencia, and Oyanguran +organized a company to secure funds for the undertaking. In two +years' time he had subdued the coast regions of this gulf, expelled +the pirates who harbored there, and founded the settlement of Nueva +Vergara. He seems to have been making progress toward the conquest +and commercial exploitation of this region, when jealous attacks in +Manila induced Governor Urbistondo to cancel his privilege and to +relieve him by an officer of the government. + +In subsequent years the Jesuits had a few mission stations here and +made a few converts among the Bagobos; but the region is still an +unsubdued and unutilized country, whose inhabitants are mainly pagan +tribes, and whose rich agricultural possibilities lie undeveloped +and unclaimed. + +The Samal Pirates.--The Sulu.--The piratical inhabitants of the +Sulu archipelago are made of two distinct Malayan peoples--the Sulu +(or Sulug), and the Samal, who are known throughout Malaysia as the +"Bajau" or "Orang laut" (Men of the Sea). The former appear to be +the older inhabitants. They occupy the rich and populous island of +Jolo and some islands of the Siassi group, immediately south. + +The Samal.--The Samal, or Bajau, are stated to have come originally +from Johore. Many of them live almost exclusively in their boats, +passing their lives from birth to death upon the sea. They are found +throughout most parts of Malaysia, the position of their little fleets +changing with the shifting of the monsoons. In the Sulu archipelago +and a few points in South Mindanao, many of these Samal have shifted +their homes from their boats to the shore. Their villages are built +on piles over the sea, and on many of the low coral reefs south of +Siassi and east of Tawi-Tawi there are great towns or settlements +which have apparently been in existence a long while. + +Fifty years ago the Samal were very numerous in the many islands +between Jolo and Basilan, and this group is still known as the Islas +Samales. Like the Sulu and other Malays, the Samal are Mohammedans, +and scarcely less persistent pirates than their fellow-Malays. With the +decline of piratical power among the Sulu of Jolo, the focus of piracy +shifted to these settlements of the Samal, and in the time of Claveria +the worst centers were the islands of Balanguingui and Tonquil, lying +just north of the island of Jolo. From here pirate and slaving raids +upon the Bisayan Islands continued to be made, and nearly every year +towns were sacked and burned and several hundred unfortunate captives +carried away. The captives were destined for slavery, and regular marts +existed for this traffic at Jolo and on the Bay of Sandakan in Borneo. + +Arrival of Steam Warships.--In 1848 the Philippines secured the +first steam war vessels. These were the "Magellanes," the "Elcano," +and the "Reina de Castilla." They were destined to revolutionize +Moro relations. + +The Destruction of the Samal Forts.--Hitherto it had been possible +for the great Moro war praos, manned by many oarsmen, to drop their +masts on the approach of an armed sailing-vessel, and, turning +toward the "eye of the wind," where no sailing-ship could pursue, +row calmly away from danger. Steam alone was effective in combating +these sea-wolves. Claveria took these newly arrived ships, and with +a strong force of infantry, which was increased by Zamboangueņo +volunteers, he entered the Samal group in February, 1848, and landed +on the island of Balanguingui. + +There were four fortresses situated in the mangrove marshes of the +island. These, in spite of a desperate resistance, were carried by +the infantry and Zamboangueņos and the pirates scattered. The conduct +of the campaign appears to have been admirable and the fighting +heroic. The Moros were completely overwhelmed; 450 dead were burned +or interred; 124 pieces of artillery--for the most part, the small +brass cannon called "lantacas"--were captured, and 150 Moro boats were +destroyed. The Spaniards cut down the cocoanut groves, and with spoil +that included such rich pirate loot as silks, silver vases, ornaments, +and weapons of war, and with over two hundred prisoners and three +hundred rescued captives, returned to Zamboanga. This was the most +signal victory ever won by Europeans in conflict with Malay piracy. The +effectiveness of this campaign is shown by the fact that while in +the preceding year 450 Filipinos had suffered capture at the hands +of Moro pirates, in 1848 and the succeeding year there was scarcely +a depredation. But in 1850 a pirate squadron from Tonquil, an island +adjacent to Balanguingui, fell upon Samar and Camaguin. Fortunately, +Governor Urbistondo, who had succeeded Claveria, vigorously continued +the policy of his predecessor, and an expedition was promptly +dispatched which destroyed the settlements and strongholds on Tonquil. + +Destruction of the Moro Forts at Jolo.--A year later war broke out +again with Jolo, and after a varied interchange of negotiations and +hostilities, the Spaniards stormed and took the town in February, +1851. The question of permanent occupation of this important site was +debated by a council of war, but their forces appearing unequal to +the task, the forts of the Moros were destroyed, and the expedition +returned. Jolo is described at this time as a very strongly guarded +situation. Five forts and a double line of trenches faced the +shore. The Moro town is said to have contained about seven thousand +souls, and there was a barrio of Chinese traders, who numbered about +five hundred. + +Treaty with the Sultan of Jolo.--A few months later the governor of +Zamboanga concluded a treaty with the sultan of Jolo by which the +archipelago was to be considered an incorporated part of the Spanish +possessions. The sultan bound himself to make no further treaties +with or cessions to foreign powers, to suppress piracy, and to fly the +Spanish flag. The Moros were guaranteed the practice of their religion, +the succession of the sultan and his descendants in the established +order, boats of Jolo were to enjoy the same trading privileges in +Spanish ports as other Filipino vessels, and the sultan retained +the right to all customs duties on foreign trading-vessels. Finally, +"in compensation for the damages of war," the sultan was to be paid +an annual subsidy of 1,500 pesos and 600 pesos each to three datos +and 360 pesos to a sherif. [89] + +The End of Malay Piracy.--In these very years that Malay piracy was +receiving such severe blows from the recuperating power and activity +of the Spanish government on the north, it was crushed also from +the south by the merciless warfare of a great Englishman, the Raja +Charles Brooke of Sarawak. The sources of pirate depredation were +Maguindanao, the Sulu archipelago, and the north and west coasts of +the great island of Borneo. We have seen how these fleets, century +after century, swept northward and wasted with fire and murder the +fair islands of the Philippines. + +But this archipelago was not alone in suffering these ravages. The +peaceful trading inhabitants of the great island groups to the south +were persistently visited and despoiled. Moreover, as the Chinese +trade by the Cape of Good Hope route became established in the first +half of the nineteenth century, these pirates became a great menace +to European shipping. They swarmed the China Sea, and luckless indeed +was the ship carried too far eastward on its course. Every American +schoolboy is familiar with the stories of fierce hand-to-hand struggles +with Malay pirates, which have come down from those years when the +American flag was seen everywhere in the ports of the Far East. + +About 1839 a young English officer, [90] who had been in the Indian +service, Charles Brooke, having armed and equipped a yacht of about +140 tons, set sail for the coast of Borneo, with the avowed intent of +destroying Malay piracy and founding an independent state. In all the +romantic stories of the East there is no career of greater daring than +that of this man. In 1841, having engaged in several bloody exploits, +Brooke forced from the sultan of Borneo the cession of Sarawak, +with the government vested in himself as an independent raja. + +Brooke now devoted himself with merciless severity to the destruction +of the pirates in the deep bays and swampy rivers, whence they had +so long made their excursions. Later he was assisted by the presence +of the English man-of-war "Dido," and in 1847 the sultan of Brunei +ceded to Great Britain the island of Labuan. In 1849, Brooke visited +Zamboanga in the English man-of-war "Moeander," and concluded a treaty +with the sultan of Sulu, which greatly alarmed the Spaniards. + +Brooke's private correspondence shows that he was ambitious and hopeful +of acquiring for England parts of the Dutch possessions in the south +and the Spanish Philippines in the north; but his plans were never +followed up by England, although in 1887 North Borneo was ceded to +an English company, and all the northern and eastern portions of this +great island are now under English protection. [91] + +Liberal Ideas among the Filipinos.--The release from Moro +piracy, the opening of foreign commerce, and the development of +agricultural production were rapidly bringing about a great change +in the aspirations of the Filipino people themselves. Nearly up to +the middle of the nineteenth century the Filipinos had felt the +full effect of isolation from the life and thought of the modern +world. But the revolutionary changes in Europe and the struggles +for constitutional government in Spain had their influence, even +in these far-away Spanish possessions. Spaniards of liberal ideas, +some of them in official positions, found their way to the Islands, +and an agitation began, originating among Spaniards themselves, +against the paternal powers of the friars. + +Influence of the Press.--The growth of periodic literature accelerated +this liberalizing movement. The press, though suffering a severe +censorship, has played a large part in shaping recent thought in +these islands and in communicating to the Filipino people those +ideas and purposes which ever inspire and elevate men. [92] The first +newspaper to make its appearance in the Philippines was in 1822--"El +Philantropo"; but journalism assumed no real importance until the +forties, when there were founded "Semanario Filipino" (1843), and +almost immediately after several others--"El Amigo de Pais" (1845), +"La Estrella" (1846), and "La Esperanza" (1847), the first daily. These +were followed by "Diario de Manila" (1848); in 1858 "El Comercio" +appeared, the oldest of the papers still in existence. [93] + +Papers conducted by Filipinos and in the Filipino tongues are of more +recent origin, but these early Spanish periodicals had a real effect +upon the Filipinos themselves, training up a class familiar with the +conduct of journalism and preparing a way for the very influential +work of the Filipino press in recent years. + +Establishment of an Educational System.--Return of the Jesuits.--But +more important than all other influences was the opening of education +to Filipinos. In 1852 a royal decree authorized the Jesuits to return +to the Philippines. The conditions under which they came back were +that they should devote themselves solely to missions in the unoccupied +fields of Mindanao, and to the higher education of the Filipinos. + +The Public Schools.--In 1860, O'Donnell, the Spanish minister of +war and colonies (Ultramar), founded the system of public primary +instruction. A primary school for boys and one for girls was to +be established in each pueblo of the Islands. In these schools, +instruction was to be given in the Spanish language. A superior +commission of education was formed, which consisted of the governor, +the archbishop, and seven other members added by the governor himself. + +The system was not secular, for it primarily was devoted to the +teaching of religious doctrine. The Spanish friar, the pueblo curate, +was the local inspector of schools and practically directed their +conduct. It was not wholly a free system, because tuition was required +of all but the poorest children; nor was it an adequate system, +because, even when most complete, it reached only a small proportion +of the children of a parish, and these very largely were of the +well-to-do families. And yet this system, for what it accomplished, +is deserving of great credit. + +Besides the church, the convent, and the tribunal, nearly every town +in the Philippines, toward the close of Spanish rule, had also, in the +public plaza, its public school buildings for boys and for girls. In +these towns a number of Filipinos were taught to converse in the +Spanish language and at least the rudiments of Spanish education. But +this system did not give opportunity for education to the little +child of the humble fisherman and the husbandman. + +The Manila Normal School.--To prepare Filipino teachers to do this +work of primary instruction, a decree of 1863 established the Manila +Normal School. In charge of the Jesuits, this school was inaugurated +in January, 1865. And about the same date the government decreed the +foundation of the Jesuit "Ateneo Municipal" for higher instruction +in the classics and sciences that should conduct the student to the +degree of bachelor of arts. The influence of these institutions upon +the development of the Filipino has been remarkable. In one or the +other of them have been trained nearly all of those young men who in +recent years have stirred the Filipino people to wide ambitions and +demands. At the same time the excellent Jesuit observatory, which has +done such important work in meteorology, was established in charge +of Padre Faura. + +Increase in Spanish Population.--The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 +brought immense changes to the Islands. Previous to this date Spanish +residents had been few. Almost the only class deeply interested in the +Islands and permanently established here had been the friars. But with +communication by steamer in thirty days from Barcelona to Manila, +a new interest was felt by Spaniards in the Philippines, though +unfortunately this interest was greatest among the politicians. Some +of the projects planned and decreed can only be regarded as visionary +and beyond the point of serviceability, and others, more unfortunately +still, had for their purpose the creation of offices and emoluments +for Peninsula politicians; but they all contributed to bring to an +end the paternal government under which there was no prospect of +further enlightenment or progress for the Filipino. + +Increase in the Number of Wealthy, Educated Filipinos.--The +Filipino had now become embarked upon a new current of intellectual +experience--a course of enlightenment which has been so full of +unexpected development, and which has already carried him so far from +his ancestor of one hundred years ago, that we can not say what advance +another generation or two may bring. Throughout all the towns of the +Islands a class was rapidly growing up to which the new industries +had brought wealth. Their means enabled them to build spacious and +splendid homes of the fine, hard woods of the Philippines, and to +surround themselves with such luxuries as the life of the Islands +permitted. This class was rapidly gaining education. It acquired a +knowledge of the Spanish language, and easily assumed that graceful +courtesy which distinguishes the Spaniard. + +The only misfortune, as regards this class, was that it was very +small. It could embrace but a few families in each populous town. Some +of these had Chinese and Spanish blood in their veins, but other +notable families were pure Filipinos. + +Attitude of the Spanish and the Friars toward Filipino Education.--The +great mistake committed by the Spaniard was that he rarely welcomed +the further progress of the native population, and the center of +this opposition to the general enlightenment of the race was the +friars. Thus those who had been the early protectors and educators, +little by little, because of their extreme conservatism and their +fear of loosening the ties that bound the Filipino to the church and +to Spain, changed into opponents of his progress and enemies of his +enlightenment; but the education which the church itself had given to +the Filipino, and which had been fostered by the state and especially +in recent times by the Jesuits, had made the Filipino passionately +ambitious for more enlightenment and freedom. + +The Rule of Governor Torre.--Liberal Reforms.--In 1868, Queen +Isabella II. of Spain was deposed, and a little later a revolutionary +government, the "Republic of Spain," was founded. It was the brief +triumph of that reforming and liberal spirit which for so many years +had been struggling to free Spain from the burdens of aristocracy +and ecclesiasticism. + +The natural consequence was the sending of a liberal governor +to the Philippines and the publication of liberal principles and +reforms. This governor was General de la Torre. He was a brave and +experienced soldier and a thorough democrat at heart. He dispensed +with the formality and petty pomp with which the governors of Manila +had surrounded themselves; he dismissed the escort of halberdiers, +with their mediæval uniforms and weapons, which had surrounded the +governor-generals since 1581, and rode out in civilian's clothes and +without ostentation. His efforts were directed to encouraging the +Filipinos and to attaching them to Spain. In the eyes of the Spanish +law, for a brief period, Spaniard and colonists had become equal, +and La Torre tried to enforce this principle and make no distinction +of race or birth. While Filipinos were encouraged and delighted, +it is impossible to describe the disgust of the Spanish population +and the opposition of the friars. La Torre was attacked and opposed, +and the entire course of his governorship was filled with trouble, +in which, naturally, liberal ideas gained wider and wider currency +among the Filipinos. + +Effect of the Opposition of the Friars.--The friars, being the most +influential opponents of the Filipino, naturally came to be regarded +by the Filipinos as their greatest enemies, and the anti-friar spirit +daily spread and intensified. A party was formed which demanded that +the friars vacate the parishes, and that their places be filled by +secular priests, in accordance with the statutes of the Council of +Trent. This party was headed by a native priest, Dr. José Burgos. + +A Filipino Movement for Reform.--After the fall of the republic in +Spain and the restoration of the monarchy, the administration in the +Philippines attempted to extirpate the rising tide of liberal thought; +but these ideas had taken root and could not be suppressed. The +Filipino party, if so we may call it, continued to plan and work +for reform. It numbered not only those of Filipino blood, but many +of Spanish descent, born in the Philippines. There is no certain +evidence that they were at this time plotting for independence, or +that their actions were treasonable; but the fear and hatred felt +by the Spaniards resulted frequently in the exile and punishment of +known advocates of reform. + +The Cavite Revolt.--In 1872 there occurred an important outbreak +known as the Cavite Revolt. Two hundred native soldiers at the +Cavite arsenal rose, killed their officers, and shouted "Death to +Spain!" They had fellow-conspirators among the troops in Manila, +but owing to mistakes in their plans these failed to rise with them +and the revolt was easily suppressed. + +It was immediately followed by the arrest of a large number of +Filipinos who had been conspicuous in La Torre's time and who were +advocates of reform. This number included the three priests, Fathers +Burgos, Zamora, and Gomez, besides Don Antonio Regidor, Don Joaquin +Pardo de Tavera, Don Pedro Carillo, and others. A council of war +condemned to death forty-one of the participants in the Cavite riot, +and these were shot on the morning of the 27th of January, 1872, +on the Field of Bagumbayan. On the 6th of February a council of war +condemned to death eleven more soldiers of the regiment of artillery, +but this sentence was commuted by the governor to life imprisonment. On +the 15th of February the same council of war sentenced to death upon +the garrote, the priests Burgos, Zamora, Gomez, and a countryman, +Saldua; and this sentence was executed on the morning of the 17th. + +The Spread of Secret Organizations.--Masonry.--New ground for fear +was now found in the spread of secret organizations, which were +denounced as Free Masonry. This is a very ancient institution which, +in Protestant countries like England and America, has a very large +membership, and in these countries its aims are wholly respectable. It +has never in any way been connected with sedition or other unworthy +movements. Its services are, in fact, largely of a religious character +and it possesses a beautiful and elaborate Christian ritual; but in +Latin countries Masonry has been charged with political intrigue and +the encouragement of infidelity, and this has resulted in clerical +opposition to the order wherever found. The first Masonic lodge in the +Philippines was established about 1861 and was composed entirely of +Spaniards. It was succeeded by others with Filipino membership, and +in one way or another seems to have inspired many secret organizations. + +The "Liga Filipina," and Dr. Rizal.--Large numbers of Filipinos were +now working, if not for independence, at least for the expulsion of the +friars; and while this feeling should have been met by a statesmanlike +and liberal policy of reform, the government constantly resorted to +measures of repression, which little by little changed the movement +for reformation into revolution. + +In 1887 the "Liga Filipina," was formed by a number of the +younger Filipino patriots, chief among whom was Dr. José Rizal y +Mercado. Rizal, by his gifts, his noble character, and his sad fate, +has gained a supreme place in the hearts of Filipinos and in the +history of the Islands. He was born in 1861 at Calamba, on Laguna de +Bay, and even as a child he was affected with sadness at the memory of +the events of 1872 and with the backward and unhappy condition of his +countrymen. He was educated by the Jesuits at the Ateneo Municipal in +Manila, and his family having means, he was enabled to study in Spain, +where he took a degree in medicine, and later to travel and study in +France, England, and Germany. + +It was in this latter country that he produced his first novel, +Noli Me Tangere. He had been a contributor to the Filipino paper +published in Spain, "La Solidaridad," and, to further bring the +conditions and needs of his country to more public notice, he wrote +this novel dealing with Tagálog life as represented at his old home on +Laguna de Bay and in the city of Manila. Later he published a sequel, +El Filibusterismo, in which even more courageously and significantly +are set forth his ideas for reform. + +His work made him many enemies, and on his return to Manila he found +himself in danger and was obliged to leave. He returned again in 1893, +and was immediately arrested and sentenced to deportation to Dapitan, +Mindanao. Here he remained quietly in the practice of his profession +for some years. + +The Katipunan.--Meanwhile the ideas which had been agitated by the +wealthy and educated Filipinos had worked their way down to the +poor and humble classes. They were now shared by the peasant and +the fisherman. Especially in those provinces where the religious +orders owned estates and took as rental a portion of the tenants' +crop, there was growing hatred and hostility to the friars. The +"Liga Filipina" had been composed of cultivated and moderate men, +who while pressing for reform were not inclined to radical extremes, +nor to obtain their ends by violent means. + +But there now grew up and gradually spread, until it had its +branches and members in all the provinces surrounding Manila, a +secret association composed largely of the uneducated classes, whose +object was independence of Spain, and whose members, having little to +lose, were willing to risk all. This was the society which has since +become famous under the name of "Katipunan." This secret association +was organized in Cavite about 1892. Its president and founder was +Andres Bonifacio. Its objects were frankly to expel the friars, and, +if possible, to destroy the Spanish government. + +Rebellion of 1896.--A general attack and slaughter of the Spaniards +was planned for the 20th of August, 1896. The plot was discovered +by the priest of Binondo, Padre Gil, who learned of the movement +through the wife of one of the conspirators, and within a few hours +the government had seized several hundred persons who were supposed to +be implicated. The arrests included many rich and prominent Filipinos, +and at the end of some weeks the Spanish prisons contained over five +thousand suspects. Over one thousand of these were almost immediately +exiled to far-distant Spanish prisons--Fernando Po, on the west coast +of Africa, and the fortress of Ceuta, on the Mediterranean. + +Meanwhile the Katipunan was organizing its forces for struggle. On +the 26th of August, one thousand insurgents attacked Caloocan, +and four days later a pitched battle was fought at San Juan del +Monte. In this last fight the insurgents suffered great loss, +their leader, Valenzuela, was captured and, with three companions, +shot on the Campo de Bagumbayan. The rising continued, however, +and the provinces of Pampanga, Bulacan, and Nueva Ecija were soon in +full rebellion. The center of revolt, however, proved to be Cavite, +This province was almost immediately cleared of Spaniards, except the +long neck of land containing the town of Cavite and protected by the +fleet. Here the insurgents received some organization under a young +man, who had been prominent in the Katipunan--Emilio Aguinaldo. + +The governor-general, Blanco, a humane man, who afterwards for a short +time commanded in Cuba, was recalled, and General Polavieja replaced +him. The Spanish army at the beginning of the revolt had consisted +of but fifteen hundred troops, but so serious was the revolt regarded +that Spain, although straining every energy at the moment to end the +rebellion in Cuba, strengthened the forces in the Philippines, until +Polavieja had an army of twenty-eight thousand Spaniards assisted by +several loyal Filipino regiments. With this army a fierce campaign +in Cavite province was conducted, which after fifty-two days' hard +fighting ended in the defeat of the insurgents and the scattering of +their forces. + +Death of Dr. Rizal.--For the moment it looked as though the rebellion +might pass. Then the Spanish government of Polavieja disgraced itself +by an act as wanton and cruel as it was inhuman and impolitic. + +Four years Dr. Rizal had spent in exile at Dapitan. He had lived +quietly and under surveillance, and it was impossible that he could +have had any share in this rebellion of 1898. Wearied, however, with +his inactivity, he solicited permission to go as an army doctor to the +dreadful Spanish hospitals in Cuba. This request was granted in July, +and Rizal had the misfortune to arrive in Manila at the very moment +of discovery of the rebellion in August. Governor Blanco hastened to +send him to Spain with a most kindly letter to the minister of war, +in which he vouched for his independence of the events which were +taking place in Manila. + +His enemies, however, could not see him escape. Their persecution +followed him to the Peninsula, and, upon his arrival in Spain, Rizal +was at once arrested and sent back to Manila a prisoner. His friend +Blanco had gone. Polavieja, the friend and tool of the reactionary +party, was busy punishing by imprisonment, banishment or death all +Filipinos who could be shown to have the slightest part or association +in the movement for reform. And by this clique Dr. Rizal was sentenced +to execution. He was shot early on the morning of December 30, +1896. [94] At his death the insurrection flamed out afresh. It now +spread to Pangasinan, Zambales, and Ilocos. + +End of the Revolt by Promises of Reform.--Polavieja returned to Spain, +and was succeeded by Gen. Primo de Rivera, who arrived in the spring +of 1897. The Spanish troops had suffered several recent reverses and +the country swarmed with insurgents. The policy of Primo de Rivera +was to gain by diplomacy where the energy of his predecessor had +failed. In July, 1897, an amnesty proclamation was issued, and in +August the governor-general opened negotiations with Aguinaldo, whose +headquarters were now in the mountains of Angat in Bulacan. Primo +de Rivera urged the home government to make some reforms, which +would greatly lessen the political importance of the friars. He +was vehemently opposed by the latter, but it was probably upon the +promise of reform that Aguinaldo and his fellow-insurgents agreed, +for the payment of 1,700,000 pesos, to surrender their arms, dismiss +the insurgent forces, and themselves retire from the Islands. This +agreement was made, and on December 27, 1897, Aguinaldo left the port +of Sual for Hongkong. + +The Spanish Misrule Ended.--Conditions in the provinces still continued +very unsatisfactory, and in its very last hours the Spanish government +lost the remnant of its prestige with the people by a massacre in +Calle Camba, Binondo, of a company of Bisayan sailors. Ten days after +this occurrence a revolt blazed out on the island of Cebu. Had events +taken their course, what would have been the final conclusion of the +struggle between Spaniards and Filipinos it is impossible to say. On +the 25th day of April the United States declared war upon Spain, +and the first day of May an American fleet reached Manila harbor, +and in the naval fight off Cavite, Spanish dominion, which had lasted +with only one brief interruption for 332 years, was broken. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +AMERICA AND THE PHILIPPINES. + + +Beginning of a New Era.--With the passing of the Spanish sovereignty +to the Americans, a new era began in the Philippines. Already the +old Spanish rule seems so far removed that we can begin to think of +it without feeling and study it without prejudice. + +Development of the United States of America.--The American nation is +the type of the New World. Beginning in a group of colonies, planted +half a century later than the settlement of the Philippines, it has +had a development unparalleled in the history of states. Although +peopled by emigrants from Europe, who rigidly preserved both their +purity of race and pride of ancestry, the American colonists, at the +end of a century, were far separated in spirit and institutions from +the Old World. + +Struggle with the wilderness and with the savage produced among them +a society more democratic and more independent than Europe had ever +known; while their profound religious convictions saved the colonists +from barbarism and intellectual decline. It can truthfully be held, +that in 1775, at the outbreak of the American Revolution, the colonists +had abler men and greater political ability than the mother-country of +England. It was these men who, at the close of the Revolution, framed +the American Constitution, the greatest achievement in the history of +public law. This nation, endowed at its commencement with so precious +an inheritance of political genius, felt its civil superiority to the +illiberal or ineffective governments of Europe, and this feeling has +produced in Americans a supreme and traditional confidence in their own +forms of government and democratic standards of life. Certainly their +history contains much to justify the choice of their institutions. + +A hundred and twenty-five years ago, these colonies were a small nation +of 2,500,000 people, occupying no more than the Atlantic coast of +the continent. Great mountain chains divided them from the interior, +which was overrun by the fiercest and most warlike type of man that +the races have produced--the American Indian. With an energy which +has shown no diminishing from generation to generation, the American +broke through these mountain chains, subdued the wilderness, conquered +the Indian tribes, and in the space of three generations was master +of the continent of North America. + +Even while engaged in the War for Independence, the American +frontiersman crossed the Appalachians and secured Kentucky and the +Northwest Territory, and with them the richest and most productive +regions of the Temperate Zone,--the Mississippi Valley. In 1803, the +great empire of Louisiana, falling from the hand of France, was added +to the American nation. In 1818, Florida was ceded by Spain, and in +1857, as a result of war with Mexico, came the Greater West and the +Pacific seaboard. This vast dominion, nearly three thousand miles in +width from east to west, has been peopled by natural increase and by +immigration from Europe, until, at the end of the nineteenth century, +the American nation numbered seventy-four million souls. + +This development has taken place without fundamental change in the +constitution or form of government, without loss of individual liberty, +and constantly increasing national prosperity. Moreover, the States +have survived the Civil War, the most bloody and persistently fought +war of all modern centuries--a war in which a million soldiers fell, +and to sustain which three and a half billion dollars in gold were +expended out of the national treasury. This war accomplished the +abolition of negro slavery, the greatest economic revolution ever +effected by a single blow. + +Such in brief is the history of the American nation, so gifted with +political intelligence, so driven by sleepless energy, so proud of +its achievements, and inwardly so contemptuous of the more polished +but less liberal life of the Old World. Europe has never understood +this nation, and not until a few years ago did Europeans dream of +its progress and its power. + +Relation of the United States to South American Republics.--Toward +the republics of Spanish America the United States has always stood +in a peculiar relation. These countries achieved their independence of +Spain under the inspiration of the success of the United States. Their +governments were framed in imitation of the American, and in spite of +the turbulence and disorder of their political life, the United States +has always felt and manifested a strong sympathy for these states as +fellow-republics. She has moreover pledged herself to the maintenance +of their integrity against the attacks of European powers. This +position of the United States in threatening with resistance the +attempt of any European power to seize American territory is known +as the Monroe Doctrine, because it was first declared by President +Monroe in 1823. + +Sympathy of American People for the Oppressed Cubans.--The fact that +the American nation attained its own independence by revolution has +made the American people give ready sympathy to the cause of the +revolutionist. The people of Cuba, who made repeated ineffective +struggles against Spanish sovereignty, always had the good wishes +of the American people. By international usage, however, one nation +may not recognize or assist revolutionists against a friendly power +until their independence is practically effected. + +Thus, when rebellion broke out afresh in Cuba in 1894, the United +States government actively suppressed the lending of assistance to +the Cubans, as was its duty, although the American people themselves +heartily wished Cuba free. The war in Cuba dragged along for years and +became more and more merciless. The passions of Cubans and Spaniards +were so inflamed that quarter was seldom given, and prisoners were +not spared. Spain poured her troops into the island until there were +120,000 on Cuban soil, but the rebellion continued. + +The Spanish have always been merciless in dealing with +revolutionists. Americans, on the other hand, have always conceded +the moral right of a people to resist oppressive government, and in +the entire history of the United States there has scarcely been a +single punishment for political crime. Although probably the fiercest +war in history was the American Civil War from 1861 to 1865, there +was not a single execution for treason. Thus the stories of the +constant executions of political prisoners, on an island in sight +of its own shores, greatly exasperated America, as did the policy of +Governor-general Weyler, which was excessive in its severity. + +War with Spain.--Destruction of the "Maine."--As the contest proceeded +without sign of termination, the patience of the American people grew +less. Then, February 15, 1898, occurred one of the most deplorable +events of recent times. The American battleship "Maine," lying in the +harbor of Havana, was, in the night, blown to destruction by mine or +torpedo, killing 266 American officers and sailors. It is impossible +to believe that so dastardly an act was done with the knowledge of +the higher Spanish officials; but the American people rightly demanded +that a government such as Spain maintained in Cuba, unable to prevent +such an outrage upon the vessel of a friendly power, and that could +neither suppress its rebellion nor wage war humanely, should cease. + +Declaration of War.--On April 19th the American Congress demanded +that Spain withdraw from the island and recognize the independence of +Cuba. This was practically a declaration of war. Spain indignantly +refused, and resolved upon resistance. Unfortunately, the ignorant +European press claimed for Spain military and naval superiority. + +The war was brief, and was an overwhelming disaster to Spain. Every +vessel of her proud navy that came under the fire of American guns +was destroyed. + +For a few months battle raged along the coasts of Cuba, and then +Spain sued for peace. + +Dewey's Victory in Manila Bay.--But meanwhile the war, begun without +the slightest reference to the Philippine Islands, had brought about +surprising consequences here. + +At the opening of the war, both Spain and the United States had +squadrons in Asiatic waters. The Spanish fleet lay at Cavite, the +American ships gathered at Hongkong. Immediately on the declaration of +war, the American naval commander, Dewey, was ordered to destroy the +Spanish fleet, which was feared on the Pacific coast of America. Dewey +entered the Bay of Manila in darkness on the morning of May 1st, +and made direct for the Spanish vessels at Cavite. His fleet was the +more powerful and immeasurably the more efficient. In a few hours +the Spanish navy was utterly destroyed and Manila lay at the mercy +of his guns. + +A New Insurrection, under Aguinaldo.--At this signal catastrophe +to Spain, the smoldering insurrection in the Islands broke out +afresh. The Spanish troops not in Manila were driven in upon their +posts, and placed in a position of siege. The friars, so hated by the +revolutionists, were captured in large numbers and were in some cases +killed. With the permission and assistance of the American authorities, +Aguinaldo returned from Singapore, and landed at Cavite. Here he +immediately headed anew the Philippine insurrection. + +Capture of Manila.--Troops were dispatched from San Francisco for the +capture of Manila. By the end of July, 8,500 men lay in the transports +off Cavite. They were landed at the little estuary of Paraņaque, +and advanced northwards upon Fort San Antonio and the defenses of +Malate. The Spaniards behind the city's defenses, although outnumbering +the Americans, were sick and dispirited. One attempt was made to drive +back the invading army, but on the following day the Americans swept +through the defenses and line of blockhouses, and Manila capitulated +(August 13, 1898). + +The Filipinos had scarcely participated in the attack on the city, and +they were excluded from occupying it after its surrender. This act was +justified, because the Filipino forces had been very recently raised, +the soldiers were undisciplined, and had they entered the city, with +passions as they were inflamed, it was feared by the Americans that +their officers might not be able to keep them from looting and crime. + +Misunderstanding between Americans and Filipinos.--Up to this point, +the relations between the American and Filipino armies had been +friendly. But here began that misunderstanding and distrust which +for so many months were to alienate these two peoples and imbitter +their intercourse. + +Provisional Government of the Filipinos.--In the interval between +the destruction of the Spanish fleet and the capture of Manila, +the Filipinos in Cavite had organized a provisional government and +proclaimed the independence of the archipelago. + +American Ideas in Regard to the Philippines.--The idea of returning +these islands to the Spanish power was exceedingly repugnant to +American sentiment. Spain's attitude toward revolutionists was well +understood in America, and the Filipinos had acted as America's friends +and allies. On the other hand, the American government was unwilling +to turn over to the newly organized Filipino republic the government +of the archipelago. It was felt in America, and with reason, that +this Filipino government was not truly representative of all the +people in the Philippines, that the Filipino leaders were untried +men, and that the people themselves had not had political training and +experience. The United States, having overthrown the Spanish government +here, was under obligation to see that the government established in +its place would represent all and do injustice to none. The Filipinos +were very slightly known to Americans, but their educated class was +believed to be small and their political ability unproven. Thus, no +assurances were given to the Filipino leaders that their government +would be recognized, or that their wishes would be consulted in the +future of the Islands. In fact, these matters could be settled only +by action of the American Congress, which was late in assembling and +slow to act. + +The Terms of Peace.--Spain and America were now negotiating terms of +peace. These negotiations were conducted at Paris, and dragged on +during many critical weeks. The Filipinos were naturally very much +concerned over the outcome. + +Finally, the American government demanded of Spain that she cede the +Islands to the United States and accept the sum of $20,000,000 gold, +for public works and improvements which she had made. + +Suspicions of the Filipino Leaders.--These terms became known in +December, 1898. They served to awaken the worst suspicions of the +Filipino leaders. Many believed that they were about to exchange +the oppressive domination of Spain for the selfish and equally +oppressive domination of America. There is reason to believe that some +leaders counseled patience, and during the succeeding months made a +constant effort to maintain the peace, but the radical party among +the Filipinos was led by a man of real gifts and fiery disposition, +Antonio Luna. He had received an education in Europe, had had some +instruction in military affairs, and when in September the Filipino +government was transferred to Malolos, Luna became the general in +chief of the military forces. He was also editor of the most radical +Filipino newspaper, "La Independencia." + +New Filipino Government.--On January 4, 1899, President McKinley +issued a special message to General Otis, commanding the armies of the +United States in the Philippines, declaring that American sovereignty +must be recognized without conditions. It was thought in the United +States that a firm declaration of this kind would be accepted by +the Filipinos and that they would not dare to make resistance. The +intentions of the American president and nation, as subsequent events +have proven, were to deal with the Filipinos with great liberality; +but the president's professions were not trusted by the Filipinos, +and the result of Mr. McKinley's message was to move them at once to +frame an independent government and to decide on war. + +This new government was framed at Malolos, Bulacan, by a congress +with representatives from most of the provinces of central Luzon. The +"Malolos Constitution" was proclaimed January 23, 1899, and Don Emilio +Aguinaldo was elected president. The cabinet, or ministry, included +Don Apolinario Mabini, secretary of state; Don Teodoro Sandico, +secretary of interior; General Baldomero Aguinaldo, secretary of war; +General Mariano Trias, secretary of treasury; Don Engracio Gonzaga, +secretary of public instruction and agriculture. + +War with the Americans.--Battle of Manila.--The Filipino forces were +impatient for fighting, and attack on the American lines surrounding +Manila began on the night of February 4th. It is certain that battle +had been decided upon and in preparation for some time, and that +fighting would have been begun in any case, before the arrival +of reënforcements from America; but the attack was precipitated a +little early by the killing at San Juan Bridge of a Filipino officer +who refused to halt when challenged by an American sentry. On that +memorable and dreadful night, the battle raged with great fury along +the entire circle of defenses surrounding the city, from Tondo +on the north to Fort San Antonio de Abad, south of the suburb of +Malate. Along three main avenues from the north, east, and south +the Filipinos attempted to storm and enter the capital, but although +they charged with reckless bravery, and for hours sustained a bloody +combat, they had fatally underestimated the fighting qualities of +the American soldier. + +The volunteer regiments of the American army came almost entirely from +the western United States, where young men are naturally trained to +the use of arms, and are imbued by inheritance with the powerful and +aggressive qualities of the American frontier. When morning broke, +the Filipino line of attack had, at every point, been shattered and +thrown back, and the Americans had advanced their positions on the +north to Caloocan, on the east to the Water Works and the Mariquina +Valley, and on the south to Pasay. + +Declaration of War.--Unfortunately, during the night attack and before +the disaster to Filipino arms was apparent, Aguinaldo had launched +against the United States a declaration of war. This declaration +prevented the Americans from trusting the Filipino overtures which +followed this battle, and peace was not made. + +The Malolos Campaign.--On March 25th began the American advance upon +the Filipino capital of Malolos. This Malolos campaign, as it is +usually called, occupied six days, and ended in the driving of the +Filipino army and government from their capital. Hard fighting took +place in the first days of this advance, and two extremely worthy +American officers were killed, Colonels Egbert and Stotsenberg. + +The Filipino army was pursued in its retreat as far as Calumpit, where +on the southern bank of the Rio Grande de Pampanga the American line +rested during the height of the rainy season. During this interval +the volunteer regiments, whose terms of service had long expired, +were returned to the States, and their places taken by regiments of +the regular army. + +The American Army.--The American army at that time, besides the +artillery, consisted of twenty-five regiments of infantry and ten of +cavalry. Congress now authorized the organization of twenty-four new +regiments of infantry, to be known as the 26th to the 49th Regiments +of U. S. Volunteers, and one volunteer regiment of cavalry, the 11th, +for a service of two years. These regiments were largely officered +by men from civil life, familiar with a great variety of callings and +professions,--men for the most part of fine character, whose services +in the months that followed were very great not only in the field, but +in gaining the friendship of the Filipino people and in representing +the character and intentions of the American government. + +Anti-War Agitators in America.--Through the summer of 1899 the war was +not pressed by the American general, nor were the negotiations with +the Filipino leaders conducted with success. The Filipinos were by no +means dismayed. In spite of their reverses, they believed the conquest +of the Islands impossible to foreign troops. Furthermore, the war had +met with tremendous opposition in America. Many Americans believed that +the war was against the fundamental rights of the Filipino people. They +attacked the administration with unspeakable bitterness. They openly +expressed sympathy for the Filipino revolutionary cause, and for the +space of two years their encouragement was an important factor in +sustaining the rebellion. + +Spread of the Insurrection.--In these same summer months the +revolutionary leaders spread their cause among the surrounding +provinces and islands. The spirit of resistance was prominent at first +only among the Tagálog, but gradually nearly all the Christianized +population was united in resistance to the American occupation. + +Occupation of Negros.--The Americans had meanwhile occupied +Iloilo and the Bisayas, and shortly afterwards the presidios in +Mindanao surrendered by the Spaniards. In Negros, also, exceptional +circumstances had transpired. The people in this island invited +American sovereignty; and Gen. James Smith, sent to the island in March +as governor, assisted the people in forming a liberal government, +through which insurrection and disorder in that island were largely +avoided. + +Death of General Luna.--With the cessation of heavy rains, the +fighting was begun again in northern Luzon. The Filipino army had +its headquarters in Tarlac, and its lines occupied the towns of the +provinces of Pangasinan and Nueva Ecija, stretching in a long line of +posts from the Zambales Mountains almost to the upper waters of the +Rio Pampanga. It was still well armed, provisioned, and resolute; but +the brilliant, though wayward, organizer of this army was dead. The +Nationalist junta, which had directed the Philippine government and +army, had not been able to reconcile its differences. It is reported +that Luna aspired to a dictatorship. He was killed by soldiers of +Aguinaldo at Cabanatuan. + +The Campaign in Northern Luzon.--The American generals now determined +upon a strategic campaign. General MacArthur was to command an +advance up the railroad from Calumpit upon Tarlac; General Lawton, +with a flying column of swift infantry and cavalry, was to make a +flanking movement eastward through Nueva Ecija and hem the Filipino +forces in upon the east. Meanwhile, General Wheaton was to convey a +force by transport to the Gulf of Lingayen, to throw a cordon across +the Ilocano coast that should cut off the retreat of the Filipino army +northward. As a strategic movement, this campaign was only partially +successful. MacArthur swept northward, crushing the Filipino line on +his front, his advance being led by the active regiment of General +J. Franklin Bell. Lawton's column scoured the country eastward, +marching with great rapidity and tremendous exertions. Swollen +rivers were crossed with great loss of life, and the column, +cutting loose from its supplies, was frequently in need of food. It +was in this column that the Filipino first saw with amazement the +great American cavalry horse, so large beside the small pony of +the Philippines. Lawton's descent was so swift that the Philippine +government and staff narrowly escaped capture. + +On the night of November 11th, the Filipino generals held their +last council of war at Bayambang on the Rio Agno, and resolved upon +dispersal. Meanwhile, Wheaton had landed at San Fabian, upon the +southern Ilocano coast, but his force was insufficient to establish +an effective cordon, and on the night of November 15th Aguinaldo, +with a small party of ministers and officers, closely pursued by the +cavalry of Lawton under the command of General Young, slipped past, +through the mountains of Pozorubio and Rosario, and escaped up the +Ilocano coast. + +Then began one of the most exciting pursuits in recent wars. The chase +never slackened, except in those repeated instances when for the moment +the trail of the Filipino general was lost. From Candon, Aguinaldo +turned eastward through the comandancias of Lepanto and Bontoc, into +the wild Igorrote country of the Cordillera Central. The trail into +Lepanto leads over the lofty mountains through the precipitous Tila +Pass. On the summit, in what was regarded as an impregnable position, +Gregorio del Pilar, little more than a boy, but a brigadier-general, +with a small force of soldiers, the remnant of his command, attempted +to cover the retreat of his president. But a battalion of the +33d Infantry, under Major March, carried the pass, with the total +destruction of Pilar's command, he himself falling amid the slain. + +Capture of Aguinaldo.--Major March then pursued Aguinaldo into +Bontoc and thence southward into the wild and mountainous territory +of Quiangan. On Christmas night, 1899, the American soldiers camped +on the crest of the Cordillera, within a few miles of the Igorrote +village where the Filipino force was sleeping. Both parties were +broken down and in dire distress through the fierceness of the flight +and pursuit, but for several weeks longer Aguinaldo's party was able +to remain in these mountains and elude its pursuers. A month later, +his trail was finally lost in the valley of the Cagayan. He and his +small party had passed over the exceedingly difficult trail through +the Sierra Madre Mountains, to the little Tagálog town of Palanan +near the Pacific coast. Here, almost entirely cut off from active +participation in the insurrection, Aguinaldo remained until June of +1901, when he was captured by the party of General Funston. + +For some weeks following the disintegration of the Filipino army, the +country appeared to be pacified and the insurrection over. The new +regiments arriving from the United States, an expedition was formed +under General Schwan, which in December and January marched southward +through Cavite and Laguna provinces and occupied Batangas, Tayabas, and +the Camarines. Other regiments were sent to the Bisayas and to northern +Luzon, until every portion of the archipelago, except the islands of +Mindoro and Palawan, contained large forces of American troops. + +Reorganization of the Filipino Army.--The Filipinos had, by no means, +however, abandoned the contest, and this period of quiet was simply +a calm while the insurgent forces were perfecting their organization +and preparing for a renewal of the conflict under a different form. It +being found impossible for a Filipino army to keep the field, there +was effected a secret organization for the purpose of maintaining +irregular warfare through every portion of the archipelago. The Islands +were partitioned into a great number of districts or "zones." At +the head of each was a zone commander, usually with the rank of +general. The operations of these men were, to a certain extent, guided +by the counsel or directions of the secret revolutionary juntas in +Manila or Hongkong, but, in fact, they were practically absolute and +independent, and they exercised extraordinary powers. They recruited +their own forces and commissioned subordinate commanders. They levied +"contributions" upon towns, owners of haciendas, and individuals of +every class, and there was a secret civil or municipal organization +for collecting these revenues. The zone commanders, moreover, exercised +the terrible power of execution by administrative order. + +Assassination of Filipinos.--Many of the Filipino leaders were +necessarily not well instructed in those rules for the conduct of +warfare which civilized peoples have agreed upon as being humane +and honorable. Many of them tried, especially in the latter months +of the war, when understanding was more widely diffused, to make +their conduct conform to international usage; but the revolutionary +junta had committed the great crime of ordering the punishment by +assassination of all Filipinos who failed to support the insurgent +cause. No possible justification, in the light of modern morality, +can be found for such a step as this. The very worst passions were +let loose in carrying out this policy. Scores of unfortunate men were +assassinated, many of them as the results of private enmity. Endless +blackmail was extorted and communities were terrorized from one end +of the archipelago to the other. + +Irregular Warfare of the Filipinos.--Through the surrender of +Spanish forces, the capture of the arsenals of Cavite and Olongapo, +and by purchase through Hongkong, the revolutionary government +possessed between thirty thousand and forty thousand rifles. These +arms were distributed to the different military zones, and the +secret organization which existed in each municipality received its +proportion. These guns were secreted by the different members of the +command, except when occasion arose for effecting a surprise or making +an attack. There were no general engagements, but in some towns there +was almost nightly shooting. Pickets and small detachments were cut +off, and roads became so unsafe throughout most of the archipelago +that there was no travel by Americans except under heavy escort. For a +long time, also, the orders of the commanding general were so lenient +that it was impossible to punish properly this conduct when it was +discovered. + +Death of General Lawton.--The American army, in its attempt to garrison +every important town in the Islands, was cut up into as many as 550 +small detachments of post garrisons. Thus, while there were eventually +sixty thousand American soldiers in the Islands, it was rare for as +many as five hundred to take the field, and most of the engagements +of the year 1900 were by small detachments of fifty to one hundred men. + +It was in one of these small expeditions that the American army +suffered the greatest single loss of the war. A few miles east of +Manila is the beautiful Mariquina Valley, from which is derived the +city's supply of water, and the headwaters of this pretty stream lie in +the wild and picturesque fastness of San Mateo and Montalban. Although +scarce a dozen miles from the capital and the headquarters of a +Filipino brigade, San Mateo was not permanently occupied by the +Americans until after the 18th of December, 1899, when a force under +General Lawton was led around through the hills to surprise the town. + +Early in the morning the American force came pouring down over the +hills that lie across the river from the village. They were met by +a brisk fire from the insurgent command scattered along the banks of +the river and in a sugar hacienda close to the stream. Here Lawton, +conspicuous in white uniform and helmet, accompanying, as was his +custom, the front line of skirmishers, was struck by a bullet and +instantly killed. + +Filipino Leaders Sent to Guam.--In November, 1900, after the reëlection +in the United States of President McKinley, a much more vigorous policy +of war was inaugurated. In this month General MacArthur, commanding +the division, issued a notable general order, defining and explaining +the laws of war which were being violated, and threatening punishment +by imprisonment of those guilty of such conduct. Some thousands of +Filipinos under this order were arrested and imprisoned. Thirty-nine +leaders, among them the high-minded but irreconcilable Mabini, were +in December, 1900, sent to a military prison on the island of Guam. + +Campaigning was much more vigorously prosecuted in all military +districts. By this time all the American officers had become familiar +with the insurgent leaders, and these were now obliged to leave the +towns and establish cuartels in remote barrios and in the mountains. + +These measures, pursued through the winter of 1900-01, broke the +power of the revolution. + +The Philippine Civil Commission.--Another very influential factor in +producing peace resulted from the presence and labors of the Civil +Philippine Commission. These gentlemen, Judge William H. Taft, Judge +Luke E. Wright, Judge Henry C. Ide, Professor Dean C. Worcester, +and Professor Bernard Moses, were appointed by the president in the +spring of 1900 to legislate for the Islands and to prepare the way +for the establishment of civil government. President McKinley's letter +of instructions to this commission will probably be ranked as one of +the ablest and most notable public papers in American history. + +The commission reached the Islands in June and began their legislative +work on September 1st. This body of men, remarkable for their high +character, was able at last to bring about an understanding with the +Filipino leaders and to assure them of the unselfish and honorable +purposes of the American government. Thus, by the early winter +of 1900-01 many Filipino gentlemen became convinced that the best +interests of the Islands lay in accepting American sovereignty, and +that they could honorably advocate the surrender of the insurgent +forces. These men represented the highest attainments and most +influential positions in the Islands. In December they formed an +association known as the Federal Party, for the purpose of inducing the +surrender of military leaders, obedience to the American government, +and the acceptance of peace. + +End of the Insurrection.--Under these influences, the insurrection, +in the spring of 1901, went rapidly to pieces. Leader after leader +surrendered his forces and arms, and took the oath of allegiance and +quietly returned home. By the end of June there were but two zone +commanders who had not surrendered,--General Malvar in Batangas, +and General Lukban in Samar. + +The First Civil Governor.--Peaceful conditions and security almost +immediately followed these surrenders and determined the president to +establish at once civil government. On July 4, 1901, this important +step was taken, Judge Taft, the president of the Philippine Commission, +taking office on that date as the first American civil governor of the +Philippines. On September 1st, the Philippine Commission was increased +by the appointment of three Filipino members,--the Hon. T. H. Pardo +de Tavera, M. D., the Hon. Benito Legarda, and the Hon. José Luzuriaga +of Negros. + +The Philippine Commission has achieved a remarkable amount of +legislation of a very high order. From September, 1900, to the end +of December, 1902, the commission passed no less than 571 acts of +legislation. Some of these were of very great importance and involved +long preparation and labor. Few administrative bodies have ever worked +harder and with greater results than the Philippine Commission during +the first two years of its activity. The frame of government in all +its branches had to be organized and set in motion, the civil and +criminal law liberalized, revenue provided, and public instruction +remodeled on a very extensive scale. + +The New Government.--The government is a very liberal one, and +one which gives an increasing opportunity for participation to the +Filipinos. It includes what is called local self-government. There +are in the Islands about 1,132 municipalities. In these the residents +practically manage their own affairs. There are thirty-eight organized +provinces in the archipelago, in which the administration rests +with the Provincial Board composed of the governor, treasurer, +and supervisor or engineer. The governor is elected for the +term of one year by the councilors of all the towns united in +assembly. The treasurer and supervisor are appointed by the governor +of the Philippine archipelago under the rules of the Civil Service +Board. The civil service is a subject which has commanded the special +consideration of the Commission. It gives equal opportunity to the +Filipino and to the American to enter the public service and to gain +public promotion; and the Filipino is by law even given the preference +where possessed of the requisite ability. + +The Insular Government.--For the purposes of administration, the +insular, or central government of the Islands is divided into four +branches, called departments, each directed by a secretary who is +also a member of the Philippine Commission. These departments are, +interior, Secretary Worcester; finance and justice, Secretary Ide; +commerce and police, Secretary Wright; and public instruction, +Secretary Moses, until January 1, 1903, and since that date Secretary +Smith. Under each of these departments are a large number of bureaus, +by which the many important activities of the government are performed. + +We have only to examine a list of these bureaus to see how many-sided +is the work which the government is performing. It is a veritable +commonwealth, complete in all the branches which demand the +attention of modern governments. Thus, under the Department of the +Interior, there is the Bureau of Public Health, with its extremely +important duties of combating epidemic diseases and improving public +sanitation, with its public hospitals, sanitariums, and charities; +the Bureau of Government Laboratories for making bacteriological and +chemical investigations; a Bureau of Forestry; a Bureau of Mining; +the Philippine Weather Bureau; a Bureau of Agriculture; a Bureau of +Non-Christian Tribes for conducting the government work in ethnology +and for framing legislation for pagan and Mohammedan tribes; and a +Bureau of Public Lands. + +Under the department of Commerce and Police are the Bureau of Posts; +Signal Service; the Philippines Constabulary, really an insular army, +with its force of some sixty-five hundred officers and men; Prisons; +the Coast Guard and Transportation Service, with a fleet of about +twenty beautiful little steamers, nearly all of them newly built for +this service and named for islands of the archipelago; the Coast and +Geodetic Survey, doing the much-needed work of charting the dangerous +coasts and treacherous waters of the archipelago; and the Bureau of +Engineering, which has under its charge great public works, many of +which are already under way. + +Under the Department of Finance and Justice are the Insular Treasurer; +the Insular Auditor; the Bureau of Customs and Immigration; the +Bureau of Internal Revenue; the Insular Cold Storage and Ice Plant; +and the great Bureau of Justice. + +Under the Department of Public Instruction there is the Bureau of +Education in charge of the system of public schools; a Bureau of +Printing and Engraving, with a new and fully equipped plant; a Bureau +of Architecture; a Bureau of Archives; a Bureau of Statistics; and +the Philippine Museum. + +Revenues and Expenditures.--The maintenance of these numerous +activities calls for an expenditure of large sums of money, but the +insular government and the Filipino people are fortunate in having +had their finances managed with exceptional ability. The revenues +of the Islands for the past fiscal year have amounted to about +$10,638,000, gold. Public expenditures, including the purchase +of equipment such as the coast-guard fleet and the forwarding of +great public works such as the improving of the harbor of Manila, +amounted during fiscal year of 1903 to about $9,150,000, gold. The +government has at all times preserved a good balance in its treasury; +but the past year has seen some diminution in the amount of revenues, +owing to the great depreciation of silver money, the falling off of +imports, the wide prevalence of cholera, and the poverty of many parts +of the country as a result of war and the loss of livestock through +pest. To assist the government of the Philippines, the Congress of +the United States in February, 1903, with great and characteristic +generosity appropriated the sum of $3,000,000, gold, as a free gift +to the people and government of the Philippines. + +The Judicial System.--Especially fortunate, also, have been the labors +of the commission in establishing a judicial system and revising the +Spanish law. The legal ability of the commission is unusually high. As +at present constituted, the judicial system consists of a Supreme +Court composed of seven justices, three of whom at the present time +are Filipinos, which, besides trying cases over which it has original +jurisdiction, hears cases brought on appeal from the Courts of First +Instance, fifteen in number, which sit in different parts of the +Islands. Each town, moreover, has its justices of the peace for the +trial of small cases and for holding preliminary examinations in cases +of crimes. By the new Code of Civil Procedure, the administration of +justice has been so simplified that there are probably no courts in +the world where justice can be more quickly secured than here. + +System of Public Schools.--Probably no feature of the American +government in the Islands has attracted more attention than the +system of public schools. Popular education, while by no means wholly +neglected under the Spanish government, was inadequate, and was +continually opposed by the clerical and conservative Spanish forces, +who feared that the liberalizing of the Filipino people would be the +loosening of the control of both Spanish state and church. On the +contrary, the success of the American government, as of any government +in which the people participate, depends upon the intelligence and +education of the people. Thus, the American government is as anxious to +destroy ignorance and poverty as the Spanish government and the Spanish +church were desirous of preserving these deeply unfortunate conditions. + +Americans believe that if knowledge is generally spread among the +Filipino people, if there can be a real understanding of the genius +and purpose of our American institutions, there will come increasing +content and satisfaction to dwell under American law. Thus, education +was early encouraged by the American army, and it received the first +attention of the commission. The widespread system of public schools +which now exists in these islands was organized by the first General +Superintendent of Public Instruction, Dr. Fred W. Atkinson, and by +Professor Bernard Moses of the Philippine Commission. + +Instruction in the English Language.--The basis of this public +instruction is the English language. This was early decided upon in +view of the great number of Filipino dialects, the absence of a common +native language or literature, and the very moderate acquaintance +with Spanish by any except the educated class. + +It is fortunate for the Filipino people that English has been +introduced here and that its knowledge is rapidly spreading. Knowledge +of language is power, and the more widely spoken the tongue, the +greater the possession of the individual who acquires it. Of all the +languages of the world, English is to-day the most widely spoken and is +most rapidly spreading. Moreover, English is preëminently the language +of the Far East. From Yokohama to Australia, and from Manila to the +Isthmus of Suez, English is the common medium of communication. It is +the language alike of business and of diplomacy. The Filipino people, +so eager to participate in all the busy life of eastern Asia, so +ambitious to make their influence felt and their counsels regarded, +will be debarred from all this unless they master this mighty English +tongue. + +The Filipino Assembly.--Thus, after four and a half years of +American occupation, the sovereignty of the United States has been +established in the archipelago, and a form of government, unique +in the history of colonial administration, inaugurated. One other +step in the contemplation of Congress, which will still further make +the government a government of the Filipino people, remains to be +taken. This is the formation of a Filipino assembly of delegates or +representatives, chosen by popular vote from all the Christianized +provinces of the archipelago. The recent census of the Philippines +will form the basis for the apportionment of this representation. This +assembly will share the legislative power on all matters pertaining +to the Christian people of the Philippines and those parts of the +Islands inhabited by them. When this step shall have been taken, +the government of the Philippine Islands will be like the typical +and peculiarly American form of government known as territorial. + +Territorial Form of Government in the United States.--The American +Union is composed of a number of states or commonwealths which, +while differing vastly in wealth and population, are on absolutely +equal footing in the Union. The inhabitants of these states form +politically the American sovereignty. They elect the president and +Congress, and through their state legislatures may change or amend +the form of the American state itself. + +Besides these states, there have always been large possessions +of the nation called territories. These territories are extensive +countries, too sparsely inhabited or too undeveloped politically to +be admitted, in the judgment of the American Congress, to statehood +in the Union. Their inhabitants do not have the right to vote for +the president; neither have they representation in the American +Congress. These territories are governed by Congress, through +territorial governments, and over them Congress has full sovereign +powers. That is, as the Supreme Court of the United States has decided +and explained, while Congress when legislating for the states in the +Union has only those powers of legislation which have been specifically +granted by the Constitution, in legislating for the territories it has +all the powers which the Constitution has not specifically denied. The +only limitations on Congress are those which, under the American +system of public law, guarantee the liberty of the individual,--his +freedom of religious belief and worship; his right to just, open, +and speedy trial; his right to the possession of his property; and +other precious privileges, the result of centuries of development +in the English-speaking race, which make up civil liberty. These +priceless securities, which no power of the government can take away, +abridge, or infringe, are as much the possession of the inhabitants +of a territory as of a state. [95] + +The government of these territories has varied greatly in form and +may be changed at any time by Congress, but it usually consists of a +governor and supreme court, appointed by the president of the United +States, and a legislature elected by the people. Since 1783 there +has always been territory so held and governed by the United States, +and if we may judge from the remarkable history of these regions, this +form of government of dependent possessions is the most successful and +most advantageous to the territory itself that has ever been devised. + +At the present time, the territories of the United States are Oklahoma, +the Indian Territory, New Mexico, Arizona, Alaska, the Hawaiian +Islands, Porto Rico, the Philippines, and Guam. + +The territorial form of government has frequently been regarded +by American statesmen as a temporary condition to be followed +at a comparatively early date by statehood. But after more than a +century of development, territorial government, as shaped by Congress +and as defined by the Supreme Court, shows itself so flexible and +advantageous that there is no reason why it should not be regarded +as a permanent and final form. Whether it will long prevail in the +Philippines, depends very largely upon the political development and +ultimate desires of the Filipino people themselves. For the present, +it is the only suitable form of government and the only form which +it is statesmanlike to contemplate. + +Filipino Independence.--The events of the last few years +seem to indicate that the American nation will not intrust the +Philippines with independence until they have immeasurably gained +in political experience and social self-control. The question is +too great to be discussed here, but this much may be said: The +rapid march of international politics in this coming century will +not be favorable to the independence of the small and imperfectly +developed state. Independence, while it may fascinate the popular +leader, may not be most advantageous for this people. Independence, +under present tendencies of international trade, means economic +isolation. Independence, in the present age, compels preparedness +for war; preparedness for war necessitates the maintenance of +strong armies, the building of great navies, and the great economic +burdens required to sustain these armaments. Especially would this +be true of an archipelago so exposed to attack, so surrounded by +ambitious powers, and so near the center of coming struggle, as +are the Philippines. Japan, with a population of forty-two million, +wonderful for their industry and economy, and passionately devoted to +their emperor, is independent, but at great cost. The burden of her +splendid army and her modern navy weighs heavily upon her people, +consumes a large proportion of their earnings, and sometimes seems +to be threatening to strain the resources of the nation almost to +the point of breaking. + +Advantages of American Control.--Surely, a people is economically far +more privileged if, like the Philippines under the American government, +or Australia under the British, they are compelled to sustain no +portion of the burden of exterior defense. The navies of the United +States to-day protect the integrity of the Philippine archipelago. The +power of a nation so strong and so terrible, when once aroused, that +no country on the globe would think for a minute of wantonly molesting +its territory, shields the Filipino from all outside interference +and permits him to expend all his energy in the development of those +abilities to which his temperament and endowment inspire him. + +American government means freedom of opportunity. There is no +honorable pursuit, calling, or walk of life under heaven in which the +Filipino may not now engage and in which he will not find his endeavors +encouraged and his success met with generous appreciation. In politics, +his progress may be slow, because progress here is not the development +of the individual nor of the few, but of the whole. But in the no +less noble pursuits of science, literature, and art, we may in this +very generation see Filipinos achieving more than notable success +and distinction, not only for themselves but for their land. + +Patriotic Duty.--Patriotic duty, as regards the Philippines, means +for the American a wholesome belief in the uprightness of the national +purposes; a loyal appreciation of the men who have here worked wisely +and without selfishness, and have borne the brunt of the toil; a +loyalty to the government of the Philippines and of the United States, +so long as these governments live honestly, rule justly, and increase +liberty; and a frank and hearty recognition of every advance made by +the Filipino people themselves. And for the Filipinos, patriotic duty +means a full acceptance of government as it has now been established, +as better than what has preceded, and perhaps superior to what he +himself would have chosen and could have devised; a loyalty to his own +people and to their interests and to the public interests, that shall, +overcome the personal selfishness that has set its cruel mark on every +native institution in this land; and a resolution to obey the laws, +preserve the peace, and use faithfully every opportunity for the +development of his own character and the betterment of the race. + + + + + + + +APPENDIX. + +SPANISH GOVERNORS OF THE PHILIPPINES. + +(1571-1898.) + + +1571-1572 Don Miguel Lopez de Legaspi. +1572-1575 (Tesorero) Guido do Labezares. +1575-1580 Don Francisco La-Sande. +1580-1583 Don Gonzalo Ronquillo. +1583-1584 Don Diego Ronquillo. +1584-1590 Dr. Don Santiago de Vera. +1590-1593 Don Gomez Perez de Dasmariņas. +1593-1595 Luis Perez Dasmariņas. +1595-1596 Don Antonio de Morga. +1596-1602 Don Francisco Tello de Guzman. +1602-1606 Don Pedro Bravo de Acuņa. +1606-1608 Royal Audiencia. +1608-1609 Don Rodrigo Vivero. +1609-1616 Don Juan de Silva. +1616-1618 Don Andres Alcazar. +1618-1624 Don Alonso Faxardo y Tenza. +1624-1625 Royal Audiencia. +1625-1626 Don Fernando de Silva. +1626-1632 Don Juan Niņo de Tabora. +1632-1633 Royal Audiencia. +1633-1635 Don Juan Zerezo de Salamanca. +1635-1644 Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera. +1644-1653 Don Diego Faxardo y Chacon. +1653-1663 Sabiano Manrique de Lara. +1663-1668 Don Diego Salcedo. +1668-1669 Seņor Peņa Bonifaz. +1669-1677 Don Manuel de Leon. +1677-1678 Royal Audiencia. +1678-1684 Don Juan de Vargas. +1684-1689 Don Gabriel de Curuzalequi. +1689-1690 Don Alonso de Avila Fuertes. +1690-1701 Don Fausto Cruzat y Gongora. +1701-1709 Don Domingo Zabalburu. +1709-1715 Conde de Lizarraga. +1715-1717 Royal Audiencia. +1717-1719 Don Fernando Manuel de Bustamante. +1719-1721 Archbishop Cuesta. +1721-1729 Don Toribio José de Cosio y Campo (Marqués de Torre Campo). +1729-1739 Don Fernando Valdes y Tamon. +1739-1745 Don Gaspar de la Torre. +1745-1750 Bishop Father Juan de Arrechedra. +1750-1754 Don Francisco José de Obando y Solis. +1754-1759 Don Pedro Manuel de Arandía y Santisteban. +1759-1761 Don Miguel Lino de Ezpeleta (Bishop of Zebu). +1761-1764 Archbishop Don Manuel Antonio Rojo del Rio y Vieyra. +1764-1764 Dr. Don Simon de Anda y Salazar. +1764-1765 Don Francisco de la Torre. +1765-1770 Don José Raon. +1770-1778 Dr. Don Simon de Anda y Salazar. +1778-1787 Don José Basco y Vargas. +1787-1788 Don Pedro Sarrio. +1788-1793 Don Felix Berenguer de Marquina. +1793-1806 Don Rafael Maria de Aguilar y Ponce de Leon. +1806-1810 Don Mariano Fernandez de Folgueras. +1810-1813 Don Manuel Gonzalez Aguilar. +1813-1816 Don José de Gardoqui Jaraveitia. +1816-1822 Don Mariano Fernandez de Folgueras. +1822-1825 Don Juan Antonio Martinez. +1825-1830 Don Mariano Ricafort Palacio y Abarca. +1830-1835 Don Pascual Enrile y Alcedo. +1835-1836 Don Gabriel de Torres. +1836-1838 Don Andres Garcia Camba. +1838-1841 Don Luis Lardizabal y Montojo. +1841-1843 Don Marcelino de Oraa Lecumberri. +1843-1844 Don Francisco de Paula Alcalá de la Torre. +1844-1850 Don Narciso Clavería y Zaldua. +1850-1850 Don Antonio Maria Blanco. +1850-1853 D. Antonio de Urbistondo, Marqués de la Solana y Teniente + General. +1853-1854 El Mariscal de Campo de Ramon Montero, General Segundo Cabo + (acting). +1854-1854 El Teniente General Marqués de Novaliches. +1854-1854 El Mariscal de Campo de Ramon Montero (acting). +1854-1856 El Teniente General de Manuel Crespo. +1856-1857 El Mariscal de Campo de Ramon Montero (acting). +1857-1860 El Teniente General de Fernando de Norzagaray. +1860-1860 El Mariscal de Campo de Ramon Solano y Llánderal (acting). +1860-1861 El Brigadier de Artilleria de Juan Herrera Dávila (acting). +1861-1862 El Teniente General de José Lemery. +1862-1865 El Teniente General de Rafael Echagüe. +1865-1865 El Mariscal de Campo de Joaquin Solano (acting). +1865-1866 El Teniente General de Juan de Lara é Irigoyen. +1866-1866 El Mariscal de Campo de Juan Laureano Sanz (acting). +1866-1866 El Comandante General de Marina de Antonio Ossorio (acting). +1866-1866 El Mariscal de Campo de Joaquin Solano (acting). +1866-1866 El Teniente General de José de la Gándara. +1866-1869 El Mariscal de Campo de Manuel Maldonado (acting). +1869-1871 El Teniente General de Carlos de la Torre. +1871-1873 El Teniente General de Rafael Izquierdo. +1873-1873 El Comandante General de Marina de Manuel MacCrohon (acting). +1873-1874 El Teniente General de Juan Alaminos y Vivar. +1874-1874 El Mariscal de Campo de Manuel Blanco Valderrama (acting). +1874-1877 El Contra Almirante de la Armada de José Malcampo y Monje. +1877-1880 El Teniente General de Domingo Moriones y Murillo. +1880-1880 El Comandante General de Marina de Rafael Rodriguez Arias + (acting). +1880-1883 El Teniente General de Fernando Primo de Rivera, Marqués + de Estella. +1883-1883 El Mariscal de Campo de Emilio de Molins, General Segundo + Cabo (acting). +1883-1885 El Capitan General del Ejercito de Joaquin Jovellar y Soler. +1885-1885 El Mariscal de Campo de Emilio de Molins (acting). +1885-1888 El Teniente General de Emilio Terrero. +1888-1888 El Mariscal de Campo de Antonio Molto (acting). +1888-1888 El Cotra Almirante de la Armada de Federico Lobatón (acting). +1888-1891 El Teniente General de Valeriano Weyler. +1891-1893 El Teniente General de Eulogio Despojol, Conde de Caspe. +1893-1893 El General de Division de Federico Ochando, General Segundo + Cabo (acting). +1893-1896 El Teniente General de Ramon Blanco y Erenas, Marqués + de Peņa-Plata. +1896-1897 El Teniente General de Camilo G. de Polavieja, Marqués + de Polavieja. +1897-1897 de José de Lacharmbre y Dominguez, Teniente General (acting). +1897-1898 de Fernando Primo de Rivera, Capitan General, Marqués + de Estella. +1898-1898 de Basilio Augustin Teniente General del Ejercito. +1898-1898 El General Segundo Cabo de Fermin Jaudenes y Alvarez. + + + + + + + +NOTES + + +[1] Relacion de las Islas Filipinas, 2d ed., p. 38. + +[2] See Yule's Marco Polo for a discussion of this point and for the +entire history of this great explorer, as well as a translation of +his narrative. This book of Ser Marco Polo has been most critically +edited with introduction and voluminous notes by the English scholar, +Sir Henry Yule. In this edition the accounts of Marco Polo, covering +so many countries and peoples of the Far East, can be studied. + +[3] See the noted work The Life of Prince Henry of Portugal, surnamed +the Navigator, and its Results, by Richard Henry Major, London, +1868. Many of the views of Mr. Major upon the importance of Prince +Henry's work and especially its early aims, have been contradicted +in more recent writings. The importance of the Sagres Observatory +is belittled. Doubts are expressed as to the farsightedness of +Prince Henry's plans, and the best opinion of to-day holds that he +did not hope to discover a new route to India by way of Africa, but +sought simply the conquest of the "Guinea," which was known to the +Europeans through the Arab Geographers, who called it "Bilad Ghana" +or "Land of Wealth." The students, if possible, should read the essay +of Mr. E. J. Payne, The Age of Discovery, in the Cambridge Modern +History, Vol I. + +[4] The classical work on this famous ruler is Robertson's Life of +Charles the Fifth, but the student should consult if possible more +recent works. + +[5] Primer Viaje alrededor del Mundo, Spanish translation by Amoretti, +Madrid, 1899, page 27. + +[6] The discovery of this famous relationship is attributed to +the Spanish Jesuit Abbé, Lorenzo Hervas, whose notable Catalogo +de las Lenguas de las Naciones conocidas was published in 1800-05; +but the similarity of Malay and Polynesian had been earlier shown by +naturalists who accompanied the second voyage of the famous Englishman, +Captain Cook (1772-75). The full proof, and the relation also of +Malagasy, the language of Madagascar, was given in 1838 by the work +of the great German philologist, Baron William von Humboldt. + +[7] Relacion de las Islas Filipinas, 2d ed., p. 52. + +[8] Another possible explanation of the many Sanskrit terms which +are found in the Philippine languages, is that the period of contact +between Filipinos and Hindus occurred not in the Philippines but in +Java and Sumatra, whence the ancestors of the Filipinos came. + +[9] Relacion de las Islas Filipinas, 2d ed., pp. 58, 59, chap. XVII. + +[10] Arte de la Lengua Tagala. + +[11] This name is derived, in the opinion of Professor Blumentritt, +from Bayi, or Bay, meaning Laguna de Bay. Professor Meyer, in his +Distribution of the Negritos, suggests an identification from this +Chinese record, of the islands of Mindanao, Palawan (called Pa-lao-yu) +and Panay, Negros, Cebu, Leyte, Samar, Bohol, and Luzon. + +[12] Through the courtesy of Professor Zulueta, of the Manila Liceo, +permission was given to use from Chao Ju-kua's work these quotations, +translated from the Chinese manuscript by Professor Blumentritt. The +English translation is by Mr. P. L. Stangl. + +[13] "This would confirm," says Professor Blumentritt, "Dr. Pardo de +Tavera's view that in ancient times the Philippines were under the +influence of Buddhism from India." + +[14] Conquista de las Islas Filipinas, p. 95. + +[15] Relacion de la Conquista de la Isla de Luzón, 1572; in Retana, +Archivo del Bibliófilo Filipino, vol. I. + +[16] Sucesos de las Filipinas, p. 297. + +[17] These data are largely taken from the account of the customs +of the Tagálog prepared by Friar Juan de Plasencia, in 1589, at +the request of Dr. Santiago de Vera, the governor and president +of the Audiencia. Although there are references to it by the early +historians of the Philippines, this little code did not see the light +until a few years ago, when a manuscript copy was discovered in the +convent of the Franciscans at Manila, by Dr. Pardo de Tavera, and was +by him published. It treats of slave-holding, penalties for crime, +inheritances, adoption, dowry, and marriage. (Las Costumbres de los +Tagálog en Filipinas, segun el Padre Plasencia, by T. H. Pardo de +Tavera. Madrid, 1892.) + +[18] See on this matter Diccionario Mitologico de Filipinas, by +Blumentritt; Retana, Archivo del Bibliófilo Filipino, vol. II. + +[19] This word is of Sanskrit origin and is common throughout Malaysia. + +[20] Relacion de las Cosas de las Filipinas hecha por Sr. Domingo +de Salazar, Primer obispo de dichas islas, 1583; in Retana, Archivo, +vol. III. + +[21] The foundation and character of this great colonial administration +have been admirably described by the Honorable Bernard Moses, United +States Philippine Commissioner and the first Secretary of Public +Instruction, in his work, The Establishment of Spanish Rule in America. + +[22] Moses: Establishment of Spanish Rule in America, p. 12. + +[23] Demarcación del Maluco, hecha por el maestro Medina, in Documentos +inéditos, vol. V., p. 552. + +[24] This and subsequent voyages are given in the Documentos inéditos, +vol. V., and a graphic account is in Argensola's Conquista de las +Islas Molucas. They are also well narrated in English by Burney, +Discoveries in the South Sea, vol. I., chapters V., XII., and XIV. + +[25] Fray Gaspar de San Agustin: Conquista de las Islas Filipinas, +lib. I., c. 13. + +[26] One of the best paintings of the Filipino artist Juan Luna, +which hangs in the Ayuntamiento in Manila, represents Legaspi in the +act of the "Pacto de Sangre" with this Filipino chieftain. + +[27] There is an old account of this interesting expedition by one +who participated. (Relacion de la Conquista de la Isla de Luzon, +Manila, 1572; Retana, Archivo del Bibliofilo Filipino, vol. IV.) + +[28] Morga: Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas, 2d ed., p. 10. + +[29] Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas. P. 316. + +[30] Conquista de la Isla de Luzon, p. 24. + +[31] See the letter of Bishop Salazar to the king, explaining his +motives, in coming to the Philippines. Retana, Biblioteca Filipina, +vol, I.; Relacion, 1583, p. 4. + +[32] Zuņiga: Historia de Filipinas, pp. 195, 196. + +[33] Both Van Noort and Morga have left us accounts of this sea-fight, +the former in his journal, Description of the Failsome Voyage Made +Round the World, and the latter in his famous, Sucesos de las Islas +Filipinas. + +[34] Montero y Vidal: Historia de Filipinas, vol. I., p. 199. + +[35] Relacion de la Conquista de Luzon, 1572, p. 15. + +[36] Relacion de las Encomiendas, existentes en Filipinas, Retana, +Archivo del Bibliófilo Filipino, vol. IV. + +[37] Ordenanzas ... para la Reparticion de los Indios de la Isla +Espaņola, in Documentos Ineditas, vol. I., p. 236. + +[38] Historia de Filipinos, p. 157, et sq. + +[39] Among other documents, which throw a most unfavorable light upon +the condition of the Filipinos under the encomiendas, is the letter to +the king from Domingo de Salazar, the first bishop of the Philippines, +which describes the conditions about 1583. + +[40] Domingo de Salazar, Relacion de las Cosas de las Filipinas, +1583, p. 5, in Retana Archives, vol. 3. + +[41] Relacion, pp. 13, 14. + +[42] Sucesos de las Filipinas, p. 334. + +[43] Las Costumbres de los Tagalos en Filipinas segun el Padre +Plasencia. Madrid, 1892. + +[44] Blumentritt: Organization Communale des Indigines des Philippines, +traduis de l'Allemand, par A. Hugot. 1881. + +[45] Sucesos de las Filipinas, p. 332. + +[46] See Salazar's relation on this point. + +[47] Chirino: Relacion, pp. 19, 20. + +[48] Morga, p. 329. + +[49] Sucesos de las Filipinas, p. 323. + +[50] The Principal Navigations, Voiages, Traffiques and Discoveries +of the English Nation, ... by Richard Hakluyt, Master of Artes and +sometime Student of Christ Church in Oxford. Imprinted at London, +1598. Vol. I., p. 560. + +[51] Sucesos de las Filipinas, p. 347. + +[52] Sucesos de las Filipinas, p. 352.] + +[53] Laws of the Indies, VIII., 45, 46. + +[54] Relacion de las Islas Filipinas, chap. V., p. 23, and +chap. XIII. p. 47. + +[55] Ibid., p. 323. + +[56] Ibid., p. 321. + +[57] Morga: Sucesos, p. 324. + +[58] Carta Relacion de las Cosas de la China y de los Chinos del +Parian de Manila, 1590; in Retana, Archivo, vol. III. + +[59] Relacion de las Islas Filipinas, p. 18. See also Salazar, +Carta Relacion. + +[60] Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas, p. 364. + +[61] Zuņiga: Historia de las Filipinas, p. 252. + +[62] Historia General de Filipinas, vol. I., p. 187. + +[63] Morris: The History of Colonization, vol. I., p. 215 sq. + +[64] Raffles: History of Java, vol. II., p. 116. + +[65] On the history of this notable expedition see Argensola, Conquista +de las Islas Molucas. Madrid, 1609. + +[66] An account of this victory, written the following year, Relacion +Verdadera de la gran vitoria, que el Armada Espaņola de la China +tuuo contra los Olandeses Pirates, has been reprinted by Retana, +Archivo Bibliofilo Filipino, vol. II. + +[67] "Just before the naval engagement of Playa Honda, the Dutch +intercepted junks on the way to Manila, bringing, amongst their +cargoes of food, as many as twelve thousand capons."--Foreman: The +Philippine Islands, p. 104. + +[68] Historia de Filipinas, p. 282. + +[69] How attractive the island appeared and how well they knew its +peoples is revealed by the accurate descriptions in the first book +of Combés' Historia de Mindanao y Jolo. + +[70] Historia de Mindanao y Jolo, lib. IV., chap. 7. + +[71] This important victory was commemorated in a number of writings, +some of which have been reprinted by Retana. See Sucesos Felices, que +por Mar y Tierra ha dado N. S. a las armas Espaņolas, 1637. Another +is published in the Appendix to Barrantes', Historia de Guerras +Piraticas. The subject is also fully treated by Combés. + +[72] The king did not confer the title of "Royal" until 1735, although +the University was taken under his protection in 1680. + +[73] Entrada de la Seraphica Religion, de Nuestro P. S. Francisco en +las Islas Filipinas. Retana, vol, I. + +[74] The Jesuits, on retiring with the Spanish forces from the +Moluccas, brought from Ternate a colony of their converts. These +people were settled at Marigondon, on the south shore of Manila Bay, +where their descendants can still be distinguished from the surrounding +Tagálog population. + +[75] See the account of the "Settlement of the Ladrones by the +Spaniards," in Burney's Voyages in the Pacific, vol. III. + +[76] Some of the benefits of such a trade are set forth by the Jesuit, +Alonzo de Ovalle, in his Historical Relation of the Kingdom of Chili, +printed in Rome, 1649. In Churchill's Collection of Voyages and +Travels, vol. III. + +[77] Recopilacion de Leyes de las Indias, lib. VIII., titulo 45, +ley 78. + +[78] Montero y Vidal: Historia de Filipinas, vol. I., p. 460. + +[79] Relacion de la Entrada del Sultan Rey de Jolo, in Archivo del +Bibliófilo Filipino, vol. I. + +[80] Historia de Filipinas, p. 682. + +[81] These orders and other documents dealing with the Jesuit +expulsion are printed in Montero y Vidal, Historia de Filipinas, +vol. II. p. 180 sq. + +[82] But the conquest was almost valueless, and a few years later the +inhabitants had to be transported to Cagayan because of the scarcity +of food. + +[83] Alava made a series of journeys through the different provinces +of the Philippines, and on these trips he was accompanied by Friar +Martinez de Zuņiga, whose narrative of these expeditions forms a most +interesting and valuable survey of the conditions of the Islands and +the people at the beginning of the nineteenth century. "Estadismo +de las Islas Filipinas, 6 mis viajes por este pais, por el Padre +Fr. Joaquin Martinez de Zuņiga. Publica esta obra por primera vez +extensamente anotada W. E. Retana." 2 vols. Madrid, 1893. + +[84] Jagor: Viajes por Filipinas, p. 81. Translated from the +German. Madrid, 1895. + +[85] See Estado de las Islas Filipinas en 1847, by D. Sinibaldo de Mas. + +[86] Bowring: A Visit to the Philippine Islands, p. 387. + +[87] The reports of the Dominican missionaries of Nueva Vizcaya +and Isabela show the extent and persistence of these raids. (See the +files of the missionary publication, El Correo Sino-Annamita, and also +the work by Padre Buenaventura Campa, Los Maybyaos y la Raza Ifugao, +Madrid, 1895. + +[88] Montero y Vidal: Historia de Filipinas, vol. III, p. 99. + +[89] Montero y Vidal: Historia de Filipinas, vol. III., p. 209. The +document is given in Appendix 4 of the same volume. + +[90] See Rajah Brooke, by Sir Spencer St. John, London, 1899. + +[91] Keppel: Expedition to Borneo of H. M. S. Dido for the Suppression +of Piracy, with extracts from the Journal of James Brooke, Esq. 2 +vols. London, 1846. Keppel: A Visit to the Indian Archipelago in +H. M. S. Moeandar. 2 vols. London, 1853. + +[92] Spain established a permanent commission of censorship in +1856. It was composed of eight persons, one half nominated by the +governor and one half by the archbishop. + +[93] El Periodismo Filipino, por W. E. Retana. Madrid, 1895. + +[94] An account of Rizal's trial and execution, together with many +papers on the revolution, is printed by Retana. See Archivo, Tomo +IV. Documentos politicos de Actualidad. + +[95] See the decisions of the Supreme Court in the cases of American +Insurance Co. v. Canter (1 Peters, 511), decided in 1828; National +Bank v. County of Yankton (101 U. S. Reports, 129), decided in 1879; +The Mormon Church v. United States (136 U. S. Reports, 1), decided May, +1890. On the domain of personal liberty possessed by the inhabitants +of a territory, in addition to above cases, see also the cases of +Reynolds v. United States (98 U. S. Reports, 154), 1878; and Murphy +v. Ramsey (114 U. S. Reports, 15), 1884. + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's A History of the Philippines, by David P. 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+} +.xd19e4595width +{ +width:335px; +} +.xd19e5034width +{ +width:529px; +} +.xd19e5106width +{ +width:303px; +} +.xd19e5143width +{ +width:336px; +} +.xd19e5192width +{ +width:720px; +} +.xd19e5278width +{ +width:337px; +} +.xd19e5291width +{ +width:337px; +} +.xd19e5347width +{ +width:439px; +} +.xd19e5363width +{ +width:338px; +} +.xd19e5423width +{ +width:297px; +} +.xd19e5441width +{ +width:532px; +} +</style> +</head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +Project Gutenberg's A History of the Philippines, by David P. Barrows + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: A History of the Philippines + +Author: David P. Barrows + +Release Date: December 11, 2011 [EBook #38269] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF THE PHILIPPINES *** + + + + +Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project +Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously +made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + +</pre> + +<div class="front"> +<div class="div1 cover"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"></p> +<div class="figure xd19e137width"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt= +"Original Front Cover." width="505" height="720"></div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="div1 titlepage"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"></p> +<div class="figure xd19e143width"><img src="images/titlepage.gif" alt= +"Original Title Page." width="411" height="720"></div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="titlePage"> +<div class="docTitle"> +<div class="mainTitle">A History of the Philippines</div> +</div> +<div class="byline">By<br> +<span class="docAuthor">David P. Barrows, Ph.D.</span><br> +General Superintendent of Public Instruction for the Philippine +Islands</div> +<div class="docImprint">New York · Cincinnati · +Chicago<br> +American Book Company</div> +</div> +<div class="div1 copyright"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first xd19e166"><span class="sc">Copyright, 1905, +by</span></p> +<p class="xd19e166"><span class="sc">David P. Barrows</span></p> +<p class="xd19e166">Entered at Stationers’ Hall, London</p> +<p class="xd19e166">Barrows, Philippines</p> +<p class="xd19e166">W. P. I <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb3" href= +"#pb3" name="pb3">3</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div class="div1 preface"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="main">Preface</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">This book has been prepared at the suggestion of the +educational authorities for pupils in the public high schools of the +Philippines, as an introduction to the history of their country. Its +preparation occupied about two years, while the author was busily +engaged in other duties,—much of it being written while he was +traveling or exploring in different parts of the Archipelago. No +pretensions are made to an exhaustive character for the book. For the +writer, as well as for the pupil for whom it is intended, it is an +introduction into the study of the history of Malaysia.</p> +<p>Considerable difficulty has been experienced in securing the +necessary historical sources, but it is believed that the principal +ones have been read. The author is greatly indebted to the Honorable +Dr. Pardo de Tavera for the use of rare volumes from his library, and +he wishes to acknowledge also the kindness of Mr. Manuel Yriarte, Chief +of the Bureau of Archives, for permission to examine public documents. +The occasional reprints of the old Philippine histories have, however, +been used more frequently than the original editions. The splendid +series of reprinted works on the Philippines, promised by Miss Blair +and Mr. Robertson, was not begun in time to be used in the preparation +of this book. The appearance of this series will make easy a path which +the present writer <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb4" href="#pb4" name= +"pb4">4</a>]</span>has found comparatively difficult, and will open the +way for an incomparably better History of the Philippines than has ever +yet been made.</p> +<p>The drawings of ethnographic subjects, which partly illustrate this +book, were made from objects in the Philippine Museum by Mr. Anselmo +Espiritu, a teacher in the public schools of Manila. They are very +accurate.</p> +<p>Above every one else, in writing this book, the author is under +obligations to his wife, without whose constant help and encouragement +it could not have been written.</p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">David P. Barrows.</span></p> +<p class="signed"><span class="sc">Manila, Philippine Islands,<br> +March 1st, 1903.</span> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb5" href="#pb5" +name="pb5">5</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="toc" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="main">Contents.</h2> +<table class="tocList"> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">Page</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">I.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch1">The Philippines as a +Subject for Historical Study</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">9</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">II.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch2">The Peoples of the +Philippines</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">25</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">III.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch3">Europe and the Far +East about 1400 A.D.</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">42</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">IV.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch4">The Great +Geographical Discoveries</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">61</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">V.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch5">Filipino People +Before the Arrival of the Spaniards</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">88</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">VI.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch6">The Spanish Soldier +and the Spanish Missionary</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">108</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">VII.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch7">Period of Conquest +and Settlement, 1565–1600</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">125</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">VIII.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch8">The Philippines +Three Hundred Years Ago</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">156</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">IX.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch9">The Dutch and Moro +Wars, 1600–1663</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">187</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">X.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch10">A Century of +Obscurity and Decline, 1633–1762</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">212</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">XI.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch11">The Philippines +During the Period of European Revolution, 1762–1837</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">231</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">XII.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch12">Progress and +Revolution, 1837–1897</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">259</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum">XIII.</td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ch13">America and the +Philippines</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">287</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#app">Appendix</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">321</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="tocDivNum"></td> +<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><a href="#ix">Index</a></td> +<td class="tocPageNum">325</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +</div> +<div class="div1 map"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"></p> +<div class="figure xd19e360width" id="p006"><a href= +"images/p006h.jpg"><img src="images/p006.jpg" alt="Philippine Islands" +width="511" height="720"></a> +<p class="figureHead">Philippine Islands</p> +</div> +<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb8" href="#pb8" name= +"pb8">8</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="main">List of Maps.</h2> +<ul> +<li> <span class="tocPagenum">Page</span></li> +<li><a href="#p006">Philippine Islands</a> +<span class="tocPagenum">6, 7</span></li> +<li><a href="#p026">Countries and Peoples of Malaysia</a> + <span class="tocPagenum">26, 27</span></li> +<li><a href="#p030">Races and Tribes of the Philippines</a> + <span class="tocPagenum">30</span></li> +<li><a href="#p039">The Spread of Mohammedanism</a> + <span class="tocPagenum">39</span></li> +<li><a href="#p044">Europe about 1400 AD.</a> +<span class="tocPagenum">44</span></li> +<li><a href="#p050">Routes of Trade to the Far East</a> + <span class="tocPagenum">50</span></li> +<li><a href="#p058">The Countries of the Far East</a> + <span class="tocPagenum">58</span></li> +<li><a href="#p069">Restoration of Toscanelli’s Map</a> + <span class="tocPagenum">69</span></li> +<li><a href="#p077">Early Spanish Discoveries in the Philippines</a> + <span class="tocPagenum">77</span></li> +<li><a href="#p085">The New World and the Indies as divided between +Spain and Portugal</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum">85</span></li> +<li><a href="#p124">Conquest and Settlement by the Spaniards in the +Philippines, 1505–1590</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum">124</span></li> +<li><a href="#p133">Straits of Manila</a> +<span class="tocPagenum">133</span></li> +<li><a href="#p134">The City of Manila</a> +<span class="tocPagenum">134</span></li> +<li><a href="#p158">Luzon</a> <span class= +"tocPagenum">158, 159</span></li> +<li><a href="#p288">Mindanao, Visayas, and Paragua</a> + <span class="tocPagenum">288, 289</span></li> +<li><a href="#p302">American Campaigns in Northern Luzon</a> + <span class="tocPagenum">302</span></li> +</ul> +<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb9" href="#pb9" name= +"pb9">9</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="body"> +<div id="ch1" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="super">History of the Philippines.</h2> +<h2 class="label">Chapter I.</h2> +<h2 class="main">The Philippines as a Subject for Historical +Study.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>Purpose of this Book.</b>—This book has been +written for the young men and young women of the Philippines. It is +intended to introduce them into the history of their own island +country. The subject of Philippine history is much broader and more +splendid than the size and character of this little book reveal. Many +subjects have only been briefly touched upon, and there are many +sources of information, old histories, letters and official documents, +which the writer had not time and opportunity to study in the +preparation of this work. It is not too soon, however, to present a +history of the Philippines, even though imperfectly written, to the +Philippine people themselves; and if this book serves to direct young +men and young women to a study of the history of their own island +country, it will have fulfilled its purpose.</p> +<p><b>The Development of the Philippines and of Japan.</b>—In +many ways the next decade of the history of the Philippine Islands may +resemble the splendid development of the neighboring country of Japan. +Both countries have in past times been isolated more or less from the +life and thought of the modern world. Both are now open to the full +current of human affairs. Both countries promise to play an important +part in the politics and commerce of <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb10" href="#pb10" name="pb10">10</a>]</span>the Far East. +Geographically, the Philippines occupy the more central and influential +position, and the success of the institutions of the Philippines may +react upon the countries of southeastern Asia and Malaysia, to an +extent that we cannot appreciate or foresee, Japan, by reason of her +larger population, the greater industry of her people, a more orderly +social life, and devoted public spirit, is at the present time far in +the lead.</p> +<p><i>The Philippines.</i>—But the Philippines possess certain +advantages which, in the course of some years, may tell strongly in her +favor. There are greater natural resources, a richer soil, and more +tillable ground. The population, while not large, is increasing +rapidly, more rapidly, in fact, than the population of Japan or of +Java. And in the character of her institutions the Philippines have +certain advantages. The position of woman, while so unfortunate in +Japan, as in China and nearly all eastern countries, in the Philippines +is most fortunate, and is certain to tell effectually upon the +advancement of the race in competition with other eastern +civilizations. The fact that Christianity is the established religion +of the people makes possible a sympathy and understanding between the +Philippines and western countries.</p> +<p><i>Japan.</i>—Yet there are many lessons which Japan can teach +the Philippines, and one of these is of the advantages and rewards of +fearless and thorough study. Fifty years ago, Japan, which had +rigorously excluded all intercourse with foreign nations, was forced to +open its doors by an American fleet under Commodore Perry. At that time +the Japanese knew nothing of western history, and had no knowledge of +modern science. Their contact with the Americans and other foreigners +revealed to them the inferiority of their knowledge. The leaders of the +country <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb11" href="#pb11" name= +"pb11">11</a>]</span>awoke to the necessity of a study of western +countries and their great progress, especially in government and in the +sciences.</p> +<p>Japan had at her service a special class of people known as the +<i>samurai</i>, who, in the life of Old Japan, were the free soldiers +of the feudal nobility, and who were not only the fighters of Japan, +but the students and scholars as well. The young men of this +<i>samurai</i> class threw themselves earnestly and devotedly into the +study of the great fields of knowledge, which had previously been +unknown to the Japanese. At great sacrifice many of them went abroad to +other lands, in order to study in foreign universities. Numbers of them +went to the United States, frequently working as servants in college +towns in order to procure the means for the pursuit of their +education.</p> +<p>The Japanese Government in every way began to adopt measures for the +transformation of the knowledge of the people. Schools were opened, +laboratories established, and great numbers of scientific and +historical books were translated into Japanese. A public school system +was organized, and finally a university was established. The Government +sent abroad many young men to study in almost every branch of knowledge +and to return to the service of the people. The manufacturers of Japan +studied and adopted western machinery and modern methods of production. +The government itself underwent revolution and reorganization upon +lines more liberal to the people and more favorable to the national +spirit of the country. The result has been the transformation, in less +than fifty years, of what was formerly an isolated and ignorant +country.</p> +<p><i>The Lesson for the Filipinos.</i>—This is the great lesson +which Japan teaches the Philippines. If there is to be transformation +here, with a constant growth of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb12" +href="#pb12" name="pb12">12</a>]</span>knowledge and advancement, and +an elevation of the character of the people as a whole, there must be a +courageous and unfaltering search for the truth: and the young men and +young women of the Philippines must seek the advantages of education, +not for themselves, but for the benefit of their people and their land; +not to gain for themselves a selfish position of social and economic +advantage over the poor and less educated Filipinos, but in order that, +having gained these advantages for themselves, they may in turn give +them to their less fortunate countrymen. The young Filipino, man or +woman, must learn the lessons of truthfulness, courage, and +unselfishness, and in all of his gaining of knowledge, and in his use +of it as well, he must practice these virtues, or his learning will be +an evil to his land and not a blessing.</p> +<p>The aim of this book is to help him to understand, first of all, the +place that the Philippines occupy in the modern history of nations, so +that he may understand how far and from what beginnings the Filipino +people have progressed, toward what things the world outside has itself +moved during this time, and what place and opportunities the Filipinos, +as a people, may seek for in the future.</p> +<p><b>The Meaning of History.</b>—History, as it is written and +understood, comprises many centuries of human life and achievement, and +we must begin our study by discussing a little what history means. Men +may live for thousands of years without having a life that may be +called historical; for history is formed only where there are credible +written records of events. Until we have these records, we have no +ground for historical study, but leave the field to another study, +which we call Archeology, or Prehistoric Culture.</p> +<p><i>Historical Races.</i>—Thus there are great races which +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb13" href="#pb13" name= +"pb13">13</a>]</span>have no history, for they have left no records. +Either the people could not write, or their writings have been +destroyed, or they told nothing about the life of the people. The +history of these races began only with the coming of a historical, or +more advanced race among them.</p> +<p>Thus, the history of the black, or negro, race begins only with the +exploration of Africa by the white race, and the history of the +American Indians, except perhaps of those of Peru and Mexico, begins +only with the white man’s conquest of America. The white, or +European, race is, above all others, the great historical race; but the +yellow race, represented by the Chinese, has also a historical life and +development, beginning many centuries before the birth of Christ.</p> +<p><i>The European Race.</i>—For thousands of years the white +race was confined to the countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea. It +had but little contact with other races of men and almost no knowledge +of countries beyond the Mediterranean shores. The great continents of +America and Australia and the beautiful island-world of the Pacific and +Indian oceans were scarcely dreamed of. This was the status of the +white race in Europe a little more than five hundred years ago. How +different is the position of this race to-day! It has now explored +nearly the entire globe. The white people have crossed every continent +and every sea. On every continent they have established colonies and +over many countries their power.</p> +<p>During these last five centuries, besides this spread of +geographical discoveries, the mingling of all the races, and the +founding of great colonies, has come also the development of scientific +knowledge—great discoveries and inventions, such as the +utilization of steam and electricity, which give to man such tremendous +power over the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb14" href="#pb14" name= +"pb14">14</a>]</span>material world. Very important changes have also +marked the religious and political life of the race. Within these years +came the Protestant revolt from the Roman Catholic Church, destroying +in some degree the unity of Christendom; and the great revolutions of +Europe and America, establishing democratic and representative +governments.</p> +<p><i>The European Race and the Filipino People.</i>—This +expansion and progress of the European race early brought it into +contact with the Filipino people, and the historical life of the +Philippines dates from this meeting of the two races. Thus the history +of the Philippines has become a part of the history of nations. During +these centuries the people of these islands, subjects of a European +nation, have progressed in social life and government, in education and +industries, in numbers, and in wealth. They have often been stirred by +wars and revolutions, by centuries of piratical invasion, and fear of +conquest by foreign nations. But these dangers have now passed +away.</p> +<p>There is no longer fear of piratical ravage nor of foreign invasion, +nor is there longer great danger of internal revolt; for the +Philippines are at the present time under a government strong enough to +defend them against other powers, to put down plunder and ravage, and +one anxious and disposed to afford to the people such freedom of +opportunity, such advantages of government and life, that the incentive +to internal revolution will no longer exist. Secure from external +attack and rapidly progressing toward internal peace, the Philippines +occupy a position most fortunate among the peoples of the Far East. +They have representative government, freedom of religion, and public +education, and, what is more than all else to the aspiring or ambitious +race or individual, freedom of opportunity. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb15" href="#pb15" name="pb15">15</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>How History is Written.</b>—One other thing should be +explained here. Every child who reads this book should understand a +little how history is written. A most natural inquiry to be made +regarding any historical statement is, “How is this known?” +And this is as proper a question for the school boy as for the +statesman. The answer is, that history rests for its facts largely upon +the written records made by people who either lived at the time these +things took place, or so near to them that, by careful inquiry, they +could learn accurately of these matters and write them down in some +form, so that we to-day can read their accounts, and at least know how +these events appeared to men of the time.</p> +<p>But not all that a man writes, or even puts in a book, of things he +has seen and known, is infallibly accurate and free from error, +partiality, and untruthfulness. So the task of the historian is not +merely to read and accept all the contemporary records, but he must +also compare one account with another, weighing all that he can find, +making due allowance for prejudice, and on his own part trying to reach +a conclusion that shall be true. Of course, where records are few the +task is difficult indeed, and, on the other hand, material may be so +voluminous as to occupy a writer a lifetime, and make it impossible for +any one man completely to exhaust a subject.</p> +<p><b>Historical Accounts of the Philippines.</b>—For the +Philippines we are so fortunate as to have many adequate sources of a +reliable and attractive kind. In a few words some of these will be +described. Nearly all exist in at least a few libraries in the +Philippines, where they may sometime be consulted by the Filipino +student, and many of them, at least in later editions, may be purchased +by the student for his own possession and study. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb16" href="#pb16" name="pb16">16</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>The Voyages of Discovery.</i>—European discovery of the +Philippines began with the great voyage of Magellan; and recounting +this discovery of the islands, there is the priceless narrative of one +of Magellan’s company, Antonio Pigafetta. His book was written in +Italian, but was first published in a French translation. The original +copies made by Pigafetta have disappeared, but in 1800 a copy was +discovered in the Ambrosian Library of Milan, Italy, and published. +Translations into English and other languages exist. It may be found in +several collections of Voyages, and there is a good Spanish translation +and edition of recent date. (<span lang="es"><i>El Primer Viaje +alrededor del Mundo</i>, por Antonio Pigafetta, traducido por Dr. +Carlos Amoretti y anotado por Manuel Walls y Merino, Madrid, +1899.</span>) There are several other accounts of Magellan’s +voyage; but Pigafetta’s was the only one written by an +eye-witness, and his descriptions of the Bisaya Islands, Cebu, Borneo, +and the Moluccas are wonderfully interesting and accurate.</p> +<p>There were several voyages of discovery between Magellan’s +time (1521) and Legaspi’s time (1565). These include the +expeditions of Loaisa, Saavedra, and Villalobos, and accounts of them +are to be found in the great series of publications made by the Spanish +Government and called <i lang="es">Coleccion de documentos +ineditos</i>, and, in another series, Navarrete’s <i lang= +"es">Coleccion de los viajes y descubrimientos</i>.</p> +<p><i>Spanish Occupation and Conquest.</i>—As we come to the +history of Spanish occupation and conquest of the Philippines, we find +many interesting letters and reports sent by both soldiers and priests +to the king, or to persons in Spain. The first complete book on the +Philippines was written by a missionary about 1602, Father Predo +Chirino’s <i lang="es">Relacion de las Islas Filipinas</i>, +printed in Rome <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb17" href="#pb17" name= +"pb17">17</a>]</span>in 1604. This important and curious narrative is +exceedingly rare, but a reprint, although rude and poor, was made in +Manila in 1890, which is readily obtainable. The <i lang="es">Relacion +de las Islas Filipinas</i> was followed in 1609 by the work of Judge +Antonio de Morga, <i lang="es">Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas</i>. This +very rare work was printed in Mexico. In 1890 a new edition was brought +out by Dr. José Rizal, from the copy in the British Museum. +There is also an English translation.</p> +<p>These two works abound in curious and valuable information upon the +Filipino people as they were at the time of the arrival of the +Spaniards, as does also a later work, the <i lang="es">Conquista de las +Islas Filipinas</i>, by Friar Gaspar de San Augustin, printed in Madrid +in 1698. This latter is perhaps the most interesting and most important +early work on the Philippine Islands.</p> +<p>As we shall see, the history of the Philippines is closely connected +with that of the East Indian Spice Islands. When the Spanish forces +took the rich island of Ternate in 1606, the triumph was commemorated +by a volume, finely written, though not free from mistakes, the +<i>Conquista de las Islas Moluccas</i>, by Leonardo de Argensola, +Madrid, 1609. There is an old English translation, and also French and +Dutch translations.</p> +<p>To no other religious order do we owe so much historical information +as to the Jesuits. The scholarship and literary ability of the Company +have always been high. Chirino was a Jesuit, as was also Father +Francisco Colin, who wrote the <i lang="la">Labor Evangelica</i>, a +narrative of the Jesuit missions in the Philippines, China, and Japan, +which was printed in Madrid in 1663. This history was continued years +later by Father Murillo Velarde, who wrote what he called the <i lang= +"es">Segunda Parte</i>, the <i lang="es">Historia de la Provincia de +Filipinas de la Compania de Jesus</i>, Manila, 1749. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb18" href="#pb18" name="pb18">18</a>]</span></p> +<p>There is another notable Jesuit work to which we owe much of the +early history of the great island of Mindanao: this is the <i lang= +"es">Historia de Mindanao y Jolo</i>, by Father Francisco Combes. The +year 1663 marked, as we shall see, an epoch in the relations between +the Spaniards and the Mohammedan Malays. In that year the Spaniards +abandoned the fortress of Zamboanga, and retired from southern +Mindanao. The Jesuits had been the missionaries in those parts of the +southern archipelago, and they made vigorous protests against the +abandonment of Moro territory. One result of their efforts to secure +the reoccupancy of these fortresses was the notable work mentioned +above. It is the oldest and most important writing about the island and +the inhabitants of Mindanao. It was printed in Madrid in 1667. A +beautiful and exact edition was brought out a few years ago, by +Retana.</p> +<p>A Dominican missionary, Father Diego Aduarte, wrote a very important +work, the <i lang="es">Historia de la Provincia del Sancto Rosario de +la Orden de Predicadores en Filipinas, Japon y China</i>, which was +printed in Manila at the College of Santo Tomas in 1640.</p> +<p>We may also mention as containing a most interesting account of the +Philippines about the middle of the seventeenth century, the famous +work on China, by the Dominican, Father Fernandez Navarrete, <i lang= +"es">Tratados historicos, politicos, ethnicos, y religiosos de la +Monarchia de China</i>, Madrid, 1767. Navarrete arrived in these +islands in 1648, and was for a time a cura on the island of Mindoro. +Later he was a missionary in China, and then Professor of Divinity in +the University of Santo Tomas. His work is translated into English in +Churchill’s <i>Collection of Voyages and Travels</i>, London, +1744, second volume.</p> +<p>The eighteenth century is rather barren of interesting <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb19" href="#pb19" name= +"pb19">19</a>]</span>historical matter. There was considerable activity +in the production of grammars and dictionaries of the native languages, +and more histories of the religious orders were also produced. These +latter, while frequently filled with sectarian matter, should not be +overlooked.</p> +<p>Between the years 1788 and 1792 was published the voluminous +<i lang="es">Historia General de Filipinas</i>, in fourteen volumes, by +the Recollect friar, Father Juan de la Concepcion. The work abounds in +superfluous matter and trivial details, yet it is a copious source of +information, a veritable mine of historical data, and is perhaps the +best known and most frequently used work upon the Philippine Islands. +There are a number of sets in the Philippines which can be consulted by +the student.</p> +<p>Some years after, and as a sort of protest against so extensive a +treatment of history, the sane and admirable Augustinian, Father +Joaquin Martinez de Zuñiga, wrote his <i lang="es">Historia de +las Islas Filipinas</i>, a volume of about seven hundred pages. It was +printed in Sampaloc, Manila, in 1803. This writer is exceptional for +his fairmindedness, his freedom from the narrow prejudices which have +characterized most of the writers on the Philippines. His language is +terse and spirited, and his volume is the most readable and, in many +ways, the most valuable attempt at a history of the Philippines. His +narrative closes with the English occupation of Manila in 1763.</p> +<p><i>Recent Histories and Other Historical Materials.</i>—The +sources for the conditions and history of the islands during the last +century differ somewhat from the preceding. The documentary sources in +the form of public papers and reports are available, and there is a +considerable mass of pamphlets dealing with special questions in the +Philippines. The publication of the official journal of <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb20" href="#pb20" name="pb20">20</a>]</span>the +Government, the <i lang="es">Gazeta de Manila</i>, commenced in 1861. +It contains all acts of legislation, orders of the Governors, pastoral +letters, and other official matters, down to the end of Spanish +rule.</p> +<p>A vast amount of material, for the recent civil history of the +islands exists in the Archives of the Philippines, at Manila, but these +documents have been very little examined. Notable among these original +documents is the series of Royal Cedulas, each bearing the signature of +the King of Spain, “Yo, el Rey.” They run back from the +last years of sovereignty to the commencement of the seventeenth +century. The early cedulas, on the establishment of Spanish rule, are +said to have been carried away by the British army in 1763, and to be +now in the British Museum.</p> +<p>Of the archives of the Royal Audiencia at Manila, the series of +judgments begins with one of 1603, which is signed by Antonia de Morga. +From this date they appear to be complete. The earliest records of the +cases which came before this court that can be found, date from the +beginning of the eighteenth century.</p> +<p>Of modern historical writings mention must be made of the <i lang= +"es">Historia de Filipinas</i>, three volumes, 1887, by Montero y +Vidal, and the publications of W. E. Retana. To the scholarship and +enthusiasm of this last author much is owed. His work has been the +republication of rare and important sources. His edition of Combes has +already been mentioned, and there should also be mentioned, and if +possible procured, his <i lang="es">Archivo del Bibliofilo</i>, four +volumes, a collection of rare papers on the islands, of different +dates; and his edition, the first ever published, of +<i>Zuñiga’s Estadismo de las Islas Filipinas</i>, an +incomparable survey of the islands made about 1800, by the priest and +historian whose history was mentioned above. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb21" href="#pb21" name="pb21">21</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>Accounts of Voyagers Who Visited the Philippines.</i>—These +references give some idea of the historical literature of the +Philippines. They comprise those works which should be chiefly +consulted. There should not be omitted the numerous accounts of +voyagers who have visited these islands from time to time, and who +frequently give us very valuable information. The first of these are +perhaps the English and Dutch freebooters, who prowled about these +waters to waylay the richly laden galleons. One of these was Dampier, +who, about 1690, visited the Ladrones and the Philippines. His <i>New +Voyage Around the World</i> was published in 1697. There was also +Anson, who in 1743 took the Spanish galleon off the coast of Samar, and +whose voyage is described in a volume published in 1745. There was an +Italian physician, Carreri, who visited the islands in 1697, in the +course of a voyage around the world, and who wrote an excellent +description of the Philippines, which is printed in English translation +in Churchill’s <i>Collection of Voyages</i>.</p> +<p>A French expedition visited the East between 1774 and 1781, and the +Commissioner, M. Sonnerat, has left a brief account of the Spanish +settlements in the islands as they then appeared. (<i lang="fr">Voyage +aux Indes Orientales et à la Chine</i>, Paris, 1782, Vol. +3.)</p> +<p>There are a number of travellers’ accounts written in the last +century, of which may be mentioned Sir John Bowring’s <i>Visit to +the Philippine Islands</i>, 1859, and Jagor’s <i lang="de">Reisen +in der Philippinen</i>, travels in the year 1859 and 1860, which has +received translation into both English and Spanish.</p> +<p><i>Bibliographies.</i>—For the historical student a +bibliographical guide is necessary. Such a volume was brought out in +1898, by Retana, <i lang="es">Catalogo abreviado de la Biblioteca +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb22" href="#pb22" name= +"pb22">22</a>]</span>Filipina</i>. It contains a catalogue of five +thousand seven hundred and eighty works, published in or upon the +Philippines. A still more exact and useful bibliography has been +prepared by the Honorable T. H. Pardo de Tavera, <i lang= +"es">Biblioteca Filipina</i>, and is published by the United States +Government.</p> +<p>It is lamentable that the Philippines Government possesses no +library of works on the Archipelago. The foundation of such an +institution seems to have been quite neglected by the Spanish +Government, and works on the Philippines are scarcely to be found, +except as they exist in private collections. The largest of these is +said to be that of the Compañia General de Tabacos, at +Barcelona, which has also recently possessed itself of the splendid +library of Retana. In Manila the Honorable Dr. Pardo de Tavera +possesses the only notable library in the islands.</p> +<p>Since the above was written the Philippines Government has commenced +the collection of historic works in the Philippines, and a talented +young Filipino scholar, Mr. Zulueta, has gone to Spain for extensive +search, both of archives and libraries, in order to enrich the public +collection in the Philippines.</p> +<p>The publication of a very extensive series of sources of Philippine +history has also been begun by the Arthur H. Clark Company in the +United States, under the editorship of Miss E. H. Blair and Mr. J. A. +Robertson. The series will embrace fifty-five volumes, and will contain +in English translations all available historical material on the +Philippines, from the age of discovery to the nineteenth century. This +notable collection will place within the reach of the student all the +important sources of his country’s history, and will make +possible a more extensive and accurate writing of the history of the +islands than has ever before been possible. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb23" href="#pb23" name="pb23">23</a>]</span></p> +<p>In addition to the published works, there repose numerous unstudied +documents of Philippine history in <span class="corr" id="xd19e730" +title="Source: the the">the</span> Archives of the Indies at +Seville.</p> +<p><b>Historical Work for the Filipino Student.</b>—After reading +this book, or a similar introductory history, the student should +procure, one by one, as many as he can of the volumes which have been +briefly described above, and, by careful reading and patient thought, +try to round out the story of his country and learn the lessons of the +history of his people. He will find it a study that will stimulate his +thought and strengthen his judgment; but always he must search for the +truth, even though the truth is sometimes humiliating and sad. If there +are <span class="corr" id="xd19e737" title= +"Source: re-regrettable">regrettable</span> passages in our own lives, +we cannot find either happiness or improvement in trying to deny to +ourselves that we have done wrong, and so conceal and minimize our +error. So if there are dark places in the history of our land and +people, we must not obscure the truth in the mistaken belief that we +are defending our people’s honor, for, by trying to conceal the +fact and excuse the fault, we only add to the shame. It is by frank +acknowledgment and clear depiction of previous errors that the +country’s honor will be protected now and in the future.</p> +<p>Very interesting and important historical work can be done by the +Filipino student in his own town or province. The public and parish +records have in many towns suffered neglect or destruction. In all +possible cases these documents should be gathered up and cared for. For +many things, they are worthy of study. They can show the growth of +population, the dates of erection of the public buildings, the former +system of government, and social conditions.</p> +<p>This is a work in which the patriotism of every young <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb24" href="#pb24" name="pb24">24</a>]</span>man and +woman can find an expression. Many sites throughout the islands are +notable for the historic occurrences which they witnessed. These should +be suitably marked with tablets or monuments, and the exact facts of +the events that took place should be carefully collected, and put in +writing. Towns and provinces should form public libraries containing, +among other works, books on the Philippines; and it should be a matter +of pride to the young Filipino scholar to build up such local +institutions, and to educate his townsmen in their use and +appreciation.</p> +<p>But throughout such studies the student should remember that his +town or locality is of less importance, from a patriotic standpoint, +than his country as a whole; that the interests of one section should +never be placed above those of the Archipelago; and that, while his +first and foremost duty is to his town and to his people, among whom he +was born and nurtured, he owes a greater obligation to his whole +country and people, embracing many different islands and different +tongues, and to the great Government which holds and protects the +Philippine Islands, and which is making possible the free development +of its inhabitants.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e748width"><img src="images/p041.jpg" alt= +"Copy of the Koran from Mindanao." width="304" height="213"> +<p class="figureHead">Copy of the Koran from Mindanao.</p> +</div> +<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb25" href="#pb25" name= +"pb25">25</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ch2" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Chapter II.</h2> +<h2 class="main">The Peoples of the Philippines.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>The Study of Ethnology.</b>—The study of +races and peoples forms a separate science from history, and is known +as <i>ethnology</i>, or the science of races. Ethnology informs us how +and where the different races of mankind originated. It explains the +relationships between the races as well as the differences of mind, of +body, and of mode of living which different people exhibit.</p> +<p>All such knowledge is of great assistance to the statesman as he +deals with the affairs of his own people and of other peoples, and it +helps private individuals of different races to understand one another +and to treat each other with due respect, kindness, and sympathy. +Inasmuch, too, as the modern history which we are studying deals with +many different peoples of different origin and race, and as much of our +history turns upon these differences, we must look for a little at the +ethnology of the Philippines.</p> +<p><b>The Negritos.</b>—<i>Physical +Characteristics.</i>—The great majority of the natives of our +islands belong to what is usually called the Malayan race, or the +Oceanic Mongols. There is, however, one interesting little race +scattered over the Philippines, which certainly has no relationship at +all with Malayans. These little people are called by the +Tagálog, “Aeta” or “Ita.” The Spaniards, +when they arrived, called them “Negritos,” or “little +negroes,” the name by which they are best known. Since they +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb28" href="#pb28" name= +"pb28">28</a>]</span>were without question the first inhabitants of +these islands of whom we have any knowledge, we shall speak of them at +once.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e777width" id="p026"><a href= +"images/p026h.jpg"><img src="images/p026.jpg" alt= +"Countries and Peoples of Malaysia" width="720" height="516"></a> +<p class="figureHead">Countries and Peoples of Malaysia</p> +</div> +<p>They are among the very smallest peoples in the world, the average +height of the men being about 145 centimeters, or the height of an +American boy of twelve years; the women are correspondingly smaller. +They have such dark-brown skins that many people suppose them to be +quite black; their hair is very wooly or kinky, and forms thick mats +upon their heads. In spite of these peculiarities, they are not +unattractive in appearance. Their eyes are large and of a fine brown +color, their features are quite regular, and their little bodies often +beautifully shaped.</p> +<p>The appearance of these little savages excited the attention of the +first Spaniards, and there are many early accounts of them. Padre +Chirino, who went as a missionary in 1592 to Panay, begins the +narrative of his labors in that island as follows: “Among the +Bisayas, there are also some Negroes. They are less black and ugly than +those of Guinea, and they are much smaller and weaker, but their hair +and beard are just the same. They are much more barbarous and wild than +the Bisayas and other Filipinos, for they have neither houses nor any +fixed sites for dwelling. They neither plant nor reap, but live like +wild beasts, wandering with their wives and children through the +mountains, almost naked. They hunt the deer and wild boar, and when +they kill one they stop right there until all the flesh is consumed. Of +property they have nothing except the bow and arrow.”<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e785src" href="#xd19e785" name= +"xd19e785src">1</a></p> +<p><i>Manners and Customs.</i>—The Negritos still have this wild, +timid character, and few have ever been truly civilized <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb29" href="#pb29" name="pb29">29</a>]</span>in spite +of the efforts of some of the Spanish missionaries. They still roam +through the mountains, seldom building houses, but making simply a +little wall and roof of brush to keep off the wind and rain. They kill +deer, wild pigs, monkeys, and birds, and in hunting they are very +expert; but their principal food is wild roots and tubers, which they +roast in ashes. Frequently in traveling through the mountains, although +one may see nothing of these timid little folk, he will see many large, +freshly dug holes from each of which they have taken out a root.</p> +<p>The Negritos ornament their bodies by making little rows of cuts on +the breast, back, and arms, and leaving the scars in ornamental +patterns; and some of them also file their front teeth to points. In +their hair they wear bamboo combs with long plumes of hair or of the +feathers of the mountain cock. They have curious dances, and ceremonies +for marriage and for death.</p> +<p><i>Distribution.</i>—The Negritos have retired from many +places where they lived when the Spaniards first arrived, but there are +still several thousand in Luzon, especially in the Cordillera Zambales, +on the Pacific coast, and in the Sierra Madre range; and in the +interior of Panay, Negros, Tablas, and in Surigao of Mindanao.</p> +<p><i>Relation of the Negritos to Other Dwarfs of the +World.</i>—Although the Negritos have had very little effect on +the history of the Philippines, they are of much interest as a race to +scientists, and we can not help asking, Whence came these curious +little people, and what does their presence here signify? While science +can not at present fully answer these questions, what we do actually +know about these pygmies is full of interest.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e808width" id="p030"><a href= +"images/p030h.jpg"><img src="images/p030.jpg" alt= +"Races and Tribes of the Philippines" width="442" height="720"></a> +<p class="figureHead">Races and Tribes of the Philippines</p> +</div> +<p>The Aetas of the Philippines are not the only black dwarfs in the +world. A similar little people, who must <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb31" href="#pb31" name="pb31">31</a>]</span>belong to the same race, +live in the mountains and jungles of the Malay peninsula. On the +Andaman Islands in the Indian Ocean, all the aboriginal inhabitants are +similar pygmies, called “Mincopies.” Some traces of their +former existence are reported from many other places in the East +Indies.</p> +<p>Thus it may be that there was a time when these little men and women +had much of this island-world quite to themselves, and their race +stretched unbrokenly from the Philippines across Malacca to the Indian +Ocean. As it would have been impossible for so feeble a people to force +their way from one island to another after the arrival of the stronger +races, who have now confined them to the mountainous interiors, we are +obliged to believe that the Negritos were on the ground first, and that +at one time they were more numerous. The Indian archipelago was then a +world of black pygmies. It may be that they were even more extensive +than this, for one of the most curious discoveries of modern times has +been the finding of similar little blacks in the equatorial forests of +Africa.</p> +<p>The Negritos must not be confused with the black or negro race of +New Guinea or Melanesia, who are commonly called Papuans; for those +Negroes are of tall stature and belong with the true Negroes of Africa, +though how the Negro race thus came to be formed of two so widely +separated branches we do not know.</p> +<p><b>The Malayan Race.</b>—<i>Origin of the Race.</i>—It +is thought that the Malayan race originated in southeastern Asia. From +the mainland it spread down into the peninsula and so scattered +southward and eastward over the rich neighboring islands. Probably +these early Malayans found the little Negritos in possession and slowly +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb32" href="#pb32" name= +"pb32">32</a>]</span>drove them backward, destroying them from many +islands until they no longer exist except in the places we have already +named.</p> +<p>With the beginning of this migratory movement which carried them +from one island to another of the great East Indian Archipelago, these +early Malayans must have invented the boats and praos for which they +are famed, and have become skillful sailors living much upon the +sea.</p> +<p><i>Effect of the Migration.</i>—Life for many generations, +upon these islands, so warm, tropical, and fruitful, <span class="corr" +id="xd19e835" title="Source: graduually">gradually</span> modified +these emigrants from Asia, until they became in mind and body quite a +different race from the Mongol inhabitants of the mainland.</p> +<p><i>Characteristics.</i>—The Malayan peoples are of a +light-brown color, with a light yellowish undertone on some parts of +the skin, with straight black hair, dark-brown eyes, and, though they +are a small race in stature, they are finely formed, muscular, and +active. The physical type is nearly the same throughout all Malaysia, +but the different peoples making up the race differ markedly from one +another in culture. They are divided also by differences in religion. +There are many tribes which are pagan. On Bali and Lombok, little +islands south of Java, the people are still Brahmin, like most +inhabitants of India. In other parts of Malaysia they are Mohammedans, +while in the Philippines alone they are mostly Christians.</p> +<p><b>The Wild Malayan Tribes.</b>—Considering first the pagan or +the wild Malayan peoples, we find that in the interior of the Malay +Peninsula and of many of the islands, such as Sumatra, Borneo and the +Celebes, there are wild Malayan tribes, who have come very little in +contact with the successive civilizing changes that have passed over +this archipelago. The true Malays call these folk “Orang +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb33" href="#pb33" name= +"pb33">33</a>]</span>benua,” or “men of the country,” +Many are almost savages, some are cannibals, and others are headhunters +like some of the Dyaks of Borneo.</p> +<p><i>In the Philippines</i>, too, we find what is probably this same +class of wild people living in the mountains. They are warlike, savage, +and resist approach. Sometimes they eat human flesh as a ceremonial +act, and some prize above all other trophies the heads of their +enemies, which they cut from the body and preserve in their homes. It +is probable that these tribes represent the earliest and rudest epoch +of Malayan culture, and that these were the first of this race to +arrive in the Philippines and dispute with the Negritos for the mastery +of the soil. In such wild state of life, some of them, like the +Manguianes of Mindoro, have continued to the present day.</p> +<p><i>The Tribes in Northern Luzon.</i>—In northern Luzon, in the +great Cordillera Central, there are many of these primitive tribes. +These people are preëminently mountaineers. They prefer the high, +cold, and semi-arid crests and valleys of the loftiest ranges. Here, +with great industry, they have made gardens by the building of +stone-walled terraces on the slopes of the hills. Sometimes hundreds of +these terraces can be counted in one valley, and they rise one above +the other from the bottom of a cañon for several miles almost to +the summit of a ridge. These terraced gardens are all under most +careful irrigation. Water is carried for many miles by log flumes and +ditches, to be distributed over these little fields. The soil is +carefully fertilized with the refuse of the villages. Two and +frequently three crops are produced each year. Here we find undoubtedly +the most developed and most nearly scientific agriculture in the +Philippines. They raise rice, cotton, tobacco, the taro, maize, and +especially the camote, or <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb34" href= +"#pb34" name="pb34">34</a>]</span>sweet potato, which is their +principal food. These people live in compact, well-built villages, +frequently of several hundred houses. Some of these tribes, like the +Igorrotes of Benguet and the Tinguianes of Abra, are peaceable as well +as industrious. In Benguet there are fine herds of cattle, much +excellent coffee, and from time immemorial the Igorrotes here have +mined gold.</p> +<p>Besides these peaceful tribes there are in Bontoc, and in the +northern parts of the Cordillera, many large tribes, with splendid +mountain villages, who are nevertheless in a constant and dreadful +state of war. Nearly every town is in feud with its neighbors, and the +practice of taking heads leads to frequent murder and combat. A most +curious tribe of persistent head hunters are the Ibilao, or Ilongotes, +who live in the Caraballo Sur Mountains between Nueva Ecija and Nueva +Vizcaya.</p> +<p>On other islands of the Philippines there are similar wild tribes. +On the island of Paragua there are the Tagbanúa and other savage +folk.</p> +<p><i>Characteristics of the Tribes of Mindanao.</i>—In Mindanao, +there are many more tribes. Three of these tribes, the Aetas, Mandaya, +and Manobo, are on the eastern coast and around Mount Apo. In Western +Mindanao, there is quite a large but scattered tribe called the +Subanon. These people make clearings on the hillsides and support +themselves by raising maize and mountain rice. They also raise hemp, +and from the fiber they weave truly beautiful blankets and garments, +artistically dyed in very curious patterns. These peoples are nearly +all pagans, though a few are being gradually converted to +Mohammedanism, and some to Christianity. The pagans occasionally +practice the revolting rites of human sacrifice and ceremonial +cannibalism. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb35" href="#pb35" name= +"pb35">35</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>The Civilized Malayan Peoples.</b>—<i>Their Later +Arrival.</i>—At a later date than the arrival of these primitive +Malayan tribes, there came to the Philippines others of a more +developed culture and a higher order of intelligence. These peoples +rapidly mastered the low country and the coasts of all the islands, +driving into the interior the earlier comers and the aboriginal +Negritos. These later arrivals, though all of one stock, differed +considerably, and spoke different dialects belonging to one language +family. They were the ancestors of the present civilized Filipino +people.</p> +<p><i>Distribution of These Peoples.</i>—All through the central +islands, Panay, Negros, Leyte, Samar, Marinduque, and northern +Mindanao, are the Bisaya, the largest of these peoples. At the southern +extremity of Luzon, in the provinces of Sorsogon and the Camarines, are +the Bicol. North of these, holding central Luzon, Batangas, Cavite, +Manila, Laguna, Bataan, Bulacan, and Nueva Ecija, are the +Tagálog, while the great plain of northern Luzon is occupied by +the Pampango and Pangasinan. All the northwest coast is inhabited by +the Ilocano, and the valley of the Cagayan by a people commonly called +Cagayanes, but whose dialect is Ibanag. In Nueva Vizcaya province, on +the Batanes Islands and the Calamianes, there are other distinct +branches of the Filipino people, but they are much smaller in numbers +and less important than the tribes marked above.</p> +<div class="figure floatRight xd19e879width"><img src="images/p035.jpg" +alt="Mindanao Belt of Bamboo Fiber." width="315" height="155"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e881" title= +"Source: Belt of Rattan.">Mindanao Belt of Bamboo Fiber.</span></p> +</div> +<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb36" href="#pb36" name= +"pb36">36</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>Importance of These Peoples.</i>—They form politically and +historically the Filipino people. They are the Filipinos whom the +Spaniards ruled for more than three hundred years. All are converts to +Christianity, and all have attained a somewhat similar stage of +civilization.</p> +<p><b>Early Contact of the Malays and Hindus.</b>—These people at +the time of their arrival in the Philippines were probably not only of +a higher plane of intelligence than any who had preceded them in the +occupation of the islands, but they appear to have had the advantages +of contact with a highly developed culture that had appeared in the +eastern archipelago some centuries earlier.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e893width"><img src="images/p036.jpg" alt= +"Mindanao Brass Vessels." width="531" height="303"> +<p class="figureHead">Mindanao Brass Vessels.</p> +</div> +<p><i>Early Civilization in India.</i>—More than two thousand +years ago, India produced a remarkable civilization. There were great +cities of stone, magnificent palaces, a life of splendid luxury, and a +highly organized social and political system. Writing, known as the +Sanskrit, had been developed, and a great literature of poetry +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb37" href="#pb37" name= +"pb37">37</a>]</span>and philosophy produced. Two great religions, +Brahminism and Buddhism, arose, the latter still the dominant religion +of Tibet, China, and Japan. The people who produced this civilization +are known as the Hindus. Fourteen or fifteen hundred years ago Hinduism +spread over Burma, Siam, and Java. Great cities were erected with +splendid temples and huge idols, the ruins of which still remain, +though their magnificence has gone and they are covered to-day with the +growth of the jungle.</p> +<p><i>Influence of Hindu Culture on the Malayan Peoples.</i>—This +powerful civilization of the Hindus, established thus in Malaysia, +greatly affected the Malayan people on these islands, as well as those +who came to the Philippines. Many words in the Tagálog have been +shown to have a Sanskrit origin, and the systems of writing which the +Spaniards found in use among several of the Filipino peoples had +certainly been developed from the alphabet then in use among these +Hindu peoples of Java.</p> +<p><b>The Rise of Mohammedanism.</b>—<i>Mohammed.</i>—A few +hundred years later another great change, due to religious faith, came +over the Malayan race,—a change which has had a great effect upon +the history of the Philippines, and is still destined to modify events +far into the future. This was the conversion to Mohammedanism. Of all +the great religions of the world, Mohammedanism was the last to arise, +and its career has in some ways been the most remarkable. Mohammed, its +founder, was an Arab, born about 572 <span class="sc">A.D.</span> At +that time Christianity was established entirely around the +Mediterranean and throughout most of Europe, but Arabia was idolatrous. +Mohammed was one of those great, prophetic souls which arise from time +to time in the world’s history. All he could learn from +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb38" href="#pb38" name= +"pb38">38</a>]</span>Hebrewism and Christianity, together with the +result of his own thought and prayers, led him to the belief in one +God, the Almighty, the Compassionate, the Merciful, who as he believed +would win all men to His knowledge through the teachings of Mohammed +himself. Thus inspired, Mohammed became a teacher or prophet, and by +the end of his life he had won his people to his faith and inaugurated +one of the greatest eras of conquest the world has seen.</p> +<p><i>Spread of Mohammedanism to Africa and Europe.</i>—The +armies of Arabian horsemen, full of fanatical enthusiasm to convert the +world to their faith, in a century’s time wrested from +Christendom all Judea, Syria, and Asia Minor, the sacred land where +Jesus lived and taught, and the countries where Paul and the other +apostles had first established Christianity. Thence they swept along +the north coast of Africa, bringing to an end all that survived of +Roman power and religion, and by 720 they had crossed into Europe and +were in possession of Spain. For nearly the eight hundred years that +followed, the Christian Spaniards fought to drive Mohammedanism from +the peninsula, before they were successful.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e925width" id="p039"><a href= +"images/p039h.jpg"><img src="images/p039.jpg" alt= +"The Spread of Mohammedanism" width="720" height="438"></a> +<p class="figureHead">The Spread of Mohammedanism</p> +</div> +<p><i>The Conversion of the Malayans to Mohammedanism.</i>—Not +only did Mohammedanism move westward over Africa and Europe, it was +carried eastward as well. Animated by their faith, the Arabs became the +greatest sailors, explorers, merchants, and geographers of the age. +They sailed from the Red Sea down the coast of Africa as far as +Madagascar, and eastward to India, where they had settlements on both +the Malabar and Coromandel coasts. Thence Arab missionaries brought +their faith to Malaysia.</p> +<p>At that time the true Malays, the tribe from which the common term +“Malayan” has been derived, were a <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb40" href="#pb40" name="pb40">40</a>]</span>small +people of Sumatra. At least as early as 1250 they were converted to +Mohammedanism, brought to them by these Arabian missionaries, and under +the impulse of this mighty faith they broke from their obscurity and +commenced that great conquest and expansion that has diffused their +power, language, and religion throughout the East Indies.</p> +<p><i>Mohammedan Settlement in Borneo.</i>—A powerful Mohammedan +Malay settlement was established on the western coasts of Borneo +certainly as early as 1400. The more primitive inhabitants, like the +Dyaks, who were a tribe of the primitive Malayans, were defeated, and +the possession of the coast largely taken from them. From this coast of +Borneo came many of the adventurers who were traversing the seas of the +Philippines when the Spaniards arrived.</p> +<p><i>The Mohammedan Population of Mindanao and Jolo</i> owes something +certainly to this same Malay migration which founded the colony of +Borneo. But the Maguindanao and Illano Moros seem to be largely +descendants of primitive tribes, such as the Manobo and Tiruray, who +were converted to Mohammedanism by Malay and Arab proselyters. The +traditions of the Maguindanao Moros ascribe their conversion to +Kabunsuan, a native of Johore, the son of an Arab father and Malay +mother. He came to Maguindanao with a band of followers, and from him +the datos of Maguindanao trace their lineage. Kabunsuan is supposed to +be descended from Mohammed through his Arab father, Ali, and so the +datos of Maguindanao to the present day proudly believe that in their +veins flows the blood of the Prophet.</p> +<p><b>The Coming of the Spaniards.</b>—Mohammedanism was still +increasing in the Philippines when the Spaniards arrived. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb41" href="#pb41" name="pb41">41</a>]</span>The +Mohammedans already had a foothold on Manila Bay, and their gradual +conquest of the archipelago was interrupted only by the coming of the +Europeans. It is a strange historical occurrence that the Spaniards, +having fought with the Mohammedans for nearly eight centuries for the +possession of Spain, should have come westward around the globe to the +Philippine Islands and there resumed the ancient conflict with them. +Thus the Spaniards were the most determined opponents of Mohammedanism +on both its western and eastern frontiers. Their ancient foes who +crossed into Spain from Morocco had been always known as +“Moros” or “Moors,” and quite naturally they +gave to these new Mohammedan enemies the same title, and Moros they are +called to the present day.</p> +<p><b>Summary.</b>—Such, then, are the elements which form the +population of these islands,—a few thousands of the little +Negritos; many wild mountain tribes of the primitive Malayans; a later +immigration of Malayans of higher cultivation and possibilities than +any that preceded them, who had been influenced by the Hinduism of Java +and who have had in recent centuries an astonishing growth both in +numbers and in culture; and last, the fierce Mohammedan sea-rovers, the +true Malays. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb42" href="#pb42" name= +"pb42">42</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e785" href="#xd19e785src" name="xd19e785">1</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Relacion de las Islas Filipinas</i>, 2d ed., p. 38.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ch3" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Chapter III.</h2> +<h2 class="main">Europe and the Far East about 1400 A.D.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>The Mediæval Period in +Europe.</b>—<i>Length of the Middle Age.</i>—By the Middle +Ages we mean the centuries between 500 and 1300 <span class= +"sc">A.D.</span> This period begins with the fall of the Roman Empire +and the looting of the Imperial City by the rude German tribes, and +ends with the rise of a new literature, a new way of looking at the +world in general, and a passion for discovery of every kind.</p> +<p>These eight hundred years had been centuries of cruel struggle, +intellectual darkness, and social depression, but also of great +religious devotion. Edward Gibbon, one of the greatest historians, +speaks of this period as “the triumph of barbarism and +religion.”</p> +<p>The population of Europe was largely changed, during the first few +centuries of the Christian Era, as the Roman Empire, that greatest +political institution of all history, slowly decayed. New peoples of +German or Teutonic origin came, fighting their way into western Europe +and settling wherever the land attracted them. Thus Spain and Italy +received the Goths; France, the Burgundians and Franks; England, the +Saxons and Angles or English.</p> +<p>These peoples were all fierce, warlike, free, unlettered barbarians. +Fortunately, they were all converted to Christianity by Roman priests +and missionaries. They embraced this faith with ardor, at the same time +that other peoples and lands were being lost to Christendom. Thus it +has resulted that the countries where Christianity <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb43" href="#pb43" name="pb43">43</a>]</span>arose +and first established itself, are now no longer Christian, and this +religion, which had an Asiatic and Semitic origin, has become the +distinguishing faith of the people of western Europe. For centuries the +countries of Europe were fiercely raided and disturbed by pillaging and +murdering hordes; by the Huns, who followed in the Germans from the +East; by the Northmen, cruel pirating seamen from Scandinavia; and, as +we have already seen, by the Mohammedans, or Saracens as they were +called, who came into central Europe by way of Spain.</p> +<p><b>Character of the Life during this +Period.</b>—<i>Feudalism.</i>—Life was so beset with peril +that independence or freedom became impossible, and there was developed +a society which has lasted almost down to the present time, and which +we call Feudalism. The free but weak man gave up his freedom and his +lands to some stronger man, who became his lord. He swore obedience to +this lord, while the lord engaged to furnish him protection and gave +him back his lands to hold as a “fief,” both sharing in the +product. This lord swore allegiance to some still more powerful man, or +“overlord,” and became his “vassal,” pledged to +follow him to war with a certain number of armed men; and this +overlord, on his part, owed allegiance to the prince, who was, perhaps, +a duke or bishop (bishops at this time were also feudal lords), or to +the king or emperor. Thus were men united into large groups or nations +for help or protection. There was little understanding of love of +country. Patriotism, as we feel it, was replaced by the passion of +fidelity or allegiance to one’s feudal superior.</p> +<p><i>Disadvantages of Feudalism.</i>—The great curse of this +system was that the feudal lords possessed the power to make war upon +one another, and so continuous were <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb45" +href="#pb45" name="pb45">45</a>]</span>their jealousies and quarrelings +that the land was never free from armed bands, who laid waste an +opponent’s country, killing the miserable serfs who tilled the +soil, and destroying their homes and cattle.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e993width" id="p044"><a href= +"images/p044h.gif"><img src="images/p044.gif" alt= +"Europe about 1400 AD." width="720" height="443"></a> +<p class="figureHead">Europe about 1400 AD.</p> +</div> +<p>There was little joy in life and no popular learning. If a man did +not enjoy warfare, but one other life was open to him, and that was in +the Church. War and religion were the pursuits of life, and it is no +wonder that many of the noblest and best turned their backs upon a life +that promised only fighting and bloodshed and, renouncing the world, +became monks. Monasticism developed in Europe under such conditions as +these, and so strong were the religious feelings of the age that at one +time a third of the land of France was owned by the religious +orders.</p> +<p><i>The Town.</i>—The two typical institutions of the early +Middle Age were the feudal castle, with its high stone walls and gloomy +towers, with its fierce bands of warriors armed in mail and fighting on +horseback with lance and sword, and the monastery, which represented +inn, hospital, and school. Gradually, however, a third structure +appeared. This was the town. And it is to these mediæval cities, +with their busy trading life, their free citizenship, and their useful +occupations, that the modern world owes much of its liberty and its +intellectual light.</p> +<p><b>The Renaissance.</b>—<i>Changes in Political +Affairs.</i>—By 1400, however, the Middle Age had nearly passed +and a new life had appeared, a new epoch was in progress, which is +called the Renaissance, which means “rebirth.” In political +affairs the spirit of nationality had arisen, and feudalism was already +declining. Men began to feel attachment to country, to king, and to +fellow-citizens; and the national states, as we now know them, each +with its <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb46" href="#pb46" name= +"pb46">46</a>]</span>naturally bounded territory, its common language, +and its approximately common race, were appearing.</p> +<p><i>France</i> and <i>England</i> were, of these states, the two most +advanced politically just previous to the fifteenth century. At this +distant time they were still engaged in a struggle which lasted quite a +century and is known as the Hundred Years’ War. In the end, +England was forced to give up all her claims to territory on the +continent, and the power of France was correspondingly increased. In +France the monarchy (king and court) was becoming the supreme power in +the land. The feudal nobles lost what power they had, while the common +people gained nothing. In England, however, the foundations for a +representative government had been laid. The powers of legislation and +government were divided between the English king and a Parliament. The +Parliament was first called in 1265 and consisted of two +parts,—the Lords, representing the nobility; and the Commons, +composed of persons chosen by the common people.</p> +<p><i>Germany</i> was divided into a number of small +principalities,—Saxony, Bavaria, Franconia, Bohemia, Austria, the +Rhine principalities, and many others,—which united in a great +assembly, or Diet, the head of which was some prince, chosen to be +emperor.</p> +<p><i>Italy</i> was also divided. In the north, in the valley of the +Po, or Lombardy, were the duchy of Milan and the Republic of Venice; +south, on the western coast, were the Tuscan states, including the +splendid city of Florence. Thence, stretching north and south across +the peninsula, were states of the church, whose ruler was the pope, for +until less than fifty years ago the pope was not only the head of the +church but also a temporal ruler. Embracing the southern part of the +peninsula was the principality of Naples. <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb47" href="#pb47" name="pb47">47</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>In the Spanish peninsula</i> Christian states had +arisen,—in the west, Portugal, in the center and east, Castile, +Aragon, and Leon, from all of which the Mohammedans had been expelled. +But they still held the southern parts of Spain, including the +beautiful plain of Andalusia and Grenada.</p> +<p><b>The Mohammedans</b>, in the centuries of their life in Spain, had +developed an elegant and prosperous civilization. By means of +irrigation and skillful planting, they had converted southern Spain +into a garden. They were the most skillful agriculturists and breeders +of horses and sheep in Europe, and they carried to perfection many fine +arts, while knowledge and learning were nowhere further advanced than +here. Through contact with this remarkable people the Christian +Spaniards gained much. Unfortunately, however, the spirit of religious +intolerance was so strong, and the hatred engendered by the centuries +of religious war was so violent, that in the end the Spaniard became +imbued with so fierce a fanaticism that he has ever since appeared +unable properly to appreciate or justly to treat any who differed from +him in religious belief.</p> +<p><i>The Conquests of the Mohammedans.</i>—In the fifteenth +century, religious toleration was but little known in the world, and +the people of the great Mohammedan faith still threatened to overwhelm +Christian Europe. Since the first great conquests of Islam in the +eighth century had been repulsed from central Europe, that faith had +shown a wonderful power of winning its way. In the tenth century Asia +Minor was invaded by hordes of Seljuks, or Turks, who poured down from +central Asia in conquering bands. These tribes had overthrown the +Arab’s power in Mesopotamia and Asia Minor only to become +converts to his faith. With freshened zeal they <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb48" href="#pb48" name="pb48">48</a>]</span>hurled +themselves upon the old Christian empire, which at Constantinople had +survived the fall of the rest of the Roman world.</p> +<p><b>The Crusades.</b>—The Seljuk Turks had conquered most of +Asia Minor, Syria, and the Holy Land. A great fear came over the people +of Europe that the city of Constantinople would be captured and they, +too, be overwhelmed by these new Mohammedan enemies. The passionate +religious zeal of the Middle Age also roused the princes and knights of +Europe to try to wrest from the infidel the Holy Land of Palestine, +where were the birthplace of Christianity and the site of the Sepulcher +of Christ. Palestine was recovered and Christian states were +established there, which lasted for over a hundred and eighty years. +Then the Arab power revived and, operating from Egypt, finally retook +Jerusalem and expelled the Christian from the Holy Land, to which he +has never yet returned as a conqueror.</p> +<p><i>Effects of the Crusades.</i>—These long, holy wars, or +“Crusades,” had a profound effect upon Europe. The rude +Christian warrior from the west was astonished and delighted with the +splendid and luxurious life which he met at Constantinople and the +Arabian East. Even though he was a prince, his life at home was barren +of comforts and beauty. Glass, linen, rugs, tapestries, silk, cotton, +spices, and sugar were some of the things which the Franks and the +Englishmen took home with them from the Holy Land. Demand for these +treasures of the East became irresistible, and trade between western +Europe and the East grew rapidly.</p> +<p><b>The Commercial Cities of Italy.</b>—The cities of Italy +developed this commerce. They placed fleets upon the Mediterranean. +They carried the crusaders out and brought <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb49" href="#pb49" name="pb49">49</a>]</span>back the +wares that Europe desired. In this way these cities grew and became +very wealthy. On the west coast, where this trade began, were Amalfi, +Pisa, Genoa, and Florence, and on the east, at the head of the +Adriatic, was Venice. The rivalry between these cities of Italy was +very fierce. They fought and plundered one another, each striving to +win a monopoly for itself of this invaluable trade.</p> +<p><i>Venice</i>, finally, was victorious. Her location was very +favorable. From her docks the wares could be carried easily and by the +shortest routes up the Po River and thence into France or northward +over the Alps to the Danube. In Bavaria grew up in this trade the +splendid German cities of Augsburg and Nuremberg, which passed these +goods on to the cities of the Rhine, and so down this most beautiful +river to the coast. Here the towns of Flanders and of the Low +Countries, or Holland, received them and passed them on again to +England and eastward to the countries of the Baltic.</p> +<p><b>Development of Modern Language.</b>—Thus commerce and trade +grew up in Europe, and, with trade and city life, greater intelligence, +learning, and independence. Education became more common, and the +universities of Europe were thronged. Latin in the Middle Age had been +the only language that was written by the learned class. Now the modern +languages of Europe took their form and began to be used for literary +purposes. Italian was the first to be so used by the great Dante, and +in the same half-century the English poet Chaucer sang in the homely +English tongue, and soon in France, Germany, and Spain national +literatures appeared. With this went greater freedom of expression. +Authority began to have less weight.</p> +<p>Men began to inquire into causes and effects, to doubt <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb51" href="#pb51" name="pb51">51</a>]</span>certain +things, to seek themselves for the truth, and so the Renaissance came. +With it came a greater love for the beautiful, a greater joy in life, a +fresh zest for the good of this world, a new passion for discovery, a +thirst for adventure, and, it must also be confessed a new laxity of +living and a new greed for gold. Christian Europe was about to burst +its narrow bounds. It could not be repressed nor confined to its old +limitations. It could never turn backward. Of all the great changes +which have come over life and thought, probably none are greater than +those which saw the transition from the mediæval to the modern +world.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e1071width" id="p050"><a href= +"images/p050h.gif"><img src="images/p050.gif" alt= +"Routes of Trade to the Far East" width="720" height="439"></a> +<p class="figureHead">Routes of Trade to the Far East</p> +</div> +<p><b>Trade with the East.</b>—<i>Articles of +Trade.</i>—Now we must go back for a moment and pursue an old +inquiry further. Whence came all these beautiful and inviting wares +that had produced new tastes and passions in Europe? The Italian +traders drew them from the Levant, but the Levant had not produced +them. Neither pepper, spices, sugarcane, costly gems, nor rich silks, +were produced on the shores of the Mediterranean.</p> +<p>Only the rich tropical countries of the East were capable of growing +these rare plants, and up to that time of delivering to the delver many +precious stones. India, the rich Malaysian archipelago, the kingdom of +China,—these are the lands and islands which from time immemorial +have given up their treasures to be forwarded far and wide to amaze and +delight the native of colder and less productive lands.</p> +<p><i>Routes of Trade to the Far East.</i>—Three old sailing and +caravan routes connect the Mediterranean with the Far East. They are so +old that we can not guess when men first used them. They were old in +the days of Solomon and indeed very ancient when Alexander the +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb52" href="#pb52" name= +"pb52">52</a>]</span>Great conquered the East. One of these routes +passed through the Black Sea, and across the Caspian Sea to Turkestan +to those strange and romantic ancient cities, Bokhara and Samarkand. +Thence it ran northeasterly across Asia, entering China from the north. +Another crossed Syria and went down through Mesopotamia to the Indian +Ocean, A third began in Egypt and went through the Red Sea, passing +along the coast of Arabia to India.</p> +<p>All of these had been in use for centuries, but by the year 1400 two +had been closed. A fresh immigration of Turks, the Ottomans, in the +fourteenth century came down upon the scourged country of the Euphrates +and Syria, and although these Turks also embraced Mohammedanism, their +hostility closed the first two routes and commerce over them has never +since been resumed.</p> +<p><i>Venetian Monopoly of Trade.</i>—Thus all interest centered +upon the southern route. By treaty with the sultan or ruler of Egypt, +Venice secured a monopoly of the products which came over this route. +Goods from the East now came in fleets up the Red Sea, went through the +hands of the sultan of Egypt, who collected a duty for them, and then +were passed on to the ships of the wealthy Venetian merchant princes, +who carried them throughout Europe. Although the object of intense +jealousy, it seemed impossible to wrest this monopoly from Venice. Her +fleet was the strongest on the Mediterranean, and her rule extended +along the Adriatic to the Grecian islands. All eager minds were bent +upon the trade with the East, but no way was known, save that which now +Venice had gained.</p> +<p><b>Extent of Geographical Knowledge.</b>—<i>The Maps of this +Period.</i>—To realize how the problem looked to the sailor of +Genoa or the merchant of Flanders at that time, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb53" href="#pb53" name="pb53">53</a>]</span>we must +understand how scanty and erroneous was the geographical knowledge of +even the fifteenth century. It was believed that Jerusalem was the +center of the world, a belief founded upon a biblical passage. The maps +of this and earlier dates represent the earth in this way: In the +center, Palestine, and beneath it the Mediterranean Sea, the only body +of water which was well known; on the left side is Europe; on the +right, Africa; and at the top, Asia—the last two continents very +indefinitely mapped. Around the whole was supposed to flow an ocean, +beyond the first few miles of which it was perilous to proceed lest the +ship be carried over the edge of the earth or encounter other +perils.</p> +<p><i>Ideas about the Earth.</i>—The Greek philosophers before +the time of Christ had discovered that the world is a globe, or ball, +and had even computed rudely its circumference. But in the Middle Ages +this knowledge had been disputed and contradicted by a geographer named +Cosmas, who held that the world was a vast plane, twice as long as it +was broad and surrounded by an ocean. This belief was generally adopted +by churchmen, who were the only scholars of the Middle Ages, and came +to be the universal belief of Christian Europe.</p> +<p>The Renaissance revived the knowledge of the writings of the old +Greek geographers who had demonstrated the earth’s shape to be +round and had roughly calculated its size; but these writings did not +have sufficient circulation in Europe to gain much acceptance among the +Christian cosmographers. The Arabs, however, after conquering Egypt, +Syria and northern Africa, translated into their own tongue the wisdom +of the Greeks and became the best informed and most scientific +geographers of the Middle Age, so that intercourse with the Arabs which +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb54" href="#pb54" name= +"pb54">54</a>]</span>began with the Crusades helped to acquaint Europe +somewhat with India and China.</p> +<p><b>The Far East.</b>—<i>The Tartar Mongols.</i>—Then in +the thirteenth century all northern Asia and China fell under the power +of the Tartar Mongols. Russia was overrun by them and western Europe +threatened. At the Danube, however, this tide of Asiatic conquest +stopped, and then a long period when Europe came into diplomatic and +commercial relations with these Mongols and through them learned +something of China.</p> +<p><i>Marco Polo Visits the Great Kaan.</i>—Several Europeans +visited the court of the Great Kaan, or Mongol king, and of one of +them, Marco Polo, we must speak in particular. He was a Venetian, and +when a young man started in 1271 with his father and uncle on a visit +to the Great Kaan. They passed from Italy to Syria, across to Bagdad, +and so up to Turkestan, where they saw the wonderful cities of this +strange oasis, thence across the Pamirs and the Desert of Gobi to Lake +Baikal, where the Kaan had his court. Here in the service of this +prince Marco Polo spent over seventeen years. So valuable indeed were +his services that the Kaan would not permit him to return. Year after +year he remained in the East. He traversed most of China, and was for a +time “taotai,” or magistrate, of the city of Yang Chan near +the Yangtze River. He saw the amazing wonders of the East. He heard of +“Zipangu,” or Japan. He probably heard of the +Philippines.</p> +<p>Finally the opportunity came for the three Venetians to return. The +Great Kaan had a relative who was a ruler of Persia, and ambassadors +came from this ruler to secure a Mongol princess for him to marry. The +dangers and hardships of the travel overland were considered too +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb55" href="#pb55" name= +"pb55">55</a>]</span>difficult for the delicate princess, and it was +decided to send her by water. Marco Polo and his father and uncle were +commissioned to accompany the expedition to Persia.</p> +<p><i>History of Marco Polo’s Travels.</i>—They sailed from +the port of Chin Cheu, probably near Amoy,<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1133src" href="#xd19e1133" name="xd19e1133src">1</a> in the year +1292. They skirted the coasts of Cambodia and Siam and reached the +eastern coasts of Sumatra, where they waited five months for the +changing of the monsoon. Of the Malay people of Sumatra, as well as of +these islands, their animals and productions, Marco Polo has left us +most interesting and quite accurate accounts. The Malays on Sumatra +were beginning to be converted to Mohammedanism, for Marco Polo says +that many of them were “Saracens.” He gained a good +knowledge of the rich and mysterious Indian Isles, where the spices and +flavorings grew. It was two years before the party, having crossed the +Indian Ocean, reached Persia and the court of the Persian king. When +they arrived they found that while they were making this long voyage +the Persian king had died; but they married the Mongol princess to his +son, the young prince, who had succeeded him, and that did just as +well.</p> +<p>From Persia the Venetians crossed to Syria and thence sailed to +Italy, and at last reached home after an absence of twenty-six years. +But Marco Polo’s adventures did not end with his return to +Venice. In a fierce sea fight between the Venetians and Genoese, he was +made <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb56" href="#pb56" name= +"pb56">56</a>]</span>a prisoner and confined in Genoa. Here a fellow +captive wrote down from Marco’s own words the story of his +eastern adventures, and this book we have to-day. It is a record of +adventure, travel, and description, so wonderful that for years it was +doubted and its accuracy disbelieved. But since, in our own time, men +have been able to traverse again the routes over which Marco Polo +passed, fact after fact has been established, quite as he truthfully +stated them centuries ago. To have been the first European to make this +mighty circuit of travel is certainly a strong title to enduring +fame.</p> +<p><b>Countries of the Far East.</b>—<i>India.</i>—Let us +now briefly look at the countries of the Far East, which by the year +1400 had come to exercise over the mind of the European so irresistible +a fascination. First of all, India, as we have seen, had for centuries +been the principal source of the western commerce. But long before the +date we are considering, the scepter of India had fallen from the hand +of the Hindu. From the seventh century, India was a prey to Mohammedan +conquerors, who entered from the northwest into the valley of the +Indus. At first these were Saracens or Arabs; later they were the same +Mongol converts to Mohammedanism, whose attacks upon Europe we have +already noticed.</p> +<p>In 1398 came the furious and bloody warrior, the greatest of all +Mongols,—Timour, or Tamerlane. He founded, with capital at Delhi, +the empire of the Great Mogul, whose rule over India was only broken by +the white man. Eastward across the Ganges and in the Dekkan, or +southern part of India, were states ruled over by Indian princes.</p> +<p><i>China.</i>—We have seen how, at the time of Marco Polo, +China also was ruled by the Tartar Mongols. The <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb57" href="#pb57" name="pb57">57</a>]</span>Chinese +have ever been subject to attack from the wandering horse-riding tribes +of Siberia. Two hundred years before Christ one of the Chinese kings +built the Great Wall that stretches across the northern frontier for +one thousand three hundred miles, for a defense against northern foes. +Through much of her history the Chinese have been ruled by aliens, as +they are to-day. About 1368, however, the Chinese overthrew the Mongol +rulers and established the Ming dynasty, the last Chinese house of +emperors, who ruled China until 1644, when the Manchus, the present +rulers, conquered the country.</p> +<p>China was great and prosperous under the Mings. Commerce flourished +and the fleets of Chinese junks sailed to India, the Malay Islands, and +to the Philippines for trade. The Grand Canal, which connects Peking +with the Yangtze River basin and Hangchau, was completed. It was an age +of fine productions of literature.</p> +<p>The Chinese seem to have been much less exclusive then than they are +at the present time; much less a peculiar, isolated people than now. +They did not then shave their heads nor wear a queue. These customs, as +well as that hostility to foreign intercourse which they have to-day, +has been forced upon China by the Manchus. China appeared at that time +ready to assume a position of enormous influence among the peoples of +the earth,—a position for which she was well fitted by the great +industry of all classes and the high intellectual power of her learned +men.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e1163width" id="p058"><a href= +"images/p058h.gif"><img src="images/p058.gif" alt= +"The Countries of the Far East" width="440" height="720"></a> +<p class="figureHead">The Countries of the Far East</p> +<p class="first">In the 15th century.</p> +</div> +<p><i>Japan.</i>—Compared with China or India, or even some minor +states, the development of Japan at this time was very backward. Her +people were divided and there was constant civil war. The Japanese +borrowed their civilization from the Chinese. From them they learned +writing <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb59" href="#pb59" name= +"pb59">59</a>]</span>and literature, and the Buddhist religion, which +was introduced about 550 <span class="sc">A.D.</span> But in +temperament they are a very different people, being spirited, warlike, +and, until recent years, despising trading and commerce.</p> +<p>Since the beginning of her history, Japan has been an empire. The +ruler, the Mikado, is believed to be of heavenly descent; but in the +centuries we are discussing the government was controlled by powerful +nobles, known as the Shogun, who kept the emperors in retirement in the +palaces of Kyoto, and themselves directed the State. The greatest of +these shoguns was Iyeyásu, who ruled Japan about 1600, soon +after Manila was founded. They developed in Japan a species of +feudalism, the great lords, or “daimios,” owning allegiance +to the shoguns, and about the daimios, as feudal retainers, bodies of +samurai, who formed a partly noble class of their own. The samurai +carried arms, fought at their lords’ command, were students and +literati, and among them developed that proud, loyal, and elevated code +of morality known as “Búshido,” which has done so +much for the Japanese people. It is this samurai class who in modern +times have effected the immense revolution in the condition and power +of Japan.</p> +<p><i>The Malay Archipelago.</i>—If now we look at the Malay +Islands, we find, as we have already seen, that changes had been +effected there. Hinduism had first elevated and civilized at least a +portion of the race, and Mohammedanism and the daring seamanship of the +Malay had united these islands under a common language and religion. +There was, however, no political union. The Malay peninsula was +divided. Java formed a central Malay power. Eastward among the +beautiful Celebes and Moluccas, the true Spice Islands, were a +multitude of small native rulers, rajas or datos, who surrounded +themselves with retainers, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb60" href= +"#pb60" name="pb60">60</a>]</span>kept rude courts, and gathered +wealthy tributes of cinnamon, pepper, and cloves. The sultans of +Ternate, Tidor, and Amboina were especially powerful, and the islands +they ruled the most rich and productive.</p> +<p>Between all these islands there was a busy commerce. The Malay is an +intrepid sailor, and an eager trader. Fleets of praos, laden with +goods, passed with the changing monsoons from part to part, risking the +perils of piracy, which have always troubled this archipelago. Borneo, +while the largest of all these islands, was the least developed, and +down to the present day has been hardly explored. The Philippines were +also outside of most of this busy intercourse and had at that date few +products to offer for trade. Their only connection with the rest of the +Malay race was through the Mohammedan Malays of Jolo and Borneo. The +fame of the Spice Islands had long filled Europe, but the existence of +the Philippines was unknown.</p> +<p><b>Summary</b>.—We have now reviewed the condition of Europe +and of farther Asia as they were before the period of modern discovery +and colonization opened. The East had reached a condition of quiet +stability. Mohammedanism, though still spreading, did not promise to +effect great social changes. The institutions of the East had become +fixed in custom and her peoples neither made changes nor desired them. +On the other hand western Europe had become aroused to an excess of +ambition. New ideas, new discoveries and inventions were moving the +nations to activity and change. That era of modern discovery and +progress, of which we cannot yet perceive the end, had begun. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb61" href="#pb61" name= +"pb61">61</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1133" href="#xd19e1133src" name="xd19e1133">1</a></span> See +Yule’s <i>Marco Polo</i> for a discussion of this point and for +the entire history of this great explorer, as well as a translation of +his narrative. This book of Ser Marco Polo has been most critically +edited with introduction and voluminous notes by the English scholar, +Sir Henry Yule. In this edition the accounts of Marco Polo, covering so +many countries and peoples of the Far East, can be studied.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ch4" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Chapter IV.</h2> +<h2 class="main">The Great Geographical Discoveries.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>An Eastern Passage to India.</b>—<i>The +Portuguese.</i>—We have seen in the <a href="#ch3">last +chapter</a> how Venice held a monopoly of the only trading-route with +the Far East. Some new way of reaching India must be sought, that would +permit the traders of other Christian powers to reach the marts of the +Orient without passing through Mohammedan lands. This surpassing +achievement was accomplished by the Portuguese. So low at the present +day has the power of Portugal fallen that few realize the daring and +courage once displayed by her seamen and soldiers and the enormous +colonial empire that she established.</p> +<p>Portugal freed her territory of the Mohammedan Moors nearly a +century earlier than Spain; and the vigor and intelligence of a great +king, John I., brought Portugal, about the year 1400, to an important +place among the states of Europe. This king captured from the Moors the +city of Ceuta, in Morocco; and this was the beginning of modern +European colonial possessions, and the first bit of land outside of +Europe to be held by a European power since the times of the Crusades. +King John’s youngest son was Prince Henry, famous in history +under the title of “the Navigator.” This young prince, with +something of the same adventurous spirit that filled the Crusaders, was +ardent to extend the power of his father’s kingdom and to widen +the sway of the religion which he devotedly professed. The power of the +Mohammedans in the Mediterranean was too great for him hopefully to +oppose and so he planned the conquest of the west coast <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb62" href="#pb62" name="pb62">62</a>]</span>of +Africa, and its conversion to Christianity. With these ends in view, he +established at Point Sagres, on the southwestern coast of Portugal, a +naval academy and observatory. Here he brought together skilled +navigators, charts, and geographies, and all scientific knowledge that +would assist in his undertaking.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e1213src" +href="#xd19e1213" name="xd19e1213src">1</a></p> +<p>He began to construct ships larger and better than any in use. To us +they would doubtless seem very clumsy and small, but this was the +beginning of ocean ship-building. The compass and the astrolabe, or +sextant, the little instrument with which, by calculating the height of +the sun above the horizon, we can tell distance from the equator, were +just coming into use. These, as well as every other practicable device +for navigation known at that time, were supplied to these ships.</p> +<p><i>Exploration of the African Coast.</i>—Thus equipped and +ably manned, the little fleets began the exploration of the African +coast, cautiously feeling their way southward and ever returning with +reports of progress made. Year after year this work went on. In 1419 +the Madeira Islands were rediscovered and colonized by Portuguese +settlers. The growing of sugarcane was begun, and vines were brought +from Burgundy and planted there. The <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb63" href="#pb63" name="pb63">63</a>]</span>wine of the Madeiras has +been famous to this day. Then were discovered the Canaries and in 1444 +the Azores. The southward exploration of the coast of the mainland +steadily continued until in 1445 the Portuguese reached the mouth of +the Senegal River. Up to this point the African shore had not yielded +much of interest to the Portuguese explorer or trader. Below Morocco +the great Sahara Desert reaches to the sea and renders barren the coast +for hundreds of miles.</p> +<p>South of the mouth of the Senegal and comprising the whole Guinea +coast, Africa is tropical, well watered, and populous. This is the home +of the true African Negro. Here, for almost the first time, since the +beginning of the Middle Ages, Christian Europe came in contact with a +race of ruder culture and different color than its own. This coast was +found to be worth exploiting; for it yielded, besides various desirable +resinous gums, three articles which have distinguished the exploitation +of Africa, namely, gold, ivory, and slaves.</p> +<p><b>Beginning of Negro Slavery in Europe.</b>—At this point +begins the horrible and revolting story of European Negro slavery. The +ancient world had practiced this ownership of human chattels, and the +Roman Empire had declined under a burden of half the population sunk in +bondage. To the enormous detriment and suffering of mankind, Mohammed +had tolerated the institution, and slavery is permitted by the Koran. +But it is the glory of the mediæval church that it abolished +human slavery from Christian Europe. However dreary and unjust +feudalism may have been, it knew nothing of that institution which +degrades men and women to the level of cattle and remorselessly sells +the husband from his family, the mother from her child. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb64" href="#pb64" name="pb64">64</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>Slaves in Portugal.</i>—The arrival of the Portuguese upon +the coast of Guinea now revived not the bondage of one white man to +another, but that of the black to the white. The first slaves carried +to Portugal were regarded simply as objects of peculiar interest, +captives to represent to the court the population of those shores which +had been added to the Portuguese dominion. But southern Portugal, from +which the Moors had been expelled, had suffered from a lack of +laborers, and it was found profitable to introduce Negroes to work +these fields.</p> +<p><i>Arguments to Justify Slavery.</i>—So arose the institution +of Negro slavery, which a century later upon the shores of the New +World was to develop into so tremendous and terrible a thing. Curiously +enough, religion was evoked to justify this enslavement of the +Africans. The Church taught that these people, being heathen, were +fortunate to be captured by Christians, that they might thereby be +brought to baptism and conversion; for it is better for the body to +perish than for the soul to be cast into hell. At a later age, when the +falsity of this teaching had been realized, men still sought to justify +the institution by arguing that the Almighty had created the African of +a lower state especially that he might serve the superior race.</p> +<p>The coast of Guinea continued to be the resort of slavers down to +the middle of the last century, and such scenes of cruelty, wickedness, +and debauchery have occurred along its shores as can scarcely be +paralleled in brutality in the history of any people.</p> +<p>The Portuguese can hardly be said to have colonized the coast in the +sense of raising up there a Portuguese population. As he approached the +equator the white man found that, in spite of his superior strength, he +could not <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb65" href="#pb65" name= +"pb65">65</a>]</span>permanently people the tropics. Diseases new to +his experience attacked him. His energy declined. If he brought his +family with him, his children were few or feeble and shortly his race +had died out.</p> +<p>The settlements of the Portuguese were largely for the purposes of +trade. At Sierra Leone, Kamerun, or Loango, they built forts and +established garrisons, mounting pieces of artillery that gave them +advantage over the attacks of the natives, and erecting warehouses and +the loathsome “barracoon,” where the slaves were confined +to await shipment. Such decadent little settlements still linger along +the African coast, although the slave-trade happily has ended.</p> +<p><b>The Successful Voyage of Vasco da Gama.</b>—Throughout the +century Prince Henry’s policy of exploration was continued. +Slowly the middle coast of Africa became known. At last in 1486, +Bartholomew Diaz rounded the extremity of the continent. He named it +the Cape of Storms; but the Portuguese king, with more prophetic sight, +renamed it the Cape of Good Hope. It was ten years, however, before the +Portuguese could send another expedition. Then Vasco da Gama rounded +the cape again, followed up the eastern coast until the Arab +trading-stations were reached. Then he struck across the sea, landed at +the Malabar coast of India, and in 1498 arrived at Calcutta. The end +dreamed of by all of Europe had been achieved. A sea-route to the Far +East had been discovered.</p> +<p><i>Results of Da Gama’s Voyage.</i>—The importance of +this performance was instantly recognized in Europe. Venice was ruined. +“It was a terrible day,” said a contemporary writer, +“when the word reached Venice. Bells were rung, men wept in the +streets, and even the bravest <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb66" href= +"#pb66" name="pb66">66</a>]</span>were silent.” The Arabs and the +native rulers made a desperate effort to expel the Portuguese from the +Indian Ocean, but their opponents were too powerful. In the course of +twenty years Portugal had founded an empire that had its forts and +trading-marts from the coast of Arabia to Malaysia. Zanzibar, Aden, +Oman, Goa, Calicut, and Madras were all Portuguese stations, fortified +and secured. In the Malay peninsula was founded the colony of Malacca. +It retained its importance and power until in the last century, when it +dwindled before the competition of Singapore.</p> +<p>The work of building up this great domain was largely that of one +man, the intrepid Albuquerque. Think what his task was! He was +thousands of miles from home and supplies, he had only such forces and +munitions as he could bring with him in his little ships, and opposed +to him were millions of inhabitants and a multitude of Mohammedan +princes. Yet this great captain built up an Indian empire. Portugal at +one bound became the greatest trading and colonizing power in the +world. Her sources of wealth appeared fabulous, and, like Venice, she +made every effort to secure her monopoly. The fleets of other nations +were warned that they could not make use of the Cape of Good Hope +route, on penalty of being captured or destroyed.</p> +<p><b>Reaching India by Sailing West.</b>—<i>The Earth as a +Sphere.</i>—Meanwhile, just as Portugal was carrying to +completion her project of reaching India by sailing <i>east</i>, Europe +was electrified by the supposed successful attempt of reaching India by +sailing directly <i>west</i>, across the Atlantic. This was the plan +daringly attempted in 1492 by Christopher Columbus. Columbus was an +Italian sailor and cosmographer of Genoa. The idea of sailing west to +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb67" href="#pb67" name= +"pb67">67</a>]</span>India did not originate with him, but his is the +immortal glory of having persistently sought the means and put the idea +into execution.</p> +<p>The Portuguese discoveries along the African coast gradually +revealed the extension of this continent and the presence of people +beyond the equator, and the possibility of passing safely through the +tropics. This knowledge was a great stimulus to the peoples of Europe. +The geographical theory of the Greeks, that the world is round, was +revived. The geographers, however, in making their calculations of the +earth’s circumference, had fallen into an error of some thousands +of miles; that is, instead of finding that it is fully twelve thousand +miles from Europe around to the East Indies, they had supposed it about +four thousand, or even less. Marco Polo too had exaggerated the +distance he had traveled and from his accounts men had been led to +believe that China, Japan, and the Spice Islands lie much further to +the east than they actually do.</p> +<p>By sailing west across one wide ocean, with no intervening lands, it +was thought that one could arrive at the island-world off the continent +of Asia. This was the theory that was revived in Italy and which clung +in men’s minds for years and years, even after America was +discovered.</p> +<p>An Italian, named Toscanelli, drew a map showing how this voyage +could be made, and sent Columbus a copy. By sailing first to the +Azores, a considerable portion of the journey would be passed, with a +convenient resting-stage. Then about thirty-five days’ favorable +sailing would bring one to the islands of “Cipango,” or +Japan, which Marco Polo had said lay off the continent of Asia. From +here the passage could readily be pursued to Cathay and India. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb68" href="#pb68" name= +"pb68">68</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>The Voyage of Christopher Columbus.</i>—The romantic and +inspiring story of Columbus is told in many books,—his poverty, +his genius, his long and discouraging pursuit of the means to carry out +his plan. He first applied to Portugal; but, as we have seen, this +country had been pursuing another plan steadily for a century, and, now +that success appeared almost at hand, naturally the Portuguese king +would not turn aside to favor Columbus’s plan.</p> +<p>For years Columbus labored to interest the Spanish court. A great +event had happened in Spanish history. Ferdinand, king of Aragon, had +wedded Isabella of Castile, and this marriage united these two kingdoms +into the modern country of Spain. Soon the smaller states except +Portugal were added, and the war for the expulsion of the Moors was +prosecuted with new vigor. In 1492, Grenada, the last splendid +stronghold of the Mohammedans in the peninsula, surrendered, and in the +same year Isabella furnished Columbus with the ships for his voyage of +discovery.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e1299width" id="p069"><a href= +"images/p069h.gif"><img src="images/p069.gif" alt= +"Restoration of Toscanelli’s Map" width="720" height="456"></a> +<p class="figureHead">Restoration of Toscanelli’s Map</p> +<p class="first">Illustrating the most advanced geographical ideas of +Europe previous to the voyages of Columbus and Magellan.</p> +<p>The position of North America and South America is shown by the +dotted lines.</p> +</div> +<p>Columbus sailed from Palos, August 3, 1492, reached the Canaries +August 24, and sailed westward on September 6. Day after day, pushed by +the strong winds, called the “trades,” they went forward. +Many doubts and fears beset the crews, but Columbus was stout-hearted. +At the end of thirty-four days from the Canaries, on October 12, they +sighted land. It was one of the groups of beautiful islands lying +between the two continents of America. But Columbus thought that he had +reached the East Indies that really lay many thousands of miles farther +west. Columbus sailed among the islands of the archipelago, discovered +Cuba and Hispaniola (Haiti), and then returned to convulse Europe with +excitement over the new-found way <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb70" +href="#pb70" name="pb70">70</a>]</span>to the East. He had not found +the rich Spice Islands, the peninsula of India, Cathay or Japan, but +every one believed that these must be close to the islands on which +Columbus had landed.</p> +<p>The tall, straight-haired, copper-colored natives, whom Columbus met +on the islands, he naturally called “Indians”; and this +name they still bear. Afterwards the islands were called the +“West Indies.” Columbus made three more voyages for Spain. +On the fourth, in 1498, he touched on the coast of South America. Here +he discovered the great Orinoco River. Because of its large size, he +must have realized that a large body of land opposed the passage to the +Orient. He died in 1506, disappointed at his failure to find India, but +never knowing what he had found, nor that the history of a new +hemisphere had begun with him.</p> +<p><i>The Voyage of the Cabots.</i>—In the same year that +Columbus discovered the Orinoco, Sebastian Cabot, of Italian parentage, +like Columbus, secured ships from the king of England, hoping to reach +China and Japan by sailing west on a northern route. What he did +discover was a rugged and uninviting coast, with stormy headlands, cold +climate, and gloomy forests of pine reaching down to the sandy shores. +For nine hundred miles he sailed southward, but everywhere this +unprofitable coast closed the passage to China. It was the coast of +Labrador and the United States. Yet for years and years it was not +known that a continent three thousand miles wide and the greatest of +all oceans lay between Cathay and the shore visited by Cabot’s +ships. This land was thought to be a long peninsula, an island, or +series of islands, belonging to Asia. No one supposed or could suppose +that there was a continent here. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb71" +href="#pb71" name="pb71">71</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>Naming the New World.</b>—But in a few years Europe did +realize that a new continent had been discovered in South America. If +you will look at your maps, you will see that South America lies far to +the eastward of North America and in Brazil approaches very close to +Africa. This Brazilian coast was visited by a Portuguese fleet on the +African route in 1499, and two years later an Italian fleet traversed +the coast from the Orinoco to the harbor of Rio Janeiro. Their voyage +was a veritable revelation. They entered the mighty current of the +Amazon, the greatest river of the earth. They saw the wondrous tropical +forests, full of monkeys, great snakes, and stranger animals. They +dealt and fought with the wild and ferocious inhabitants, whose ways +startled and appalled the European. All that they saw filled them with +greatest wonder. This evidently was not Asia, nor was it the Indies. +Here, in fact, was a new continent, a veritable “Mundus +Novus.”</p> +<p>The pilot of this expedition was an Italian, named Amerigo Vespucci. +On the return this man wrote a very interesting letter or little +pamphlet, describing this new world, which was widely read, and brought +the writer fame. A few years later a German cosmographer, in preparing +a new edition of Ptolemy’s geography, proposed to give to this +new continent the name of the man who had made known its wonders in +Europe, So it was called “America.” Long after, when the +northern shores were also proved to be those of a continent, this great +land was named “North America.” No injustice was intended +to Columbus when America was so named. It was not then supposed that +Columbus had discovered a continent. The people then believed that +Columbus had found a new route to India and had discovered some new +islands that lay off the coast of Asia. <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb72" href="#pb72" name="pb72">72</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>Spain Takes Possession of the New Lands.</b>—Of these newly +found islands and whatever wealth they might be found to contain, Spain +claimed the possession by right of discovery. And of the European +nations, it was Spain which first began the exploration and +colonization of America. Spain was now free from her long Mohammedan +wars, and the nation was being united under Ferdinand and Isabella. The +Spaniards were brave, adventurous, and too proud to engage in commerce +or agriculture, but ready enough to risk life and treasure in quest of +riches abroad. The Spaniards were devotedly religious, and the Church +encouraged conquest, that missionary work might be extended. So Spain +began her career that was soon to make her the foremost power of Europe +and one of the greatest colonial empires the world has seen. It is +amazing what the Spaniards accomplished in the fifty years following +Columbus’s first voyage.</p> +<p>Hispaniola was made the center from which the Spaniards extended +their explorations to the continents of both North and South America. +On these islands of the West Indies they found a great tribe of +Indians,—the Caribs. They were fierce and cruel. The Spaniards +waged a warfare of extermination against them, killing many, and +enslaving others for work in the mines. The Indian proved unable to +exist as a slave. And his sufferings drew the attention of a Spanish +priest, Las Casas, who by vigorous efforts at the court succeeded in +having Indian slavery abolished and African slavery introduced to take +its place. This remedy was in the end worse than the disease, for it +gave an immense impetus to the African slave-trade and peopled America +with a race of Africans in bondage.</p> +<p><i>Other Spanish Explorations and Discoveries.</i>—Meanwhile, +the Spanish soldier, with incredible energy, courage, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb73" href="#pb73" name="pb73">73</a>]</span>and +daring, pushed his conquests. In 1513, Florida was discovered, and in +the same year<span class="corr" id="xd19e1337" title= +"Source: .">,</span> Balboa crossed the narrow isthmus of Panama and +saw the Pacific Ocean. Contrary to what is often supposed, he did not +dream of its vast extent, but supposed it to be a narrow body of water +lying between Panama, and the Asian islands. He named it the +“South Sea,” a name that survived after its true character +was revealed by Magellan. Then followed the two most romantic and +surprising conquests of colonial history,—that of Mexico by +Cortes in 1521, and of Peru by Pizarro in 1533–34. These great +countries were inhabited by Indians, the most advanced and cultured on +the American continents. And here the Spaniards found enormous +treasures of gold and silver. Then, the discovery of the mines of +Bogota opened the greatest source of the precious metal that Europe had +ever known. Spaniards flocked to the New World, and in New Spain, as +Mexico was called, was established a great vice-royalty. Year after +year enormous wealth was poured into Spain from these American +possessions.</p> +<p><i>Emperor Charles V.</i>—Meanwhile great political power had +been added to Spain in Europe. In 1520 the throne of Spain fell to a +young man, Charles, the grandson of Ferdinand and Isabella. His mother +was Juana, the Spanish princess, and his father was Philip the +Handsome, of Burgundy. Philip the Handsome was the son of Maximilian, +the Archduke of Austria. Now it curiously happened that the thrones of +each of these three countries was left without other heirs than +Charles, and in 1520 he was King of Spain, Archduke of Austria, and +Duke of Burgundy and the Low Countries, including the rich commercial +cities of Holland and Belgium. In addition to all this, the German +princes elected him German <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb74" href= +"#pb74" name="pb74">74</a>]</span>emperor, and although he was King +Charles the First of Spain, he is better known in history as Emperor +Charles the Fifth.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e1346src" href= +"#xd19e1346" name="xd19e1346src">2</a></p> +<p>He was then an untried boy of twenty years, and no one expected to +find in him a man of resolute energy, cold persistence, and great +executive ability. But so it proved, and this was the man that made of +Spain the greatest power of the time. He was in constant warfare. He +fought four wars with King Francis I. of France, five wars with the +Turks, both in the Danube valley and in Africa, and an unending +succession of contests with the Protestant princes of Germany. For +Charles, besides many other important changes, saw the rise of +Protestantism, and the revolt of Germany, Switzerland, and England from +Catholicism. The first event in his emperorship was the assembling of +the famous German Diet at Worms, where was tried and condemned the real +founder of the Protestant religion, Martin Luther.</p> +<p><b>The Voyage of Hernando Magellan.</b>—In the mean time a way +had at last been found to reach the Orient from Europe by sailing west. +This discovery, the greatest voyage ever made by man, was accomplished, +in 1521, by the fleet of Hernando Magellan. Magellan was a Portuguese, +who had been in the East with Albuquerque. He had fought with the +Malays in Malacca, and had helped to establish the Portuguese power in +India.</p> +<p>On his return to Portugal, the injustice of the court drove him from +his native country, and he entered the service of Spain. Charles the +Fifth commissioned him to attempt a voyage of discovery down the coast +of South <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb75" href="#pb75" name= +"pb75">75</a>]</span>America, with the hope of finding a passage to the +East. This was Magellan’s great hope and faith,—that south +of the new continent of America must lie a passage westward, by which +ships could sail to China. As long as Portugal was able to keep closed +the African route to all other ships than her own, the discovery of +some other way was imperative.</p> +<p>On the 20th of September, 1519, Magellan’s fleet of five ships +set sail from Seville, which was the great Spanish shipping-port for +the dispatch of the colonial fleets. On December 13 they reached the +coast of Brazil and then coasted southward. They traded with the +natives, and at the mouth of the Rio de la Plata stayed some days to +fish.</p> +<p>The weather grew rapidly colder and more stormy as they went farther +south, and Magellan decided to stop and winter in the Bay of San +Julian. Here the cold of the winter, the storms, and the lack of food +caused a conspiracy among his captains to mutiny and return to Spain. +Magellan acted with swift and terrible energy. He went himself on board +one of the mutinous vessels, killed the chief conspirator with his own +hand, executed another, and then “marooned,” or left to +their fate on the shore, a friar and one other, who were leaders in the +plot.</p> +<p><i>The Straits of Magellan.</i>—The fleet sailed southward +again in August but it was not until November 1, 1520, that Magellan +entered the long and stormy straits that bear his name and which +connect the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. South of them were great bleak +islands, cold and desolate. They were inhabited by Indians, who are +probably the lowest and most wretched savages on the earth. They live +on fish and mussels. As they go at all times naked, they carry with +them in their <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb76" href="#pb76" name= +"pb76">76</a>]</span>boats brands and coals of fire. Seeing the +numerous lights on the shore, Magellan named these islands Tierra del +Fuego (the Land of Fire). For twenty days the ships struggled with the +contrary and shifting winds that prevail in this channel, during which +time one ship deserted and returned to Spain. Then the remaining four +ships passed out onto the boundless waters of the Pacific.</p> +<p><i>Westward on the Pacific Ocean.</i>—But we must not make the +mistake of supposing that Magellan and his followers imagined that a +great ocean confronted them. They expected that simply sailing +northward to the latitude of the Spice Islands would bring them to +these desired places. This they did, and then turned westward, +expecting each day to find the Indies; but no land appeared. The days +lengthened into weeks, the weeks into months, and still they went +forward, carried by the trade winds over a sea so smooth and free from +tempests that Magellan named it the “Pacific.”</p> +<p>But they suffered horribly from lack of food, even eating in their +starvation the leather slings on the masts. It was a terrible trial of +their courage. Twenty of their number died. The South Pacific is +studded with islands, but curiously their route lay just too far north +to behold them. From November 28, when they emerged from the Straits of +Magellan, until March 7, when they reached the Ladrones, they +encountered only two islands, and these were small uninhabited rocks, +without water or food, which in their bitter disappointment they named +las Desventuradas (the Unfortunate Islands).</p> +<div class="figure xd19e1380width" id="p077"><a href= +"images/p077h.gif"><img src="images/p077.gif" alt= +"Early Spanish Discoveries in the Philippines" width="720" height= +"436"></a> +<p class="figureHead">Early Spanish Discoveries in the Philippines</p> +</div> +<p><i>The Ladrone Islands.</i>—Their relief must have been +inexpressible when, on coming up to land on March the 7th, they found +inhabitants and food, yams, cocoanuts, and rice. At these islands the +Spaniards first saw the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb78" href= +"#pb78" name="pb78">78</a>]</span>prao, with its light outrigger, and +pointed sail. So numerous were these craft that they named the group +las Islas de las Velas (the Islands of Sails); but the loss of a +ship’s boat and other annoying thefts led the sailors to +designate the islands Los Ladrones (the Thieves), a name which they +still retain.</p> +<p><b>The Philippine Islands.</b>—<i>Samar.</i>—Leaving the +Ladrones Magellan sailed on westward looking for the Moluccas, and the +first land that he sighted was the eastern coast of Samar. Pigafetta +says: “Saturday, the 16th of March, we sighted an island which +has very lofty mountains. Soon after we learned that it was Zamal, +distant three hundred leagues from the islands of the +Ladrones.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e1397src" href="#xd19e1397" +name="xd19e1397src">3</a></p> +<p><i>Homonhón.</i>—On the following day the sea-worn +expedition, landed on a little uninhabited island south of Samar which +Pigafetta called Humunu, and which is still known as Homonhón or +Jomonjól.</p> +<p>It was while staying at this little island that the Spaniards first +saw the people of the Philippines. A prao which contained nine men +approached their ship. They saw other boats fishing near and learned +that all of these people came from the island of Suluan, which lies off +to the eastward from Jomonjól about twenty kilometres. In their +life and appearance these fishing people were much like the present +Samal laut of southern Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago.</p> +<p><i>Limasaua.</i>—Pigafetta says that they stayed on the island +of Jomonjól eight days but had great difficulty in securing +food. The natives brought them a few cocoanuts and oranges, palm wine, +and a chicken or two, but this was all that could be spared, so, on the +25th, the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb79" href="#pb79" name= +"pb79">79</a>]</span>Spaniards sailed again, and near the south end of +Leyte landed on the little island of Limasaua. Here there was a +village, where they met two chieftains, whom Pigafetta calls +“kings,” and whose names were Raja Calambú and Raja +Ciagu. These two chieftains were visiting Limasaua and had their +residences one at Butúan and one at Cagayan on the island of +Mindanao. Some histories have stated that the Spaniards accompanied one +of these chieftains to Butúan, but this does not appear to have +been the case.</p> +<p>On the island of Limasaua the natives had dogs, cats, hogs, goats, +and fowls. They were cultivating rice, maize, breadfruit, and had also +cocoanuts, oranges, bananas, citron, and ginger. Pigafetta tells how he +visited one of the chieftains at his home on the shore. The house was +built as Filipino houses are today, raised on posts and thatched. +Pigafetta thought it looked “like a haystack.”</p> +<p>It had been the day of San Lazarus when the Spaniards first reached +these islands, so that Magellan gave to the group the name of the +Archipelago of Saint Lazarus, the name under which the Philippines were +frequently described in the early writings, although another title, +Islas del Poniente or Islands of the West, was more common up to the +time when the title Filipinas became fixed.</p> +<p><i>Cebu.</i>—Magellan’s people were now getting +desperately in need of food, and the population on Limasaua had very +inadequate supplies; consequently the natives directed him to the +island of Cebu, and provided him with guides.</p> +<p>Leaving Limasaua the fleet sailed for Cebu, passing several large +islands, among them Bohol, and reaching Cebu harbor on Sunday, the 7th +of April. A junk from Siam was anchored at Cebu when Magellan’s +ships arrived <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb80" href="#pb80" name= +"pb80">80</a>]</span>there; and this, together with the knowledge that +the Filipinos showed of the surrounding countries, including China on +the one side and the Moluccas on the other, is additional evidence of +the extensive trade relations at the time of the discovery.</p> +<p>Cebu seems to have been a large town and it is reported that more +than two thousand warriors with their lances appeared to resist the +landing of the Spaniards, but assurances of friendliness finally won +the Filipinos, and Magellan formed a compact with the dato of Cebu, +whose name was Hamalbar.</p> +<p><i>The Blood Compact.</i>—The dato invited Magellan to seal +this compact in accordance with a curious custom of the Filipinos. Each +chief wounded himself in the breast and from the wound each sucked and +drank the other’s blood. It is not certain whether Magellan +participated in this “blood compact,” as it has been +called; but later it was observed many times in the Spanish settlement +of the islands, especially by Legaspi.</p> +<p>The natives were much struck by the service of the mass, which the +Spaniards celebrated on their landing, and after some encouragement +desired to be admitted to the Spaniards’ religion. More than +eight hundred were baptized, including Hamalbar. The Spaniards +established a kind of “factory” or trading-post on Cebu, +and for some time a profitable trade was engaged in. The Filipinos well +understood trading, had scales, weights, and measures, and were fair +dealers.</p> +<p><i>Death of Magellan.</i>—And now follows the great tragedy of +the expedition. The dato of Cebu, or the “Christian king,” +as Pigafetta called their new ally, was at war with the islanders of +Mactán. Magellan, eager to assist one who had adopted the +Christian faith, landed on Mactán <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb81" href="#pb81" name="pb81">81</a>]</span>with fifty men and in the +battle that ensued was killed by an arrow through the leg and +spear-thrust through the breast. So died the one who was unquestionably +the greatest explorer and most daring adventurer of all time. +“Thus,” says Pigafetta, “perished our guide, our +light, and our support.” It was the crowning disaster of the +expedition.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e1441width"><img src="images/p081.jpg" alt= +"Magellan Monument, Manila." width="531" height="361"> +<p class="figureHead">Magellan Monument, Manila.</p> +</div> +<p><i>The Fleet Visits Other Islands.</i>—After Magellan’s +death, the natives of Cebu rose and killed the newly elected leader, +Serrano, and the fleet in fear lifted its anchors and sailed southward +from the Bisayas. They had lost thirty-five men and their numbers were +reduced to one hundred and fifteen. One of the ships was burned, there +being too few men surviving to handle three vessels. After touching at +western Mindanao, they sailed westward, and saw the small group of +Cagayan Sulu. The <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb82" href="#pb82" +name="pb82">82</a>]</span>few inhabitants they learned were Moros, +exiled from Borneo. They landed on Paragua, called Puluan (hence +Palawan), where they observed the sport of cock-fighting, indulged in +by the natives.</p> +<p>From here, still searching for the Moluccas, they were guided to +Borneo, the present city of Brunei. Here was the powerful Mohammedan +colony, whose adventurers were already in communication with Luzon and +had established a colony on the site of Manila. The city was divided +into two sections, that of the Mohammedan Malays, the conquerors, and +that of the Dyaks, the primitive population of the island. Pigafetta +exclaims over the riches and power of this Mohammedan city. It +contained twenty-five thousand families, the houses built for most part +on piles over the water. The king’s house was of stone, and +beside it was a great brick fort, with over sixty brass and iron +cannon. Here the Spaniards saw elephants and camels, and there was a +rich trade in ginger, camphor, gums, and in pearls from Sulu.</p> +<p>Hostilities cut short their stay here and they sailed eastward along +the north coast of Borneo through the Sulu Archipelago, where their +cupidity was excited by the pearl fisheries, and on to Maguindanao. +Here they took some prisoners, who piloted them south to the Moluccas, +and finally, on November 8, they anchored at Tidor. These Molucca +islands, at this time, were at the height of the Malayan power. The +ruler, or raja of Tidor was Almanzar, of Ternate Corala; the +“king” of Gilolo was Yusef. With all these rulers the +Spaniards exchanged presents, and the rajas are said by the Spaniards +to have sworn perpetual amnesty to the Spaniards and acknowledged +themselves vassals of the king. In exchange for cloths, the Spaniards +laid in a rich cargo of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb83" href= +"#pb83" name="pb83">83</a>]</span>cloves, sandalwood, ginger, cinnamon, +and gold. They established here a trading-post and hoped to hold these +islands against the Portuguese.</p> +<p><i>The Return to Spain.</i>—It was decided to send one ship, +the “Victoria,” to Spain by way of the Portuguese route and +the Cape of Good Hope, while the other would return to America. +Accordingly the “Victoria,” with a little crew of sixty +men, thirteen of them natives, under the command of Juan Sebastian del +Cano, set sail. The passage was unknown to the Spaniards and full of +perils. They sailed to Timor and thence out into the Indian Ocean. They +rounded Africa, sailing as far south as 42 degrees. Then they went +northward, in constant peril of capture by some Portuguese fleet, +encountering storms and with scarcity of food. Their distress must have +been extreme, for on this final passage twenty-one of their small +number died.</p> +<p>At Cape Verdi they entered the Portuguese port for supplies, +trusting that at so northern a point their real voyage would not be +suspected. But some one of the party, who went ashore for food, in an +hour of intoxication boasted of the wonderful journey they had +performed and showed some of the products of the Spice Islands. +Immediately the Portuguese governor gave orders for the seizure of the +Spanish vessel and El Cano, learning of his danger, left his men, who +had gone on shore, raised sail, and put out for Spain.</p> +<p>On the 6th of September, 1522, they arrived at San Lucar, at the +mouth of the Guadalquivir River, on which is situated Seville, one ship +out of the five, and eighteen men out of the company of 234, who had +set sail almost three full years before. Spain welcomed her worn and +tired seamen with splendid acclaim. To El Cano was <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb84" href="#pb84" name="pb84">84</a>]</span>given a +title of nobility and the famous coat-of-arms, showing the sprays of +clove, cinnamon, and nutmeg, and the effigy of the globe with the +motto, the proudest and worthiest ever displayed on any +adventurer’s shield, “<span lang="la">Hic primus +<span class="corr" id="xd19e1470" title= +"Source: circum dedit">circumdedisti</span> me</span>.”</p> +<p><i>The First Circumnavigation of the Earth.</i>—Thus with +enormous suffering and loss of life was accomplished the first +circumnavigation of the earth. It proved that Asia could be reached, +although by a long and circuitous route, by sailing westward from +Europe. It made known to Europe that the greatest of all oceans lies +between the New World and Asia, and it showed that the earth is +incomparably larger than had been believed and supposed. It was the +greatest voyage of discovery that has ever been accomplished, and +greater than can ever be performed again.</p> +<p><b>New Lands Divided between Spain and Portugal.</b>—By this +discovery of the Philippines and a new way to the Spice Islands, Spain +became engaged in a long dispute with Portugal. At the beginning of the +modern age, there was in Europe no system of rules by which to regulate +conduct between states. That system of regulations and customs which we +call International Law, and by which states at the present time are +guided in their dealings, had not arisen. During the middle age, +disputes between sovereigns were frequently settled by reference to the +emperor or to the pope, and the latter had frequently asserted his +right to determine all such questions as might arise. The pope had also +claimed to have the right of disposing of all heathen and newly +discovered lands and peoples.</p> +<p>So, after the discovery of the East Indies by Portugal and of the +West Indies by Spain, Pope Alexander VI., divided the new lands between +them. He declared that <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb86" href="#pb86" +name="pb86">86</a>]</span>all newly discovered countries halfway around +the earth to the east of a meridian 100 leagues west of the Azores +should be Portuguese, and all to the west Spanish. Subsequently he +shifted this line to 270 leagues west of the Azores. This division, it +was supposed, would give India and the Malay islands to Portugal, and +to Spain the Indies that Columbus had discovered, and the New World, +except Brazil.</p> +<p>As a matter of fact, 180 degrees west of the meridian last set by +the pope extended to the western part of New Guinea, and not quite to +the Moluccas; but in the absence of exact geographical knowledge both +parties claimed the Spice Islands. Portugal denied to Spain all right +to the Philippines as well, and, as we shall see, a conflict in the Far +East began, which lasted nearly through the century. Portugal captured +the traders, whom El Cano had left at Tidor, and broke up the Spanish +station in the Spice Islands. The “Trinidad,” the other +ship, which was intended to return to America, was unable to sail +against the strong winds, and had to put back to Tidor, after cruising +through the waters about New Guinea.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e1489width" id="p085"><a href= +"images/p085h.gif"><img src="images/p085.gif" alt= +"The New World and the Indies as divided between Spain and Portugal" +width="720" height="439"></a> +<p class="figureHead">The New World and the Indies as divided between +Spain and Portugal</p> +<p class="first">Half of World in which newly discovered countries were +to be allotted to Spain.</p> +<p>Half of World in which newly discovered countries were to be +allotted to Portugal.</p> +</div> +<p><b>Effect of the Century of Discoveries.</b>—This +circumnavigation of the globe completed a period of discovery which had +begun a hundred years before with the timid, slow attempts of the +Portuguese along the coast of Africa. In these years a new era had +opened. At its beginning the European knew little of any peoples +outside of his own countries, and he held not one mile of land outside +the continent of Europe. At the end of a hundred years the earth had +become fairly well known, the African race, the Malay peoples, the +American Indians, and the Pacific islanders had all been seen and +described, and from now on the history of the white race was to be +connected <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb87" href="#pb87" name= +"pb87">87</a>]</span>with that of these other races. The age of +colonization, of world-wide trade and intercourse, had begun. The white +man, who had heretofore been narrowly pressed in upon Europe, +threatened again and again with conquest by the Mohammedan, was now to +cover the seas with his fleets and all lands with his power. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb88" href="#pb88" name= +"pb88">88</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1213" href="#xd19e1213src" name="xd19e1213">1</a></span> See the +noted work <i>The Life of Prince Henry of Portugal, surnamed the +Navigator, and its Results</i>, by Richard Henry Major, London, 1868. +Many of the views of Mr. Major upon the importance of Prince +Henry’s work and especially its early aims, have been +contradicted in more recent writings. The importance of the Sagres +Observatory is belittled. Doubts are expressed as to the farsightedness +of Prince Henry’s plans, and the best opinion of to-day holds +that he did not hope to discover a new route to India by way of Africa, +but sought simply the conquest of the “Guinea,” which was +known to the Europeans through the Arab Geographers, who called it +“Bilad Ghana” or “Land of Wealth.” The +students, if possible, should read the essay of Mr. E. J. Payne, <i>The +Age of Discovery</i>, in the <i>Cambridge Modern History</i>, Vol +I.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1346" href="#xd19e1346src" name="xd19e1346">2</a></span> The +classical work on this famous ruler is Robertson’s <i>Life of +Charles the Fifth</i>, but the student should consult if possible more +recent works.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1397" href="#xd19e1397src" name="xd19e1397">3</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Primer Viaje alrededor del Mundo</i>, Spanish translation by +Amoretti, Madrid, 1899, page 27.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ch5" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Chapter V.</h2> +<h2 class="main">The Filipino People Before the Arrival of the +Spaniards.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>Position of Tribes.</b>—On the arrival of the +Spaniards, the population of the Philippines seems to have been +distributed by tribes in much the same manner as at present. Then, as +now, the Bisaya occupied the central islands of the archipelago and +some of the northern coast of Mindanao. The Bicol, Tagálog, and +Pampango were in the same parts of Luzon as we find them to-day. The +Ilocano occupied the coastal plain facing the China Sea, but since the +arrival of the Spaniards they have expanded considerably and their +settlements are now numerous in Pangasinan, Nueva Vizcaya, and the +valley of the Cagayan.</p> +<p><b>The Number of People.</b>—These tribes which to-day number +nearly 7,000,000 souls, at the time of Magellan’s discovery were, +probably, not more than 500,000. The first enumeration of the +population made by the Spaniards in 1591, and which included +practically all of these tribes, gives a population of less than +700,000. (See Chapter VIII., <i><a href="#ch8">The Philippines Three +Hundred Years Ago</a></i>.)</p> +<p>There are other facts too that show us how sparse the population +must have been. The Spanish expeditions found many coasts and islands +in the Bisayan group without inhabitants. Occasionally a sail or a +canoe would be seen, and then these would disappear in some small +“estero” or mangrove swamp and the land seem as unpopulated +as before. At certain points, like Limasaua, Butúan, and Bohol, +the natives were more numerous, and Cebu was a large and thriving +community; but <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb89" href="#pb89" name= +"pb89">89</a>]</span>the Spaniards had nearly everywhere to search for +settled places and cultivated lands.</p> +<p>The sparsity of population is also well indicated by the great +scarcity of food. The Spaniards had much difficulty in securing +sufficient provisions. A small amount of rice, a pig and a few +chickens, were obtainable here and there, but the Filipinos had no +large supplies. After the settlement of Manila was made, a large part +of the food of the city was drawn from China. The very ease with which +the Spaniards marched where they willed and reduced the Filipinos to +obedience shows that the latter were weak in numbers. Laguna and the +Camarines seem to have been the most populous portions of the +archipelago. All of these things and others show that the Filipinos +were but a small fraction of their present number.</p> +<p>On the other hand, the Negritos seem to have been more numerous, or +at least more in evidence. They were immediately noticed on the island +of Negros, where at the present they are few and confined to the +interior; and in the vicinity of Manila and in Batangas, where they are +no longer found, they were mingling with the Tagálog +population.</p> +<p><b>Conditions of Culture.</b>—The culture of the various +tribes, which is now quite the same throughout the archipelago, +presented some differences. In the southern Bisayas, where the +Spaniards first entered the archipelago, there seem to have been two +kinds of natives: the hill dwellers, who lived in the interior of the +islands in small numbers, who wore garments of tree bark and who +sometimes built their houses in the trees; and the sea dwellers, who +were very much like the present day Moro tribes south of Mindanao, who +are known as the Sámal, and who built their villages over the +sea or on the shore and <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb90" href= +"#pb90" name="pb90">90</a>]</span>lived much in boats. These were +probably later arrivals than the forest people. From both of these +elements the Bisaya Filipinos are descended, but while the coast people +have been entirely absorbed, some of the hill-folk are still pagan and +uncivilized, and must be very much as they were when the Spaniards +first came.</p> +<p>The highest grade of culture was in the settlements where there was +regular trade with Borneo, Siam, and China, and especially about +Manila, where many Mohammedan Malays had colonies.</p> +<p><b>Languages of the Malayan Peoples.</b>—With the exception of +the Negrito, all the languages of the Philippines belong to one great +family, which has been called the “Malayo-Polynesian.” All +are believed to be derived from one very ancient mother-tongue. It is +astonishing how widely this Malayo-Polynesian speech has spread. +Farthest east in the Pacific there is the Polynesian, then in the +groups of small islands, known as Micronesian; then Melanesian or +Papuan; the Malayan throughout the East Indian archipelago, and to the +north the languages of the Philippines. But this is not all; for far +westward on the coast of Africa is the island of Madagascar, many of +whose languages have no connection with African but belong to the +Malayo-Polynesian family.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e1541src" href= +"#xd19e1541" name="xd19e1541src">1</a></p> +<p><i>The Tagálog Language.</i>—It should be a matter of +great interest to Filipinos that the great scientist, Baron +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb91" href="#pb91" name= +"pb91">91</a>]</span>William von Humboldt, considered the +Tagálog to be the richest and most perfect of all the languages +of the Malayo-Polynesian family, and perhaps the type of them all. +“It possesses,” he said, “all the forms collectively +of which particular ones are found singly in other dialects; and it has +preserved them all with very trifling exceptions unbroken, and in +entire harmony and symmetry.” The Spanish friars, on their +arrival in the Philippines, devoted themselves at once to learning the +native dialects and to the preparation of prayers and catechisms in +these native tongues. They were very successful in their studies. +Father Chirino tells us of one Jesuit who learned sufficient +Tagálog in seventy days to preach and hear confession. In this +way the Bisayan, the Tagálog, and the Ilocano were soon +mastered.</p> +<p>In the light of the opinion of Von Humboldt, it is interesting to +find these early Spaniards pronouncing the Tagálog the most +difficult and the most admirable. “Of all of them,” says +Padre Chirino, “the one which most pleased me and filled me with +admiration was the Tagálog. Because, as I said to the first +archbishop, and afterwards to other serious persons, both there and +here, I found in it four qualities of the four best languages of the +world: Hebrew, Greek, Latin, and Spanish; of the Hebrew, the mysteries +and obscurities; of the Greek, the articles and the precision not only +of the appellative but also of the proper nouns; of the Latin, the +wealth and elegance; and of the Spanish, the good breeding, politeness, +and courtesy.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e1556src" href= +"#xd19e1556" name="xd19e1556src">2</a></p> +<p><i>An Early Connection with the Hindus.</i>—The Malayan +languages contain also a considerable proportion of words borrowed from +the Sanskrit, and in this the Tagálog, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb92" href="#pb92" name="pb92">92</a>]</span>Bisayan, +and Ilocano are included. Whether these words were passed along from +one Malayan group to another, or whether they were introduced by the +actual presence and power of the Hindu in this archipelago, may be fair +ground for debate; but the case for the latter position has been so +well and brilliantly put by Dr. Pardo de Tavera that his conclusions +are here given in his own words. “The words which Tagálog +borrowed,” he says, “are those which signify intellectual +acts, moral conceptions, emotions, superstitions, names of deities, of +planets, of numerals of high number, of botany, of war and its results +and consequences, and finally of titles and dignities, some animals, +instruments of industry, and the names of money.”</p> +<p>From the evidence of these works, Dr. Pardo argues for a period in +the early history of the Filipinos, not merely of commercial +intercourse, like that of the Chinese, but of Hindu political and +social domination. “I do not believe,” he says, “and +I base my opinion on the same words that I have brought together in +this vocabulary, that the Hindus were here simply as merchants, but +that they dominated different parts of the archipelago, where to-day +are spoken the most cultured languages,—the Tagálo, the +Visayan, the Pampanga, and the Ilocano; and that the higher culture of +these languages comes precisely from the influence of the Hindu race +over the Filipino.”</p> +<p><i>The Hindus in the Philippines.</i>—“It is impossible +to believe that the Hindus, if they came only as merchants, however +great their number, would have impressed themselves in such a way as to +give to these islanders the number and the kind of words which they did +give. These names of dignitaries, of caciques, of high functionaries of +the court, of noble ladies, indicate that all of these high positions +with names of Sanskrit origin were occupied at <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb93" href="#pb93" name="pb93">93</a>]</span>one time +by men who spoke that language. The words of a similar origin for +objects of war, fortresses, and battle-songs, for designating objects +of religious belief, for superstitions, emotions, feelings, industrial +and farming activities, show us clearly that the warfare, religion, +literature, industry, and agriculture were at one time in the hands of +the Hindus, and that this race was effectively dominant in the +Philippines.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e1575src" href= +"#xd19e1575" name="xd19e1575src">3</a></p> +<p><b>Systems of Writing among the Filipinos.</b>—When the +Spaniards arrived in the Philippines, the Filipinos were using systems +of writing borrowed from Hindu or Javanese sources. This matter is so +interesting that one can not do better than to quote in full Padre +Chirino’s account, as he is the first of the Spanish writers to +mention it and as his notice is quite complete.</p> +<p>“So given are these islanders to reading and writing that +there is hardly a man, and much less a woman, that does not read and +write in letters peculiar to the island of Manila, very different from +those of China, Japan, and of India, as will be seen from the following +alphabet.</p> +<p>“The vowels are three; but they serve for five, and are,</p> +<div class="table"> +<table class="xd19e1586"> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-a.gif" alt="" width="70" +height="54"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-e.gif" alt="" width="171" +height="57"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-o.gif" alt="" width="46" +height="55"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜀ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜁ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜂ</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">a</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">e, i</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">o, u</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p>The consonants are no more than twelve, and they serve to write both +consonant and vowel, in this form. The letter alone, without any point +either above or below, sounds with <i>a</i>. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb94" href="#pb94" name="pb94">94</a>]</span></p> +<div class="table"> +<table class="xd19e1586"> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ba.gif" alt="" width="54" +height="42"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ca.gif" alt="" width="48" +height="45"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-da.gif" alt="" width="64" +height="57"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ga.gif" alt="" width="54" +height="54"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ha.gif" alt="" width="69" +height="57"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-la.gif" alt="" width="113" +height="73"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜊ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜃ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜇ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜄ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜑ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜎ</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">Ba</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ca</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">da</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ga</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ha</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">la</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ma.gif" alt="" width="69" +height="52"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-na.gif" alt="" width="64" +height="49"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-pa.gif" alt="" width="72" +height="58"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-sa.gif" alt="" width="72" +height="54"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ta.gif" alt="" width="77" +height="64"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ya.gif" alt="" width="78" +height="63"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜋ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜈ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜉ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜐ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜎ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜌ</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">ma</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">na</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">pa</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">sa</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ta</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ya</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p>Placing the point above, each one sounds with <i>e</i> or with +<i>i</i>.</p> +<div class="table"> +<table class="xd19e1586"> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-be.gif" alt="" width="48" +height="52"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-que.gif" alt="" width="44" +height="58"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-de.gif" alt="" width="57" +height="62"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-gue.gif" alt="" width="52" +height="66"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-he.gif" alt="" width="51" +height="62"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-le.gif" alt="" width="113" +height="81"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜊᜒ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜃᜒ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜇᜒ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜄᜒ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜑᜒ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜎᜒ</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">Bi</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">qui</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">di</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">gui</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">hi</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">li</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">be</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">que</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">de</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">gue</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">he</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">le</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-me.gif" alt="" width="51" +height="61"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ne.gif" alt="" width="55" +height="59"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-pe.gif" alt="" width="63" +height="61"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-se.gif" alt="" width="64" +height="69"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-te.gif" alt="" width="65" +height="60"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ye.gif" alt="" width="62" +height="62"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜋᜒ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜈᜒ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜉᜒ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜐᜒ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜎᜒ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜌᜒ</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">mi</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ni</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">pi</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">si</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ti</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">yi</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">me</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ne</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">pe</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">se</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">te</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ye</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p>Placing the point below, it sounds with <i>o</i> or with +<i>u</i>.</p> +<div class="table"> +<table class="xd19e1586"> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-bo.gif" alt="" width="48" +height="69"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-co.gif" alt="" width="41" +height="63"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-do.gif" alt="" width="57" +height="69"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-go.gif" alt="" width="47" +height="62"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ho.gif" alt="" width="54" +height="65"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-lo.gif" alt="" width="94" +height="80"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜊᜓ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜃᜓ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜇᜓ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜄᜓ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜑᜓ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜎᜓ</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">bo</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">co</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">do</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">go</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ho</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">lo</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">bu</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">cu</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">du</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">gu</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">hu</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">lu</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-mo.gif" alt="" width="60" +height="70"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-no.gif" alt="" width="56" +height="71"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-po.gif" alt="" width="73" +height="71"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-so.gif" alt="" width="64" +height="74"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-to.gif" alt="" width="69" +height="80"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-yo.gif" alt="" width="61" +height="74"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜋᜓ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜈᜓ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜉᜓ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜐᜓ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜎᜓ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜌᜓ</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">mo</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">no</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">po</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">so</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">to</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">yo</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">mu</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">nu</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">pu</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">su</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">tu</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">yu</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p>For instance, in order to say ‘cama,’ the two letters +alone suffice. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb95" href="#pb95" name= +"pb95">95</a>]</span></p> +<div class="table"> +<table class="xd19e1586"> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ca.gif" alt="" width="48" +height="45"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ma.gif" alt="" width="69" +height="52"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜃ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜋ</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">ca</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ma</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p>If to the <img src="images/bb-ca.gif" alt="" width="48" height="45"> +<span lang="tl-bayb">ᜃ</span> there is placed a point above, it +will say</p> +<div class="table"> +<table class="xd19e1586"> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-que.gif" alt="" width="44" +height="58"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ma.gif" alt="" width="69" +height="52"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜃᜒ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜋ</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">que</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ma</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p>If it is given to both below, it will say</p> +<div class="table"> +<table class="xd19e1586"> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-co.gif" alt="" width="41" +height="63"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-mo.gif" alt="" width="60" +height="70"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜃᜓ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜋᜓ</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">co</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">mo</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p>The final consonants are supplied or understood in all cases, and so +to say ‘cantar,’ they write</p> +<div class="table"> +<table class="xd19e1586"> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ca.gif" alt="" width="48" +height="45"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ta.gif" alt="" width="77" +height="64"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜃ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜆ</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">ca</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ta</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p>barba,</p> +<div class="table"> +<table class="xd19e1586"> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ba.gif" alt="" width="54" +height="42"></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><img src="images/bb-ba.gif" alt="" width="54" +height="42"></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜊ</span></td> +<td class="xd19e1587"><span lang="tl-bayb">ᜊ</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="xd19e1587">ba</td> +<td class="xd19e1587">ba</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p>But with all, and that without many evasions, they make themselves +understood, and they themselves understand marvellously. And the reader +supplies, with much skill and ease, the consonants that are lacking. +They have learned from us to write running the lines from the left hand +to the right, but formerly they only wrote from above downwards, +placing the first line (if I remember rightly) at the left hand, and +continuing with the others to the right, the opposite of the Chinese +and Japanese.... They write upon canes or on leaves of a palm, using +for a pen a point of iron. Nowadays in writing not only <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb96" href="#pb96" name="pb96">96</a>]</span>their +own but also our letters, they use a feather very well cut, and paper +like ourselves.</p> +<p>They have learned our language and pronunciation, and write as well +as we do, and even better; for they are so bright that they learn +everything with the greatest ease. I have brought with me handwriting +with very good and correct lettering. In Tigbauan, I had in school a +very small child, who in three months’ time learned, by copying +from well-written letters that I set him, to write enough better than +I, and transcribed for me writings of importance very faithfully, and +without errors or mistakes. But enough of languages and letters; now +let us return to our occupation with human souls.”<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e2175src" href="#xd19e2175" name= +"xd19e2175src">4</a></p> +<p><i>Sanskrit Source of the Filipino Alphabet.</i>—Besides the +Tagálog, the Bisaya, Pampango, Pangasinan, and Ilocano had +alphabets, or more properly syllabaries similar to this one. Dr. Pardo +de Tavera has gathered many data concerning them, and shows that they +were undoubtedly received by the Filipinos from a Sanskrit source.</p> +<p><i>Early Filipino Writings.</i>—The Filipinos used this +writing for setting down their poems and songs, which were their only +literature. None of this, however, has come down to us, and the +Filipinos soon adopted the Spanish alphabet, forming the syllables +necessary to write their language from these letters. As all these have +phonetic values, it is still very easy for a Filipino to learn to +pronounce and so read his own tongue. These old characters lingered for +a couple of centuries, in certain places. Padre Totanes<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e2188src" href="#xd19e2188" name="xd19e2188src">5</a> +tells us that it was rare in 1705 to find a person who could use them; +but the Tagbanua, a pagan <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb97" href= +"#pb97" name="pb97">97</a>]</span>people on the island of Paragua, use +a similar syllabary to this day. Besides poems, they had songs which +they sang as they rowed their canoes, as they pounded the rice from its +husk, and as they gathered for feast or entertainment; and especially +there were songs for the dead. In these songs, says Chirino, they +recounted the deeds of their ancestors or of their deities.</p> +<p><b>Chinese in the Philippines.</b>—<i>Early +Trade.</i>—Very different from the Hindu was the early influence +of the Chinese. There is no evidence that, previous to the Spanish +conquest, the Chinese settled or colonized in these islands at all; and +yet three hundred years before the arrival of Magellan their +trading-fleets were coming here regularly and several of the islands +were well known to them. One evidence of this prehistoric trade is in +the ancient Chinese jars and pottery which have been exhumed in the +vicinity of Manila, but the Chinese writings themselves furnish us even +better proof. About the beginning of the thirteenth century, though not +earlier than 1205, a Chinese author named Chao Ju-kua wrote a work upon +the maritime commerce of the Chinese people. One chapter of his work is +devoted to the Philippines, which he calls the country of +Mayi.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2201src" href="#xd19e2201" name= +"xd19e2201src">6</a> According to this record it is indicated that the +Chinese were familiar with the islands of the archipelago seven hundred +years ago.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2207src" href="#xd19e2207" name= +"xd19e2207src">7</a> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb98" href="#pb98" +name="pb98">98</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>Chinese, Description of the People.</i>—“The country +of Mayi,” says this interesting classic, “is situated to +the north of Poni (Burney, or Borneo). About a thousand families +inhabit the banks of a very winding stream. The natives clothe +themselves in sheets of cloth resembling bed sheets, or cover their +bodies with sarongs. (The sarong is the gay colored, typical garment of +the Malay.) Scattered through the extensive forests are copper Buddha +images, but no one knows how they got there.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2215src" href="#xd19e2215" name="xd19e2215src">8</a></p> +<div class="figure floatLeft xd19e2218width"><img src="images/p098.jpg" +alt="Moro Brass Betel Box." width="337" height="153"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e2220" title= +"Source: Filipino Iron Treasure Box.">Moro Brass Betel Box.</span></p> +</div> +<p>“When the merchant (Chinese) ships arrive at this port they +anchor in front of an open place ... which serves as a market, where +they trade in the produce of the country. When a ship enters this port, +the captain makes presents of white umbrellas (to the mandarins). The +merchants are obliged to pay this tribute in order to obtain the good +will of these lords.” The products of the country are stated to +be yellow wax, cotton, pearls, shells, betel nuts, and yuta cloth, +which was perhaps one of the several cloths still woven of +abacá, or piña. The articles imported by the Chinese were +“porcelain, trade gold, objects of lead, glass beads of all +colors, iron cooking-pans, and iron needles.”</p> +<p><i>The Negritos.</i>—Very curious is the accurate mention in +this Chinese writing, of the Negritos, the first of all <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb99" href="#pb99" name="pb99">99</a>]</span>accounts +to be made of the little blacks. “In the interior of the valleys +lives a race called Hai-tan (Acta). They are, of low stature, have +round eyes of a yellow color, curly hair, and their teeth are easily +seen between their lips. (That is, probably, not darkened by +betel-chewing or artificial stains.) They build their nests in the +treetops and in each nest lives a family, which only consists of from +three to five persons. They travel about in the densest thickets of the +forests, and, without being seen themselves, shoot their arrows at the +passers-by; for this reason they are much feared. If the trader +(Chinese) throws them a small porcelain bowl, they will stoop down to +catch it and then run away with it, shouting joyfully.”</p> +<p><i>Increase in Chinese Trade.</i>—These junks also visited the +more central islands, but here traffic was conducted on the ships, the +Chinese on arrival announcing themselves by beating gongs and the +Filipinos coming out to them in their light boats. Among other things +here offered by the natives for trade are mentioned “strange +cloth,” perhaps cinamay or jusi, and fine mats.</p> +<p>This Chinese trade continued probably quite steadily until the +arrival of the Spaniards. Then it received an enormous increase through +the demand for Chinese food-products and wares made by the Spaniards, +and because of the value of the Mexican silver which the Spaniards +offered in exchange.</p> +<p><b>Trade with the Moro Malays of the South.</b>—The spread of +Mohammedanism and especially the foundation of the colony of Borneo +brought the Philippines into important commercial relations with the +Malays of the south. Previous to the arrival of the Spaniards these +relations seem to have been friendly and peaceful. The Mohammedan +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb100" href="#pb100" name= +"pb100">100</a>]</span>Malays sent their praos northward for purposes +of trade, and they were also settling in the north Philippines as they +had in Mindanao.</p> +<p>When Legaspi’s fleet, soon after its arrival, lay near the +island of Bohol, the “Maestro de Campo” had a hard fight +with a Moro vessel which had come up for trade, and took six prisoners. +One of them, whom they call the “pilot,” was closely +interrogated by the Adelantado and some interesting information +obtained, which is recorded by Padre San Augustin.<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e2245src" href="#xd19e2245" name="xd19e2245src">9</a> Legaspi +had a Malay slave interpreter with him and San Augustin says that Padre +Urdaneta “knew well the Malayan language.” The pilot said +that “those of Borneo brought for trade with the Filipinos, +copper and tin, which was brought to Borneo from China, porcelain, +dishes, and bells made in their fashion, very different from those that +the Christians use, and benzoin, and colored blankets from India, and +cooking-pans made in China, and that they also brought iron lances very +well tempered, and knives and other articles of barter, and that in +exchange for them they took away from the islands gold, slaves, wax, +and a kind of small seashell which they call ‘sijueyes,’ +and which passes for money in the kingdom of Siam and other places; and +also they carry off some white cloths, of which there is a great +quantity in the islands.”</p> +<p>Butúan, on the north coast of Mindanao, seems to have been +quite a trading-place resorted to by vessels from all quarters. This +country, like many other parts of the Philippines, has produced from +time immemorial small quantities of gold, and all the early voyagers +speak of the gold earrings and ornaments of the natives. Butúan +also produced sugarcane and was a trading-port for <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb101" href="#pb101" name= +"pb101">101</a>]</span>slaves. This unfortunate traffic in human life +seems to have been not unusual, and was doubtless stimulated by the +commerce with Borneo. Junks from Siam trading with Cebu were also +encountered by the Spaniards.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e2255width"><img src="images/p101.jpg" alt= +"Moro Brass Cannon, or “Lantaka.”" width="513" height= +"175"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e2257" title= +"Source: Filipino Portable Iron Cannon.">Moro Brass Cannon, or +“Lantaka.”</span></p> +</div> +<p><b>Result of this Intercourse and Commerce.</b>—This +intercourse and traffic had acquainted the Filipinos with many of the +accessories of civilized life long before the arrival of the Spaniards. +Their chiefs and datos dressed in silks, and maintained some splendor +of surroundings; nearly the whole population of the tribes of the coast +wrote and communicated by means of a syllabary; vessels from Luzon +traded as far south as Mindanao and Borneo, although the products of +Asia proper came through the fleets of foreigners; and perhaps what +indicates more clearly than anything else the advance the Filipinos +were making through their communication with outside people is their +use of firearms. Of this point there is no question. Everywhere in the +vicinity of Manila, on Lubang, in Pampanga, at Cainta and Laguna de +Bay, the Spaniards encountered forts mounting small cannon, or +“lantakas.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2264src" href= +"#xd19e2264" name="xd19e2264src">10</a> The Filipinos seem to have +understood, moreover, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb102" href= +"#pb102" name="pb102">102</a>]</span>the arts of casting cannon and of +making powder. The first gun-factory established by the Spaniards was +in charge of a Filipino from Pampanga.</p> +<p><b>Early Political and Social Life.</b>—<i>The +Barangay.</i>—The weakest side of the culture of the early +Filipinos was their political and social organization, and they were +weak here in precisely the same way that the now uncivilized peoples of +northern Luzon are still weak. Their state did not embrace the whole +tribe or nation; it included simply the community. Outside of the +settlers in one immediate vicinity, all others were enemies or at most +foreigners. There were in the Philippines no large states, nor even +great rajas and sultans such as were found in the Malay Archipelago, +but instead on every island were a multitude of small communities, each +independent of the other and frequently waging war.</p> +<p>The unit of their political order was a little cluster of houses +from thirty to one hundred families, called a “barangay,” +and which still exists in the Philippines as the “barrio.” +At the head of each barangay was a chief known as the +“dato,” a word no longer used in the northern Philippines, +though it persists among the Moros of Mindanao. The powers of these +datos within their small areas appear to have been great, and they were +treated with utmost respect by the people.</p> +<p>The barangays were grouped together in tiny federations including +about as much territory as the present towns, whose affairs were +conducted by the chiefs or datos, although sometimes they seem to have +all been in obedience to a single chief, known in some places as the +“hari,” at other times by the Hindu word +“raja,” or the Mohammedan term “sultan.” +Sometimes the power of one of these rajas seems to have extended over +the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb103" href="#pb103" name= +"pb103">103</a>]</span>whole of a small island, but usually their +“kingdoms” embraced only a few miles.</p> +<p><i>Changes Made by the Spaniards.</i>—The Spaniards, in +enforcing their authority through the islands, took away the real power +from the datos, grouping the barangays into towns, or +“pueblos,” but making the datos “cabezas de +barrio,” or “gobernadorcillos.” Something of the old +distinction between the dato, or “principal,” and the +common man may be still represented in the “gente +illustrada,” or the more wealthy, educated, and influential class +found in each town, and the “gente baja,” or the poor and +uneducated.</p> +<p><i>Classes of Filipinos under the Datos.</i>—Beneath the +datos, according to Chirino and Morga, there were three classes of +Filipinos; the free persons, or “maharlica,” who paid no +tribute to the dato, but who accompanied him to war, rowed his boat +when he went on a journey, and attended him in his house. This class is +called by Morga “timauas.”<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2295src" href="#xd19e2295" name="xd19e2295src">11</a></p> +<p>Then there was a very large class, who appear to have been freedmen +or liberated slaves, who had acquired their own homes and lived with +their families, but who owed to dato or maharlica heavy debts of +service; to sow and harvest in his ricefields, to tend his fish-traps, +to row his canoe, to build his house, to attend him when he had guests, +and to perform any other duties that the chief might command. These +semi-free were called “aliping namamahay,” and their +condition of bondage descended to their children.</p> +<p>Beneath these existed a class of slaves. These were the +“siguiguiliris,” and they were numerous. Their slavery +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb104" href="#pb104" name= +"pb104">104</a>]</span>arose in several ways. Some were those who as +children had been captured in war and their lives spared. Some became +slaves by selling their freedom in times of hunger. But most of them +became slaves through debt, which descended from father to son. The sum +of five or six pesos was enough in some cases to deprive a man of his +freedom.</p> +<p>These slaves were absolutely owned by their lord, who could +theoretically sell them like cattle; but, in spite of its bad +possibilities, this Filipino slavery was ordinarily not of a cruel or +distressing nature. The slaves frequently associated on kindly +relations with their masters and were not overworked. This form of +slavery still persists in the Philippines among the Moros of Mindanao +and Jolo. Children of slaves inherited their parents’ slavery. If +one parent was free and the other slave, the first, third, and fifth +children were free and the second, fourth, and sixth slaves. This whole +matter of inheritance of slavery was curiously worked out in minute +details.</p> +<p><i>Life in the Barangay.</i>—Community feeling was very strong +within the barangay. A man could not leave his own barangay for life in +another without the consent of the community and the payment of money. +If a man of one barrio married a woman of another, their children were +divided between the two barangays. The barangay was responsible for the +good conduct of its members, and if one of them suffered an injury from +a man outside, the whole barangay had to be appeased. Disputes and +wrongs between members of the same barangay were referred to a number +of old men, who decided the matter in accordance with the customs of +the tribe, which were handed down by tradition.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2312src" href="#xd19e2312" name="xd19e2312src">12</a> +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb105" href="#pb105" name= +"pb105">105</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>The Religion of the Filipinos.</b>—The Filipinos on the +arrival of the Spaniards were fetish-worshipers, but they had one +spirit whom they believed was the greatest of all and the creator or +maker of things. The Tagálog called this deity Bathala,<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e2326src" href="#xd19e2326" name= +"xd19e2326src">13</a> the Bisaya, Laon, and the Ilocano, Kabunian. They +also worshiped the spirits of their ancestors, which were represented +by small images called “anitos.” Fetishes, which are any +objects believed to possess miraculous power, were common among the +people, and idols or images were worshiped. Pigafetta describes some +idols which he saw in Cebu, and Chirino tells us that, within the +memory of Filipinos whom he knew, they had idols of stone, wood, bone, +or the tooth of a crocodile, and that there were some of gold.</p> +<p>They also reverenced animals and birds, especially the crocodile, +the raven, and a mythical bird of blue or yellow color, <span class= +"corr" id="xd19e2337" title="Source: whch">which</span> was called by +the name of their deity Bathala.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2340src" +href="#xd19e2340" name="xd19e2340src">14</a> They had no temples or +public places of worship, but each one had his anitos in his own house +and performed his sacrifices and acts of worship there. As sacrifices +they killed pigs or chickens, and made such occasions times of +feasting, song, and drunkenness. The life of the <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb106" href="#pb106" name= +"pb106">106</a>]</span>Filipino was undoubtedly filled with +superstitious fears and imaginings.</p> +<p><b>The Mohammedan Malays.</b>—The Mohammedans outside of +southern Mindanao and Jolo, had settled in the vicinity of Manila Bay +and on Mindoro, Lubang, and adjacent coasts of Luzon. The spread of +Mohammedanism was stopped by the Spaniards, although it is narrated +that for a long time many of those living on the shores of Manila Bay +refused to eat pork, which is forbidden by the Koran, and practiced the +rite of circumcision. As late as 1583, Bishop Salazar, in writing to +the king of affairs in the Philippines, says the Moros had preached the +law of Mohammed to great numbers in these islands and by this preaching +many of the Gentiles had become Mohammedans; and further he adds, +“Those who have received this foul law guard it with much +persistence and there is great difficulty in making them abandon it; +and with cause too, for the reasons they give, to our shame and +confusion, are that they were better treated by the preachers of +Mohammed than they have been by the preachers of +Christ.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2349src" href="#xd19e2349" +name="xd19e2349src">15</a></p> +<p><b>Material Progress of the Filipinos.</b>—The material +surroundings of the Filipino before the arrival of the Spaniards were +in nearly every way quite as they are to-day. The “center of +population” of each town to-day, with its great church, tribunal, +stores and houses of stone and wood, is certainly in marked contrast; +but the appearance of a barrio a little distance from the center is +to-day probably much as it was then. Then, as now, the bulk of the +people lived in humble houses of bamboo <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb107" href="#pb107" name="pb107">107</a>]</span>and nipa raised on +piles above the dampness of the soil; then, as now, the food was +largely rice and the excellent fish which abound in river and sea. +There were on the water the same familiar bancas and fish corrals, and +on land the rice fields and cocoanut groves. The Filipinos had then +most of the present domesticated animals,—dogs, cats, goats, +chickens, and pigs,—and perhaps in Luzon the domesticated +buffalo, although this animal was widely introduced into the +Philippines from China after the Spanish conquest. Horses came with the +Spaniards and their numbers were increased by the bringing in of +Chinese mares, whose importation is frequently mentioned.</p> +<p>The Spaniards introduced also the cultivation of tobacco, coffee, +and cacao, and perhaps also the native corn of America, the maize, +although Pigafetta says they found it already growing in the +Bisayas.</p> +<p>The Filipino has been affected by these centuries of Spanish +sovereignty far less on his material side than he has on his spiritual, +and it is mainly in the deepening and elevating of his emotional and +mental life and not in the bettering of his material condition that +advance has been made. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb108" href= +"#pb108" name="pb108">108</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1541" href="#xd19e1541src" name="xd19e1541">1</a></span> The +discovery of this famous relationship is attributed to the Spanish +Jesuit Abbé, Lorenzo Hervas, whose notable <i lang="es">Catalogo +de las Lenguas de las Naciones conocidas</i> was published in +1800–05; but the similarity of Malay and Polynesian had been +earlier shown by naturalists who accompanied the second voyage of the +famous Englishman, Captain Cook (1772–75). The full proof, and +the relation also of Malagasy, the language of Madagascar, was given in +1838 by the work of the great German philologist, Baron William von +Humboldt.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1556" href="#xd19e1556src" name="xd19e1556">2</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Relacion de las Islas Filipinas</i>, 2d ed., p. 52.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e1575" href="#xd19e1575src" name="xd19e1575">3</a></span> Another +possible explanation of the many Sanskrit terms which are found in the +Philippine languages, is that the period of contact between Filipinos +and Hindus occurred not in the Philippines but in Java and Sumatra, +whence the ancestors of the Filipinos came.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2175" href="#xd19e2175src" name="xd19e2175">4</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Relacion de las Islas Filipinas</i>, 2d ed., pp. 58, 59, chap. +XVII.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2188" href="#xd19e2188src" name="xd19e2188">5</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Arte de la Lengua Tagala.</i></p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2201" href="#xd19e2201src" name="xd19e2201">6</a></span> This +name is derived, in the opinion of Professor Blumentritt, from Bayi, or +Bay, meaning Laguna de Bay. Professor Meyer, in his <i>Distribution of +the Negritos</i>, suggests an identification from this Chinese record, +of the islands of Mindanao, Palawan (called Pa-lao-yu) and Panay, +Negros, Cebu, Leyte, Samar, Bohol, and Luzon.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2207" href="#xd19e2207src" name="xd19e2207">7</a></span> Through +the courtesy of Professor Zulueta, of the Manila Liceo, permission was +given to use from Chao Ju-kua’s work these quotations, translated +from the Chinese manuscript by Professor Blumentritt. The English +translation is by Mr. P. L. Stangl.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2215" href="#xd19e2215src" name="xd19e2215">8</a></span> +“This would confirm,” says Professor Blumentritt, +“Dr. Pardo de Tavera’s view that in ancient times the +Philippines were under the influence of Buddhism from India.”</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2245" href="#xd19e2245src" name="xd19e2245">9</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Conquista de las Islas Filipinas</i>, p. 95.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2264" href="#xd19e2264src" name="xd19e2264">10</a></span> +<i lang="es">Relacion de la Conquista de la Isla de Luzón</i>, +1572; in Retana, <i lang="es">Archivo del Bibliófilo +Filipino</i>, vol. I.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2295" href="#xd19e2295src" name="xd19e2295">11</a></span> +<i lang="es">Sucesos de las Filipinas</i>, p. 297.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2312" href="#xd19e2312src" name="xd19e2312">12</a></span> These +data are largely taken from the account of the customs of the +Tagálog prepared by Friar Juan de Plasencia, in 1589, at the +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd19e2314" href="#xd19e2314" name= +"xd19e2314">93n</a>]</span>request of Dr. Santiago de Vera, the +governor and president of the Audiencia. Although there are references +to it by the early historians of the Philippines, this little code did +not see the light until a few years ago, when a manuscript copy was +discovered in the convent of the Franciscans at Manila, by Dr. Pardo de +Tavera, and was by him published. It treats of slave-holding, penalties +for crime, inheritances, adoption, dowry, and marriage. (<i lang= +"es">Las Costumbres de los Tagálog en Filipinas, segun el Padre +Plasencia</i>, by T. H. Pardo de Tavera. Madrid, 1892.)</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2326" href="#xd19e2326src" name="xd19e2326">13</a></span> See on +this matter <i lang="es">Diccionario Mitologico de Filipinas</i>, by +Blumentritt; Retana, <i lang="es">Archivo del Bibliófilo +Filipino</i>, vol. II.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2340" href="#xd19e2340src" name="xd19e2340">14</a></span> This +word is of Sanskrit origin and is common throughout Malaysia.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2349" href="#xd19e2349src" name="xd19e2349">15</a></span> +<i lang="es">Relacion de las Cosas de las Filipinas hecha por Sr. +Domingo de Salazar, Primer obispo de dichas islas</i>, 1583; in Retana, +<i lang="es">Archivo</i>, vol. III.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ch6" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Chapter VI.</h2> +<h2 class="main">The Spanish Soldier and the Spanish Missionary.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>History of the Philippines as a Part of the History +of the Spanish Colonies.</b>—We have already seen how the +Philippines were discovered by Magellan in his search for the Spice +Islands. Brilliant and romantic as is the story of that voyage, it +brought no immediate reward to Spain. Portugal remained in her +enjoyment of the Eastern trade and nearly half a century elapsed before +Spain obtained a settlement in these islands. But if for a time he +neglected the Far East, the Spaniard from the Peninsula threw himself +with almost incredible energy and devotion into the material and +spiritual conquest of America. All the greatest achievements of the +Spanish soldier and the Spanish missionary had been secured within +fifty years from the day when Columbus sighted the West Indies.</p> +<p>In order to understand the history of the Philippines, we must not +forget that these islands formed a part of this great colonial empire +and were under the same administration; that for over two centuries the +Philippines were reached through Mexico and to a certain extent +governed by Mexico; that the same governors, judges, and soldiers held +office in both hemispheres, passing from America to the Philippines and +being promoted from the Islands to the higher official positions of +Mexico and Peru. So to understand the rule of Spain in the Philippines, +we must study the great administrative machinery and the <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb109" href="#pb109" name= +"pb109">109</a>]</span>great body of laws which she developed for the +government of the Indies.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2381src" href= +"#xd19e2381" name="xd19e2381src">1</a></p> +<p><b>Character of the Spanish Explorers.</b>—The conquests +themselves were largely effected through the enterprise and wealth of +private individuals; but these men held commissions from the Spanish +crown, their actions were subject to strict royal control, and a large +proportion of the profits and plunder of their expeditions were paid to +the royal treasury. Upon some of these conquerors the crown bestowed +the proud title of “adelantado.” The Spanish nobility threw +themselves into these hazardous undertakings with the courage and fixed +determination born of their long struggle with the Moors. Out of the +soul-trying circumstances of Western conquest many obscure men rose, +through their brilliant qualities of spirit, to positions of eminence +and power; but the exalted offices of viceroy and governor were +reserved for the titled favorites of the king.</p> +<p><b>The Royal Audiencia.</b>—Very early the Spanish court, in +order to protect its own authority, found it necessary to succeed the +ambitious and adventurous conqueror by a ruler in close relationship +with and absolute dependence on the royal will. Thus in Mexico, Cortes +the conqueror was removed and replaced by the viceroy Mendoza, who +established upon the conquests of the former the great Spanish colony +of New Spain, to this day the most successful of all the states planted +by Spain in America.</p> +<p>To limit the power of the governor or viceroy, as well <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb110" href="#pb110" name="pb110">110</a>]</span>as +to act as a supreme court for the settlement of actions and legal +questions, Spain created the “Royal Audiencia.” This was a +body of men of noble rank and learned in the law, sent out from Spain +to form in each country a colonial court; but their powers were not +alone judicial; they were also administrative. In the absence of the +governor they assumed his duties.</p> +<p><b>Treatment of the Natives by the Spanish.</b>—In his +treatment of the natives, whose lands he captured, the Spanish king +attempted three things,—first, to secure to the colonist and to +the crown the advantages of his labor, second, to convert the Indians +to the Christian religion as maintained by the Roman Catholic Church, +and third, to protect them from cruelty and inhumanity. Edict after +edict, law after law, issued from the Spanish throne with these ends in +view. As they stand upon the greatest of colonial law-books, the +<i lang="es">Recopilacion de Leyes de las Indias</i>, they display an +admirable sensitiveness to the needs of the Indian and an appreciation +of the dangers to which he was subjected; but in the actual practice +these beneficent provisions were largely useless.</p> +<p>The first and third of Spain’s purposes in her treatment of +the native proved incompatible. History has shown that liberty and +enlightenment can not be taken from a race with one hand and protection +given it with the other. All classes of Spain’s colonial +government were frankly in pursuit of wealth. Greed filled them all, +and was the mainspring of every discovery and every settlement. The +king wanted revenue for his treasury; the noble and the soldier, booty +for their private purse; the friar, wealth for his order; the bishop, +power for his church. All this wealth had to come out of the native +toiler on the lands which the Spanish conqueror had seized; and while +noble <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb111" href="#pb111" name= +"pb111">111</a>]</span>motives were probably never absent and at +certain times prevailed, yet in the main the native of America and of +the Philippines was a sufferer under the hand and power of the +Spaniard.</p> +<p><b>“The Encomenderos.”</b>—Spain’s system of +controlling the lives and the labor of the Indians was based to a +certain extent on the feudal system, still surviving in the Peninsula +at the time of her colonial conquests. The captains and soldiers and +priests of her successful conquests had assigned to them great estates +or fruitful lands with their native inhabitants, which they managed and +ruled for their own profit. Such estates were called first +“repartimientos.” But very soon it became the practice, in +America, to grant large numbers of Indians to the service of a +Spaniard, who had over them the power of a master and who enjoyed the +profits of their labor. In return he was supposed to provide for the +conversion of the Indians and their religious instruction. Such a grant +of Indians was called an “encomienda.” The +“encomendero” was not absolute lord of the lives and +properties of the Indians, for elaborate laws were framed for the +latter’s protection. Yet the granting of subjects without the +land on which they lived made possible their transfer and sale from one +encomendero to another, and in this way thousands of Indians of America +were made practically slaves, and were forced into labor in the +mines.</p> +<p>As we have already seen, the whole system was attacked by the +Dominican priest, Las Casas, a truly noble character in the history of +American colonization, and various efforts were made in America to +limit the encomiendas and to prevent their introduction into Mexico and +Peru; but the great power of the encomendero in America, together with +the influence of the Church, which held extensive <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb112" href="#pb112" name= +"pb112">112</a>]</span>encomiendas, had been sufficient to extend the +institution, even against Las Casas’ impassioned remonstrances. +Its abolition in Mexico was decreed in 1544, but “commissioners +representing the municipality of Mexico and the religious orders were +sent to Spain to ask the king to revoke at least those parts of the +‘New Laws’ which threatened the interests of the settlers. +By a royal decree of October 20, 1545, the desired revocation was +granted. This action filled the Spanish settlers with joy and the +enslaved Indians with despair.”<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2418src" href="#xd19e2418" name="xd19e2418src">2</a></p> +<p>Thus was the institution early established as a part of the colonial +system and came with the conquerors to the Philippines.</p> +<p><b>Restrictions on Colonization and Commerce.</b>—For the +management of all colonial affairs the king created a great board, or +bureau, known as the “Council of the Indies,” which sat in +Madrid and whose members were among the highest officials of Spain. The +Spanish government exercised the closest supervision over all colonial +matters, and colonization was never free. All persons, wares, and +ships, passing from Spain to any of her colonial possessions, were +obliged to pass through Seville, and this one port alone.</p> +<p>This wealthy ancient city, situated on the river Guadalquivir in +southwestern Spain, was the gateway to the Spanish Empire. From this +port went forth the mailed soldier, the robed friar, the adventurous +noble, and the brave and highborn Spanish ladies, who accompanied their +husbands to such great distances over the sea. And back to this port +were brought the gold of Peru, the silver of Mexico, and the silks and +embroideries of China, dispatched through the Philippines. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb113" href="#pb113" name="pb113">113</a>]</span></p> +<p>It must be observed that all intercourse between Spain and her +colonies was rigidly controlled by the government. Spain sought to +create and maintain an exclusive monopoly of her colonial trade. To +enforce and direct this monopoly, there was at Seville the Commercial +House, or “Casa de Contratacion.” No one could sail from +Spain to a colonial possession without a permit and after government +registration. No one could send out goods or import them except through +the Commercial House and upon the payment of extraordinary imposts. +Trade was absolutely forbidden to any except Spaniards. And by her +forts and fleets Spain strove to isolate her colonies from the approach +of Portuguese, Dutch, or English, whose ships, no less daringly manned +than those of Spain herself, were beginning to traverse the seas in +search of the plunder and spoils of foreign conquest and trade.</p> +<p><b>Summary of the Colonial Policy of Spain.</b>—Spain sought +foreign colonies, first, for the spoils of accumulated wealth that +could be seized and carried away at once, and, secondly, for the income +that could be procured through the labor of the inhabitants of the +lands she gained. In framing her government and administration of her +colonies, she sought primarily the political enlightenment and welfare +neither of the Spanish colonist nor the native race, but the glory, +power, and patronage of the crown. The commercial and trade regulations +were devised, not to develop the resources and increase the prosperity +of the colonies, but to add wealth to the Peninsula. Yet the purposes +of Spain were far from being wholly selfish. With zeal and success she +sought the conversion of the heathen natives, whom she subjected, and +in this showed a humanitarian interest in advance of the Dutch and +English, who rivaled her in colonial empire. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb114" href="#pb114" name="pb114">114</a>]</span></p> +<p>The colonial ideals under which the policy of Spain was framed were +those of the times. In the centuries that have succeeded, public wisdom +and conscience on these matters have immeasurably improved. Nations no +longer make conquests frankly to exploit them, but the public opinion +of the world demands that the welfare of the colonial subject be sought +and that he be protected from official greed. There is great advance +still to be made. It can hardly be said that the world yet recognizes +that a stronger people should assist a weaker without assurance of +material reward, but this is the direction in which the most +enlightened feeling is advancing. Every undertaking of the white race, +which has such aims in view, is an experiment worthy of the most +profound interest and most solicitous sympathy.</p> +<p><b>Result of the Voyage of Magellan and El Cano</b>.—The mind +of the Spanish adventurer was greatly excited by the results of +Sebastian del Cano’s voyage. Here was the opportunity for rich +trade and great profit. Numerous plans were laid before the king, one +of them for the building of an Indian trading-fleet and an annual +voyage to the Moluccas to gather a great harvest of spices.</p> +<p>Portugal protested against this move until the question of her claim +to the Moluccas, under the division of Pope Alexander, could be +settled. The exact longitude of Ternate west from the line 370 leagues +beyond the Verde Islands was not well known. Spaniards argued that it +was less than 180 degrees, and, therefore, in spite of Portugal’s +earlier discovery, belonged to them. The pilot, Medina, for example, +explained to Charles V. that from the meridian 370 <span class="corr" +id="xd19e2449" title="Source: degrees">leagues</span> west of San Anton +(the most westerly island of the Verde group) to the city of Mexico was +59 degrees, from Mexico to Navidad, 9 degrees, and <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb115" href="#pb115" name="pb115">115</a>]</span>from +this port to Cebu, 100 degrees, a total of only 168 degrees, leaving a +margin of 12 degrees; therefore by the pope’s decision the +Indies, Moluccas, Borneo, Gilolo, and the Philippines were +Spain’s.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2454src" href="#xd19e2454" +name="xd19e2454src">3</a> A great council of embassadors and +cosmographers was held at Badajoz in 1524, but reached no agreement. +Spain announced her resolution to occupy the Moluccas, and Portugal +threatened with death the Spanish adventurers who should be found +there.</p> +<p><b>The First Expedition to the Philippines.</b>—Spain acted +immediately upon her determination, and in 1525 dispatched an +expedition under Jofre de Loaisa to reap the fruits of Magellan’s +discoveries.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2466src" href="#xd19e2466" +name="xd19e2466src">4</a> The captain of one vessel was Sebastian del +Cano, who completed the voyage of Magellan. On his ship sailed Andres +de Urdaneta, who later became an <span class="corr" id="xd19e2478" +title="Source: Augustian">Augustinian</span> friar and accompanied the +expedition of Legaspi that finally effected the settlement of the +Philippines. Not without great hardship and losses did the fleet pass +the Straits of Magellan and enter the Pacific Ocean. In mid-ocean +Loaisa died, and four days later the heroic Sebastian del Cano. +Following a route somewhat similar to that of Magellan, the fleet +reached first the Ladrone Islands and later the coast of Mindanao. From +here they attempted to sail to Cebu, but the strong northeast monsoon +drove them southward to the Moluccas, and they landed on Tidor the last +day of the year 1526. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb116" href= +"#pb116" name="pb116">116</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>The Failure of the Expedition.</i>—The Portuguese were at +this moment fighting to reduce the native rajas of these islands to +subjection. They regarded the Spaniards as enemies, and each party of +Europeans was shortly engaged in fighting and in inciting the natives +against the other. The condition of the Spaniards became desperate in +the extreme, and indicates at what cost of life the conquests of the +sixteenth century were made. Their ships had become so battered by +storm as to be no longer sea-worthy. The two officers, who had +successively followed Loaisa and El Cano in command, had likewise +perished. Of the 450 men who had sailed from Spain, but 120 now +survived. These, under the leadership of Hernando de la Torre, threw up +a fort on the island of Tidor, unable to go farther or to retire, and +awaited hoped-for succor from Spain.</p> +<p>Relief came, not from the Peninsula, but from Mexico. Under the +instructions of the Spanish king, in October, 1527, Cortes dispatched +from Mexico a small expedition in charge of D. Alvaro de Saavedra. +Swept rapidly by the equatorial trades, in a few months Saavedra had +traversed the Carolines, reprovisioned on Mindanao, and reached the +survivors on Tidor. Twice they attempted to return to New Spain, but +strong trade winds blow without cessation north and south on either +side of the equator for the space of more than twelve hundred miles, +and the northern latitude of calms and prevailing westerly winds were +not yet known.</p> +<p>Twice Saavedra beat his way eastward among the strange islands of +Papua and Melanesia, only to be at last driven back upon Tidor and +there to die. The survivors were forced to abandon the Moluccas. By +surrendering to the Portuguese they were assisted to return +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb117" href="#pb117" name= +"pb117">117</a>]</span>to Europe by way of Malacca, Ceylon, and Africa, +and they arrived at Lisbon in 1536, the survivors of Loaisa’s +expedition, having been gone from Spain eleven years.</p> +<p>The efforts of the Spanish crown to obtain possession of the Spice +Islands, the Celebes and Moluccas, with their coveted products of +nutmeg, cinnamon, and pepper, were for the time being ended. By the +Treaty of Zaragoza (1529) the Emperor, Charles V., for the sum of three +hundred and fifty thousand gold ducats, renounced all claim to the +Moluccas. For thirteen years the provisions of this treaty were +respected by the Spaniards, and then another attempt was made to obtain +a foothold in the East Indies.</p> +<p><b>The Second Expedition to the Philippines.</b>—The facts +that disaster had overwhelmed so many, that two oceans must be crossed, +and that no sailing-route from Asia back to America was known, did not +deter the Spaniards from their perilous conquests; and in 1542 another +expedition sailed from Mexico, under command of Lopez de Villalobos, to +explore the Philippines and if possible to reach China.</p> +<p>Across the Pacific they made a safe and pleasant voyage. In the warm +waters of the Pacific they sailed among those wonderful coral atolls, +rings of low shore, decked with palms, grouped in beautiful +archipelagoes, whose appearance has never failed to delight the +navigator, and whose composition is one of the most interesting +subjects known to students of the earth’s structure and history. +Some of these coral islands Villalobos took possession of in the name +of Spain. These were perhaps the Pelew Islands or the Carolines.</p> +<p>At last Villalobos reached the east coast of Mindanao, but after +some deaths and sickness they sailed again and <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb118" href="#pb118" name="pb118">118</a>]</span>were +carried south by the monsoon to the little island of Sarangani, south +of the southern peninsula of Mindanao. The natives were hostile, but +the Spaniards drove them from their stronghold and made some captures +of musk, amber, oil, and gold-dust. In need of provisions, they planted +the maize, or Indian corn, the wonderful cereal of America, which +yields so bounteously, and so soon after planting. Food was greatly +needed by the Spaniards and was very difficult to obtain.</p> +<p><i>The Naming of the Islands.</i>—Villalobos equipped a small +vessel and sent it northward to try to reach Cebu. This vessel reached +the coast of Samar. Villalobos gave to the island the name of Filipina, +in honor of the Spanish Infante, or heir apparent, Philip, who was soon +to succeed his father Charles V. as King Philip the Second of Spain. +Later in his correspondence with the Portuguese Villalobos speaks of +the archipelago as Las Filipinas. Although for many years the title of +the Islas del Poniente continued in use, Villalobos’ name of +Filipinas gradually gained place and has lived.</p> +<p><i>The End of the Expedition.</i>—While on Sarangani demands +were made by the Portuguese, who claimed that Mindanao belonged with +the Celebes, that the Spaniards should leave. Driven from Mindanao by +lack of food and hostility of the natives, Villalobos was blown +southward by storms to Gilolo. Here, after long negotiations, the +Portuguese compelled him to surrender. The survivors of the expedition +dispersed, some remaining in the Indies, and some eventually reaching +Spain; but Villalobos, overwhelmed by discouragement, died on the +island of Amboyna. The priest who ministered to him in his last hours +was the famous Jesuit missionary to the Indies, Saint Francis Xavier. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb119" href="#pb119" name= +"pb119">119</a>]</span></p> +<p>Twenty-three years were to elapse after the sailing of +Villalobos’ fleet before another Spanish expedition should reach +the Philippines. The year 1565 dates the permanent occupation of the +archipelago by the Spanish.</p> +<p><b>Increase in Political Power of the Church.</b>—Under Philip +the Second, the champion of ecclesiasticism, the Spanish crown cemented +the union of the monarchy with the church and devoted the resources of +the empire, not only to colonial acquisition, but to combating the +Protestant revolution on the one hand and heathenism on the other. The +Spanish king effected so close a union of the church and state in +Spain, that from this time on churchmen rose higher and higher in the +Spanish councils, and profoundly influenced the policy and fate of the +nation. The policy of Philip the Second, however, brought upon Spain +the revolt of the Dutch Lowlands and the wars with England, and her +struggle with these two nations drained her resources both on land and +sea, and occasioned a physical and moral decline. But while Spain was +constantly losing power and prestige in Europe, the king was extending +his colonial domain, lending royal aid to the ambitious adventurer and +to the ardent missionary friar. Spain’s object being to +christianize as well as to conquer, the missionary became a very +important figure in the history of every colonial enterprise, and these +great orders to whom missions were intrusted thus became the central +institutions in the history of the Philippines.</p> +<p><b>The Rise of Monasticism.</b>—Monasticism was introduced +into Europe from the East at the very commencement of the Middle Ages. +The fundamental idea of the old monasticism was retirement from human +society in the belief that the world was bad and could not be bettered, +and <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb120" href="#pb120" name= +"pb120">120</a>]</span>that men could lead holier lives and better +please God by forsaking secular employments and family relations, and +devoting all their attention to purifying their characters. The first +monastic order in Europe were the Benedictines, organized in the +seventh century, whose rule and organization were the pattern for those +that followed.</p> +<p>The clergy of the church were divided thus into two +groups,—first, the parish priests, or ministers, who lived among +the people over whom they exercised the care of souls, and who, because +they were of the people themselves and lived their lives in association +with the community, were known as the “secular clergy,” and +second, the monks, or “regular clergy,” were so called +because they lived under the “rule” of their order.</p> +<p>In the early part of the thirteenth century monasticism, which had +waned somewhat during the preceding two centuries, received a new +impetus and inspiration from the organization of new orders known as +brethren or “Friars.” The idea underlying their +organization was noble, and above that of the old monasticism; for it +was the idea of service, of ministry both to the hearts and bodies of +depressed and suffering men.</p> +<p><i>The Dominicans.</i>—The Order of Dominicans was organized +by Saint Dominic, an Italian, about 1215. The primary object of its +members was to defend the doctrines of the Church and, by teaching and +preaching, destroy the doubts and protests which in the thirteenth +century were beginning to disturb the claims of the Catholic Church and +the Papacy. The Dominican friars did not live in communities, but +traveled about, humbly clad, preaching in the villages and towns, and +seeking to expose and punish the heretic. The mediæval +universities, through their study of philosophy and the Roman law, +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb121" href="#pb121" name= +"pb121">121</a>]</span>were producing a class of men disposed to hold +opinions contrary to the teachings of the Church. The Dominicans +realized the importance of these great centers of instruction and +entered them as teachers and masters, and by the beginning of the +fifteenth century had made them strongholds of conservatism and +orthodoxy.</p> +<p><i>The Franciscans.</i>—A few years after this organization, +the Order of Franciscans was founded by Saint Francis of Assisi, of +Spain. The aims of this order were not only to preach and administer +the sacraments, but to nurse the sick, provide for the destitute, and +alleviate the dreadful misery which affected whole classes in the +Middle Ages. They took vows of absolute poverty, and so humble was the +garb prescribed by their rule that they went barefooted from place to +place.</p> +<p><i>The Augustinian</i> Order was founded by Pope Alexander IV., in +1265, and still other orders came later.</p> +<p><b>The Degeneration of the Orders.</b>—Without doubt the early +ministrations of these friars were productive of great good both on the +religious and humanitarian sides. But, as the orders became wealthy, +the friars lost their spirituality and their lives grew vicious. By the +beginning of the sixteenth century the administration of the Church +throughout Europe had become so corrupt, the economic burden of the +religious orders so great, and religious teaching and belief so +material, that the best and noblest minds in all countries were +agitating for reform.</p> +<p><b>The Reformation.</b>—In addition to changes in church +administration, many Christians were demanding a greater freedom of +religious thinking and radical changes in the Church doctrine which had +taken form in the Middle Ages. Thus, while all the best minds in the +Church were united in seeking a reformation of character and of +administration, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb122" href="#pb122" +name="pb122">122</a>]</span>great differences arose between them as to +the possibility of change in Church doctrines. These differences +accordingly separated them into two parties, the Papacy adhering +strongly to the doctrine as it was then accepted, while various leaders +in the north of Europe, including Martin Luther in Germany, Swingli in +Switzerland, and John Calvin in France and Geneva, broke with the +authority of the Pope and declared for a liberation of the individual +conscience.</p> +<p>Upon the side of the Papacy, the Emperor Charles the Fifth threw the +weight of the Spanish monarchy, and to enforce the Papal authority he +attacked the German princes by force of arms. The result was a great +revolt from the Roman Catholic Church, which spread all over northern +Germany, a large portion of Switzerland, the lowlands of the Rhine, and +England, and which included a numerous and very influential element +among the French people. These countries, with the exception of France, +have remained Protestant to the present day; and the great expansion of +the English people in America and the East has established +Protestantism in all parts of the world.</p> +<p><i>Effects of the Reformation in the Roman Catholic +Church.</i>—The reform movement, which lasted through the +century, brought about a great improvement in the Roman Catholic +Church. Many, who remained devoted to Roman Catholic orthodoxy, were +zealous for administrative reform. A great assembly of Churchmen, the +Council of Trent, for years devoted itself to legislation to correct +abuses. The Inquisition was revived and put into force against +Protestants, especially in the dominions of Spain, and the religious +orders were reformed and stimulated to new sacrifices and great +undertakings.</p> +<p>But greater, perhaps, than any of these agencies in re-establishing +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb123" href="#pb123" name= +"pb123">123</a>]</span>the power of the Pope and reviving the life of +the Roman Catholic Church was the organization of a new order, the +“Society of Jesus.” The founder was a Spaniard, Ignatius +Loyola, The Jesuits devoted themselves especially to education and +missionary activity. Their schools soon covered Europe, while their +mission stations were to be found in both North and South America, +India, the East Indies, China, and Japan.</p> +<p><b>The Spanish Missionary.</b>—The Roman Catholic Church, +having lost a large part of Europe, thus strove to make up the loss by +gaining converts in heathen lands. Spain, being the power most rapidly +advancing her conquests abroad, was the source of the most tireless +missionary effort. From the time of Columbus, every fleet that sailed +to gain plunder and lands for the Spanish kingdom carried bands of +friars and churchmen to convert to Christianity the heathen peoples +whom the sword of the soldier should reduce to obedience.</p> +<p>“The Laws of the Indies” gave special power and +prominence to the priest. In these early days of Spain’s colonial +empire many priests were men of piety, learning, and unselfish +devotion. Their efforts softened somewhat the violence and brutality +that often marred the Spanish treatment of the native, and they became +the civilizing agents among the peoples whom the Spanish soldiers had +conquered.</p> +<p>In Paraguay, California, and the Philippines the power and +importance of the Spanish missionary outweighed that of the soldier or +governor in the settlement of those countries and the control of the +native inhabitants. Churchmen, full of the missionary spirit, pressed +upon the king the duties of the crown in advancing the cross, and more +than one country was opened to Spanish settlement through the +enthusiasm of the priest.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e2574width" id="p124"><a href= +"images/p124h.gif"><img src="images/p124.gif" alt= +"Conquest and Settlement by the Spaniards in the Philippines, 1565–1590" +width="438" height="720"></a> +<p class="figureHead">Conquest and Settlement by the Spaniards in the +Philippines, 1565–1590</p> +</div> +<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb125" href="#pb125" name= +"pb125">125</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2381" href="#xd19e2381src" name="xd19e2381">1</a></span> The +foundation and character of this great colonial administration have +been admirably described by the Honorable Bernard Moses, United States +Philippine Commissioner and the first Secretary of Public Instruction, +in his work, <i>The Establishment of Spanish Rule in America</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2418" href="#xd19e2418src" name="xd19e2418">2</a></span> Moses: +<i>Establishment of Spanish Rule in America</i>, p. 12.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2454" href="#xd19e2454src" name="xd19e2454">3</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Demarcación del Maluco, hecha por el maestro Medina</i>, in +<i lang="es">Documentos inéditos</i>, vol. V., p. 552.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2466" href="#xd19e2466src" name="xd19e2466">4</a></span> This and +subsequent voyages are given in the <i lang="es">Documentos +inéditos</i>, vol. V., and a graphic account is in +Argensola’s <i lang="es">Conquista de las Islas Molucas</i>. They +are also well narrated in English by Burney, <i>Discoveries in the +South Sea</i>, vol. I., chapters V., XII., and XIV.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ch7" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Chapter VII.</h2> +<h2 class="main">Period of Conquest and Settlement, +1565–1600.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>Cause of Settlement and Conquest of the +Philippines.</b>—The previous Spanish expeditions whose +misfortunes have been narrated, seemed to have proved to the Court of +Spain that they could not drive the Portuguese from the Moluccas. But +to the east of the Moluccas lay great unexplored archipelagoes, which +might lie within the Spanish demarcation and which might yield spices +and other valuable articles of trade; and as the Portuguese had made no +effective occupation of the Philippines, the minds of Spanish +conquerors turned to this group also as a coveted field of conquest, +even though it was pretty well understood that they lay in the latitude +of the Moluccas, and so were denied by treaty to Spain.</p> +<p>In 1559 the Spanish king, Felipe II., commanded the viceroy of +Mexico to undertake again the discovery of the islands lying +“toward the Moluccas,” but the rights of Portugal to +islands within her demarcation were to be respected. Five years passed +before ships and equipments could be prepared, and during these years +the objects of the expedition received considerable discussion and +underwent some change.</p> +<p>The king invited Andres de Urdaneta, who years before had been a +captain in the expedition of Loaisa, to accompany the expedition as a +guide and director. Urdaneta, after his return from the previous +expedition, had renounced military life and had become an Augustinian +friar. He was known to be a man of wise judgment, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb126" href="#pb126" name="pb126">126</a>]</span>with +good knowledge of cosmography, and as a missionary he was able to give +to the expedition that religious strength which characterized all +Spanish undertakings.</p> +<p>It was Urdaneta’s plan to colonize, not the Philippines, but +New Guinea; but the Audiencia of Mexico, which had charge of fitting +out the expedition, charged it in minute instructions to reach and if +possible colonize the Philippines, to trade for spices and to discover +the return sailing route back across the Pacific to New Spain. The +natives of the islands were to be converted to Christianity, and +missionaries were to accompany the expedition. In the quaint language +of Fray Gaspar de San Augustin, there were sent “holy guides to +unfurl and wave the banners of Christ, even to the remotest portions of +the islands, and to drive the devil from the tyrannical possession, +which he had held for so many ages, usurping to himself the adoration +of those peoples.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2596src" href= +"#xd19e2596" name="xd19e2596src">1</a></p> +<p><b>The Third Expedition to the Philippines.</b>—The expedition +sailed from the port of Natividad, Mexico, November 21, 1564, under the +command of Miguel Lopez de Legaspi. The ships followed for a part of +the way a course further south than was necessary, and touched at some +inhabited islands of Micronesia. About the 22d of January they reached +the Ladrones and had some trouble with the natives. They reached the +southern end of Samar about February the 13th. Possession of Samar was +taken by Legaspi in the name of the king, and small parties were sent +both north and south to look for villages of the Filipinos.</p> +<p>A few days later they rounded the southern part of Samar, crossed +the strait to the coast of southern Leyte, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb127" href="#pb127" name="pb127">127</a>]</span>and +the field-marshal, Goyti, discovered the town of Cabalian, and on the +5th of March the fleet sailed to this town. Provisions were scarce on +the Spanish vessels, and great difficulty was experienced in getting +food from the few natives met in boats or in the small settlements +discovered.</p> +<div class="figure floatRight xd19e2610width"><img src= +"images/p127.jpg" alt="Legaspi." width="337" height="526"> +<p class="figureHead">Legaspi.</p> +<p class="first">(<i>From a painting by Luna, in the Malacañan +palace at Manila.</i>)</p> +</div> +<p><i>Legaspi at Bohol.</i>—About the middle of March the fleet +arrived at Bohol, doubtless the southern or eastern shore. While near +here Goyti in a small boat captured a Moro prao from Borneo and after a +hard fight brought back the Moros as prisoners to Legaspi. There proved +to be quite a trade existing between the Moros from Borneo and the +natives of Bohol and Mindanao.</p> +<p>Here on Bohol they were able to make friendly terms with the +natives, and with Sicatuna, the dato of Bohol, Legaspi performed the +ceremony of blood covenant. The Spanish leader and the Filipino chief +each made a small <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb128" href="#pb128" +name="pb128">128</a>]</span>cut in his own arm or breast and drank the +blood of the other. According to Gaspar de San Augustin, the blood was +mixed with a little wine or water and drunk from a goblet.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e2627src" href="#xd19e2627" name="xd19e2627src">2</a> +This custom was the most sacred bond of friendship among the Filipinos, +and friendship so pledged was usually kept with great fidelity.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e2630width"><img src="images/p128.jpg" alt= +"The Blood Compact." width="532" height="359"> +<p class="figureHead">The Blood Compact.</p> +<p class="first">(<i>Painting by Juan Luna.</i>)</p> +</div> +<p><i>Legaspi in Cebu.</i>—On the 27th of April, 1565, +Legaspi’s fleet reached Cebu. Here, in this beautiful strait and +fine anchoring-ground, Magellan’s ships had lingered until the +death of their leader forty-four years before. A splendid native +settlement lined the shore, so Father Chirino tells us, for a distance +of more than a league. The natives of Cebu were fearful and greatly +agitated, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb129" href="#pb129" name= +"pb129">129</a>]</span>and seemed determined to resist the landing of +the Spaniards. But at the first discharge of the guns of the ships, the +natives abandoned the shore, and, setting fire to the town, retreated +into the jungles and hills. Without loss of life the Spaniards landed, +and occupied the harbor and town.</p> +<div class="figure floatLeft xd19e2645width"><img src="images/p129.jpg" +alt="The Holy Child (Santo Niño) of Cebu." width="335" height= +"460"> +<p class="figureHead">The Holy Child (Santo Niño) of Cebu.</p> +</div> +<p><i>Finding of “the Holy Child of Cebu.”</i>—The +Spanish soldiers found in one of the houses of the natives a small +wooden image of the Child Jesus. A similar image, Pigafetta tells us, +he had himself given to a native while in the island with Magellan. It +had been preserved by the natives and was regarded by them as an object +of veneration. To the pious Spaniards the discovery of this sacred +object was hailed as an event of great good fortune. It was taken by +the monks, and carried to a shrine especially erected for it. It still +rests in the church of the Augustinians, an object of great +devotion.</p> +<p><i>Settlement Made at Cebu.</i>—In honor of this image this +first settlement of the Spaniards in the Philippines <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb130" href="#pb130" name= +"pb130">130</a>]</span>received the name of “City of the Most +Holy Name of Jesus.” Here Legaspi established himself, and, by +great tact and skill, gradually won the confidence and friendship of +the inhabitants. A formal peace was at last concluded in which the +dato, Tupas, recognized the sovereignty of Spain; and the people of +Cebu and the Spaniards bound themselves to assist each other against +the enemies of either.</p> +<p>They had some difficulty in understanding one another, but the +Spaniards had with them a Mohammedan Malay of Borneo, called Cid-Hamal, +who had been taken from the East Indies to the Peninsula and thence to +Mexico and Legaspi’s expedition. The languages of Malaysia and +the Philippines are so closely related that this man was able to +interpret. Almost immediately, however, the missionaries began the +study of the native dialect, and Padre Chirino tells us that Friar +Martin Herrada made here the first Filipino vocabulary, and was soon +preaching the Gospel to the natives in their own language.</p> +<p>The great difficulty experienced by Legaspi was to procure +sufficient food for his expedition. At different times he sent a ship +to the nearest islands, and twice his ship went south to Mindanao to +procure a cargo of cinnamon to be sent back to New Spain.</p> +<p>Thus month by month the Spaniards gained acquaintance with the +beautiful island sea of the archipelago, with its green islands and +brilliant sheets of water, its safe harbors and picturesque +settlements.</p> +<p><i>The Bisayans.</i>—In 1569, Legaspi discovered the great +island of Panay. Here they were fortunate in securing a great abundance +of supplies and the friendship of the natives, who received them well. +These beautiful central islands of the Philippines are inhabited by +Bisaya. The <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb131" href="#pb131" name= +"pb131">131</a>]</span>Spaniards found this tribe tattooing their +bodies with ornamental designs, a practice widespread throughout +Oceanica, and which still is common among the tribes of northern Luzon. +This practice caused the Spaniards to give to the Bisayas the title of +“Islas de los Pintados” (the Islands of the Painted).</p> +<p><b>Discovery of the Northern Return Route across the +Pacific.</b>—Before the arrival of the expedition in the +Philippines, the captain of one of Legaspi’s ships, inspired by +ungenerous ambition and the hopes of getting a reward, outsailed the +rest of the fleet. Having arrived first in the islands, he started at +once upon the return voyage. Unlike preceding captains who had tried to +return to New Spain by sailing eastward from the islands against both +wind and ocean current, this captain sailed northward beyond the trades +into the more favorable westerly winds, and found his way back to +America and New Spain.</p> +<p>Soon after arriving in the Philippines, Legaspi’s instructions +required him to dispatch at least one vessel on the return voyage to +New Spain. Accordingly on June 1st the San Pablo set sail, carrying +about two hundred men, including Urdenata and another friar. This +vessel also followed the northern route across the Pacific, and after a +voyage of great hardship, occupying three and a half months, it reached +the coast of North America at California and followed it southward to +Acapulco.</p> +<p>The discovery made by these captains of a favorable route for +vessels returning from the islands to New Spain safe from capture by +the Portuguese, completed the plans of the Spanish for the occupation +of the Philippines. In 1567 another vessel was dispatched by Legaspi +and made this voyage successfully. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb132" +href="#pb132" name="pb132">132</a>]</span></p> +<p>The sailing of these vessels left Legaspi in Cebu with a colony of +only one hundred and fifty Spaniards, poorly provided with resources, +to commence the conquest of the Philippines. But he won the friendship +and respect of the inhabitants, and in 1568 two galleons with +reinforcements arrived from Acapulco. From this time on nearly yearly +communication was maintained, fresh troops with munitions and supplies +arriving with each expedition.</p> +<p><b>The First Expedition against the Moro +Pirates.</b>—<i>Pirates of Mindoro.</i>—The Spaniards found +the Straits of San Bernardino and the Mindoro Sea swarming with the +fleets of Mohammedan Malays from Borneo and the Jolo Archipelago. To a +race living so continuously upon the water, piracy has always possessed +irresistible attractions. In the days of Legaspi, the island of Mindoro +had been partially settled by Malays from the south, and many of these +settlements were devoted to piracy, preying especially upon the towns +on the north coast of Panay. In January, 1570, Legaspi dispatched his +grandson, Juan de Salcedo, to punish these marauders.<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e2690src" href="#xd19e2690" name="xd19e2690src">3</a></p> +<p><i>Capture of Pirate Strongholds.</i>—Salcedo had a force of +forty Spaniards and a large number of Bisaya. He landed on the western +coast of Mindoro and took the pirate town of Mamburao. The main +stronghold of the Moros he found to be on the small island of Lubang, +northwest of Mindanao. Here they had three strong forts with high +walls, on which were mounted small brass cannon, or +“lantakas.” Two of these forts were surrounded by moats. +There were several days of fighting before Lubang was conquered. The +possession of Lubang brought <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb133" href= +"#pb133" name="pb133">133</a>]</span>the Spaniards almost to the +entrance of Manila Bay, Meanwhile, a captain, Enriquez de Guzman, had +discovered Masbate, Burias, and Ticao, and had landed on Luzon in the +neighborhood of Albay, called then, “Italon.”</p> +<div class="figure xd19e2706width" id="p133"><img src="images/p133.gif" +alt="Straits of Manila." width="524" height="184"> +<p class="figureHead"><b>Straits of Manila.</b></p> +</div> +<p><b>Conquest of the Moro City of Manila.</b>—<i>Expedition from +Panay.</i>—Reports had come to Legaspi of an important Mohammedan +settlement named “May-nila,” on the shore of a great bay, +and a Mohammedan chieftain, called Maomat, was procured to guide the +Spaniards on their conquest of this region.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2718src" href="#xd19e2718" name="xd19e2718src">4</a> For this +purpose Legaspi sent his field-marshal, Martin de Goiti, with Salcedo, +one hundred and twenty Spanish soldiers, and fourteen or fifteen boats +filled with Bisayan allies. They left Panay early in May, and, after +stopping at Mindoro, came to anchor in Manila Bay, off the mouth of the +Pasig River.</p> +<p><i>The Mohammedan City.</i>—On the south bank of the river was +the fortified town of the Mohammedan chieftain, Raja Soliman; on the +north bank was the town of Tondo, under the Raja Alcandora, or +Lacandola. Morga<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2728src" href="#xd19e2728" +name="xd19e2728src">5</a> tells us that these Mohammedan settlers from +the island <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb135" href="#pb135" name= +"pb135">135</a>]</span>of Borneo had commenced to arrive on the island +only a few years before the coming of the Spaniards. They had settled +and married among the Filipino population already occupying Manila Bay, +and had introduced some of the forms and practices of the Mohammedan +religion. The city of Manila was defended by a fort, apparently on the +exact sight of the present fort of Santiago. It was built of the trunks +of palms, and had embrasures where were mounted a considerable number +of cannon, or lantakas.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e2737width" id="p134"><a href= +"images/p134h.gif"><img src="images/p134.gif" alt="The City of Manila" +width="436" height="720"></a> +<p class="figureHead">The City of Manila</p> +<p class="first">(Adapted from <span lang="es">Buzeta Diccionario de +las Islas Filipinas</span>)</p> +<p>Reference</p> +<table> +<tr> +<td> +<ul class="xd19e2747"> +<li>1. <i>Artillery and Naval Store House</i></li> +<li>2. <i>Arsenal</i></li> +<li>3. <i>Audiencia or Court House</i></li> +<li>4. <i>Military Hospital</i></li> +<li>5. <i>University of St. Thomas</i></li> +<li>6. <i>Ayuntamiento or Palace</i></li> +<li>7. <i>Archbishop’s Palace</i></li> +<li>8. <i lang="es">Intendencia</i></li> +<li>9. <i>Consulate</i></li> +<li>10. <i>College of Santa Potenciana</i></li> +<li>11. <i>Church of Santo Domingo</i></li> +<li>12. <i>Cathedral</i></li> +<li>13. <i>College of San Juan de Letran</i></li> +</ul> +</td> +<td> +<ul class="xd19e2747"> +<li>14. <i>Church and College of Santa Isabel</i></li> +<li>15. <i>Hospital of S Juan de Dios</i></li> +<li>16. <i>Church and Convent of San Augustin</i></li> +<li>17. <i lang="es">Orden Tercera</i></li> +<li>18. <i>Church of San Francisco</i></li> +<li>19. <i>Church of Recoletos</i></li> +<li>20. <i>Santo Domingo Gate</i></li> +<li>21. <i>Parian Gate</i></li> +<li>22. <i>Real Gate</i></li> +<li>23. <i>Santa Lucia Gate</i></li> +<li>24. <i>Postern Gate</i></li> +<li>25. <i>Isabel II Gate</i></li> +</ul> +</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p><i>Capture of the City.</i>—The natives received the +foreigners at first with a show of friendliness, but after they had +landed on the banks of the Pasig, Soliman, with a large force, +assaulted them. The impetuous Spaniards charged, and carried the +fortifications, and the natives fled, setting fire to their settlement. +When the fight was over the Spaniards found among the dead the body of +a Portuguese artillerist, who had directed the defense. Doubtless he +was one who had deserted from the Portuguese garrison far south in the +Indian archipelago to cast in his fortunes with the Malays. It being +the commencement of the season of rains and typhoons, the Spaniards +decided to defer the occupation of Manila, and, after exploring Cavite +harbor, they returned to Panay.</p> +<p>A year was spent in strengthening their hold on the Bisayas and in +arranging for their conquest of Luzon. On Masbate was placed a friar +and six soldiers, so small was the number that could be spared.</p> +<p><b>Founding of the Spanish City of Manila.</b>—With a force of +280 men Legaspi returned in the spring of 1571 to the conquest of +Luzon. It was a bloodless victory. The Filipino rajas declared +themselves vassals of the Spanish king, and in the months of May and +June the Spaniards established themselves in the present site of the +city. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb136" href="#pb136" name= +"pb136">136</a>]</span></p> +<p>At once Legaspi gave orders for the reconstruction of the fort, the +building of a palace, a convent for the Augustinian monks, a church, +and 150 houses. The boundaries of this city followed closely the +outlines of the Tagálog city “Maynila,” and it seems +probable that the location of buildings then established have been +adhered to until the present time. This settlement appeared so +desirable to Legaspi that he at once designated it as the capital of +the archipelago. Almost immediately he organized its governing +assembly, or <span lang="es">ayuntamiento</span>.</p> +<p><b>The First Battle on Manila Bay.</b>—In spite of their ready +submission, the rajas, Soliman and Lacandola, did not yield their +sovereignty without a struggle. They were able to secure assistance in +the Tagálog and Pampanga settlements of Macabebe and Hagonoy. A +great fleet of forty war-praos gathered in palm-lined estuaries on the +north shore of Manila Bay, and came sweeping down the shallow coast to +drive the Spaniards from the island. Against them were sent Goiti and +fifty men. The protective mail armor, the heavy swords and lances, the +horrible firearms, coupled with the persistent courage and fierce +resolution of the Spanish soldier of the sixteenth century, swept back +this native armament. The chieftain Soliman was killed.</p> +<p><b>The Conquest of Central Luzon.</b>—Goiti continued his +marching and conquering northward until nearly the whole great plain of +central Luzon, that stretches from Manila Bay to the Gulf of Lingayen, +lay submissive before him. A little later the raja Lacandola died, +having accepted Christian baptism, and the only powerful resistance on +the island of Luzon was ended.</p> +<p>Goiti was sent back to the Bisayas, and the command of the army of +Luzon fell to Salcedo, the brilliant and <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb137" href="#pb137" name="pb137">137</a>]</span>daring grandson of +Legaspi, at this time only twenty-two years of age. This young knight +led his command up the Pasig River. Cainta and Taytay, at that time +important Tagálog towns, were conquered, and then the country +south of Laguna de Bay. The town of Cainta was fortified and defended +by small cannon, and although Salcedo spent three days in negotiations, +it was only taken by storm, in which four hundred Filipino men and +women perished.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2879src" href="#xd19e2879" +name="xd19e2879src">6</a> From here Salcedo marched over the mountains +to the Pacific coast and south into the Camarines, where he discovered +the gold mines of Paracale and Mamburao.</p> +<p>At about this time the Spaniards conquered the Cuyos and Calamianes +islands and the northern part of Paragua.</p> +<p><b>Exploration of the Coast of Northern Luzon.</b>—In 1572, +Salcedo, with a force of only forty-five men, sailed northward from +Manila, landed in Zambales and Pangasinan, and on the long and rich +Ilocos coast effected a permanent submission of the inhabitants. He +also visited the coast farther north, where the great and fertile +valley of the Cagayan, the largest river of the archipelago, reaches to +the sea. From here he continued his adventurous journey down the +Pacific coast of Luzon to the island of Polillo, and returned by way of +Laguna de Bay to Manila.</p> +<p><b>Death of Legaspi.</b>—He arrived in September, 1572, to +find that his grandfather and commander, Legaspi, had died a month +before (August 20, 1572). After seven years of labor the conqueror of +difficulties was dead, but almost the entire archipelago had been added +to the crown of Spain. Three hundred years of Spanish dominion secured +little more territory than that traversed and pacified <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb138" href="#pb138" name="pb138">138</a>]</span>by +the conquerors of those early years. In spite of their slender forces, +the daring of the Spaniards induced them to follow a policy of widely +extending their power, effecting settlements, and enforcing submission +wherever rich coasts and the gathering of population attracted +them.</p> +<p>Within a single year’s time most of the coast country of Luzon +had been traversed, important positions seized, and the inhabitants +portioned out in encomiendas. On the death of Legaspi, the command fell +to Guido de Lavezares.</p> +<div class="figure floatRight xd19e2899width"><img src= +"images/p138.jpg" alt="Legaspi Monument, Luneta." width="301" height= +"478"> +<p class="figureHead">Legaspi Monument, Luneta.</p> +</div> +<p><b>Reasons for this Easy Conquest of the Philippines.</b>—The +explanation of how so small a number of Europeans could so rapidly and +successfully reduce to subjection the inhabitants of a territory like +the Philippines, separated into so many different islands, is to be +found in several things.</p> +<p>First.—The expedition had a great leader, one of those knights +combining sagacity with resolution, who glorify the brief period when +Spanish prestige was highest. No policy could ever be successful in the +Philippines which did not depend for its strength upon giving a measure +of satisfaction to the Filipino people. Legaspi did this. He +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb139" href="#pb139" name= +"pb139">139</a>]</span>appears to have won the native datos, treating +them with consideration, and holding out to them the expectations of a +better and more prosperous era, which the sovereignty of the Spaniard +would bring. Almost from the beginning, the natives of an island +already reduced flocked to his standard to assist in the conquest of +another. The small forces of the Spanish soldiers were augmented by +hundreds of Filipino allies.</p> +<p>Second.—Another reason is found in the wonderful courage and +great fighting power of the Spanish soldier. Each man, splendidly +armored and weaponed, deadly with either sword or spear, carrying in +addition the arquebus, the most efficient firearm of the time, was +equal in combat to many natives who might press upon him with their +naked bodies and inferior weapons.</p> +<p>Third.—Legaspi was extremely fortunate in his captains, who +included such old campaigners as the field-marshal Martin de Goiti, who +had been to the Philippines before with Villalobos, and such gallant +youths as Salcedo, one of the most attractive military figures in all +Spanish history.</p> +<p>Fourth.—In considering this Spanish conquest, we must +understand that the islands were far more sparsely inhabited than they +are to-day. The Bisayan islands, the rich Camarines, the island of +Luzon, had, in Legaspi’s time, only a small fraction of their +present great populations. This population was not only small, but it +was also extremely disunited. Not only were the great tribes separated +by the differences of language, but, as we have already seen, each tiny +community was practically independent, and the power of a dato very +limited. There were no great princes, with large forces of fighting +retainers whom they could call to arms, such as the Portuguese +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb140" href="#pb140" name= +"pb140">140</a>]</span>had encountered among the Malays south in the +Moluccas.</p> +<p>Fifth.—But certainly one of the greatest factors in the +yielding of the Filipino to the Spaniard was the preaching of the +missionary friars. No man is so strong with an unenlightened and +barbarous race as he who claims power from God. And the preaching of +the Catholic faith, with its impressive and dramatic services, its holy +sacraments, its power to arrest the attention and to admit at once the +rude mind into the circle of its ministry, won the heart of the +Filipino. Without doubt he was ready and eager for a loftier and truer +religious belief and ceremonial. There was no powerful native +priesthood to oppose the introduction of Christianity. The preaching of +the faith and the baptism of converts proceeded almost as rapidly as +the marching of Salcedo’s soldiers.</p> +<p><b>The Dangers of the Spanish Occupation.</b>—Such conditions +assured the success of the Spanish occupation, provided the small +colony could be protected from outside attacks. But even from the +beginning the position of this little band of conquerors was perilous. +Their numbers were small and of necessity much scattered, and their +only source of succor lay thousands of miles away, across the greatest +body of water on the earth, in a land itself a colony newly wrested +from the hand of the Indian. Across the narrow waters of the China Sea, +only a few days’ distant, even in the slow-sailing junks, lay the +teeming shores of the most populous country in the world, in those days +not averse to foreign conquest.</p> +<p><b>Attempt of the Chinese under Limahong to Capture +Manila.</b>—<i>Activity of the Southern Chinese.</i>—It was +from the Chinese that the first heavy blow fell. The southeastern coast +of China, comprising the provinces of <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb141" href="#pb141" name="pb141">141</a>]</span>Kwangtung and Fukien, +has always exhibited a restlessness and passion for emigration not +displayed by other parts of the country. From these two provinces, +through the ports of Amoy and Canton, have gone those Chinese traders +and coolies to be found in every part of the East and many other +countries of the world. Two hundred years before the arrival of the +Spaniards, Chinese junks traversed the straits and seas and visited +regularly the coast of Mindanao.</p> +<p><i>Limahong’s Expedition to the Philippines.</i>—This +coast of China has always been notorious for its piracy. The distance +of the capital at Peking and the weakness of the provincial viceroys +have made impossible its suppression. It was one of these bold +filibusters of the China Sea, called Limahong, who two years after the +death of Legaspi attempted the conquest of the Philippines. The +stronghold of this corsair was the island of Pehon, where he fortified +himself and developed his power.</p> +<p>Here, reports of the prosperous condition of Manila reached him, and +he prepared a fleet of sixty-two war-junks, with four thousand soldiers +and sailors. The accounts even state that a large number of women and +artisans were taken on board to form the nucleus of the settlement, as +soon as the Spaniards should be destroyed. In the latter part of +November, 1574, this powerful fleet came sweeping down the western +coast of Luzon and on the 29th gathered in the little harbor of +Mariveles, at the entrance to Manila Bay. Eight miles south of Manila +is the town of Parañaque, on an estuary which affords a good +landing-place for boats entering from the bay. Here on the night +following, Limahong put ashore six hundred men, under one of his +generals, Sioco, who was a Japanese.</p> +<p><i>The Attack upon Manila</i>.—From here they marched +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb142" href="#pb142" name= +"pb142">142</a>]</span>rapidly up the beach and fell furiously upon the +city. Almost their first victim was the field-marshal Goiti. The fort +of Manila was at this date a weak affair, without ditches or +escarpment, and it was here that the struggle took place. The +Spaniards, although greatly outnumbered, were able to drive back the +Chinese; but they themselves lost heavily. Limahong now sent ashore +heavy reinforcements, and prepared to overwhelm the garrison. The +Spaniards were saved from defeat by the timely arrival of Salcedo with +fifty musketeers. From his station at Vigan he had seen the sails of +Limahong’s fleet, cruising southward along the Luzon coast, and, +suspecting that so great an expedition could have no other purpose than +the capture of Manila, he embarked in seven small boats, and reached +the city in six days, just in time to participate in the furious battle +between the Spaniards and the entire forces of the Chinese pirate. The +result was the complete defeat of the Chinese, who were driven back +upon their boats at Parañaque.</p> +<p><i>The Result of Limahong’s Expedition.</i>—Although +defeated in his attack on Manila, Limahong was yet determined on a +settlement in Luzon, and, sailing northward, he landed in Pangasinan +and began constructing fortifications at the mouth of the river +Lingayen. The Spaniards did not wait for him to strengthen himself and +to dispute with them afresh for the possession of the island, but +organized in March an expedition of two hundred and fifty Spaniards and +fifteen hundred Filipinos under Salcedo. They landed suddenly in the +Gulf of Lingayen, burned the entire fleet of the Chinese, and scattered +a part of the forces in the surrounding mountains. The rest, though +hemmed in by the Spaniards, were able to construct small boats, in +which they escaped from the islands. <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb143" href="#pb143" name="pb143">143</a>]</span></p> +<p>Thus ended this formidable attack, which threatened for a time to +overthrow the power of Spain in the East. It was the beginning, +however, of important relations with China. Before Limahong’s +escape a junk arrived from the viceroy of Fukien, petitioning for the +delivery of the Chinese pirate. Two Augustinian friars accompanied his +junk back to China, eager for such great fields of missionary conquest. +They carried letters from Lavezares inviting Chinese friendship and +intercourse.</p> +<p><b>Beginning of a New Period of Conquest.</b>—In the spring of +1576, Salcedo died at Vigan, at the age of twenty-seven. With his death +may be said to close the first period of the history in the +Philippines,—that of the Conquest, extending from 1565 to 1576. +For the next twenty-five years the ambitions of the Spaniards were not +content with the exploration of this archipelago, but there were +greater and more striking conquests, to which the minds of both soldier +and priest aspired.</p> +<p>Despite the settlement with Portugal, the rich Spice Islands to the +south still attracted them, and there were soon revealed the fertile +coasts of Siam and Cambodia, the great empire of China, the beautiful +island of Formosa, and the Japanese archipelago. These, with their +great populations and wealth, were more alluring fields than the poor +and sparsely populated coasts of the Philippines. So, for the next +quarter of a century, the policy of the Spaniards in the Philippines +was not so much to develop these islands themselves, as to make them a +center for the commercial and spiritual conquest of the +Orient.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e2960src" href="#xd19e2960" name= +"xd19e2960src">7</a> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb144" href="#pb144" +name="pb144">144</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>A Treaty with the Chinese.</b>—The new governor arrived in +the Islands in August, 1575. He was Dr. Francisco La-Sande. In October +there returned the ambassadors who had been sent to China by Lavezares. +The viceroy of Fukien had received them with much ceremony. He had not +permitted the friars to remain, but had forwarded the governor’s +letter to the Chinese emperor. In February following came a Chinese +embassy, granting a port of the empire with which the Spaniards could +trade. This port, probably, was Amoy, which continued to be the chief +port of communication with China to the present day.</p> +<p>It was undoubtedly commerce and not the missionaries that the +Chinese desired. Two Augustinians attempted to return with this embassy +to China, but the Chinese on leaving the harbor of Manila landed on the +coast of Zambales, where they whipped the missionaries, killed their +servants and interpreter, and left the friars bound to trees, whence +they were rescued by a small party of Spaniards who happened to pass +that way.</p> +<p><b>Sir Francis Drake’s Noted Voyage.</b>—The year 1577 +is notable for the appearance in the East of the great English +sea-captain, freebooter, and naval hero, Francis Drake. England and +Spain, at this moment, while not actually at war, were rapidly +approaching the conflict which made them for centuries traditional +enemies. Spain was the champion of Roman ecclesiasticism. Her king, +Philip the Second, was not only a cruel bigot, but a politician of +sweeping ambition. His schemes included the conquest of France and +England, the extermination of Protestantism, and the subjection of +Europe to his own and the Roman authority.</p> +<p>The English people scented the danger from afar, and <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb145" href="#pb145" name= +"pb145">145</a>]</span>while the two courts nominally maintained peace, +the daring seamen of British Devon were quietly putting to sea in their +swift and terrible vessels, for the crippling of the Spanish power. The +history of naval warfare records no more reckless adventures than those +of the English mariners during this period. Audacity could not rise +higher.</p> +<p>Drake’s is the most famous and romantic figure of them all. In +the year 1577, he sailed from England with the avowed purpose of +sweeping the Spanish Main. He passed the Straits of Magellan, and came +up the western coast of South America, despoiling the Spanish shipping +from Valparaiso to Panama. Thence he came on across the Pacific, +touched the coast of Mindanao, and turned south to the Moluccas.</p> +<p>The Portuguese had nominally annexed the Moluccas in 1522, but at +the time of Drake’s visit they had been driven from Ternate, +though still holding Tidor. Drake entered into friendly relations with +the sultan of Ternate, and secured a cargo of cloves. From here he +sailed boldly homeward, daring the Portuguese fleets, as he had defied +the Spanish, and by way of Good Hope returned to England, his fleet the +first after Magellan’s to circumnavigate the globe.</p> +<p><b>A Spanish Expedition to Borneo.</b>—The appearance of Drake +in the Moluccas roused La-Sande to ambitious action. The attraction of +the southern archipelagoes was overpowering, and at this moment the +opportunity seemed to open to the governor to force southward his +power. One of the Malay kings of Borneo, Sirela, arrived in Manila, +petitioning aid against his brother, and promising to acknowledge the +sovereignty of the king of Spain over the island of Borneo. La-Sande +went in person to restore <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb146" href= +"#pb146" name="pb146">146</a>]</span>this chieftain to power. He had a +fleet of galleys and frigates, and, according to Padre Gaspar de San +Augustin, more than fifteen hundred Filipino bowmen from Pangasinan, +Cagayan, and the Bisayas accompanied the expedition. He landed on the +coast of Borneo, destroyed the fleet of praos and the city of the +usurper, and endeavored to secure Sirela in his principality. Sickness +among his fleet and the lack of provisions forced him to return to +Manila.</p> +<p><b>The First Attack upon the Moros of Jolo.</b>—On his return +he sent an officer against the island of Jolo. This officer forced the +Joloanos to recognize his power, and from there he passed to the island +of Mindanao, where he further enforced obedience upon the natives. This +was the beginning of the Spanish expeditions against the Moros, which +had the effect of arousing in these Mohammedan pirates such terrible +retaliatory vengeance. Under La-Sande the conquest of the Camarines was +completed by Captain Juan Chavés and the city of Nueva Caceres +founded.</p> +<p><b>The Appointment of Governor Ronquillo.</b>—It was the +uniform policy of the Spanish government to limit the term of office of +the governor to a short period of years. This was one of the futile +provisions by which Spain attempted to control both the ambition and +the avarice of her colonial captains. But Don Gonzalo Ronquillo had +granted to him the governorship of the Philippines for life, on the +condition of his raising and equipping a force of six hundred in Spain, +largely at his own expense, for the better protection and pacification +of the archipelago. This Ronquillo did, bringing his expedition by way +of Panama. He arrived in April, 1580, and although he died at the end +of three years, his rule came at an important time. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb147" href="#pb147" name="pb147">147</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>The Spanish and the Portuguese Colonies Combined.</b>—In +1580, Philip II<span class="corr" id="xd19e3008" title= +"Source: .">,</span> conquered and annexed to Spain the kingdom of +Portugal, and with Portugal came necessarily to the Spanish crown those +rich eastern colonies which the valor of Da Gama and Albuquerque had +won. Portugal rewon her independence in 1640, but for years Manila was +the capital of a colonial empire, extending from Goa in India to +Formosa.</p> +<p><b>Events of Ronquillo’s Rule.</b>—Ronquillo, under +orders from the crown, entered into correspondence with the captain of +the Portuguese fortress on the island of Tidor, and the captain of +Tidor petitioned Ronquillo for assistance in reconquering the tempting +island of Ternate. Ronquillo sent south a considerable expedition, but +after arriving in the Moluccas the disease of beri-beri in the Spanish +camp defeated the undertaking. Ronquillo also sent a small armada to +the coasts of Borneo and Malacca, where a limited amount of pepper was +obtained.</p> +<p>The few years of Ronquillo’s reign were in other ways +important. A colony of Spaniards was established at Oton, on the island +of Panay, which was given the name of Arévalo (Iloilo). And +under Ronquillo was pacified for the first time the great valley of the +Cagayan. At the mouth of the river a Japanese adventurer, Tayfusa, or +Tayzufu, had established himself and was attempting the subjugation of +this important part of northern Luzon. Ronquillo sent against him +Captain Carreon, who expelled the intruder and established on the +present site of Lao-lo the city of Nueva Segovia. Two friars +accompanied this expedition and the occupation of this valley by the +Spaniards was made permanent.</p> +<p><b>The First Conflicts between the Church and the +State.</b>—In March, 1581, there arrived the first Bishop of +Manila, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb148" href="#pb148" name= +"pb148">148</a>]</span>Domingo de Salazar. Almost immediately began +those conflicts between the spiritual and civil authorities, and +between bishop and the regular orders, which have filled to such an +extent the history of the islands. The bishop was one of those +authoritative, ambitious, and arrogant characters, so typical in the +history of the Church. It was largely due to his protests against the +autocratic power of the governor that the king was induced to appoint +the first Audiencia. The character and power of these courts have +already been explained. The president and judges arrived the year +following the death of Ronquillo, and the president, Dr. Santiago de +Vera, became acting governor during the succeeding five years.</p> +<div class="figure floatRight xd19e3023width"><img src= +"images/p148-1.jpg" alt="Moro Spear." width="131" height="451"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e3025" title= +"Source: Malay">Moro</span> Spear.</p> +</div> +<p>In 1587, the first Dominicans, fifteen in number, arrived, and +founded their celebrated mission, La Provincia del Santisimo +Rosario.</p> +<div class="figure floatLeft xd19e3031width"><img src= +"images/p148-2.jpg" alt="Moro Shield." width="260" height="266"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e3033" title= +"Source: Malay">Moro</span> Shield.</p> +</div> +<p><b>Increasing Strength of the Malays.</b>—De Vera continued +the policy of his predecessors and another fruitless attack was made on +Ternate in 1585. The power of the Malay people was increasing, while +that of the Europeans was decreasing. The sultans had expelled their +foreign masters, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb149" href="#pb149" +name="pb149">149</a>]</span>and neither Spaniard nor Portuguese were +able to effect the conquest of the Moluccas. There were uprisings of +the natives in Manila and in Cagayan and Ilocos.</p> +<p><b>The Decree of 1589.</b>—Affairs in the Islands did not yet, +however, suit Bishop Salazar, and as the representative of both +governor and bishop, the Jesuit, Alonso Sanchez, was dispatched in 1586 +to lay the needs of the colony before the king. Philip was apparently +impressed with the necessity of putting the government of the Islands +upon a better <span class="corr" id="xd19e3048" title= +"Source: adminstrative">administrative</span> basis. To this end he +published the important decree of 1589.</p> +<div class="figure floatRight xd19e3051width"><img src= +"images/p149.jpg" alt="Moro Shield." width="213" height="433"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e3053" title= +"Source: Malay">Moro</span> Shield.</p> +</div> +<p>The governor now became a paid officer of the crown, at a salary of +ten thousand ducats. For the proper protection of the colony and the +conquest of the Moluccas, a regular force of four hundred soldiers +accompanied the governor. His powers were extended to those of an +actual viceregent of the king, and the Audiencia was abolished. The man +selected to occupy this important post was Don Gomez Perez +Dasmariñas, who arrived with the new constitution in May, 1590. +So great was the chagrin of the bishop at the abolition of the +Audiencia and the increase of the governor’s power, that he +himself set out for Spain to lay his wishes before the court.</p> +<p><b>The Missionary Efforts of the Friars.</b>—Twenty-four +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb150" href="#pb150" name= +"pb150">150</a>]</span>Franciscans came with Dasmariñas and the +presence of the three orders necessitated the partition of the Islands +among them. The keenest rivalry and jealousy existed among them over +the prosecution of missions in still more foreign lands. To the +missionaries of this age it seemed a possible thing to convert the +great and conservative nations of China and Japan to the Western +religion.</p> +<p>In the month of Dasmariñas’ arrival, a company of +Dominicans attempted to found a mission in China, and, an embassy +coming from Japan to demand vassalage from the Philippines, four of the +newly arrived Franciscans accompanied the Japanese on their return.</p> +<p>A year later, in 1592, another embassy from the king of Cambodia +arrived, bringing gifts that included two elephants, and petitioning +for succor against the king of Siam. This was the beginning of an +alliance between Cambodia and the Philippines which lasted for many +years, and which occasioned frequent military aid and many efforts to +convert that country.</p> +<p><b>Death of Dasmariñas.</b>—But the center of +Dasmariñas’ ambitions was the effective conquest of the +East Indies and the extension of Spanish power and his own rule through +the Moluccas. With this end in view, for three years he made +preparations. For months the shores were lined with the yards of the +shipbuilders, and the great forests of Bulacan fell before the axes of +the Indians. More than two hundred vessels, “galeras,” +“galeotas,” and “virrayes,” were built, and +assembled at Cavite.</p> +<p>In the fall of 1593, the expedition, consisting of over nine hundred +Spaniards, Filipino bowmen and rowers, was ready. Many of the +Filipinos, procured to row these boats, were said to have been slaves, +purchased through the Indian chiefs by the Spanish encomenderos. The +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb151" href="#pb151" name= +"pb151">151</a>]</span>governor sent forward this great fleet under the +command of his son, Don Luis, and in the month of October he himself +set sail in a galley with Chinese rowers. But on the night of the +second day, while off the island of Maricaban, the Chinese oarsmen rose +against the Spaniards, of whom there were about forty on the ship, and +killed almost the entire number, including the governor. They then +escaped in the boat to the Ilocos coast and thence to China.</p> +<p>The murder of this active and illustrious general was a determining +blow to the ambitious projects for the conquest of the East Indies. +Among other papers which Dasmariñas brought from Spain was a +royal cedula giving him power to nominate his successor, who proved to +be his son, Don Luis, who after some difficulty succeeded temporarily +to his father’s position.</p> +<p><b>Arrival of the Jesuits.</b>—In June, 1595, there arrived +Don Antonio de Morga, who had been appointed assessor and +lieutenant-governor of the Islands, to succeed Don Luis. With Morga +came the first Jesuit missionaries. He was also the bearer of an order +granting to the Jesuits the exclusive privilege of conducting missions +in China and Japan. The other orders were forbidden to pass outside the +Islands.</p> +<p><b>An attempt to Colonize Mindanao.</b>—In the year 1596, the +Captain Rodriguez de Figueroa received the title of governor of +Mindanao, with exclusive right to colonize the island for “the +space of two lives.” He left Iloilo in April with 214 Spaniards, +two Jesuit priests, and many natives. They landed in the Rio Grande of +Mindanao, where the defiant dato, Silonga, fortified himself and +resisted them. Almost immediately Figueroa rashly ventured on shore and +was killed by Moros. Reinforcements were sent under Don Juan Ronquillo, +who, after nearly <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb152" href="#pb152" +name="pb152">152</a>]</span>bringing the datos to submission, abandoned +all he had gained. The Spaniards burned their forts on the Rio Grande +and retired to Caldera, near Zamboanga, where they built a +presidio.</p> +<p><b>Death of Franciscans in Japan.</b>—The new governor, Don +Francisco Tello de Guzman, arrived on June 1, 1596. He had previously +been treasurer of the Casa de Contratacion in Seville. Soon after his +arrival an important and serious tragedy occurred in Japan. The ship +for Acapulco went ashore on the Japanese coast and its rich cargo was +seized by the feudal prince where the vessel sought assistance. The +Franciscans had already missions in these islands, and a quarrel +existed between them and the Portuguese Jesuits over this missionary +field. The latter succeeded in prejudicing the Japanese court against +the Franciscans, and when they injudiciously pressed for the return of +the property of the wrecked galleon, “San Felipe,” the +emperor, greedy for the rich plunder, and exasperated by their +preaching, met their petitions with the sentence of death. They were +horribly crucified at the port of Nagasaki, February 5, 1597. This +emperor was the proud and cruel ruler, Taycosama. He was planning the +conquest of the Philippines themselves, when death ended his plans.</p> +<p><b>The First Archbishop in the Philippines.</b>—Meanwhile the +efforts of Salazar at the Spanish court had effected further important +changes for the Islands. The reëstablishment of the Royal +Audiencia was ordered, and his own position was elevated to that of +archbishop, with the three episcopal sees of Ilocos, Cebu, and the +Camarines. He did not live to assume this office, and the first +archbishop of the Philippines was Ignacio Santibañez, who also +died three months after his arrival, on May 28, 1598. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb153" href="#pb153" name="pb153">153</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>Reëstablishment of the Audiencia.</b>—The Audiencia +was reëstablished with great pomp and ceremony. The royal seal was +borne on a magnificently caparisoned horse to the cathedral, where a Te +Deum was chanted, and then to the Casas Reales, where was inaugurated +the famous court that continued without interruption down to the end of +Spanish rule. Dr. Morga was one of the first oidores, and the earliest +judicial record which can now be found in the archives of this court is +a sentence bearing his signature.</p> +<p><b>The Rise of Moro Piracy.</b>—The last years of De +Guzman’s governorship were filled with troubles ominous for the +future of the Islands. The presidio of Caldera was destroyed by the +Moros. Following this victory, in the year 1599, the Moros of Jolo and +Maguindanao equipped a piratical fleet of fifty caracoas, and swept the +coasts of the Bisayas. Cebu, Negros, and Panay were ravaged, their +towns burned, and their inhabitants carried off as slaves.</p> +<p>The following year saw the return of a larger and still more +dreadful expedition. The people of Panay abandoned their towns and fled +into the mountains, under the belief that these terrible attacks had +been inspired by the Spaniards. To check these pirates, Juan Gallinato, +with a force of two hundred Spaniards, was sent against Jolo, but, like +so many expeditions that followed his, he accomplished nothing. The +inability of the Spaniards was now revealed and the era of Moro piracy +had begun. “From this time until the present day” (about +the year 1800), wrote Zuñiga, “these Moros have not ceased +to infest our colonies; innumerable are the Indians they have captured, +the towns they have looted, the rancherias they have destroyed, the +vessels they have taken. It seems as if God has preserved them for +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb154" href="#pb154" name= +"pb154">154</a>]</span>vengeance on the Spaniards that they have not +been able to subject them in two hundred years, in spite of the +expeditions sent against them, the armaments sent almost very year to +pursue them. In a very little while we conquered all the islands of the +Philippines; but the little island of Jolo, a part of Mindanao, and +other islands near by we have not been able to subjugate to this +day.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3111src" href="#xd19e3111" name= +"xd19e3111src">8</a></p> +<div class="figure xd19e3117width"><img src="images/p154.jpg" alt= +"Moro “Vinta.”" width="536" height="374"> +<p class="figureHead">Moro <span class="corr" id="xd19e3120" title= +"Source: Prao.">“Vinta.”</span></p> +</div> +<p><b>Battle at Mariveles with the Dutch.</b>—In October, 1600, +two Dutch vessels appeared in the Islands; it was the famous expedition +of the Dutch admiral, Van Noort. They had come through the Straits of +Magellan, on a voyage around the world. The Dutch were in great need of +provisions. As they were in their great enemy’s colony, they +captured and sunk several boats, Spanish and Chinese, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb155" href="#pb155" name= +"pb155">155</a>]</span>bound for Manila with rice, poultry, palm-wine, +and other stores of food. At Mariveles, a Japanese vessel from Japan +was overhauled. Meanwhile in Manila great excitement and activity +prevailed. The Spaniards fitted up two galleons and the +“Oidor” Morga himself took command with a large crew of +fighting men.</p> +<p>On November 14, they attacked the Dutch, whose crews were greatly +reduced to only eighty men on both ships. The vessel commanded by Morga +ran down the flagship of Van Noort, and for hours the ships lay side by +side while a hand-to-hand fight raged on the deck and in the hold. The +ships taking fire, Morga disengaged his ship, which was so badly +shattered that it sank, with great loss of life; but Morga and some +others reached the little island of Fortuna. Van Noort was able to +extinguish the fire on his vessel, and escape from the Islands. He +eventually reached Holland. His smaller vessel was captured with its +crew of twenty-five men, who were all hung at Cavite.<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e3131src" href="#xd19e3131" name="xd19e3131src">9</a></p> +<p><b>Other Troubles of the Spanish.</b>—In the year 1600, two +ships sailed for Acapulco, but one went down off the Catanduanes and +the other was shipwrecked on the Ladrones. “On top of all other +misfortunes, Manila suffered, in the last months of this government, a +terrible earthquake, which destroyed many houses and the church of the +Jesuits.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3144src" href="#xd19e3144" +name="xd19e3144src">10</a></p> +<p>The Moros, the Dutch, anxieties and losses by sea, the visitations +of God,—how much of the history of the seventeenth century in the +Philippines is filled with these four things! <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb156" href="#pb156" name="pb156">156</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2596" href="#xd19e2596src" name="xd19e2596">1</a></span> Fray +Gaspar de San Agustin: <i lang="es">Conquista de las Islas +Filipinas</i>, lib. I., c. 13.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2627" href="#xd19e2627src" name="xd19e2627">2</a></span> One of +the best paintings of the Filipino artist Juan Luna, which hangs in the +Ayuntamiento in Manila, represents Legaspi in the act of the +“Pacto de Sangre” with this Filipino chieftain.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2690" href="#xd19e2690src" name="xd19e2690">3</a></span> There is +an old account of this interesting expedition by one who participated. +(<i lang="es">Relacion de la Conquista de la Isla de Luzon</i>, Manila, +1572; Retana, <i lang="es">Archivo del Bibliofilo Filipino</i>, vol. +IV.)</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2718" href="#xd19e2718src" name="xd19e2718">4</a></span> Morga: +<i lang="es">Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas</i>, 2d ed., p. 10.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2728" href="#xd19e2728src" name="xd19e2728">5</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Sucesos<a id="xd19e2731" name="xd19e2731"></a> de las Islas +Filipinas.</i> P. 316.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2879" href="#xd19e2879src" name="xd19e2879">6</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Conquista de la Isla de Luzon</i>, p. 24.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e2960" href="#xd19e2960src" name="xd19e2960">7</a></span> See the +letter of Bishop Salazar to the king, explaining his motives, in coming +to the Philippines. Retana, <i lang="es">Biblioteca Filipina</i>, vol, +I.; <i lang="es">Relacion</i>, 1583, p. 4.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3111" href="#xd19e3111src" name="xd19e3111">8</a></span> +Zuñiga: <i lang="es">Historia de Filipinas</i>, pp. 195, +196.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3131" href="#xd19e3131src" name="xd19e3131">9</a></span> Both Van +Noort and Morga have left us accounts of this sea-fight, the former in +his journal, <i>Description of the Failsome Voyage Made Round the +World</i>, and the latter in his famous, <i lang="es">Sucesos de las +Islas Filipinas</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3144" href="#xd19e3144src" name="xd19e3144">10</a></span> Montero +y Vidal: <i lang="es">Historia de Filipinas</i>, vol. I., p. 199.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ch8" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Chapter VIII.</h2> +<h2 class="main">The Philippines Three Hundred Years Ago.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>Condition of the Archipelago at the Beginning of +the Seventeenth Century.</b>—<i>The Spanish Rule Completely +Established.</i>—At the close of the sixteenth century the +Spaniards had been in possession of the Philippines for a generation. +In these thirty-five years the most striking of all the results of the +long period of Spanish occupation were accomplished. The work of these +first soldiers and missionaries established the limits and character of +Spanish rule as it was to remain for 250 years. Into this first third +of a century the Spaniard crowded all his heroic feats of arms, +exploration, and conversion. Thereafter, down to 1850, new fields were +explored, and only a few new tribes Christianized.</p> +<p>The survey of the archipelago given by Morga soon after 1600 reads +like a narrative of approximately modern conditions. It reveals to us +how great had been the activities of the early Spaniard and how small +the achievements of his countrymen after the seventeenth century began. +All of the large islands, except Paragua and the Moro country, were, in +that day, under encomiendas, their inhabitants paying tributes and for +the most part professing the Catholic faith.</p> +<p>The smaller groups and islets were almost as thoroughly exploited. +Even of the little Catanduanes, lying off the Pacific coast of Luzon, +Morga could say, “They are well populated with natives,—a +good race, all encomended <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb157" href= +"#pb157" name="pb157">157</a>]</span>to Spaniards, with doctrine and +churches, and an alcalde-mayor, who does justice among them.”</p> +<div class="figure xd19e3172width" id="p158"><a href= +"images/p158h.jpg"><img src="images/p158.jpg" alt="Luzón" width= +"514" height="720"></a> +<p class="figureHead">Luzón</p> +</div> +<p>He says of the Babuyanes at the extreme north of the archipelago, +“They are not encomended, nor is tribute collected among them, +nor are there Spaniards among them, because they are of little reason +and politeness, and there have neither been Christians made among them, +nor have they justices.” They continued in this condition until a +few years before the end of Spanish rule. In 1591, however, the +Babuyanes had been given in encomienda to Esteban de la Serna and +Francisco Castillo. They are put as having two thousand inhabitants and +five hundred “tributantes,” but all unsubdued (“todos +alçados”).</p> +<p>On some islands the hold of the Spaniards was more extensive in +Morga’s day than at a later time. Then the island of Mindoro was +regarded as important, and in the early years and decades of Spanish +power appears to have been populous along the coasts. Later it was +desolated by the Moro pirates and long remained wild and almost +uninhabited except by a shifting population from the mainland of +Luzon.</p> +<p><b>The Encomiendas.</b>—The first vessels that followed the +expedition of Legaspi had brought orders from the king that the Islands +should be settled, and divided in encomiendas to those who had +conquered and won them.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3184src" href= +"#xd19e3184" name="xd19e3184src">1</a> On this instruction, Legaspi had +given the Filipinos in encomienda to his captains and soldiers as fast +as the conquest proceeded.</p> +<p>We are fortunate to have a review of these encomiendas, made in +1591, about twenty-five years after the system was introduced into the +Islands.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3191src" href="#xd19e3191" name= +"xd19e3191src">2</a> There were then 267 <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb160" href="#pb160" name="pb160">160</a>]</span>encomiendas in the +Philippines, of which thirty-one were of the king, and the remainder of +private persons.</p> +<p><i>Population under the Encomiendas.</i>—From the enumeration +of these encomiendas, we learn that the most populous parts of the +archipelago were La Laguna, with 24,000 tributantes and 97,000 +inhabitants, and the Camarines, which included all the Bicol territory, +and the Catanduanes, where there were 21,670 tributantes and a +population of over 86,000, In the vicinity of Manila and Tondo, which +included Cavite and Marigondon, the south shore of the bay, and Pasig +and Taguig, there were collected 9,410 tributes, and the population was +estimated at about 30,000. In Ilocos were reported 17,130 tributes and +78,520 souls.</p> +<p>The entire valley of the Cagayan had been divided among the soldiers +of the command which had effected the conquest. In the list of +encomiendas a few can be recognized, such as Yguig and Tuguegarao, but +most of the names are not to be found on maps of to-day. Most of the +inhabitants were reported to be “rebellious” +(alçados), and some were apparently the same wild tribes which +still occupy all of this water-shed, except the very banks of the +river; but none the less had the Spaniards divided them off into +“<span class="corr" id="xd19e3208" title= +"Source: repartimentos">repartimientos</span>.” One soldier had +even taken as an encomienda the inhabitants of the upper waters of the +river, a region which is called in the <i lang="es">Relacion</i> +“Pugao,” with little doubt the habitat of the same Igorrote +tribe as the Ipugao, who still dwell in these mountains. The upper +valley of the Magat, or Nueva Vizcaya, does not appear to have been +occupied and probably was not until the missions of the eighteenth +century.</p> +<p>The population among the Bisayan islands was quite surprisingly +small, considering its present proportions. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb161" href="#pb161" name= +"pb161">161</a>]</span>Masbate, for example, had but 1,600 souls; +Burias, a like number; the whole central group, leaving out Panay, only +15,833 tributes, or about 35,000 souls. There was a single encomienda +in Butúan, Mindanao, and another on the Caraga coast. There were +a thousand tributes collected in the encomienda of Cuyo, and fifteen +hundred in Calamianes, which, says the <i lang="es">Relacion</i>, +included “los negrillos,” probably the mixed Negrito +population of northern Palawan.</p> +<p>The entire population under encomiendas is set down as 166,903 +tributes, or 667,612 souls. This is, so far as known, the earliest +enumeration of the population of the Philippines. Barring the Igorrotes +of northern Luzon and the Moros and other tribes of Mindanao, it is a +fair estimate of the number of the Filipino people three hundred years +ago.</p> +<p>It will be noticed that the numbers assigned to single encomenderos +in the Philippines were large. In America the number was limited. As +early as 1512, King Ferdinand had forbidden any single person, of +whatever rank or grade, to hold more than three hundred Indians on one +island.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3225src" href="#xd19e3225" name= +"xd19e3225src">3</a> But in the Philippines, a thousand or twelve +hundred “tributantes” were frequently held by a single +Spaniard.</p> +<p><i>Condition of the Filipinos under the Encomiendas.—Frequent +Revolts.</i>—That the Filipinos on many of these islands bitterly +resented their condition is evidenced by the frequent uprisings and +rebellions. The encomenderos were often extortionate and cruel, and +absolutely heedless of the restrictions and obligations imposed upon +them by the Laws of the Indies. Occasionally a new governor, +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb162" href="#pb162" name= +"pb162">162</a>]</span>under the first impulse of instructions from +Mexico or Spain, did something to correct abuses. Revolts were almost +continuous during the year 1583, and the condition of the natives very +bad, many encomenderos regarding them and treating them almost as +slaves, and keeping them at labor to the destruction of their own crops +and the misery of their families. Gov. Santiago de Vera reached the +Islands the following year and made a characteristic attempt to improve +the system, which is thus related by Zuñiga:—</p> +<p>“As soon as he had taken possession of the government, he +studied to put into effect the orders which he brought from the king, +to punish certain encomenderos, who had abused the favor they had +received in being given encomiendas, whereby he deposed +Bartolomé de Ledesma, encomendero of Abuyo (Leyte), and others +of those most culpable, and punished the others in proportion to the +offenses which they had committed, and which had been proven.</p> +<p>“In the following year of 1585, he sent Juan de Morones and +Pablo de Lima, with a well equipped squadron, to the Moluccas, which +adventure was as unfortunate as those that had preceded it, and they +returned to Manila without having been able to take the fortress of +Ternate. The governor felt it very deeply that the expedition had +failed, and wished to send another armada in accordance with the orders +which the king had given him; but he could not execute this because the +troops from New Spain did not arrive, and because of the Indians, who +lost no occasion which presented itself to shake off the yoke of the +Spaniards.</p> +<p>“The Pampangos and many inhabitants of Manila confederated +with the Moros of Borneo, who had come for <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb163" href="#pb163" name= +"pb163">163</a>]</span>trade, and plotted to enter the city by night, +set it on fire, and, in the confusion of the conflagration, slay all +the Spaniards. This conspiracy was discovered through an Indian woman, +who was married to a Spanish soldier, and measures to meet the +conspiracy were taken, before the mine exploded, many being seized and +suffering exemplary punishment.</p> +<p>“The islands of Samar, Ybabao, and Leyte were also in +disturbance, and the encomendero of Dagami, pueblo of Leyte, was in +peril of losing his life, because the Indians were incensed by his +thievings in the collection of tribute, which was paid in wax, and +which he compelled them to have weighed with a steelyard which he had +made double the legal amount, and wanted to kill him. They would have +done so if he had not escaped into the mountains and afterwards passed +by a banca to the island of Cebu. The governor sent Captain Lorenzo de +la Mota to pacify these disturbances; he made some punishments, and +with these everything quieted down.”<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3249src" href="#xd19e3249" name="xd19e3249src">4</a></p> +<p>Three years later, however, the natives of Leyte were again in +revolt. In 1589 Cagayan rose and killed many Spaniards. The revolt +seems to have spread from here to the town of Dingras, Ilocos, where +the natives rose against the collectors of tribute, and slew six +Spaniards of the pueblo of Fernandina. (Zuñiga, <i lang= +"es">Historia de Filipinas</i>, p. 165.)<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3259src" href="#xd19e3259" name="xd19e3259src">5</a></p> +<p><b>Effects of the Spanish Government.</b>—The Spanish +occupation had brought ruin and misery to some parts of <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb164" href="#pb164" name="pb164">164</a>]</span>the +country. Salazar describes with bitterness the evil condition of the +Filipinos. In the rich fields of Bulacan and Pampanga, great gangs of +laborers had been impressed, felling the forests for the construction +of the Spanish fleets and manning these fleets at the oars, on voyages +which took them for four and six months from their homes. The governor, +Don Gonzalez de Ronquillo, had forced many Indians of Pampanga into the +mines of Ilocos, taking them from the sowing of their rice. Many had +died in the mines and the rest returned so enfeebled that they could +not plant. Hunger and famine had descended upon Pampanga, and on the +encomienda of Guido de Lavazares over a thousand had died from +starvation.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3268src" href="#xd19e3268" name= +"xd19e3268src">6</a></p> +<p><i>The Taxes.</i>—The taxes were another source of abuse. +Theoretically, the tax upon Indians was limited to the +“tributo,” the sum of eight reales (about one dollar) +yearly from the heads of all families, payable either in gold or in +produce of the district. But in fixing the prices of these commodities +there was much extortion, the encomenderos delaying the collection of +the tribute until the season of scarcity, when prices were high, but +insisting then on the same amount as at harvest-time.</p> +<p>The principal, who occupied the place of the former dato, or +“maharlica,” like the gobernadorcillo of recent times, was +responsible for the collecting of the tribute, and his lot seems to +have been a hard one. “If they do not give as much as they ask, +or do not pay for as many Indians as they say there are, they abuse the +poor principal, or throw him into the pillory (<span lang="es">cepo de +cabeza</span>), because all the encomenderos, when they go to make +collections, take their pillories with them, and there they keep +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb165" href="#pb165" name= +"pb165">165</a>]</span>him and torment him, until forced to give all +they ask. They are even said to take the wife and daughter of the +principal, when he can not be found. “Many are the principales +who have died under these torments, according to reports.”</p> +<p>Salazar further states that he has known natives to be sold into +slavery, in default of tribute. Neither did they impose upon adults +alone, but “they collect tribute from infants, the aged and the +slaves, and many do not marry because of the tribute, and others slay +their children.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3288src" href= +"#xd19e3288" name="xd19e3288src">7</a></p> +<p><i>Scarcity of Food.</i>—Salazar further charges that the +alcaldes mayores (the alcaldes of provinces), sixteen in number, were +all corrupt, and, though their salaries were small, they accumulated +fortunes. For further enumeration of economic ills, Salazar details how +prices had evilly increased. In the first years of Spanish occupation, +food was abundant. There was no lack of rice, beans, chickens, pigs, +venison, buffalo, fish, cocoanuts, bananas, and other fruits, wine and +honey; and a little money bought much. A hundred gantas (about three +hundred pints) of rice could then be bought for a toston (a Portuguese +coin, worth about a half-peso), eight to sixteen fowls for a like +amount, a fat pig for from four to six reales. In the year of his +writing (about 1583), products were scarce and prices exorbitant. Rice +had doubled, chickens were worth a real, a good pig six to eight pesos. +Population had decreased, and whole towns were deserted, their +inhabitants having fled into the hills.</p> +<p><b>General Improvement under Spanish Rule.</b>—This is one +side of the picture. It probably is overdrawn by the bishop, who was +jealous of the civil authority and who began the first of those +continuous clashes between the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb166" +href="#pb166" name="pb166">166</a>]</span>church and political power in +the Philippines. Doubtless if we could see the whole character of +Spanish rule in these decades, we should see that the actual condition +of the Filipino had improved and his grade of culture had arisen. No +one can estimate the actual good that comes to a people in being +brought under the power of a government able to maintain peace and +dispense justice. Taxation is sometimes grievous, corruption without +excuse; but almost anything is better than anarchy.</p> +<p>Before the coming of the Spaniards, it seems unquestionable that the +Filipinos suffered greatly under two terrible grievances that inflict +barbarous society,—in the first place, warfare, with its murder, +pillage, and destruction, not merely between tribe and tribe, but +between town and town, such as even now prevails in the wild mountains +of northern Luzon, among the primitive Malayan tribes; and in the +second place, the weak and poor man was at the mercy of the strong and +rich.</p> +<p>The establishment of Spanish sovereignty had certainly mitigated, if +it did not wholly remedy, these conditions. “All of these +provinces,” Morga could write, “are pacified and are +governed from Manila, having alcaldes mayores, corregidors, and +lieutenants, each one of whom governs in his district or province and +dispenses justice. The chieftains (principales), who formerly held the +other natives in subjection, no longer have power over them in the +manner which they tyrannically employed, which is not the least benefit +these natives have received in escaping from such +slavery.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3307src" href="#xd19e3307" +name="xd19e3307src">8</a></p> +<p><b>Old Social Order of the Filipinos but Little +Disturbed.</b>—Some governors seem to have done their utmost to +improve the condition of the people and to govern them <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb167" href="#pb167" name= +"pb167">167</a>]</span>well. Santiago de Vera, as we have seen, even +went so far as to commission the worthy priest, Padre Juan de +Plasencia, to investigate the customs and social organization of the +Filipinos, and to prepare an account of their laws, that they might be +more suitably governed. This brief code—for so it is—was +distributed to alcaldes, judges, and encomenderos, with orders to +pattern their decisions in accordance with Filipino custom.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e3318src" href="#xd19e3318" name= +"xd19e3318src">9</a></p> +<p>In ordering local affairs, the Spaniards to some extent left the old +social order of the Filipinos undisturbed. The several social classes +were gradually suppressed, and at the head of each barrio, or small +settlement, was appointed a head, or cabeza de barangay. As these +<span class="corr" id="xd19e3328" title= +"Source: barangayes">barangays</span> were grouped into pueblos, or +towns, the former datos were appointed captains and +gobernadorcillos.</p> +<p><b>The Payment of Tribute.</b>—The tribute was introduced in +1570.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3335src" href="#xd19e3335" name= +"xd19e3335src">10</a> It was supposed to be eight reales or a peso of +silver for each family. Children under sixteen and those over sixty +were exempt. In 1590 the amount was raised to ten reales. To this was +added a real for the church, known as “sanctorum,” and, on +the organization of the towns, a real for the <span lang="es">caja de +communidad</span> or municipal treasury. Under the encomiendas the +tribute was paid to the encomenderos, except on the royal encomiendas; +but after two or three generations, as the encomiendas were suppressed, +these collections went directly to the insular treasury. There was, in +addition to the tribute, a compulsory service of labor on roads, +bridges, and <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb168" href="#pb168" name= +"pb168">168</a>]</span>public works, known as the “corvee,” +a feudal term, or perhaps more generally as the “<span lang= +"es">polos y servicios</span>.” Those discharging this enforced +labor were called “polistas.”</p> +<p><b>Conversion of the Filipinos to Christianity.</b>—The +population had been very rapidly Christianized. All accounts agree that +almost no difficulty was encountered in baptizing the more advanced +tribes. “There is not in these islands a province,” says +Morga, “which resists conversion and does not desire +it.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3353src" href="#xd19e3353" name= +"xd19e3353src">11</a> Indeed, the Islands seem to have been ripe for +the preaching of a higher faith, either Christian or Mohammedan. For a +time these two great religions struggled together in the vicinity of +Manila,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3358src" href="#xd19e3358" name= +"xd19e3358src">12</a> but at the end of three decades Spanish power and +religion were alike established. Conversion was delayed ordinarily only +by the lack of sufficient numbers of priests. We have seen that this +conversion of the people was the work of the missionary friars. In 1591 +there were 140 in the Islands, but the <i lang="es">Relacion</i> de +Encomiendas calls for 160 more to properly supply the peoples which had +been laid under tribute.</p> +<p><b>Coming of the Friars.</b>—The Augustinians had been the +first to come, accompanying Legaspi. Then came the barefooted friars of +the Order of Saint Francis. The first Jesuits, padres Antonio +Sedeño and Alonzo Sanchez, came with the first bishop of the +Islands, Domingo de Salazar, in 1580. They came apparently without +resources. Even their garments brought from Mexico had rotted on the +voyage. They found a little, poor, narrow house in a suburb of Manila, +called Laguio (probably Concepcion). “So poorly furnished was +it,” says Chirino, “that the same chest which held their +books was the table on which <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb169" href= +"#pb169" name="pb169">169</a>]</span>they ate. Their food for many days +was rice, cooked in water, without salt or oil or fish or meat or even +an egg, or anything else except that sometimes as a regalo they enjoyed +some salt sardines.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3371src" href= +"#xd19e3371" name="xd19e3371src">13</a> After the Jesuits, came, as we +have seen, the friars of the Dominican order, and lastly the +Recollects, or unshod Augustinians.</p> +<p><b>Division of the Archipelago among the Religious +Orders.</b>—The archipelago was districted among these missionary +bands. The Augustinians had many parishes in the Bisayas, on the +Ilocano coast, some in Pangasinan, and all of those in Pampanga. The +Dominicans had parts of Pangasinan and all of the valley of Cagayan. +The Franciscans controlled the Camarines and nearly all of southern +Luzon, and the region of Laguna de Bay. All of these orders had +convents and monasteries both in the city of Manila and in the country +round about. The imposing churches of brick and stone, which now +characterize nearly every pueblo, had not in those early decades been +erected; but Morga tells us that “the churches and monasteries +were of wood, and well built, with furniture and beautiful ornaments, +complete service, crosses, candlesticks, and chalices of silver and +gold.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3381src" href="#xd19e3381" +name="xd19e3381src">14</a></p> +<p><b>The First Schools.</b>—Even in these early years there seem +to have been some attempts at the education of the natives. The friars +had schools in reading and writing for boys, who were also taught to +serve in the church, to sing, to play the organ, the harp, guitar, and +other instruments. We must remember, however, that the Filipino before +the arrival of the Spaniard had a written language, and even in +pre-Spanish times there must have been instruction given to the child. +The type of humble school, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb170" href= +"#pb170" name="pb170">170</a>]</span>that is found to-day in remote +barrios, conducted by an old man or woman, on the floor or in the yard +of a home, where the ordinary family occupations are proceeding, +probably does not owe its origin to the Spaniards, but dates from a +period before their arrival. The higher education established by the +Spaniards appears to have been exclusively for the children of +Spaniards. In 1601 the Jesuits, pioneers of the Roman Catholic orders +in education, established the College of San José.</p> +<p><b>Establishment of Hospitals.</b>—The city early had notable +foundations of charity. The high mortality which visited the Spaniards +in these islands and the frequency of diseases early called for the +establishment of institutions for the orphan and the invalid. In +Morga’s time there were the orphanages of San Andres and Santa +Potenciana. There was the Royal Hospital, in charge of three +Franciscans, which burned in the conflagration of 1603, but was +reconstructed. There was also a Hospital of Mercy, in charge of Sisters +of Charity from Lisbon and the Portuguese possessions of India.</p> +<p>Close by the Monastery of Saint Francis stood then, where it stands +to-day, the hospital for natives, San Juan de Dios. It was of royal +patronage, but founded by a friar of the Franciscan order, Juan +Clemente. “Here,” says Morga, “are cured a great +number of natives of all kinds of sicknesses, with much charity and +care. It has a good house and offices of stone, and is administered by +the barefooted religious of Saint Francis. Three priests are there and +four lay-brethren of exemplary life, who, with the doctors, surgeons, +and apothecaries, are so dexterous and skilled that they work with +their hands marvelous cures, both in medicine and +surgery.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3396src" href="#xd19e3396" +name="xd19e3396src">15</a> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb171" href= +"#pb171" name="pb171">171</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>Mortality among the Spaniards.</b>—Mortality in the +Philippines in these years of conquest was frightfully high. The waste +of life in her colonial adventures, indeed, drained Spain of her best +and most vigorous manhood. In the famous old English collection of +voyages, published by Hakluyt in 1598, there is printed a captured +Spanish letter of the famous sea-captain, Sebastian Biscaino, on the +Philippine trade. Biscaino grieves over the loss of life which had +accompanied the conquest of the Philippines, and the treacherous +climate of the tropics. “The country is very unwholesome for us +Spaniards. For within these 20 years, of 14,000 which have gone to the +Philippines, there are 13,000 of them dead, and not past 1,000 of them +left alive.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3408src" href= +"#xd19e3408" name="xd19e3408src">16</a></p> +<p><b>The Spanish Population.</b>—The Spanish population of the +Islands was always small,—at the beginning of the seventeenth +century certainly not more than two thousand, and probably less later +in the century. Morga divides them into five classes: the prelates and +ecclesiastics; the encomenderos, colonizers, and conquerors; soldiers +and officers of war and marine; merchants and men of business; and the +officers of his Majesty’s government. “Very few are living +now,” he says, “of those first conquistadores who won the +land and effected the conquest with the Adelantado Miguel Lopez de +Legaspi.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3417src" href="#xd19e3417" +name="xd19e3417src">17</a></p> +<p><b>The Largest Cities.</b>—Most of this Spanish population +dwelt in Manila or in the five other cities which the Spaniards +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb172" href="#pb172" name= +"pb172">172</a>]</span>had founded in the first three decades of their +occupation. Those were as follows:—</p> +<p><i>The City of Nueva Segovia</i>, at the mouth of the Cagayan, was +founded in the governorship of Ronquillo, when the valley of the +Cagayan was first occupied and the Japanese colonists, who had settled +there, were expelled. It had at the beginning of the seventeenth +century two hundred Spaniards, living in houses of wood. There was a +fort of stone, where some artillery was mounted. Besides the two +hundred Spanish inhabitants there were one hundred regular Spanish +soldiers, with their officers and the alcalde mayor of the province. +Nueva Segovia was also the seat of a bishopric which included all +northern Luzon. The importance of the then promising city has long ago +disappeared, and the pueblo of Lallo, which marks its site, is an +insignificant native town.</p> +<p><i>The City of Nueva Caceres</i>, in the Camarines, was founded by +Governor La-Sande. It, too, was the seat of a bishopric, and had one +hundred Spanish inhabitants.</p> +<p><i>The Cities of Cebu and Iloilo.</i>—In the Bisayas were the +Cities of the Holy Name of God (Cebu), and on the island of Panay, +Arévalo (or Iloilo). The first maintained something of the +importance attaching to the first Spanish settlement. It had its stone +fort and was also the seat of a bishopric. It was visited by +trading-vessels from the Moluccas, and by permit of the king enjoyed +for a time the unusual privilege of sending annually a ship loaded with +merchandise to New Spain. Arévalo had about eighty Spanish +inhabitants, and a monastery of the Augustinians.</p> +<p><i>The City of Fernandina, or Vigan</i>, which Salcedo had founded, +was nearly without Spanish inhabitants. <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb173" href="#pb173" name="pb173">173</a>]</span>Still, it was the +political center of the great Ilocano coast, and it has held this +position to the present day.</p> +<p><b>Manila.</b>—But all of these cities were far surpassed in +importance by the capital on the banks of the Pasig. The wisdom of +Legaspi’s choice had been more than justified. Manila, at the +beginning of the seventeenth century, was unquestionably the most +important European city of the East. As we have already seen, in 1580 +Portugal had been annexed by Spain and with her had come all the +Portuguese possessions in India, China, and Malaysia. After 1610, the +Dutch were almost annually warring for this colonial empire, and +Portugal regained her independence in 1640. But for the first few years +of the seventeenth century, Manila was the political mistress of an +empire that stretched from Goa to Formosa and embraced all those +coveted lands which for a century and a half had been the desire of +European states.</p> +<p>The governor of the Philippines was almost an independent king. +Nominally, he was subordinate to the viceroy of Mexico, but practically +he waged wars, concluded peaces, and received and sent embassies at his +own discretion. The kingdom of Cambodia was his ally, and the states of +China and Japan were his friends.</p> +<p><i>The Commercial Importance of Manila.</i>—Manila was also +the commercial center of the Far East, and the entrepôt through +which the kingdoms of eastern Asia exchanged their wares. Here came +great fleets of junks from China laden with stores. Morga fills nearly +two pages with an enumeration of their merchandise, which included all +manner of silks, brocades, furniture, pearls and gems, fruits, nuts, +tame buffalo, geese, horses and mules, all kinds of animals, +“even to birds in cages, some of which talk and others sing, and +which they make perform <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb174" href= +"#pb174" name="pb174">174</a>]</span>a thousand tricks; there are +innumerable other gew-gaws and knickknacks, which among Spaniards are +in much esteem.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3459src" href= +"#xd19e3459" name="xd19e3459src">18</a></p> +<p>Each year a fleet of thirty to forty vessels sailed with the new +moon in March. The voyage across the China Sea, rough with the +monsoons, occupied fifteen or twenty days, and the fleet returned at +the end of May or the beginning of June. Between October and March +there came, each year, Japanese ships from Nagasaki which brought +wheat, silks, objects of art, and weapons, and took away from Manila +the raw silk of China, gold, deer horns, woods, honey, wax, palm-wine, +and wine of Castile.</p> +<p>From Malacca and India came fleets of the Portuguese subjects of +Spain, with spices, slaves, Negroes and Kafirs, and the rich +productions of Bengal, India, Persia, and Turkey. From Borneo, too, +came the smaller craft of the Malays, who from their boats sold the +fine palm mats, the best of which still come from Cagayan de Sulu and +Borneo, slaves, sago, water-pots and glazed earthenware, black and +fine. From Siam and Cambodia also, but less often, there came +trading-ships. Manila was thus a great emporium for all the countries +of the East, the trade of which seems to have been conducted largely by +and through the merchants of Manila.</p> +<p><b>Trade with Mexico and Spain Restricted.</b>—The commerce +between the Philippines, and Mexico and Spain, though it was of vast +importance, was limited by action of the crown. It was a commerce which +apparently admitted of infinite expansion, but the shortsighted +merchants and manufacturers of the Peninsula clamored against its +development, and it was subjected to the severest limitations. Four +galleons were at first maintained <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb175" +href="#pb175" name="pb175">175</a>]</span>for this trade, which were +dispatched two at a time in successive years from Manila to the port of +Acapulco, Mexico. The letter on the Philippine trade, already quoted, +states that these galleons were great ships of six hundred and eight +hundred tons apiece.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3474src" href= +"#xd19e3474" name="xd19e3474src">19</a> They went “very strong +with soldiers,” and they carried the annual mail, reinforcements, +and supplies of Mexican silver for trade with China, which has remained +the commercial currency of the East to the present day. Later the +number of galleons was reduced to one.</p> +<p><b>The Rich Cargoes of the Galleons.</b>—The track of the +Philippine galleon lay from Luzon northeastward to about the +forty-second degree of latitude, where the westerly winds prevail, +thence nearly straight across the ocean to Cape Mendocino in northern +California, which was discovered and mapped by Biscaino in 1602. Thence +the course lay down the western coast of North America nearly three +thousand miles to the port of Acapulco.</p> +<p>We can imagine how carefully selected and rich in quality were the +merchandises with which these solitary galleons were freighted, the +pick of all the rich stores which came to Manila. The profits were +enormous,—six and eight hundred per cent. Biscaino wrote that +with two hundred ducats invested in Spanish wares and some Flemish +commodities, he made fourteen hundred ducats; but, he added, in 1588 he +lost a ship,—robbed and burned by Englishmen. On the safe arrival +of these ships depended how much of the fortunes of the colony!</p> +<p><i>Capture of the Galleons.</i>—For generations these galleons +were probably the most tempting and romantic prize that ever aroused +the cupidity of privateer. The first to profit by this rich booty was +Thomas Cavendish, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb176" href="#pb176" +name="pb176">176</a>]</span>who in 1584 came through the Straits of +Magellan with a fleet of five vessels. Like Drake before him, he +ravaged the coast of South America and then steered straight away +across the sea to the Moluccas. Here he acquired information about the +rich commerce of the Philippines and of the yearly voyage of the +galleon. Back across the Pacific went the fleet of Cavendish for the +coast of California.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e3489width"><img src="images/p176.jpg" alt= +"Capture of the Galleon “Cabadonga,” off the Coast of Samar." +width="534" height="334"> +<p class="figureHead"><b><span class="corr" id="xd19e3492" title= +"Source: Capture of a Galleon (from an old print).">Capture of the +Galleon “Cabadonga,” off the Coast of Samar.</span></b></p> +<p class="first">(<i>From a print in Anson’s Voyage Around the +World.</i>)</p> +</div> +<p>In his own narrative he tells how he beat up and down between Capes +San Lucas and Mendocino until the galleon, heavy with her riches, +appeared. She fell into his hands almost without a fray. She carried +one hundred and twenty-two thousand pesos of gold and a great and rich +store of satins, damask, and musk. Cavendish landed the Spanish on the +California coast, burned the “Santa Anna,” and then +returned to the Philippines and made an attack upon the shipyard of +Iloilo, but was repulsed. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb177" href= +"#pb177" name="pb177">177</a>]</span>He sent a letter to the governor +at Manila, boasting of his capture, and then sailed for the Cape of +Good Hope and home.</p> +<p>There is an old story that tells how his sea-worn ships came up the +Thames, their masts hung with silk and damask sails. From this time on +the venture was less safe. In 1588 there came to Spain the overwhelming +disaster of her history,—the destruction of the Great Armada. +From this date her power was gone, and her name was no longer a terror +on the seas. English freebooters controlled the oceans, and in 1610 the +Dutch appeared in the East, never to withdraw.</p> +<p><b>The City of Manila Three Hundred Years Ago.</b>—We can +hardly close this chapter without some further reference to the city of +Manila as it appeared three hundred years ago. Morga has fortunately +left us a detailed description from which the following points in the +main are drawn. As we have already seen, Legaspi had laid out the city +on the blackened site of the town and fortress of the Mohammedan +prince, which had been destroyed in the struggle for occupation. He +gave it the same extent and dimensions that it possesses to this +day.</p> +<p>Like other colonial capitals in the Far East, it was primarily a +citadel and refuge from attack. On the point <span class="corr" id= +"xd19e3513" title="Source: beween">between</span> the sea and the river +Legaspi had built the famous and permanent fortress of Santiago. In the +time of the great Adelantado it was probably only a wooden stockade, +but under the governor Santiago de Vera it was built up of stone. +Cavendish (1587) describes Manila as “an unwalled town and of no +great strength,” but under the improvements and completions made +by Dasmariñas about 1590 it assumed much of its present +appearance. Its guns thoroughly commanded the entrance <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb178" href="#pb178" name="pb178">178</a>]</span>to +the river Pasig and made the approach of hostile boats from the harbor +side impossible.</p> +<p>It is noteworthy, then, that all the assaults that have been made +upon the city, from that of Limahong, to those of the British in 1763, +and of the Americans in 1898, have been directed against the southern +wall by an advance from Parañaque. Dasmariñas also +inclosed the city with a stone wall, the base from which the present +noble rampart has arisen. It had originally a width of from seven and a +half to nine feet. Of its height no figure is given, Morga says simply +that with its buttresses and turrets it was sufficiently high for the +purposes of defense.</p> +<p><i>The Old Fort.</i>—There was a stone fort on the south side +facing Ermita, known as the Fortress of Our Lady of Guidance; and there +were two or more bastions, each with six pieces of artillery,—St. +Andrew’s, now a powder magazine at the southeast corner, and St. +Gabriel’s, over-looking the Parian district, where the Chinese +were settled.</p> +<p>The three principal gates to the city, with the smaller wickets and +posterns, which opened on the river and sea, were regularly closed at +night by the guard which made the rounds. At each gate and wicket was a +permanent post of soldiers and artillerists.</p> +<p>The Plaza de Armas adjacent to the fort had its arsenal, stores, +powder-works, and a foundry for the casting of guns and artillery. The +foundry, when established by Ronquillo, was in charge of a Pampangan +Indian called Pandapira.</p> +<p><i>The Spanish Buildings of the City.</i>—The buildings of the +city, especially the Casas Reales and the churches and monasteries, had +been durably erected of stone. Chirino claims that the hewing of stone, +the burning of lime, and <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb179" href= +"#pb179" name="pb179">179</a>]</span>the training of native and Chinese +artisans for this building, were the work of the Jesuit father, +Sedeño. He himself fashioned the first clay tiles and built the +first stone house, and so urged and encouraged others, himself +directing, the building of public works, that the city, which a little +before had been solely of timber and cane, had become one of the best +constructed and most beautiful in the Indies.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3534src" href="#xd19e3534" name="xd19e3534src">20</a> He it was +also who sought out Chinese painters and decorators and ornamented the +churches with images and paintings.</p> +<p>Within the walls, there were some six hundred houses of a private +nature, most of them built of stone and tile, and an equal number +outside in the suburbs, or “<span lang= +"es">arrabales</span>,” all occupied by Spaniards +(“<span lang="es">todos son vivienda y poblacion de los +Españoles</span>”).<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3547src" +href="#xd19e3547" name="xd19e3547src">21</a></p> +<p>This gives some twelve hundred Spanish families or establishments, +exclusive of the religious, who in Manila numbered at least one hundred +and fifty,<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3554src" href="#xd19e3554" name= +"xd19e3554src">22</a> the garrison, at certain times, about four +hundred trained Spanish soldiers who had seen service in Holland and +the Low Countries, and the official classes.</p> +<p><i>The Malecon and the Luneta.</i>—It is interesting at this +early date to find mention of the famous recreation drive, the Paseo de +Bagumbayan, now commonly known as the Malecon and Luneta. +“Manila,” says our historian, “has two places of +recreation on land; the one, which is clean and wide, extends from the +point called Our Lady of Guidance for about a league along the sea, and +through the street and village of natives, called Bagumbayan, to +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb180" href="#pb180" name= +"pb180">180</a>]</span>a very devout hermitage (Ermita), called the +Hermitage of Our Lady of Guidance, and from there a good distance to a +monastery and mission (doctrina) of the Augustinians, called Mahalat +(Malate).”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3565src" href="#xd19e3565" +name="xd19e3565src">23</a> The other drive lay out through the present +suburb of Concepcion, then called Laguio, to Paco, where was a +monastery of the Franciscans.</p> +<p><b>The Chinese in Manila.</b>—<i>Early Chinese +Commerce.</i>—We have seen that even as long ago as three hundred +years Manila was a metropolis of the Eastern world. Vessels from many +lands dropped anchor at the mouth of the Pasig, and their merchants set +up their booths within her markets. Slaves from far-distant India and +Africa were sold under her walls. Surely it was a cosmopolitan +population that the shifting monsoons carried to and from her +gates.</p> +<p>But of all these Eastern races only one has been a constant and +important factor in the life of the Islands. This is the Chinese. It +does not appear that they settled in the country or materially affected +the life of the Filipinos until the establishment of Manila by the +Spaniards. The Spaniards were early desirous of cultivating friendly +relations with the Empire of China. Salcedo, on his first punitive +expedition to Mindoro, had found a Chinese junk, which had gone ashore +on the western coast. He was careful to rescue these voyagers and +return them to their own land, with a friendly message inviting trading +relations. Commerce and immigration followed immediately the founding +of the city.</p> +<p>The Chinese are without question the most remarkable colonizers in +the world. They seem able to thrive in any climate. They readily marry +with every race. The <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb181" href="#pb181" +name="pb181">181</a>]</span>children that follow such unions are not +only numerous but healthy and intelligent. The coasts of China teem +with overcrowding populations. Emigration to almost any land means +improvement of the Chinese of poor birth. These qualities and +conditions, with their keen sense for trade and their indifference to +physical hardship and danger, make the Chinese almost a dominant factor +wherever political barriers have not been raised against their +entrance.</p> +<p>The Chinese had early gained an important place in the commercial +and industrial life of Manila. A letter to the king from Bishop Salazar +shows that he befriended them and was warm in their praise.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e3587src" href="#xd19e3587" name= +"xd19e3587src">24</a> This was in 1590, and there were then in Manila +and Tondo about seven thousand resident Chinese, and they were +indispensable to the prosperity of the city.</p> +<p><i>Importance of Chinese Labor and Trade.</i>—In the early +decades of Spanish rule, the Philippines were poor in resources and the +population was sparse, quite insufficient for the purposes of the +Spanish colonizers. Thus the early development of the colony was based +upon Chinese labor and Chinese trade. As the early writers are fond of +emphasizing, from China came not only the finished silks and costly +wares, which in large part were destined for the trade to New Spain and +Europe, but also cattle, horses and mares, foodstuffs, metals, fruits, +and even ink and paper. “And what is more,” says Chirino, +“from China come those who supply every sort of service, all +dexterous, prompt, and cheap, from physicians and barbers to +burden-bearers and porters. They are the tailors and shoemakers, +metal-workers, silversmiths, sculptors, locksmiths, painters, +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb182" href="#pb182" name= +"pb182">182</a>]</span>masons, weavers, and finally every kind of +servitors in the commonwealth.”<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3601src" href="#xd19e3601" name="xd19e3601src">25</a></p> +<p><i>Distrust of the Chinese.</i>—In those days, not only were +the Chinese artisans and traders, but they were also farmers and +fishermen,—occupations in which they are now not often seen. But +in spite of their economic necessity, the Chinese were always looked +upon with disfavor and their presence with dread. Plots of murder and +insurrection were supposedly rife among them. Writers object that their +numbers were so great that there was no security in the land; their +life was bad and vicious; through intercourse with them the natives +advanced but little in Christianity and customs; they were such +terrible eaters that they made foods scarce and prices high.</p> +<p>If permitted, they went everywhere through the Islands and committed +a thousand abuses and offenses. They explored every spot, river, +estero, and harbor, and knew the country better even than the Spaniard +himself, so that if any enemy should come they would be able to cause +infinite mischief.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3615src" href= +"#xd19e3615" name="xd19e3615src">26</a> When we find so just and +high-minded a man as the president of the Audiencia, Morga, giving +voice to such charges, we may be sure that the feeling was deep and +terrible, and practically universal among all Spanish inhabitants.</p> +<p><i>The First Massacre of the Chinese.</i>—Each race feared and +suspected the other, and from this mutual cowardice came in 1603 a +cruel outbreak and massacre. Three Chinese mandarins arrived in that +year, stating that they had been sent by the emperor to investigate a +report that there was a mountain in Cavite of solid precious metal. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb183" href="#pb183" name= +"pb183">183</a>]</span>This myth was no more absurd than many pursued +by the Spaniards themselves in their early conquests, and it doubtless +arose from the fact that Chinese wares were largely purchased by +Mexican bullion; but the Spaniards were at once filled with suspicion +of an invasion, and their distrust turned against the Chinese in the +Islands.</p> +<p>How far these latter were actually plotting sedition and how far +they were driven into attack by their fears at the conduct of the +Spaniards can hardly be decided. But the fact is, that on the evening +of Saint Francis day the Chinese of the Parian rose. The dragon banners +were raised, war-gongs were beaten, and that night the pueblos of +Quiapo and Tondo were burned and many Filipinos murdered.</p> +<p>In the morning a force of 130 Spaniards, under Don Luis +Dasmariñas and Don Tomas Bravo, were sent across the river, and +in the fight nearly every Spaniard was slain. The Chinese then +assaulted the city, but, according to the tradition of the priests, +they were driven back in terror by the apparition on the walls of Saint +Francis. They threw up forts on the site of the Parian and in Dilao, +but the power of their wild fury was gone and the Spaniards were able +to dislodge and drive them into the country about San Pablo de Monte. +From here they were dispersed with great slaughter. Twenty-three +thousand Chinese are reported by Zuñiga to have perished in this +sedition. If his report is true, the number of Chinese in the Islands +must have increased very rapidly between 1590 and 1603.</p> +<p><i>Restriction of Chinese Immigration and Travel.</i>—Commerce +and immigration began again almost immediately. The number of Chinese, +however, allowed to remain was reduced. The Chinese ships that came +annually to trade <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb184" href="#pb184" +name="pb184">184</a>]</span>were obliged to take back with them the +crews and passengers which they brought. Only a limited number of +merchants and artisans were permitted to live in the Islands. They were +confined to three districts in the city of Manila, and to the great +market, the Alcayceria or Parian.</p> +<p>The word “Parian” seems to have been also used for the +Chinese quarter in and adjoining the walled city, but here is meant the +district in Binondo about the present Calle San Fernando. A block of +stores with small habitations above them had been built as early as the +time of Gonsalez. It was in the form of a square, and here were the +largest numbers of shops and stores.</p> +<p>They could not travel about the Islands, nor go two leagues from the +city without a written license, nor remain over night within the city +after the gates were closed, on penalty of their lives. They had their +own alcalde and judge, a tribunal and jail; and on the north side of +the river Dominican friars, who had learned the Chinese language, had +erected a mission and hospital. There was a separate barrio for the +baptized Chinese and their families, to the number of about five +hundred.</p> +<p>The Chinese in the Philippines from the earliest time to the present +have been known by the name of “Sangleyes.” The derivation +of this curious word is uncertain; but Navarrete, who must have +understood Chinese well, says that the word arose from a +misapprehension of the words spoken by the Chinese who first presented +themselves at Manila. “Being asked what they came for, they +answered, ‘Xang Lei,’ that is, ‘We come to +trade.’ The Spaniards, who understood not their language, +conceiving it to be the name of a country, and putting the two words +together, made one of them, by which they still distinguish the +Chinese, calling them Sangleyes.” <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb185" href="#pb185" name="pb185">185</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>The Japanese Colony.</b>—There was also in those early +years quite a colony of Japanese. Their community lay between the +Parian and the barrio of Laguio. There were about five hundred, and +among them the Franciscans claimed a goodly number of converts.</p> +<p><b>The Filipino District of Tondo.</b>—We have described at +some length the city south of the river and the surrounding suburbs, +most of them known by the names they hold to-day. North of the Pasig +was the great district of Tondo, the center of that strong, independent +Filipino feeling which at an early date was colored with Mohammedanism +and to this day is strong in local feeling. This region has thriven and +built up until it has long been by far the most important and populous +part of the metropolis, but not until very recent times was it regarded +as a part of the city of Manila, which name was reserved for the walled +citadel alone.</p> +<p>A bridge across the Pasig, on the site of the present Puente de +España, connected the two districts at a date later than +Morga’s time. It was one of the first things noticed by +Navarrete, who, without describing it well, says it was very fine. It +was built during the governorship of Niño de Tabora, who died in +1632.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3654src" href="#xd19e3654" name= +"xd19e3654src">27</a> Montero states that it was of stone, and that +this same bridge stood for more than two centuries, resisting the +incessant traffic and the strength of floods.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3660src" href="#xd19e3660" name="xd19e3660src">28</a></p> +<p><b>The Decline of Manila during the Next Century.</b>—Such was +Manila thirty-five and forty years after its foundation. It was at the +zenith of its importance, the capital of the eastern colonies, the mart +of Asia, more splendid than Goa, more powerful than Malacca or Macao, +more <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb186" href="#pb186" name= +"pb186">186</a>]</span>populous and far more securely held than Ternate +and Tidor. “Truly,” exclaimed Chirino, “it is another +Tyre, so magnified by Ezekiel.” It owed its great place to the +genius and daring of the men who founded it, to the freedom of action +which it had up to this point enjoyed, and to its superlative +situation.</p> +<p>In the years that followed we have to recount for the most part only +the process of decline. Spain herself was fast on the wane. A few years +later and the English had almost driven her navies from the seas, the +Portuguese had regained their independence and lost empire, the Dutch +were in the East, harrying Portuguese and Spaniard alike and fast +monopolizing the rich trade. The commerce and friendly relations with +the Chinese, on which so much depended, were broken by massacre and +reprisal; and, most terrible and piteous of all, the awful wrath and +lust of the Malay pirate, for decade after decade, was to be visited +upon the archipelago.</p> +<p>The colonial policy of the mother-land, selfish, shortsighted, and +criminal, was soon to make its paralyzing influence felt upon trade and +administration alike. These things were growing and taking place in the +next period which we have to consider,—the years from 1600 to +1663. They left the Philippines despoiled and insignificant for a whole +succeeding century, a decadent colony and an exploited treasure. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb187" href="#pb187" name= +"pb187">187</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3184" href="#xd19e3184src" name="xd19e3184">1</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Relacion de la Conquista de Luzon</i>, 1572, p. 15.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3191" href="#xd19e3191src" name="xd19e3191">2</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Relacion de las Encomiendas, existentes en Filipinas</i>, Retana, +<i lang="es">Archivo del Bibliófilo Filipino</i>, vol. IV.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3225" href="#xd19e3225src" name="xd19e3225">3</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Ordenanzas ... para la Reparticion de los Indios de la Isla +Española</i>, in <i lang="es">Documentos Ineditas</i>, vol. I., +p. 236.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3249" href="#xd19e3249src" name="xd19e3249">4</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Historia de Filipinos</i>, p. 157, et sq.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3259" href="#xd19e3259src" name="xd19e3259">5</a></span> Among +other documents, which throw a most unfavorable light upon the +condition of the Filipinos under the encomiendas, is the letter to the +king from Domingo de Salazar, the first bishop of the Philippines, +which describes the conditions about 1583.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3268" href="#xd19e3268src" name="xd19e3268">6</a></span> Domingo +de Salazar, <i lang="es">Relacion de las Cosas de las Filipinas</i>, +1583, p. 5, in Retana Archives, vol. 3.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3288" href="#xd19e3288src" name="xd19e3288">7</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Relacion</i>, pp. 13, 14.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3307" href="#xd19e3307src" name="xd19e3307">8</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Sucesos de las Filipinas</i>, p. 334.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3318" href="#xd19e3318src" name="xd19e3318">9</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Las Costumbres de los <span class="corr" id="xd19e3321" title= +"Source: Tagáloes">Tagalos</span> en Filipinas segun el Padre +Plasencia.</i> Madrid, 1892.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3335" href="#xd19e3335src" name="xd19e3335">10</a></span> +Blumentritt: <i lang="fr">Organization Communale des Indigines des +Philippines, traduis de l’Allemand</i>, par A. Hugot. 1881.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3353" href="#xd19e3353src" name="xd19e3353">11</a></span> +<i lang="es">Sucesos de las Filipinas</i>, p. 332.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3358" href="#xd19e3358src" name="xd19e3358">12</a></span> See +Salazar’s relation on this point.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3371" href="#xd19e3371src" name="xd19e3371">13</a></span> +Chirino: <i lang="es">Relacion</i>, pp. 19, 20.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3381" href="#xd19e3381src" name="xd19e3381">14</a></span> Morga, +p. 329.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3396" href="#xd19e3396src" name="xd19e3396">15</a></span> +<i lang="es">Sucesos de las <span class="corr" id="xd19e3399" title= +"Source: Filipians">Filipinas</span></i>, p. 323.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3408" href="#xd19e3408src" name="xd19e3408">16</a></span> <i>The +Principal Navigations, Voiages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the +English Nation, ... by Richard Hakluyt, Master of Artes and sometime +Student of Christ Church in Oxford. Imprinted at London</i>, 1598. Vol. +I., p. 560.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3417" href="#xd19e3417src" name="xd19e3417">17</a></span> +<i lang="es">Sucesos de las Filipinas</i>, p. 347.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3459" href="#xd19e3459src" name="xd19e3459">18</a></span> +<i lang="es">Sucesos de las Filipinas</i>, p. 352.]</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3474" href="#xd19e3474src" name="xd19e3474">19</a></span> Laws of +the Indies, VIII., 45, 46.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3534" href="#xd19e3534src" name="xd19e3534">20</a></span> +<i lang="es">Relacion de las Islas Filipinas</i>, chap. V., p. 23, and +chap. XIII. p. 47.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3547" href="#xd19e3547src" name="xd19e3547">21</a></span> +<i>Ibid.</i>, p. 323.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3554" href="#xd19e3554src" name="xd19e3554">22</a></span> +<i>Ibid.</i>, p. 321.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3565" href="#xd19e3565src" name="xd19e3565">23</a></span> Morga: +<i lang="es">Sucesos</i>, p. 324.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3587" href="#xd19e3587src" name="xd19e3587">24</a></span> +<i lang="es">Carta Relacion de las Cosas de la China y de los Chinos +del Parian de Manila</i>, 1590; in Retana, <i lang="es">Archivo</i>, +vol. III.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3601" href="#xd19e3601src" name="xd19e3601">25</a></span> +<i lang="es">Relacion de las Islas Filipinas</i>, p. 18. See also +Salazar, <i lang="es">Carta Relacion</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3615" href="#xd19e3615src" name="xd19e3615">26</a></span> +<i lang="es">Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas</i>, p. 364.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3654" href="#xd19e3654src" name="xd19e3654">27</a></span> +Zuñiga: <i lang="es">Historia de las Filipinas</i>, p. 252.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3660" href="#xd19e3660src" name="xd19e3660">28</a></span> +<i lang="es">Historia General de Filipinas</i>, vol. I., p. 187.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ch9" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Chapter IX.</h2> +<h2 class="main">The Dutch and Moro Wars. 1600–1663.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>Loss of the Naval Power of Spain and +Portugal.</b>—The seizure of Portugal by Philip II. in 1580 was +disastrous in its consequences to both Portugal and Spain. For Portugal +it was humiliation and loss of colonial power. Spain was unequal to the +task of defending the Portuguese possessions, and her jealousy of their +prosperity seems to have caused her deliberately to neglect their +interests and permit their decline. In one day Portugal lost possession +of that splendid and daring navy which had first found a way to the +Indies. Several hundred Portuguese ships, thousands of guns, and large +sums of money were appropriated by Spain upon the annexation of +Portugal.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3685src" href="#xd19e3685" name= +"xd19e3685src">1</a> Most of these ill-fated ships went down in the +English Channel with the Great Armada.</p> +<p>When the terrible news of the destruction of this powerful armament, +on which rested Spanish hopes for the conquest and humiliation of +England, was brought to the Escorial, the magnificent palace where the +years of the king were passed, Philip II., that strange man, whose +countenance never changed at tidings of either defeat or victory, is +reported to have simply said, “I thank God that I have the power +to replace the loss.” He was fatuously mistaken. The loss could +never be made good. The navies of Spain and Portugal were never fully +rebuilt. In that year (1588), preëminence on the sea passed to the +English and the Dutch. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb188" href= +"#pb188" name="pb188">188</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>The Netherlands Become an Independent Country.</b>—Who were +these Dutch, or Hollanders? How came they to wrest from Spain and +Portugal a colonial empire, which they hold to-day without loss of +prosperity or evidence of decline? In the north of Europe, facing the +North Sea, is a low, rich land, intersected by rivers and washed far +into its interior by the tides, known as Holland, the Low Countries, or +the Netherlands. Its people have ever been famed for their industry and +hardihood. In manufacture and trade in the latter Middle Age, they +stood far in the lead in northern Europe, Their towns and cities were +the thriftiest, most prosperous, and most cleanly.</p> +<p>We have already explained the curious facts of succession by which +these countries became a possession of the Spanish king, Emperor +Charles the Fifth. The Low Countries were always greatly prized by +Charles, and in spite of the severities of his rule he held their +affection and loyalty until his death. It was in the city of Antwerp +that he formally abdicated in favor of his son, Philip II., and, as +described by contemporary historians, this solemn and imposing ceremony +was witnessed with every mark of loyalty by the assembly.</p> +<p><i>The Rebellion.</i>—But the oppressions and persecutions of +Philip’s reign drove the people to rebellion. The Netherlands had +embraced the Protestant religion, and when, in addition to plunder, +intimidation, the quartering of Spanish soldiery, and the violation of +sovereign promises, Philip imposed that terrible and merciless +institution, the Spanish Inquisition, the Low Countries faced the +tyrant in a passion of rebellion.</p> +<p>War, begun in 1556, dragged on for years. There was pitiless +cruelty, and the sacking of cities was accompanied by fearful butchery. +In 1575 the seven Dutch counties <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb189" +href="#pb189" name="pb189">189</a>]</span>declared their independence, +and formed the republic of the Netherlands. Although the efforts of +Spain to reconquer the territory continued until the end of the +century, practical independence was gained some years before.</p> +<p><b>Trade between Portugal and the Netherlands Forbidden.</b>—A +large portion of the commerce of the Low Countries had been with +Lisbon. The Portuguese did not distribute to Europe the products which +their navies brought from the Indies. Foreign merchants purchased in +Lisbon and carried these wares to other lands, and to a very large +degree this service had been performed by the Dutch. But on the +annexation of Portugal, Philip forbade all commerce and trade between +the two countries. By this act the Dutch, deprived of their Lisbon +trade, had to face the alternative of commercial ruin or the gaining of +those Eastern products for themselves. They chose the latter course +with all its risks. It was soon made possible by the destruction of the +Armada.</p> +<p><b>The Dutch Expeditions to the Indies.</b>—In 1595 their +first expedition, led by one Cornelius Houtman, who had sailed in +Portuguese galleons, rounded the Cape of Good Hope and entered the +Indian domain. The objective point was Java, where an alliance was +formed with the native princes and a cargo of pepper secured. Two +things were shown by the safe return of this fleet,—the great +wealth and profit of the Indian trade, and the inability of Spain and +Portugal to maintain their monopoly.</p> +<p>In 1598 the merchants of Amsterdam defeated a combined Spanish and +Portuguese fleet in the East, and trading settlements were secured in +Java and Johore. In 1605 they carried their factories to Amboina and +Tidor.</p> +<p><i>Effect of the Success of the Dutch.</i>—The exclusive +monopoly over the waters of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb190" href="#pb190" name= +"pb190">190</a>]</span>which Portugal and Spain had maintained for a +century, was broken. With the concurrence of the Roman See, they had +tried to divide the New World and the Orient between them. That effort +was now passed. They had claimed the right to exclude from the vast +oceans they had discovered the vessels of every other nation but their +own.</p> +<p>This doctrine in the History of International Law is known as that +of <i lang="la">mare clausum</i>, or “closed sea.” The +death-blow to this domination was given by the entrance of the Dutch +into the Indies, and it is not a mere coincidence that we find the +doctrine of closed sea itself scientifically assailed, a few years +later, by the great Dutch jurist, Grotius, the founder of the system of +international law in his work, <i lang="la">De Libero Mare</i>.</p> +<p><i>The Trading Methods of the Dutch.</i>—The Dutch made no +attempts in the Indies to found great colonies for political domination +and religious conversion. Commerce was their sole object. Their policy +was to form alliances with native rulers, promising to assist them +against the rule of the Portuguese or Spaniard in return for exclusive +privileges of trade. In this they were more than successful.</p> +<p>In 1602 they obtained permission to establish a factory at Bantam, +on the island of Java. This was even then a considerable trading-point. +“Chinese, Arabs, Persians, Moors, Turks, Malabars, Peguans, and +merchants from all nations were established there,” the principal +object of trade being pepper.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3739src" href= +"#xd19e3739" name="xd19e3739src">2</a></p> +<p>The character of the treaty made by the Dutch with the king of +Bantam is stated by Raffles. “The Dutch stipulated to assist him +against foreign invaders, particularly <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb191" href="#pb191" name="pb191">191</a>]</span>Spaniards and +Portuguese; and the king, on his side, agreed to make over to the Dutch +a good and strong fort, a free trade, and security for “their +persons and property without payment of any duties or taxes, and to +allow no other European nation to trade or reside in his +territories.”</p> +<p><b>Spanish Expedition against the Dutch in the +Moluccas.</b>—The Spaniards, however, did not relinquish the +field to these new foes without a struggle, and the conflict fills the +history of the eighteenth century. When the Dutch expelled the +Portuguese from Amboina and Tidor in February, 1605, many of the +Portuguese came to the Philippines and enlisted in the Spanish forces. +The governor, Don Pedro Bravo de Acuña, filled with wrath at the +loss of these important possessions, with great activity organized an +expedition for their conquest.</p> +<p>In the previous year there had arrived from Spain eight hundred +troops, two hundred of them being native Mexicans. Thus Acuña +was able to organize a powerful fleet that mounted seventy-five pieces +of artillery and carried over fourteen hundred Spaniards and sixteen +hundred Indians.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3755src" href="#xd19e3755" +name="xd19e3755src">3</a> The fleet sailed in January, 1606. Tidor was +taken without resistance and the Dutch factory seized, with a great +store of money, goods, and weapons. The Spaniards then assailed +Ternate; the fort and plaza were bombarded, and then the town was +carried by storm.</p> +<p>Thus, at last was accomplished the adventure which for nearly a +century had inspired the ambitions of the Spaniards, which had drawn +the fleet of Magellan, which had wrecked the expeditions of Loyasa and +Villalobos, for <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb192" href="#pb192" +name="pb192">192</a>]</span>which the Spaniards in the Philippines had +prepared expedition after expedition, and for which Governor +Dasmariñas had sacrificed his life. At last the Moluccas had +been taken by the forces of Spain.</p> +<p><b>Capture of a Dutch Fleet at Mariveles.</b>—So far from +disposing of their enemies, however, this action simply brought the +Dutch into the Philippines. In 1609, Juan de Silva became governor of +the Islands and in the same year arrived the Dutch admiral, Wittert, +with a squadron. After an unsuccessful attack on Iloilo, the Dutch +fleet anchored off Mariveles, to capture vessels arriving for the +Manila trade.</p> +<p>At this place, on the 25th of April, 1610, the Spanish fleet, which +had been hastily fitted at Cavite, attacked the Dutch, killing the +admiral and taking all the ships but one, two hundred and fifty +prisoners, and a large amount of silver and merchandise. These +prisoners seem to have been treated with more mercy than the captives +of Van Noort’s fleet, who were hung at Cavite. The wounded are +said to have been cared for, and the friars from all the religious +orders vied with one another to convert these “Protestant +pirates” from their heresy.</p> +<p><b>An Expedition against the Dutch in Java.</b>—Spain made a +truce of her European wars with Holland in 1609, but this cessation of +hostilities was never recognized in the East. The Dutch and Spanish +colonists continued to war upon and pillage each other until late in +the century. Encouraged by his victory over Wittert, Silva negotiated +with the Portuguese allies in Goa, India, to drive the Dutch from Java. +A powerful squadron sailed from Cavite in 1616 for this purpose. It was +the largest fleet which up to that date had ever been assembled in the +Philippines. The expedition, however, failed to unite with <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb193" href="#pb193" name= +"pb193">193</a>]</span>their Portuguese allies, and in April, Silva +died at Malacca of malignant fever.</p> +<p><b>The Dutch Fleets.</b>—<i>Battles near +Corregidor.</i>—The fleet returned to Cavite to find that the +city, while stripped of soldiers and artillery, had been in a fever of +anxiety and apprehension over the proximity of Dutch vessels. They were +those of Admiral Spilbergen, who had arrived by way of the Straits of +Magellan and the Pacific. He has left us a chart of the San Bernadino +Straits, which is reproduced here. Spilbergen bombarded Ilolio and then +sailed for the Moluccas.</p> +<p>A year later he returned, met a Spanish fleet of seven galleons and +two galleras near Manila and suffered a severe defeat.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e3787src" href="#xd19e3787" name="xd19e3787src">4</a> +The battle began with cannonading on Friday, April 13, and continued +throughout the day. On the following day the vessels came to close +quarters, the Spaniards boarded the Dutch vessels, and the battle was +fought out with the sword.</p> +<p>The Dutch were overwhelmed. Probably their numbers were few. The +<i lang="es">Relacion</i> states they had fourteen galleons, but other +accounts put the number at ten, three vessels of which were destroyed +or taken by the Spaniards. One of them, the beautiful ship, “The +Sun of Holland,” was burned. This combat is known as the battle +of Playa Honda. Another engagement took place in the same waters of +Corregidor, late in 1624, when a Dutch fleet was driven away without +serious loss to either side.</p> +<p><i>The Dutch Capture Chinese Junks, and Galleons.</i>—But +through the intervening years, fleets of the Hollanders <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb194" href="#pb194" name="pb194">194</a>]</span>were +continually arriving, both by the way of the Cape of Good Hope and the +Straits of Magellan. Those that came across the Pacific almost +invariably cruised up the Strait of San Bernadino, securing the fresh +provisions so desirable to them after their long voyage.</p> +<p>The prizes which they made of Chinese vessels, passing Corregidor +for Manila, give us an idea of how considerably the Spaniards in the +Philippines relied upon China for their food. Junks, or +“champans,” were continually passing Corregidor, laden with +chickens, hogs, rice, sugar, and other comestibles.<a class="noteref" +id="xd19e3815src" href="#xd19e3815" name="xd19e3815src">5</a></p> +<p>The Mexican galleons were frequently destroyed or captured by these +lurking fleets of the Dutch, and for a time the route through the +Straits of San Bernadino had to be abandoned, the galleons reaching +Manila by way of Cape Engano, or sometimes landing in Cagayan, and more +than once going ashore on the Pacific side of the island, at Binangonan +de Lampon.</p> +<p><b>The Dutch in Formosa.</b>—The Dutch also made repeated +efforts to wrest from Portugal her settlement and trade in China. As +early as 1557 the Portuguese had established a settlement on the island +of Macao, one of these numerous islets that fill the estuary of the +river of Canton. This is the oldest European settlement in China and +has been held continuously by the Portuguese until the present day, +when it remains almost the last vestige of the once mighty Portuguese +empire of the East. It was much coveted by the Dutch because of its +importance in the trade with Canton and Fukien. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb195" href="#pb195" name="pb195">195</a>]</span></p> +<p>In 1622 a fleet from Java brought siege to Macao, and, being +repulsed, sailed to the Pescadores Islands, where they built a fort and +established a post, which threatened both the Portuguese trade with +Japan and the Manila trade with Amoy. Two years later, on the +solicitation of the Chinese government, the Dutch removed their +settlement to Formosa, where they broke up the Spanish mission stations +and held the island for the succeeding thirty-five years. Thus, +throughout the century, these European powers harassed and raided one +another, but no one of them was sufficiently strong to expel the others +from the East.</p> +<p><b>The Portuguese Colonies.</b>—In 1640 the kingdom of +Portugal freed itself from the domination of Spain. With the same blow +Spain lost the great colonial possessions that came to her with the +attachment of the Portuguese. “All the places,” says +Zuñiga, “which the Portuguese had in the Indies, separated +themselves from the crown of Castile and recognized as king, Don Juan +of Portugal.” “This same year,” he adds, “the +Dutch took Malacca.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3834src" href= +"#xd19e3834" name="xd19e3834src">6</a></p> +<p><b>The Moros.</b>—<i>Increase of Moro Piracy.</i>—During +all these years the raids of the Moros of Maguindanao and Jolo had +never ceased. Their piracies were almost continuous. There was no +security; churches were looted, priests killed, people borne away for +ransom or for slavery. Obviously, this piracy could only be met by +destroying it at its source. Defensive fortifications and protective +fleets were of no consequence, when compared with the necessity of +subduing the Moro in his own lairs. In 1628 and 1630 punitive +expeditions were sent against Jolo, Basilan, and Mindanao, which drove +the Moros from their forts, burned their towns, and cut down their +groves of cocoanut trees. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb196" href= +"#pb196" name="pb196">196</a>]</span>But such expeditions served only +to inflame the more the wrathful vengeance of the Moro, and in 1635 the +government resolved upon a change of policy and the establishment of a +presidio at Zamboanga.</p> +<p><i>Founding of a Spanish Post at Zamboanga.</i>—This brings us +to a new phase in the Moro wars. The governor, Juan Cerezo de +Salamanca, was determined upon the conquest and the occupation of +Mindanao and Jolo. In taking this step, Salamanca, like Corcuera, who +succeeded him, acted under the influence of the Jesuits. Their missions +in Bohol and northern Mindanao made them ambitious to reserve for the +ministrations of their society all lands that were conquered and +occupied, south of the Bisayas.</p> +<p>The Jesuits were the missionaries on Ternate and Siao and wherever +in the Moluccas and Celebes the Spanish and Portuguese had established +their power. The Jesuits had accompanied the expedition of Rodriguez de +Figueroa in 1595, and from that date they never ceased petitioning the +government for a military occupation of these islands and for their own +return, as the missionaries of these regions. The Jesuits were +brilliant and able administrators. For men of their ambition, Mindanao, +with its rich soil, attractive productions, and comparatively numerous +populations, was a most enticing field for the establishment of such a +theocratic commonwealth as the Jesuits had created and administered in +America.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3855src" href="#xd19e3855" name= +"xd19e3855src">7</a></p> +<p>On the other hand, the occupation of Zamboanga was strenuously +opposed by the other religious orders; but the Jesuits, ever remarkable +for their ascendancy in affairs of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb197" +href="#pb197" name="pb197">197</a>]</span>state, were able to effect +the establishment of Zamboanga, though they could not prevent its +abandonment a quarter of a century later.</p> +<p><i>Erection of the Forts.</i>—The presidio was founded in +1635, by a force under Don Juan de Chaves. His army consisted of three +hundred Spaniards and one thousand Bisaya, The end of the peninsula was +swept of Moro inhabitants and their towns destroyed by fire. In June +the foundations of the stone fort were laid under the direction of the +Jesuit, Father Vera, who is described as being experienced in military +engineering and architecture.</p> +<p>To supply the new site with water, a ditch was built from the river +Tumaga, a distance of six or seven miles, which brought a copious +stream to the very walls of the fort. The advantage or failure of this +expensive fortress is very hard to determine. Its planting was a +partisan measure, and it was always subject to partisan praise and +partisan blame. Sometimes it seemed to have checked the Moros and +sometimes seemed only to be stirring them to fresh anger and +aggression.</p> +<p>The same year that saw the establishment of Zamboanga, Hortado de +Corcuera became governor of the Philippines. He was much under the +influence of the Jesuits and confirmed their policy of conquest.</p> +<p><i>Defeat of the Moro Pirate Tagal.</i>—A few months later a +notable fleet of pirates, recruited from Mindanao, Jolo, and Borneo, +and headed by a chieftain named Tagal, a brother of the notorious +Correlat, sultan of Maguindanao, went defiantly past the new presidio +and northward through the Mindoro Sea. For more than seven months they +cruised the Bisayas. The islands of the Camarines especially felt their +ravages. In Cuyo they captured the corregidor and three friars. +Finally, with <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb198" href="#pb198" name= +"pb198">198</a>]</span>650 captives and rich booty, including the +ornaments and services of churches, Tagal turned southward on his +return.</p> +<p>The presidio of Zamboanga had prepared to intercept him and a fierce +battle took place off the Punta de Flechas, thirty leagues to the +northeast of Zamboanga. According to the Spanish writers, this point +was one held sacred by Moro superstitions. A deity inhabited these +waters, whom the Moros were accustomed to propitiate on the departure +and arrival of their expeditions, by throwing into the sea lances and +arrows. The victory was a notable one for the Spanish arms. Tagal and +more than 300 Moros were killed, and 120 Christian captives were +released.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e3881width"><img src="images/p198.jpg" alt= +"Moro Helmet and Coat of Mail." width="362" height="558"> +<p class="figureHead">Moro Helmet and Coat of Mail.</p> +</div> +<p><i>Corcuera’s Expedition against the Moros at +Lamítan.</i>—Corcuera had meanwhile been preparing an +expedition, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb199" href="#pb199" name= +"pb199">199</a>]</span>which had taken on the character of a holy war. +Jesuit and soldier mingled in its company and united in its direction. +The Jesuit saint, Francis Xavier, was proclaimed patron of the +expedition, and mass was celebrated daily on the ships. Corcuera +himself accompanied the expedition, and at Zamboanga, where they +arrived February 22, 1637, he united a force of 760 Spaniards and many +Bisayans and Pampangas.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e3891width"><img src="images/p199.jpg" alt= +"Moro Sword and Scabbard." width="529" height="230"> +<p class="figureHead">Moro Sword and Scabbard.</p> +</div> +<p>From Zamboanga the force started for Lamítan, the stronghold +of Correlat, and the center of the power of the Maguindanao. It seems +to have been situated on the coast, south of the region of Lake Lanao. +The fleet encountered rough weather and contrary winds off Punta de +Flechas, which they attributed to the influence of the Moro demon.</p> +<p>To rid the locality of this unholy influence, Padre Marcello, the +Jesuit superior, occupied himself for two days. Padre Combés has +left us an account of the ceremony.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3899src" +href="#xd19e3899" name="xd19e3899src">8</a> The demon was dispossessed +by exorcism. Mass was celebrated. Various articles, representing Moro +infidelity, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb200" href="#pb200" name= +"pb200">200</a>]</span>including arrows, were destroyed and burnt. Holy +relics were thrown into the waters, and the place was finally +sanctified by baptism in the name of Saint Sebastian.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e3906width"><img src="images/p200-1.jpg" alt= +"Sulu Barong and Sheath." width="377" height="189"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e3908" title= +"Source: Moro Short Sword and Sheath.">Sulu Barong and +Sheath.</span></p> +</div> +<div class="figure xd19e3911width"><img src="images/p200-2.jpg" alt= +"Moro Spear." width="453" height="170"> +<p class="figureHead">Moro Spear.</p> +</div> +<p>On the 14th of March the expedition reached Lamítan, +fortified and defended by two thousand Moro warriors. The Spanish +force, however, was overwhelming, and the city was taken by storm. Here +were captured eight bronze cannon, twenty-seven “versos” (a +kind of small howitzer), and over a hundred muskets and arquebuses and +a great store of Moro weapons. Over one hundred vessels were destroyed, +including a fleet of Malay merchant praos from Java. Sixteen villages +were burned, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb201" href="#pb201" name= +"pb201">201</a>]</span>and seventy-two Moros were hung. Correlat, +though pursued and wounded, was not captured.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3919src" href="#xd19e3919" name="xd19e3919src">9</a></p> +<div class="figure xd19e3928width"><img src="images/p201.jpg" alt= +"Old Moro Sailing Boat." width="534" height="375"> +<p class="figureHead">Old Moro <span class="corr" id="xd19e3931" title= +"Source: Pirate">Sailing</span> Boat.</p> +</div> +<p><i>The Conquest of Jolo.</i>—Corcuera returned to Zamboanga +and organized an expedition for the conquest of Jolo. Although defended +by four thousand Moro warriors and by allies from Basílan and +the Celebes, Corcuera took Jolo after some months of siege. The sultan +saved himself by flight, but the sultana was taken prisoner. Corcuera +reconstructed the fort, established a garrison of two hundred Spaniards +and an equal number of Pampangas, left some Jesuit fathers, and, having +nominated <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb202" href="#pb202" name= +"pb202">202</a>]</span>Major Almonte chief of all the forces in the +south, returned in May, 1638, to Manila, with all the triumph of a +conqueror.</p> +<p>Almonte continued the work of subjugation. In 1639 he conquered the +Moro dato of Buhayen, in the valley of the Rio Grande, where a small +presidio was founded. And in the same year the Jesuits prevailed upon +him to invade the territory of the Malanao, now known as the Laguna de +Lanao. This expedition was made from the north through Iligan, and for +a time brought even this warlike and difficult territory under the +authority of the governor and the spiritual administration of the +Jesuits.</p> +<p><b>Loss of the Spanish Settlement on Formosa.</b>—The full +military success of Corcuera’s governorship was marred by the +loss of Macao and the capture of the Spanish settlement on the island +of Formosa by the Dutch. In the attempt to hold Macao, Corcuera sent +over the encomendero of Pasig, Don Juan Claudio. The populace of Macao, +however, rose in tumult, assassinated the governor, Sebastian Lobo, and +pronounced in favor of Portugal. Later, by decree of the Portuguese +governor of Goa, all the Spanish residents and missionaries were +expelled. The Dutch seizure of Formosa, a year later, has already been +described.</p> +<p><b>The Archipelago and the Religious Orders.</b>—During these +decades, conflict was almost incessant between the archbishop of Manila +and the regular orders. In the Philippines the regulars were the parish +curates, and the archbishop desired that all matters of their curacy, +touching the administration of the sacraments and other parish duties, +should be subject to the direction of the bishops. This question of the +“diocesan visit” was fought over for nearly two hundred +years. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb203" href="#pb203" name= +"pb203">203</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>The Governor and the Archbishop.</i>—Even more serious to +the colony were the conflicts that raged between the governor-general +and the archbishop. All the points of dissension between Church and +State, which vexed the Middle Ages, broke out afresh in the +Philippines. The appointment of religious officers; the distribution of +revenue; the treatment of the natives; the claim of the church to offer +asylum to those fleeing the arm of the law; its claims of jurisdiction, +in its ecclesiastical courts, over a large class of civil +offenses—these disputes and many others, occasioned almost +incessant discord between the heads of civil and ecclesiastical +authority.</p> +<p><i>The “Residencia.”</i>—We have seen that the +power of the governor was in fact very large. Theoretically, the +Audiencia was a limit upon his authority; but in fact the governor was +usually the president of this body, and the oidores were frequently his +abettors and rarely his opponents. At the end of each governor’s +rule there took place a characteristic Spanish institution, called the +“Residencia.” This was a court held by the newly elected +governor, for an examination into the conduct of his predecessor. +Complaints of every description were received, and often, in the +history of the Philippines, one who had ruled the archipelago almost as +an independent monarch found himself, at the end of his office, ruined, +and in chains.</p> +<p>It was upon the occasion of the Residencia that the ecclesiastical +powers, after a governorship stormy with disputes, exercised their +power for revenge. Unquestionably many a governor, despite his actual +power, facing, as he did, the Residencia at the termination of his +rule, made peace with his enemies and yielded to their demands. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb204" href="#pb204" name= +"pb204">204</a>]</span></p> +<p>Corcuera had continuous troubles with the archbishop and with the +religious orders other than the Jesuits. In 1644, when his successor, +Fajardo, relieved him, the Franciscans, Augustinians, and Recollects +procured his imprisonment and the confiscation of his property. For +five years, the conqueror of the Moros lay a prisoner in the fortresses +of Santiago and Cavite, when he was pardoned by the Council of the +Indies, and appointed governor of the Canaries by the king.</p> +<p><i>Weakening of the Governor’s Power.</i>—This power of +private and religious classes to intimidate and overawe the responsible +head of the Philippine government was an abuse which continued to the +very close of the Spanish rule. This, together with the relatively +short term of the governor’s office, his natural desire to avoid +trouble, his all too frequent purpose of amassing a fortune rather than +maintaining the dignity of his position and advancing the interests of +the Islands, combined decade after decade to make the spiritual +authority more powerful. In the end the religious orders, with their +great body of members, their hold upon the Filipinos, their high +influence at the court, and finally their great landed wealth, governed +the Islands.</p> +<p><i>The Educational Work of the Religious Orders.</i>—In any +criticism of the evils connected with their administration of the +Philippines, one must not fail to recognize the many achievements of +the missionary friars that were worthy. To the Dominicans and the +Jesuits is due the establishment of institutions of learning. The +Jesuits in 1601 had planted their College of San José. The +Dominicans, here as in Europe, the champions of orthodox learning, had +their own institution, the College of Santo Tomas, inaugurated in 1619, +and were the rivals of the Jesuits for the privilege of giving higher +instruction. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb205" href="#pb205" name= +"pb205">205</a>]</span></p> +<p>In 1645 the pope granted to the Dominicans the right to bestow +higher degrees, and their college became the “Royal and +Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas.” This splendid +name breathes that very spirit of the Middle Ages which the Dominican +order strove to perpetuate in the Philippines down to modern +days.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e3977src" href="#xd19e3977" name= +"xd19e3977src">10</a> Dominicans also founded the College of San Juan +de Letran, as a preparatory school to the University.</p> +<p>We should not pass over the educational work of the religious orders +without mention of the early printing-plants and their publications. +The missionary friars were famous printers, and in the Philippines, as +well as in America, some noble volumes were produced by their +handicraft.</p> +<p><i>Founding of Hospitals by the Franciscans.</i>—Nor had the +Franciscans in the Philippines neglected the fundamental purpose of +their foundation,—that of ministration to the sick and +unprotected. A narrative of their order, written in 1649, gives a long +list of their beneficent foundations.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3987src" href="#xd19e3987" name="xd19e3987src">11</a> Besides the +hospital of Manila, they had an infirmary at Cavite for the native +mariners and shipbuilders, a hospital at Los Baños, another in +the city of Nueva Caceras. Lay brethren were attached to many of the +convents as nurses.</p> +<p>In 1633 a curious occurrence led to the founding of the leper +hospital of San Lazaro. The emperor of Japan, in a probably ironical +mood, sent to Manila a shipload of Japanese afflicted with this +unfortunate disease. These people were mercifully received by the +Franciscans, and <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb206" href="#pb206" +name="pb206">206</a>]</span>cared for in a home, which became the San +Lazaro hospital for lepers.</p> +<p><b>Life and Progress of the Filipinos.</b>—Few sources exist +that can show us the life and progress of the Filipino people during +these decades. Christianity, as introduced by the missionary friars, +was wonderfully successful, and yet there were relapses into +heathenism. Old religious leaders and priestesses roused up from time +to time, and incited the natives to rebellion against their new +spiritual masters. The payment of tribute and the labor required for +the building of churches often drove the people into the mountains.</p> +<p><i>Religious Revolt at Bohol and Leyte.</i>—In 1621 a somewhat +serious revolt took place on Bohol. The Jesuits who administered the +island were absent in Cebu, attending the fiestas on the canonization +of Saint Francis Xavier. The whisper was raised that the old heathen +deity, Diwata, was at hand to assist in the expulsion of the Spaniards. +The island rose in revolt, except the two towns of Loboc and Baclayan. +Four towns were burned, the churches sacked, and the sacred images +speared. The revolt spread to Leyte, where it was headed by the old +dato, Bancao of Limasaua, who had sworn friendship with Legaspi. This +insurrection was put down by the alcalde mayor of Cebu and the Filipino +leaders were hung. On Leyte, Bancao was speared in battle, and one of +the heathen priests suffered the penalty, prescribed by the Inquisition +for heresy—death by burning.</p> +<p><i>Revolt of the Pampangas.</i>—The heavy drafting of natives +to fell trees and build the ships for the Spanish naval expeditions and +the Acapulco trade was also a cause for insurrection. In 1660 a +thousand Pampangas were kept cutting in the forests of that province +alone. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb207" href="#pb207" name= +"pb207">207</a>]</span>Sullen at their heavy labor and at the harshness +of their overseers, these natives rose in revolt. The sedition spread +to Pangasinan, Zambales, and Ilocos, and it required the utmost efforts +of the Spanish forces on land and water to suppress the rebellion.</p> +<p><b>Uprising of the Chinese.</b>—In spite of the terrible +massacre, that had been visited upon the Chinese at the beginning of +the century, they had almost immediately commenced returning not only +as merchants, but as colonists. The early restrictions upon their life +must have been relaxed, for in 1639 there were more than thirty +thousand living in the Islands, many of them cultivating lands at +Calamba and at other points on the Laguna de Bay.</p> +<p>In that year a rebellion broke out, in which the Chinese in Manila +participated. They seized the church of San Pedro Mecati, on the Pasig, +and fortified themselves. From there they were routed by a combined +Filipino and Spanish force. The Chinese then broke up into small bands, +which scattered through the country, looting and murdering, but being +pursued and cut to pieces by the Filipinos. For five months this +pillage and massacre went on, until seven thousand Chinese were +destroyed. By the loss of these agriculturists and laborers Manila was +reduced to great distress.</p> +<p><b>Activity of the Moro Pirates.</b>—The task of the Spaniards +in controlling the Moro datos continued to be immensely difficult. +During the years following the successes of Corcuera and Almonte, the +Moros were continually plotting. Aid was furnished from Borneo and the +Celebes, and they were further incited by the Dutch. In spite of the +vigilance of Zamboanga, small piratical excursions continually harassed +the Bisayas and the Camarines. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb208" +href="#pb208" name="pb208">208</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>Continued Conflicts with the Dutch</b>.—The Dutch, too, +from time to time showed themselves in Manila. In 1646 a squadron +attacked Zamboanga, and then came north to Luzon. The Spanish naval +strength was quite unprepared; but two galleons, lately arrived from +Acapulco, were fitted with heavy guns, Dominican friars took their +places among the gunners, and, under the protection of the Virgin of +the Rosary, successfully encountered the enemy.</p> +<p>A year later a fleet of twelve vessels entered Manila Bay, and +nearly succeeded in taking Cavite. Failing in this, they landed in +Bataan province, and for some time held the coast of Manila Bay in the +vicinity of Abucay. The narrative of Franciscan missions in 1649, above +cited, gives town after town in southern Luzon, where church and +convent had been burned by the Moros or the Dutch.</p> +<p><b>The Abandonment of Zamboanga and the Moluccas.</b>—The +threat of the Dutch made the maintenance of the presidio of Zamboanga +very burdensome. In 1656 the administration of the Moluccas was united +with that of Mindanao, and the governor of the former, Don Francisco de +Esteybar, was transferred from Ternate to Zamboanga and made +lieutenant-governor and captain-general of all the provinces of the +south.</p> +<p>Six years later, the Moluccas, so long coveted by the Spaniards, and +so slowly won by them, together with Zamboanga, were wholly abandoned, +and to the Spice Islands the Spaniards were never to return. This +sudden retirement from their southern possessions was not, however, +occasioned by the incessant restlessness of the Moros nor by the +plottings of the Dutch. It was due to a threat of danger from the +north.</p> +<p><i>Koxinga the Chinese Adventurer.</i>—In 1644, China was +conquered by the Manchus. Pekin capitulated at <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb209" href="#pb209" name="pb209">209</a>]</span>once +and the Ming dynasty was overthrown, but it was only by many years of +fighting that the Manchus overcame the Chinese of the central and +southern provinces. These were years of <span class="corr" id= +"xd19e4040" title="Source: turbulance">turbulence</span>, revolt, and +piracy.</p> +<p>More than one Chinese adventurer rose to a romantic position during +this disturbed time. One of these adventurers, named It Coan, had been +a poor fisherman of Chio. He had lived in Macao, where he had been +converted to Christianity, and had been a cargador, or cargo-bearer, in +Manila. He afterwards went to Japan, and engaged in trade. From these +humble and laborious beginnings, like many another of his persistent +countrymen, he gained great wealth, which on the conquest of the +Manchus he devoted to piracy.</p> +<p>His son was the notorious Kue-Sing, or Koxinga, who for years +resisted the armies of the Manchus, and maintained an independent power +over the coasts of Fukien and Chekiang. About 1660 the forces of the +Manchus became too formidable for him to longer resist them upon the +mainland, and Koxinga determined upon the capture of Formosa and the +transference of his kingdom to that island.</p> +<p>For thirty-eight years this island had been dominated by the Dutch, +whose fortresses commanded the channel of the Pescadores. The colony +was regarded as an important one by the Dutch colonial government at +Batavia. The city of Tai-wan, on the west coast, was a considerable +center of trade. It was strongly protected by the fortress of Zealand, +and had a garrison of twenty-two hundred Dutch soldiers. After months +of fighting, Koxinga, with an overpowering force of Chinese, compelled +the surrender of the Hollanders and the beautiful island passed into +his power. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb210" href="#pb210" name= +"pb210">210</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>A Threatened Invasion of the Philippines.</i>—Exalted by +his success against European arms, Koxinga resolved upon the conquest +of the Philippines. He summoned to his service the Italian Dominican +missionary, Ricci, who had been living in the province of Fukien, and +in the spring of 1662 dispatched him as an ambassador to the governor +of the Philippines to demand the submission of the archipelago.</p> +<p>Manila was thrown into a terrible panic by this demand, and indeed +no such danger had threatened the Spanish in the Philippines since the +invasion of Limahong. The Chinese conqueror had an innumerable army, +and his armament, stores, and navy had been greatly augmented by the +surrender of the Dutch. The Spaniards, however, were united on +resistance. The governor, Don Sabiano Manrique de Lara, returned a +defiant answer to Koxinga, and the most radical measures were adopted +to place the colony in a state of defense.</p> +<p>All Chinese were ordered immediately to leave the Islands. Fearful +of massacre, these wretched people again broke out in rebellion, and +assaulted the city. Many were slain, and other bands wandered off into +the mountains, where they perished at the hands of the natives. Others, +escaping by frail boats, joined the Chinese colonists on Formosa. +Churches and convents in the suburbs of Manila, which might afford +shelter to the assailant, were razed to the ground. More than all this, +the Moluccas were forsaken, never again to be recovered by Spaniards; +and the presidios of Zamboanga and Cuyo, which served as a kind of +bridle on the Moros of Jolo and Mindanao, were abandoned. All Spanish +troops were concentrated in Manila, fortifications were rebuilt, and +the population waited anxiously for the attack. But the blow never +fell. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb211" href="#pb211" name= +"pb211">211</a>]</span>Before Ricci arrived at Tai-wan, Koxinga was +dead, and the peril of Chinese invasion had passed.</p> +<p><i>Effects of These Events.</i>—But the Philippines had +suffered irretrievable loss. Spanish prestige was gone. Manila was no +longer, as she had been at the commencement of the century, the capital +of the East. Spanish sovereignty was again confined to Luzon and the +Bisayas. The Chinese trade, on which rested the economic prosperity of +Manila, had once again been ruined. For a hundred years the history of +the Philippines is a dull monotony, quite unrelieved by any heroic +activity or the presence of noble character.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4064src" href="#xd19e4064" name="xd19e4064src">12</a> +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb212" href="#pb212" name= +"pb212">212</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3685" href="#xd19e3685src" name="xd19e3685">1</a></span> Morris: +<i>The History of Colonization</i>, vol. I., p. 215 sq.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3739" href="#xd19e3739src" name="xd19e3739">2</a></span> Raffles: +<i>History of Java</i>, vol. II., p. 116.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3755" href="#xd19e3755src" name="xd19e3755">3</a></span> On the +history of this notable expedition see Argensola, <i lang= +"es">Conquista de las Islas Molucas</i>. Madrid, 1609.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3787" href="#xd19e3787src" name="xd19e3787">4</a></span> An +account of this victory, written the following year, <i lang= +"es">Relacion Verdadera de la <span class="corr" id="xd19e3791" title= +"Source: Grand Vittoria">gran vitoria</span>, que el Armada +Española de la China tuuo contra los <span class="corr" id= +"xd19e3794" title="Source: Orlandeses">Olandeses</span> Pirates</i>, +has been reprinted by Retana, <i lang="es">Archivo Bibliofilo +Filipino</i>, vol. II.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3815" href="#xd19e3815src" name="xd19e3815">5</a></span> +“Just before the naval engagement of Playa Honda, the Dutch +intercepted junks on the way to Manila, bringing, amongst their cargoes +of food, as many as twelve thousand capons.”—Foreman: +<i>The Philippine Islands</i>, p. 104.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3834" href="#xd19e3834src" name="xd19e3834">6</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Historia de Filipinas</i>, p. 282.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3855" href="#xd19e3855src" name="xd19e3855">7</a></span> How +attractive the island appeared and how well they knew its peoples is +revealed by the accurate descriptions in the first book of +Combés’ <i lang="es">Historia de Mindanao y Jolo</i>.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3899" href="#xd19e3899src" name="xd19e3899">8</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Historia de Mindanao y Jolo</i>, lib. IV., chap. 7.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3919" href="#xd19e3919src" name="xd19e3919">9</a></span> This +important victory was commemorated in a number of writings, some of +which have been reprinted by Retana. See <i lang="es">Sucesos Felices, +que por Mar y Tierra ha dado N. S. a las armas Españolas</i>, +1637. Another is published in the Appendix to Barrantes’, +<i lang="es">Historia de Guerras Piraticas</i>. The subject is also +fully treated by Combés.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3977" href="#xd19e3977src" name="xd19e3977">10</a></span> The +king did not confer the title of “Royal” until 1735, +although the University was taken under his protection in 1680.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e3987" href="#xd19e3987src" name="xd19e3987">11</a></span> +<i lang="es">Entrada de la Seraphica Religion, de Nuestro P. S. +Francisco en las Islas Filipinas</i>. Retana, vol, I.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4064" href="#xd19e4064src" name="xd19e4064">12</a></span> The +Jesuits, on retiring with the Spanish forces from the Moluccas, brought +from Ternate a colony of their converts. These people were settled at +Marigondon, on the south shore of Manila Bay, where their descendants +can still be distinguished from the surrounding Tagálog +population.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ch10" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Chapter X.</h2> +<h2 class="main">A Century of Obscurity and Decline. +1663–1762.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>Political Decline of the Philippines.</b>—For +the hundred years succeeding the abandonment of the Moluccas, the +Philippines lost all political significance as a colony. From almost +every standpoint they were profitless to Spain. There were continued +deficits, which had to be made good from the Mexican treasury. The part +of Spain in the conquest of the East was over, and the Philippines +became little more than a great missionary establishment, presided over +by the religious orders.</p> +<p><b>Death of Governor Salcedo by the Inquisition.</b>—In 1663, +Lara was succeeded by Don Diego de Salcedo. On his arrival, Manila had +high hopes of him, which were speedily disappointed. He loaded the +Acapulco galleon with his own private merchandise, and then dispatched +it earlier than was usual, before the cargoes of the merchants were +ready. He engaged in a wearisome strife with the archbishop, and seems +to have worried the ecclesiastic, who was aged and feeble, into his +grave. At the end of a few years he was hated by every one, and a +conspiracy against him was formed which embraced the religious, the +army, the civil officials, and the merchants. Beyond the reach of the +power of ordinary plotters, he fell a victim to the commissioner of the +Inquisition.</p> +<p><i>The Spanish Inquisition</i>, which wrought such cruelty and +misery in the Peninsula, was carried also to the Spanish colonies. As +we have seen, it was primarily the function of the Dominican order to +administer the institution. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb213" href= +"#pb213" name="pb213">213</a>]</span>The powers exercised by an +inquisitor can scarcely be understood at the present day. His methods +were secret, the charges were not made public, the whole proceedings +were closeted, and yet so great were the powers of this court that none +could resist its authority, or inquire into its actions. Spain forbade +any heretics, Jews, or Moors going to the colonies, and did the utmost +to prevent heresy abroad. She also established in America the +Inquisition itself. Fortunately, it never attained the importance in +the Philippines that it had in Spain. In the Philippines there was no +“Tribunal,” the institution being represented solely by a +commissioner.</p> +<p><i>Death of the Governor.</i>—In 1667, when the unpopularity +of Governor Salcedo was at its height, this commissioner professed to +discover in him grounds of heresy from the fact that he had been born +in Flanders, and decided to avenge the Church by encompassing his ruin. +By secret arrangement, the master of the camp withdrew the guard from +the palace, and the commissioner, with several confederates, gained +admission. The door of the governor’s room was opened by an old +woman, who had been terrified into complicity, and the governor was +seized sleeping, with his arms lying at the head of his bed.</p> +<p>The commissioner informed the governor that he was a prisoner of the +Holy Office. He was taken to the convent of the Augustinians. Here he +was kept in chains until he could be sent to Mexico, to appear before +the Tribunal there. The government in Mexico annulled the arrest of the +commissioner, but Salcedo died at sea on the return of the vessel to +the Philippines in 1669.</p> +<p><b>Colonization of the Ladrone Islands.</b>—In 1668 a Jesuit +mission under Padre Diego Luis de Sanvítores was established on +the Ladrones, the first of the many mission <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb214" href="#pb214" name= +"pb214">214</a>]</span>stations, both Roman Catholic and Protestant, in +the South Pacific. The islands at that time were well populated and +fertile, and had drawn the enthusiasm of Padre Sanvítores in +1662 when he first sailed to the Philippines.</p> +<p>The hostility of the Manchus in China, the Japanese persecutions, +and the abandonment of Mindanao had closed many mission fields, and +explains the eagerness with which the Jesuits sought the royal +permission to Christianize these islands, which had been so constantly +visited by Spanish ships but never before colonized. With Padre +Sanvítores and his five Jesuit associates were a number of +Christian Filipino catechists.</p> +<p><i>Settlement of Guam.</i>—The mission landed at Guam, and was +favorably received. Society among these islanders was divided into +castes. The chiefs were known as chamorri, which has led to the natives +of the Ladrones being called “Chamorros.” A piece of ground +was given the Jesuits for a church at the principal town called Agadna +(Agaña), and here also a seminary was built for the instruction +of young men. The queen regent of Spain, Maria of Austria, gave an +annual sum to this school, and in her honor the Jesuits changed the +name of the islands to the Marianas. The Jesuits preached on eleven +inhabited islands of the group, and in a year’s time had baptized +thirteen thousand islanders and given instruction to twenty +thousand.</p> +<p><i>Troubles with the Natives at Guam.</i>—This first year was +the most successful in the history of the mission. Almost immediately +after, the Jesuits angered the islanders by compulsory conversions. +There were quarrels in several places, and priests, trying to baptize +children against the wishes of their parents, were killed. In 1670 the +Spaniards were attacked, and obliged to fortify themselves at +Agaña. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb215" href="#pb215" name= +"pb215">215</a>]</span></p> +<p>The Jesuits had a guard of a Spanish captain and about thirty +Spanish and Filipino soldiers, who, after some slaughter of the +natives, compelled them to sue for peace. The conditions imposed by the +Jesuits were that the natives should attend mass and festivals, have +their children baptized, and send them to be catechised. The hatred of +the natives was unabated, however, and in 1672 Sanvítores was +killed by them. His biographer claims that at his death he had baptized +nearly fifty thousand of these islanders.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4113src" href="#xd19e4113" name="xd19e4113src">1</a></p> +<p><i>Depopulation of the Ladrone Islands.</i>—About 1680 a +governor was sent to the islands, and they were organized as a +dependency of Spain. The policy of the governors and the Jesuits was +conversion by the sword. The natives were persecuted from island to +island, and in the history of European settlements there is hardly one +that had more miserable consequences to the inhabitants. Disease was +introduced and swept off large numbers. Others fell resisting the +Spaniards, and an entire island was frequently depopulated by order of +the governor, or the desire of the Jesuits to have the natives brought +to Guam. Many, with little doubt, fled to other archipelagoes.</p> +<p>If we can trust the Jesuit accounts, there were in the whole group +one hundred thousand inhabitants when the Spaniards arrived. A +generation saw them almost extinct. Dampier, who touched at Guam in +1686, says then that on the island, where the Spaniards had found +thirty thousand people, there were not above one hundred natives. In +1716 and 1721 other voyagers announced the number of inhabitants on +Guam at two thousand, but only one other island of the group was +populated. When <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb216" href="#pb216" +name="pb216">216</a>]</span>Anson in 1742 visited Guam, the number had +risen to four thousand, and there were a few hundred inhabitants on +Rota; but these seem to have been the whole population. The original +native population certainly very nearly touched extinction. The islands +were from time to time colonized from the Philippines, and the present +population is very largely of Filipino blood.</p> +<p><b>Conflicts between Governor and Archbishop.</b>—Meanwhile, +in the Philippines the conflict of the governor with the archbishop and +the friars continued. The conduct of both sides was selfish and +outrageous. In 1683 the actions of Archbishop Pardo became so violent +and seditious that the Audiencia decreed his banishment to Pangasinan +or Cagayan. He was taken by force to Lingayan, where he was well +accommodated but kept under surveillance. The Dominicans retaliated by +excommunication, and the Audiencia thereupon banished the provincial of +the order from the Islands, and sent several other friars to +Mariveles.</p> +<p>But the year following, Governor Vargas was relieved by the arrival +of his successor, who was favorable to the ecclesiastical side of the +controversy. The archbishop returned and assumed a high hand. He +suspended and excommunicated on all sides. The oidores were banished +from the city, and all died in exile in remote portions of the +archipelago. The ex-governor-general, Vargas, being placed under the +spiritual ban, sued for pardon and begged that his repentance be +recognized.</p> +<p>The archbishop sentenced him to stand daily for the space of four +months at the entrances to the churches of the city and of the Parian, +and in the thronged quarter of Binondo, attired in the habit of a +penitent, with a rope about his neck and carrying a lighted candle in +his hand. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb217" href="#pb217" name= +"pb217">217</a>]</span>He was, however, able to secure a mitigation of +this sentence, but was required to live absolutely alone in a hut on an +island in the Pasig River. He was sent a prisoner to Mexico in 1689, +but died upon the voyage.</p> +<p>The various deans and canons who had concurred in the +archbishop’s banishment, as well as other religious with whom the +prelate had had dissensions, were imprisoned or exiled. The bodies of +two oidores were, on their death and after their burial, disinterred +and their bones profaned.</p> +<p><b>Degeneration of the Colony under Church +Rule.</b>—Archbishop Pardo died in 1689, but the strife and +confusion which had been engendered continued. There were quarrels +between the archbishop and the friars, between the prelate and the +governor. All classes seem to have shared the bitterness and the hatred +of these unhappy dissensions.</p> +<p>The moral tone of the whole colony during the latter part of the +seventeenth century was lowered. Corruption flourished everywhere, and +the vigor of the administration decayed. Violence went unrebuked, and +the way was open for the deplorable tragedy in which this strife of +parties culminated. Certainly no governor could have been more supine, +and shown greater incapacity and weakness of character, than the one +who ruled in the time of Archbishop Pardo and those that succeeded +him.</p> +<p><b>Improvements Made by Governor Bustamante.</b>—<i>Enrichment +of the Treasury.</i>—In the year 1717, however, came a governor +of a different type, Fernando Manuel de Bustamante. He was an old +soldier, stern of character and severe in his measures. He found the +treasury robbed and exhausted. Nearly the whole population of Manila +were in debt to the public funds. Bustamante ordered <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb218" href="#pb218" name= +"pb218">218</a>]</span>these amounts paid, and to compel their +collection he attached the cargo of silver arriving by the galleon from +Acapulco. This cargo was owned by the religious companies, officials, +and merchants, all of whom were indebted to the government. In one year +of his vigorous administration he raised the sum of three hundred +thousand pesos for the treasury.</p> +<p>With sums of money again at the disposal of the state, Bustamante +attempted to revive the decayed prestige and commerce of the +Islands.</p> +<p><i>Refounding of Zamboanga.</i>—In 1718 he refounded and +rebuilt the presidio of Zamboanga. Not a year had passed, since its +abandonment years before, that the pirates from Borneo and Mindanao had +failed to ravage the Bisayas. The Jesuits had petitioned regularly for +its reëstablishment, and in 1712 the king had decreed its +reoccupation. The citadel was rebuilt on an elaborate plan under the +direction of the engineer, Don Juan Sicarra. Besides the usual +barracks, storehouses, and arsenals, there were, within the walls, a +church, hospital, and cuartel for the Pampangan soldiers. Sixty-one +cannon were mounted upon the defenses. Upon the petition of the +Recollects, Bustamante also established a presidio at Labo, at the +southern point of the island of Paragua, whose coasts were attacked by +the Moros from Sulu and Borneo.</p> +<p><i>Treaty with Siam.</i>—In the same year he sent an embassy +to Siam, with the idea of stimulating the commerce which had flourished +a century before. The reception of this embassy was most flattering; a +treaty of peace, friendship, and commerce was made, and on ground ceded +to the Spaniards was begun the erection of a factory.</p> +<p><i>Improvements in the City of Manila.</i>—How far this brave +and determined man might have revived the colony <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb219" href="#pb219" name="pb219">219</a>]</span>it +is impossible to say. The population of Manila, both ecclesiastical and +civil, was at this time so sunk in corruption and so degenerate as to +make almost impossible any recuperation except under the rule of a man +equally determined as Bustamante, but ruling for a long period of time. +He had not hesitated to order investigations into the finances of the +Islands, which disclosed defalcations amounting to seven hundred +thousand pesos. He fearlessly arrested the defaulters, no matter what +their station. The whole city was concerned in these peculations, +consequently the utmost fear and apprehension existed on all sides; and +Bustamante, hated as well as dreaded, was compelled to enforce his +reforms single-handed.</p> +<p><i>His Murder.</i>—He was opposed by the friars and defied by +the archbishop, but, notwithstanding ecclesiastical condemnation, he +went to the point of ordering the arrest of the prelate. The city rose +in sedition, and a mob, headed by friars, proceeded to the palace of +the governor, broke in upon him, and, as he faced them alone and +without support, killed him in cold blood (October 11, 1719).</p> +<p>The archbishop proclaimed himself governor and president of the +Audiencia. The oidores and officials who had been placed under arrest +by Bustamante were released, and his work overthrown. The new +government had neither the courage nor the inclination to continue +Bustamante’s policy, and in 1720 the archbishop called a council +of war, which decreed the abandonment of the fort at Labo.</p> +<p>When the news of this murder reached Spain, the king ordered an +investigation and the punishment of the guilty, and in 1721 Governor +Torre Campo arrived to put these mandates into execution. The culprits, +however, were so high and so influential that the governor did not dare +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb220" href="#pb220" name= +"pb220">220</a>]</span>proceed against them; and although the commands +of the king were reiterated in 1724, the assassins of Bustamante were +never brought to justice.</p> +<p><b>Treaty with the Sultan of Jolo.</b>—In spite of the +cowardly policy of the successors of Bustamante, the presidio of +Zamboanga was not abandoned. So poorly was it administered, however, +that it was not effective to prevent Moro piracy, and the attacks upon +the Bisaya and Calamianes continued. In 1721 a treaty was formed with +the sultan of Jolo providing for trade between Manila and Jolo, the +return or ransom of captives, and the restitution to Spain of the +island of Basílan.</p> +<p><b>The Moro Pirates of Tawi Tawi.</b>—To some extent this +treaty seems to have prevented assaults from Jolo, but in 1730 the +Moros of Tawi Tawi fell upon Paragua and the Calamianes, and in 1731 +another expedition from the south spent nearly a whole year cruising +and destroying among the Bisayas.</p> +<p><b>Deplorable State of Spanish Defenses.</b>—The defenses of +the Spaniards during these many decades were continually in a +deplorable state, their arms were wretched, and, except in moments of +great apprehension, no attention was given to fortifications, to the +preservation of artillery, nor to the supply of ammunition. Sudden +attacks ever found the Spaniards unprepared. Military unreadiness was +the normal condition of this archipelago from these early centuries +down to the destruction of the Spanish armament by the American +fleet.</p> +<p><b>The Economic Policy of Spain.</b>—<i>Restrictions of +Trade.</i>—During the closing years of the seventeenth century +and the beginning of the eighteenth, commerce seemed to have been +actually paralyzed. That brilliant trade which is described by Morga, +and which was at its height about <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb221" +href="#pb221" name="pb221">221</a>]</span>1605, was a few years later +defeated by the miserable economic policy of Spain, pandering to the +demands of the merchants of Cadiz and Seville.</p> +<p>Spain’s economic policy had only in view benefits to the +Peninsula. “The Laws of the Indies” abound with edicts for +the purpose of limiting and crippling colonial commerce and industry, +wherever it was imagined that it might be prejudicial to the protected +industries of Spain. The manufacturers of Seville wished to preserve +the colonies, both of America and of the Indies, as markets for their +monopoly wares; and in this policy, for two centuries, they had the +support of the crown. The growing trade between Mexico and the +Philippines had early been regarded with suspicion, and legislation was +framed to reduce it to the lowest point compatible with the existence +of the colony.</p> +<p>None of the colonies of America could conduct commerce with the +Philippines except Mexico, and here all communication must pass through +the port of Acapulco. This trade was limited to the passage of a single +vessel a year. In 1605 two galleons were permitted, but their size was +reduced to three hundred tons. They were allowed to carry out 500,000 +pesos of silver, but no more than 250,000 pesos’ worth of Chinese +products could be returned. Neither the Spaniards of Mexico nor any +part of America could traffic directly with China, nor could Spanish +vessels pass from Manila to the ports of Asia. Only those goods could +be bought which Chinese merchants themselves brought to the +Philippines.</p> +<p><i>Selfishness of Merchants in Spain.</i>—Even these +restrictions did not satisfy the jealousy of the merchants of Spain. +They complained that the royal orders limiting the traffic were not +regarded, and they insisted upon so <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb222" href="#pb222" name="pb222">222</a>]</span>vexatious a +supervision of this commerce, and surrounded infractions of the law +with such terrible penalties, that the trade was not maintained even to +the amount permitted by law. Spanish merchants even went to the point +of petitioning for the abandonment of the Philippines, on the ground +that the importations from China were prejudicial to the industry of +the Peninsula.</p> +<p>The colonists upon the Pacific coast of America suffered from the +lack of those commodities demanded by civilized life, which could only +reach them as they came from Spain through the port of Porto Bello and +the Isthmus of Panama. Without question, an enormous and beneficial +commerce could have been conducted by the Philippines with the +provinces of western America.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e4215src" href= +"#xd19e4215" name="xd19e4215src">2</a></p> +<p><i>Trade Between South America and the Philippines +Forbidden.</i>—But this traffic was absolutely forbidden, and to +prevent Chinese and Philippine goods from entering South America, the +trade between Mexico and Peru was in 1636 wholly suppressed by a +decree. This decree, as it stands upon the pages of the great +<i>Recopilacion</i>, is an epitome of the insane economic policy of the +Spaniard. It cites that whereas “it had been permitted that from +Peru to New Spain there should go each year two vessels for commerce +and traffic to the amount of two hundred thousand ducats [which later +had been reduced to one hundred thousand ducats], and because there had +increased in Peru to an excessive amount the commerce in the fabrics of +China, in spite of the many prohibitions that had been imposed, and in +order absolutely to remove <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb223" href= +"#pb223" name="pb223">223</a>]</span>the occasion for the future, we +order and command the officers of Peru and New Spain that they +invariably prohibit and suppress this commerce and traffic between the +two kingdoms by all the channels through which it is conducted, +maintaining this prohibition firmly and continually for the +future.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e4233src" href="#xd19e4233" +name="xd19e4233src">3</a></p> +<p>In 1718 the merchants of Seville and Cadiz still complained that +their profits were being injured by even the limited importation of +Chinese silks into Mexico. Thereupon absolute prohibition of import of +Chinese silks, either woven or in thread, was decreed. Only linens, +spices, and supplies of such things as were not produced in Spain could +be brought into Mexico. This order was reaffirmed in 1720, with the +provision that six months would be allowed the people of Mexico to +consume the Chinese silks which they had in their possession, and +thereafter all such goods must be destroyed.</p> +<p><i>Ineffectiveness of These Restrictions.</i>—These measures, +while ruining the commerce of the Philippines, were as a matter of fact +ineffective to accomplish the result desired. Contraband trade between +China and America sprang up in violation of the law. Silks to the value +of four million pesos were annually smuggled into America.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e4244src" href="#xd19e4244" name="xd19e4244src">4</a> +In 1734 the folly and uselessness of such laws was somewhat recognized +by the Council of the Indies, and a cedula was issued restoring the +permission to trade in Chinese silks and raising the value of cargoes +destined for Acapulco to five hundred thousand pesos, and the quantity +of silver for return to one million pesos. The celebrated traffic of +the galleon was resumed and continued until the year 1815. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb224" href="#pb224" name="pb224">224</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>An Attempt to Colonize the Carolines.</b>—Southeastward of +the Philippines, in that part of the Pacific which is known as +Micronesia, there is an archipelago of small islands called the +Carolines. The westernmost portion of the group also bear the name of +the Pelews, or Palaos. Inasmuch as these islands were eventually +acquired by Spain and remained in her possession down to the year 1898, +it may be well to state something at this time of the attempt made by +the Jesuits in 1731 to colonize them.</p> +<p>Certain of these little islands were seen several times by +expeditions crossing the Pacific as early as the latter part of the +sixteenth century, but after the trade between Mexico and the +Philippines had been definitely settled upon, a fixed course was +followed westward from Acapulco to Guam, from which there was little +variation, and during the seventeenth century these islands passed +quite out of mind; but in the year 1696 a party of natives, twenty men +and ten women, were driven by storms far from their home in the +Carolines upon the eastern coast of Samar. It seems that similar +parties of castaways from the Pelew and Caroline Islands had been known +to reach Mindanao and other parts of the Philippines at an even earlier +date. These last came under the observation of the Jesuit priests on +Samar, who baptized them, and, learning from them of the archipelago +from which they had been carried, were filled with missionary ambition +to visit and Christianize these Pacific islanders.</p> +<p>This idea was agitated by the Jesuits, until about 1730 royal +permission was granted to the enterprise. A company of Jesuits in the +following year sailed for the Ladrones and thence south until the +Carolines were discovered. They landed on a small island not far from +Yap. Here they succeeded in baptizing numerous natives and <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb225" href="#pb225" name="pb225">225</a>]</span>in +establishing a mission. Fourteen of their number, headed by the priest, +Padre Cantava, remained on the island while the expedition returned to +secure reënforcements and supplies. Unfortunately, this succor was +delayed for more than a year, and when Spanish vessels with missionary +reënforcements on board again reached the Carolines in 1733, the +mission had been entirely destroyed and the Spaniards, with Padre +Cantava, had been killed. These islands have been frequently called the +“New Philippines.”</p> +<p><b>Conditions of the Filipinos during the Eighteenth +Century.</b>—During the most of the eighteenth century, data are +few upon the condition of the Filipino people. There seems to have been +little progress. Conditions certainly were against the social or +intellectual advance of the native race. Perhaps, however, their +material well-being was quite as great during these years, when little +was attempted, as during the governorships of the more ambitious and +enterprising Spaniards who had characterized the earlier period of +Philippine history.</p> +<p><i>Provincial Governments.</i>—Provincial administration seems +to have fallen almost wholly into the hands of the missionaries. The +priests made themselves the local rulers throughout the Christianized +portion of the archipelago.</p> +<p><i>Insurrection in Bohol.</i>—Insurrection seems especially to +have troubled the island of Bohol during most of the eighteenth +century, and in 1750 an insurrection broke out which practically +established the independence of a large portion of the island, and +which was not suppressed for thirty-five years. The trouble arose in +the town of Inabanga, where the Jesuit priest Morales had greatly +antagonized and imbittered the natives by his severity. Some +apostasized, and went to the hills. One of these men was <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb226" href="#pb226" name= +"pb226">226</a>]</span>killed by the orders of the priest and his body +refused Christian burial, and left uncared for and exposed.</p> +<p>A brother of this man, named <span class="corr" id="xd19e4278" +title="Source: Dogóhoy">Dagóhoy</span>, infuriated by +this indignity, headed a sedition which shortly included three thousand +natives. The priest was killed, and his own body left by the road +unburied. In spite of the efforts of the alcalde of Cebu, <span class= +"corr" id="xd19e4281" title= +"Source: Dogóhoy">Dagóhoy</span> was able to maintain +himself, and practically established a small native state, which +remained until the occupation of the island by the Recollects, after +the Jesuits had been expelled from the Spanish dominions.</p> +<p><b>Activity of the Jesuits.</b>—During the eighteenth century +the Jesuits alone of the religious orders seemed to have been active in +prosecuting their efforts and seeking new fields for conversion. The +sloth and inactivity which overcame the other orders place in greater +contrast the ambition and the activities, both secular and spiritual, +of the Jesuits.</p> +<p><i>Conversion of the Sultan Alim ud Din.</i>—In 1747 they +established a mission even on Jolo. They were unable to overcome the +intense antagonism of the Moro panditas and datos, but they apparently +won the young sultan, Alim ud Din, whose strange story and shifting +fortunes have been variously told. One of the Jesuits, Padre Villelmi, +was skilled in the Arabic language, and this familiarity with the +language and literature of Mohammedanism doubtless explains his +ascendency over the mind of the sultan. Alim ud Din was not a strong +man. His power over the subordinate datos was small, and in 1748 his +brother, Bantilan, usurped his place and was proclaimed sultan of +Jolo.</p> +<p>Alim ud Din, with his family and numerous escort, came to Zamboanga, +seeking the aid of the Spanish against <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb227" href="#pb227" name="pb227">227</a>]</span>his brother. From +Zamboanga he was sent to Manila. On his arrival, January 3, 1749, he +was received with all the pomp and honor due to a prince of high rank. +A house for his entertainment and his retinue of seventy persons was +prepared in Binondo. A public entrance was arranged, which took place +some fifteen days after his reaching the city. Triumphal arches were +erected across the streets, which were lined with more than two +thousand native militia under arms. The sultan was publicly received in +the hall of the Audiencia, where the governor promised to lay his case +before the king of Spain. The sultan was showered with presents, which +included chains of gold, fine garments, precious gems, and gold canes, +while the government sustained the expense of his household.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e4296src" href="#xd19e4296" name= +"xd19e4296src">5</a></p> +<p>Following this reception, steps were taken for his conversion. His +spiritual advisers cited to him the example of the Emperor Constantine +whose conversion enabled him to effect triumphant conquests over his +enemies. Under these representations Alim ud Din expressed his desire +for baptism. The governor-general, who at this time was a priest, the +bishop of Nueva Segovia, was very anxious that the rite should take +place; but this was opposed by his spiritual superior, the archbishop +of Manila, who, with some others, entertained doubts as to the +sincerity of the sultan’s profession.</p> +<p>In order to accomplish his baptism, the governor sent him to his own +diocese, where at Paniqui, on the 29th of April, 1750, the ceremony +took place with great solemnity. On the return of the party to Manila, +the sultan was received with great pomp, and in his honor <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb228" href="#pb228" name="pb228">228</a>]</span>were +held games, theatrical representations, fire-works, and bull-fights. +This was the high-water mark of the sultan’s popularity.</p> +<p><i>Failure to Reinstate Alim ud Din.</i>—Meanwhile the +usurper, Bantilan, was giving abundant evidence of his hostility. The +Spaniards were driven from Jolo, and the fleets of the Moros again +ravaged the Bisayas. In July arrived the new governor, the Marquis of +Obando, who determined to restore Alim ud Din and suppress the Moro +piracy.</p> +<p>An expedition set sail, with the sultan on board, and went as far as +Zamboanga, but accomplished nothing. Here the conduct of the sultan +served to confirm the doubts of the Spaniards as to the sincerity of +his friendship. He was arrested, and returned to Manila, and imprisoned +in the fortress of Santiago. With varying treatment he remained in the +hands of the Spaniards until 1763, when he was returned to Jolo by the +English.</p> +<p><b>Great Increase in Moro Piracy.</b>—The year 1754 is stated +to have been the bloodiest in the history of Moro piracy. No part of +the Bisayas escaped ravaging in this year, while the Camarines, +Batangas, and Albay suffered equally with the rest. The conduct of the +pirates was more than ordinarily cruel. Priests were slain, towns +wholly destroyed, and thousands of captives were carried south into +Moro slavery. The condition of the Islands at the end of this year was +probably the most deplorable in their history.</p> +<p><b>Reforms under General Arandía.</b>—The +demoralization and misery with which Obando’s rule closed were +relieved somewhat by the capable government of Arandía, who +succeeded him. Arandía was one of the few men of talent, energy, +and integrity who stood at the head of affairs in these islands during +two centuries. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb229" href="#pb229" name= +"pb229">229</a>]</span></p> +<p>He reformed the greatly disorganized military force, establishing +what was known as the “Regiment of the King,” made up very +largely of Mexican soldiers. He also formed a corps of artillerists +composed of Filipinos. These were regular troops, who received from +Arandía sufficient pay to enable them to live decently and like +an army.</p> +<p>He reformed the arsenal at Cavite, and, in spite of opposition on +all sides, did something to infuse efficiency and honesty into the +government. At the head of the armament which had been sent against the +Moros he placed a Jesuit priest, Father Ducos. A capable officer was +also sent to command the presidio at Zamboanga, and while Moro piracy +was not stopped, heavy retaliation was visited upon the pirates.</p> +<p>Arandía’s most popular act of government was the +expulsion of the Chinese from the provinces, and in large part from the +city. They seem to have had in their hands then, perhaps even more than +now, the commerce or small trade between Manila and provincial towns. +To take over this trade, Arandía founded a commercial company of +Spaniards and mestizos, which lasted only for a year. The Christianized +Chinese were allowed to remain under license, and for those having +shops in Manila Arandía founded the Alcayceria of San Fernando. +It consisted of a great square of shops built about an open interior. +It stood in Binondo, on the present Calle de San Fernando, in what is +still a populous Chinese quarter.</p> +<p><b>Death of Arandía and Decline of the +Colony.</b>—Arandía died in May, 1759, and the government +was assumed by the bishop of Cebu, who in turn was forced from his +position by the arrival of the archbishop of Manila, Don Manuel Rojo. +The archbishop revoked the celebrated <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb230" href="#pb230" name="pb230">230</a>]</span>orders of good +government which Arandía had put into force, and the colony +promised to relapse once more into its customary dormant condition. +This was, however, prevented by an event which brought to an end the +long period of obscurity and inertia under which the colony had been +gradually decaying, and introduced, in a way, a new period of its +history. This was the capture of the Philippine Islands by the British +in 1762. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb231" href="#pb231" name= +"pb231">231</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4113" href="#xd19e4113src" name="xd19e4113">1</a></span> See the +account of the “Settlement of the Ladrones by the +Spaniards,” in Burney’s <i>Voyages in the Pacific</i>, vol. +III.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4215" href="#xd19e4215src" name="xd19e4215">2</a></span> Some of +the benefits of such a trade are set forth by the Jesuit, Alonzo de +Ovalle, in his <i>Historical Relation of the Kingdom of Chili</i>, +printed in Rome, 1649. In Churchill’s <i>Collection of Voyages +and Travels</i>, vol. III.</p> +<p class="footnote" lang="es"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" +id="xd19e4233" href="#xd19e4233src" name="xd19e4233">3</a></span> +<i>Recopilacion de Leyes de las Indias</i>, lib. VIII., titulo 45, ley +78.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4244" href="#xd19e4244src" name="xd19e4244">4</a></span> Montero +y Vidal: <i lang="es">Historia de Filipinas</i>, vol. I., p. 460.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4296" href="#xd19e4296src" name="xd19e4296">5</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Relacion de la Entrada del Sultan Rey de Jolo</i>, in <i lang= +"es">Archivo del Bibliófilo Filipino</i>, vol. I.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ch11" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Chapter XI.</h2> +<h2 class="main">The Philippines During the Period of European +Revolution. 1762–1837.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>The New Philosophy of the Eighteenth +Century.</b>—The middle of the eighteenth century in Europe was a +time when ideas were greatly liberalized. A philosophy became current +which professed to look for its authority not to churches or hereditary +custom and privilege, but to the laws of God as they are revealed in +the natural world. Men taught that if we could only follow nature we +could not do wrong. “Natural law” became the basis for a +great amount of political and social discussion and the theoretical +foundation of many social rights. The savage, ungoverned man was by +many European philosophers and writers supposed to live a freer, more +wholesome and more natural life than the man who is bound by the +conventions of society and the laws of state.</p> +<p>Most of this reasoning we now know to be scientifically untrue. The +savage and the hermit are not, in actual fact, types of human happiness +and freedom. Ideal life for man is found only in governed society, +where there is order and protection, and where also should be freedom +of opportunity. But to the people of the eighteenth century, and +especially to the scholars of France, where the government was +monarchical and oppressive, and where the people were terribly burdened +by the aristocracy, this teaching was welcomed as a new gospel. Nor was +it devoid of grand and noble ideas—ideas which, carried out in a +conservative way, might have bettered society.</p> +<p>It is from this philosophy and the revolution which <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb232" href="#pb232" name= +"pb232">232</a>]</span>succeeded it that the world received the modern +ideas of liberty, equality, fraternity, and democracy. These ideas, +having done their work in America and Europe, are here at work in the +Philippines today. It remains to be seen whether a society can be +rebuilt here on these principles, and whether Asia too will be reformed +under their influence.</p> +<p><b>Colonial Conflicts between the Great European +Countries.</b>—During the latter half of the eighteenth century +there culminated the long struggle for colonial empire between European +states which we have been following. We have seen how colonial conquest +was commenced by the Portuguese, who were very shortly followed by the +Spaniards, and how these two great Latin powers attempted to exclude +the other European peoples from the rich Far East and the great New +World which they had discovered.</p> +<p>We have seen how this attempt failed, how the Dutch and the English +broke in upon this gigantic reserve, drove the Spanish fleets from the +seas, and despoiled and took of this great empire almost whatever they +would. The Dutch and English then fought between themselves. The +English excluded the Dutch from North America, capturing their famous +colony of New Amsterdam, now New York, and incorporating it (1674) with +their other American colonies, which later became the United States of +America. But in the East Indies the Dutch maintained their trade and +power, gradually extending from island to island, until they +gained—what they still possess—an almost complete monopoly +of spice production.</p> +<p><b>War between England and France.</b>—In India, England in +the eighteenth century won great possessions and laid the foundation +for what has been an almost complete <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb233" href="#pb233" name="pb233">233</a>]</span>subjugation of this +Eastern empire. Here, however, and even more so than in America, +England encountered a royal and brilliant antagonist in the monarch of +France.</p> +<p>French exploration in North America had given France claims to the +two great river systems of the St. Lawrence and the Mississippi, the +latter by far the greatest and richest region of the temperate zone. +So, during much of this eighteenth century, England and France were +involved in wars that had for their prizes the possession of the +continent of North America and the great peninsula of India.</p> +<p>This conflict reached its climax between 1756 and 1763. Both states +put forth all their strength. France called to her support those +countries whose reigning families were allied to her by blood, and in +this way Spain was drawn into the struggle. The monarchs of both France +and Spain belonged to the great house of Bourbon. War was declared +between England and Spain in 1761. Spain was totally unfitted for the +combat. She could inflict no injury upon England and simply lay +impotent and helpless to retaliate, while English fleets in the same +year took Havana in the west and Manila in the east.</p> +<p><i>English Victory over French in India and +America.</i>—English power in India was represented during these +years by the greatest and most striking figure in England’s +colonial history—Lord Clive. To him is due the defeat of France +in India, the capture of her possessions, and the founding of the +Indian Empire, which is still regarded as England’s greatest +possession. The French were expelled from India in the same year that +the great citadel of New France in America—Quebec—was taken +by the English under General Wolfe. <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb234" href="#pb234" name="pb234">234</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>The Philippines under the English.</b>—<i>Expedition from +India to the Philippines.</i>—Lord Clive was now free to strike a +blow at France’s ally, Spain; and in Madras an expedition was +prepared to destroy Spanish power in the Philippines. Notice of the +preparation of this expedition reached Manila from several sources in +the spring and summer of 1762; but with that fatality which pursued the +Spaniard to the end of his history in the Philippines, no preparations +were made by him, until on the 22d of September a squadron of thirteen +vessels anchored in Manila Bay.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e4383width"><img src="images/p234.jpg" alt= +"Church at Malate." width="533" height="371"> +<p class="figureHead">Church at Malate.</p> +</div> +<p>Through the mist, the stupid and negligent authorities of Manila +mistook them for Chinese trading-junks; but it was the fleet of the +English Admiral Cornish, with a force of five thousand British and +Indian soldiers under the command of General Draper. For her defense +Manila had <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb235" href="#pb235" name= +"pb235">235</a>]</span>only 550 men of the “Regiment of the +King” and eighty Filipino artillerists. Yet the Spaniards +determined to make resistance from behind the walls of the city.</p> +<p><i>Surrender of Manila to the English.</i>—The English +disembarked and occupied Malate. From the churches of Malate, Ermita, +and Santiago the British bombarded Manila, and the Spaniards replied +from the batteries of San Andres and San Diego, the firing not being +very effective on either side.</p> +<p>On the 25th, Draper summoned the city to surrender; but a council of +war, held by the archbishop, who was also governor, decided to fight +on. Thirty-six hundred Filipino militia from Pampanga, Bulacan, and +Laguna marched to the defense of the city, and on the 3rd of October +two thousand of these Filipinos made a sally from the walls and +recklessly assaulted the English lines, but were driven back with +slaughter. On the night of the 4th of October a breach in the walls was +made by the artillery, and early in the morning of the 5th four hundred +English soldiers entered almost without resistance. A company of +militia on guard at the Puerto Real was bayoneted and the English then +occupied the Plaza, and here received the surrender of the fort of +Santiago.</p> +<p>The English agreed not to interfere with religious liberty, and +honors of war were granted to the Spanish soldiers. Guards were placed +upon the convent of the nuns of Santa Clara and the beaterios, and the +city was given over to pillage, which lasted for forty hours, and in +which many of the Chinese assisted.</p> +<p><i>Independent Spanish Capital under Anda at Bulacan.</i>—The +English were thus masters of the city, but during their period of +occupation they never extended their power far beyond the present +limits of Manila. Previous <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb236" href= +"#pb236" name="pb236">236</a>]</span>to the final assault and +occupation of Manila, the authorities had nominated the oidor, Don +Simon de Anda y Salazar, lieutenant-governor and captain-general of the +Islands, with instructions to maintain the country in its obedience to +the king of Spain. Anda left the capital on the night of October 4, +passing in a little banca through the nipa swamps and esteros on the +north shore of Manila Bay to the provincial capital of Bulacan.</p> +<p>Here he called together the provincial of the Augustinian monks, the +alcalde mayor of the province, and some other Spaniards. They resolved +to form an independent government representing Spain, and to continue +the resistance. This they were able to do as long as the British +remained in the Islands. The English made a few short expeditions into +Bulacan and up the Pasig River, but there was no hard fighting and no +real effort made to pursue Anda’s force. The Chinese welcomed the +English and gave them some assistance, and for this Anda slew and hung +great numbers of them.</p> +<p><i>The Philippines Returned to Spain.</i>—By the Treaty of +Paris in 1763, peace was made, by which France surrendered practically +all her colonial possessions to England; but England returned to Spain +her captures in Cuba and the Philippines. In March, 1764, there arrived +the Spanish frigate “Santa Rosa,” bringing the first +“Lieutenant of the King for the Islands,” Don Francisco de +la Torre, who brought with him news of the Treaty of Paris and the +orders to the English to abandon the Islands.</p> +<p><i>Resistance of the English by the Friars.</i>—In resistance +to the English and in the efforts to maintain Spanish authority, a +leading part had been taken by the friars. “The sacred +orders,” says Martinez de Zuñiga,<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4415src" href="#xd19e4415" name="xd19e4415src">1</a> <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb237" href="#pb237" name= +"pb237">237</a>]</span>“had much to do with the success of +Señor Anda. They maintained the Indians of their respective +administrations loyal to the orders; they inspired the natives with +horror against the English as enemies of the king and of religion, +inciting them to die fighting to resist them; they contributed their +estates and their property; and they exposed their own persons to great +dangers.” The friars were certainly most interested in retaining +possession of the Islands and had most to lose by their falling into +English hands.</p> +<p><b>Increase of the Jesuits in Wealth and Power.</b>—In this +zealous movement for defense, however, the Jesuits bore no part; and +there were charges made against them of treasonable intercourse with +the English, which may have had foundation, and which are of +significance in the light of what subsequently occurred.</p> +<p>At the close of the eighteenth century, all the governments of +Catholic Europe were aroused with jealousy and suspicious hatred +against the Jesuits. The society, organized primarily for missionary +labor, had gradually taken on much of a secular character. The society +was distinguished, as we have seen in its history in the Philippines, +by men with great capacity and liking for what we may call practical +affairs as distinguished from purely religious or devotional life. The +Jesuits were not alone missionaries and orthodox educators, but they +were scientists, geographers, financiers, and powerful and almost +independent administrators among heathen peoples. They had engaged so +extensively and shrewdly in trade that their estates, warehouses, and +exchanges bound together the fruitful fields of colonial provinces with +the busy marts and money-centers of Europe. Their wealth was believed +to be enormous. Properly invested and carefully guarded, it was rapidly +increasing. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb238" href="#pb238" name= +"pb238">238</a>]</span></p> +<p>What, however, made the order exasperating alike to rulers and +peoples were the powerful political intrigues in which members of the +order engaged. Strong and masterful men themselves, the field of state +affairs was irresistibly attractive. Their enemies charged that they +were unscrupulous in the means which they employed to accomplish +political ends. It is quite certain that the Jesuits were not patriotic +in their purposes or plans. They were an international corporation; +their members belonged to no one nation; to them the Society was +greater and more worthy of devotion than any state, in which they +themselves lived and worked.</p> +<p><b>Dissolution of the Society of Jesus.</b>—Europe had, +however, reached the belief, to which it adheres today, that a man must +be true to the country in which he lives and finds shelter and +protection and in which he ranks as a political member, or else incur +odium and punishment. Thus it was their indifference to national +feeling that brought about the ruin of the Jesuits. It is significant +that the rulers, the most devoted to Catholicism, followed one another +in decreeing their expulsion from their dominions. In 1759 they were +expelled from Portugal, in 1764 from France, and April 2, 1767, the +decree of confiscation and banishment from Spain and all Spanish +possessions was issued by King Carlos III. Within a year thereafter, +the two most powerful princes of Italy, the king of Naples and the Duke +of Parma, followed, and then the Grand Master of the Knights of Malta +expelled them from that island. The friends of the order were powerless +to withstand this united front of Catholic monarchs, and in July, 1773, +Pope Clement XIV. suppressed and dissolved the society, which was not +restored until 1814. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb239" href="#pb239" +name="pb239">239</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>The Jesuits Expelled from the Philippines.</i>—The order +expelling the Jesuits from the Philippines was put into effect in the +year 1767. The instructions authorized the governor in case of +resistance to use force of arms as against a rebellion.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e4441src" href="#xd19e4441" name="xd19e4441src">2</a> +Besides their colleges in Manila, Tondo, Cavite, Leyte, Samar, Bohol, +and Negros, the Jesuits administered curacies in the vicinity of +Manila, in Cavite province, in Mindoro and Marinduque, while the +islands of Bohol, Samar, and Leyte were completely under their +spiritual jurisdiction. In Mindanao their missions, a dozen or more in +number, were found on both the northern and southern coasts. Outside of +the Philippines proper they were the missionaries on the Ladrones, or +Marianas. Their property in the Philippines, which was confiscated by +the government, amounted to 1,320,000 pesos, although a great deal of +their wealth was secreted and escaped seizure through the connivance of +the governor, Raon.</p> +<p><b>Governor Anda’s Charges against the Religious +Orders.</b>—Don Simon de Anda had been received in Spain with +great honor for the defense which he had made in the Islands, and in +1770 returned as governor of the Philippines. His appointment was +bitterly resented by the friars. In 1768, Anda had addressed to the +king a memorial upon the disorders in the Philippines, in which he +openly charged the friars with commercialism, neglect of their +spiritual duties, oppression of the natives, opposition to the teaching +of the Spanish language, and scandalous interference with civil +officials and affairs. Anda’s remedy for these abuses was the +rigorous enforcement of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb240" href= +"#pb240" name="pb240">240</a>]</span>the laws actually existing for the +punishment of such conduct and the return to Spain of friars who +refused to respect the law.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e4453width"><img src="images/p240.jpg" alt= +"The Anda Monument in Manila." width="536" height="369"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e4455" title= +"Source: Anda Monument.">The Anda Monument in Manila.</span></p> +</div> +<p>He was, however, only partially successful in his policy. During the +six years of his rule, he labored unremittingly to restore the Spanish +government and to lift it from the decadence and corruption that had so +long characterized it. There were strong traits of the modern man in +this independent and incorruptible official. If he made many enemies, +it is, perhaps, no less to the credit of his character; and if in the +few years of his official life he was unable to restore the colony, it +must be remembered that he had few assistants upon whom to rely and was +without adequate means.</p> +<div class="figure floatRight xd19e4460width"><img src= +"images/p241-1.jpg" alt="Igorot Ax." width="341" height="413"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e4462" title= +"Source: Calinga Axe.">Igorot Ax.</span></p> +</div> +<p><b>The Moro Pirates.</b>—The Moros were again upon their +forays, and in 1771 even attacked Aparri, on the extreme <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb241" href="#pb241" name= +"pb241">241</a>]</span>northern coast of Luzon, and captured a Spanish +missionary. Anda reorganized the Armada de Pintados, and toward the end +of his life created also the Marina Sutil, a fleet of light gunboats +for the defense of the coasts against the attacks of pirates.</p> +<p><b>Failure of an English Settlement.</b>—The hostility of the +Moro rulers was complicated by the interference of the English, who, +after the evacuation of Manila, continued to haunt the Sulu archipelago +with the apparent object of effecting a settlement. By treaty with the +Moro datos, they secured the cession of the island of Balanbangan, off +the north coast of Borneo. This island was fortified and a factory was +established, but in 1775 the Moros attacked the English with great fury +and destroyed the entire garrison, except the governor and five others, +who escaped on board <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb242" href="#pb242" +name="pb242">242</a>]</span>a vessel, leaving a great quantity of arms +and wealth to the spoils of the Moros. The English factors, who had +taken up business on the island of Jolo, fled in a Chinese junk; and +these events, so unfortunate to the English, ended their attempts to +gain a position in the Jolo archipelago until many years later.</p> +<div class="figure floatLeft xd19e4477width"><img src= +"images/p241-2.jpg" alt="Moro Gong." width="308" height="182"> +<p class="figureHead">Moro <span class="corr" id="xd19e4480" title= +"Source: Brass Vessel">Gong</span>.</p> +</div> +<p><b>Increase in Agriculture.</b>—Anda died in October, 1776, +and his successor, Don José Basco de Vargas, was not appointed +until July, 1778. With Basco’s governorship we see the beginning +of those numerous projects for the encouragement of agriculture and +industry which characterized the last century of Spanish rule. His +“<span lang="es">Plan general economico</span>” +contemplated the encouragement of cotton-planting, the propagation of +mulberry-trees and silk-worms, and the cultivation of spices and sugar. +Premiums were offered for success in the introduction of these new +products and for the encouragement of manufacturing industries suitable +to the country and its people.</p> +<p>Out of these plans grew the admirable <span lang="es">Sociedad +Economica de Amigos del Pais</span>, which was founded by Basco in +1780. The idea was an excellent one, and the society, although +suffering long periods of inactivity, lasted for fully a century, and +from time to time was useful in the improvement and development of the +country, and stimulated agricultural experiments through its premiums +and awards.</p> +<p><i>Establishment of the Tobacco Industry.</i>—Up to this time +the Philippine revenues had been so unproductive that the government +was largely supported by a subsidy of $250,000 a year paid by Mexico. +Basco was the first to put the revenues of the Islands upon a lucrative +basis. To him was due the establishment, in 1782, of the famous tobacco +monopoly (estanco de tabacos) which became <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb243" href="#pb243" name="pb243">243</a>]</span>of +great importance many years later, as new and rich tobacco lands like +the Cagayan were brought under cultivation.</p> +<div class="figure floatRight xd19e4502width"><img src= +"images/p243-1.jpg" alt="Igorot Drum." width="318" height="320"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e4504" title= +"Source: Igorrote">Igorot</span> Drum.</p> +</div> +<p><b>Favorable Commercial Legislation.</b>—The change in +economic ideas, which had come over Europe through the liberalizing +thought of the eighteenth century, is shown also by a most radical step +to direct into new channels the commerce of the Philippines. This was +the creation in 1785 of a great trading corporation with special +privileges and crown protection, “The Royal Company of the +Philippines.”</p> +<div class="figure floatLeft xd19e4512width"><img src= +"images/p243-2.jpg" alt="Igorot Shield." width="119" height="375"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e4514" title= +"Source: Igorrote">Igorot</span> Shield.</p> +</div> +<p>The company was given a complete monopoly of all the commerce +between Spain and the Philippines, except the long-established direct +traffic between Manila and Acapulco. All the old laws, designed to +prevent the importation into the Peninsula of wares of the Orient, were +swept away. Philippine products were exempted from all customs duty, +either on leaving Manila or entering Spain. The vessels of the company +were permitted to visit the ports of China, and the ancient +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb244" href="#pb244" name= +"pb244">244</a>]</span>and absurd prohibition, which prevented the +merchants of Manila from trading with India, and China, was +removed.</p> +<p>Though still closing the Philippines against foreign trade, this +step was a veritable revolution in the commercial legislation of the +Philippines. Had the project been ably and heartily supported, it might +have produced a development that would have advanced prosperity half a +century; but the people of Manila did not welcome the opening of this +new line of communication. The ancient commerce with Acapulco was a +valuable monopoly to those who had the right to participate in it, and +their attitude toward the new company was one either of indifference or +hostility.</p> +<p>In 1789 the port of Manila was opened and made free to the vessels +of all foreign nations for the space of three years, for the +importation and sale exclusively of the wares of Asia; but the products +of Europe, with the exception of Spain, were forbidden.</p> +<p>The Royal Company was rechartered in 1805, and enjoyed its monopoly +until 1830, when its privileges lapsed and Manila was finally opened to +the ships of foreign nations.</p> +<p><b>Conquest of the Igorrote Provinces of Luzon.</b>—Basco was +a zealous governor and organized a number of military expeditions to +occupy the Igorrote country in the north. In 1785 the heathen Igorrotes +of the missions of Ituy and Paniqui in Nueva Vizcaya revolted and had +to be reconquered by a force of musketeers from Cagayan.</p> +<p><b>Conquest of the Batanes Islands.</b>—Basco also effected +the conquest of the Batanes Islands to the north of Luzon, establishing +garrisons and definitely annexing them to the colony. The Dominican +missionaries long before this <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb245" +href="#pb245" name="pb245">245</a>]</span>time had attempted to convert +these islands to Christianity; but the poverty of the people and the +fierceness of the typhoons which sweep these little islands prevented +the cultivation of anything more than camotes and taro, and had made +them unprofitable to hold. Basco was honored, however, for his +reoccupation of these islands, and on his return to Spain, at the +expiration of his governorship, received the title of “Count of +the Conquest of the Batanes.”<a class="noteref" id="xd19e4539src" +href="#xd19e4539" name="xd19e4539src">3</a></p> +<p><b>A Scientific Survey of the Coast of the Islands.</b>—About +1790 the Philippines were visited by two Spanish frigates, the +“Descubierta” and the “Atrevida,” under the +command of Captain Malaspina. These vessels formed an exploring +expedition sent out by the Spanish government to make a hydrographic +and astronomic survey of the coasts of Spanish America, the Ladrones, +and the Philippines. It was one of those creditable enterprises for the +widening of scientific knowledge which modern governments have +successively and with great honor conducted.</p> +<p>The expedition charted the Strait of San Bernardino, the coasts of +several of the Bisayan Islands, and Mindanao. One of the scientists of +the party was the young botanist, Don Antonio Pineda, who died in +Ilocos in 1792, but whose studies in the flora of the Philippines +thoroughly established his reputation. A monument to his memory was +erected near the church in Malate, but it has since suffered from +neglect and is now falling in ruins.</p> +<p><b>Establishment of a Permanent Navy in the +Philippines.</b>—The intentions of England in this archipelago +were still regarded with suspicion by the Spanish government, and +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb246" href="#pb246" name= +"pb246">246</a>]</span>in 1795 and 1796 a strong Spanish fleet, sent +secretly by way of the coast of South America, was concentrated in the +waters of the Philippines under the command of Admiral Alava. Its +object was the defense of the Islands in case of a new war with Great +Britain. News of the declaration of war between these two countries +reached Manila in March, 1797, but though for many months there was +anxiety, England made no attempt at reoccupation. These events led, +however, to the formation of a permanent naval squadron, with +head-quarters and naval station at Cavite.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4554src" href="#xd19e4554" name="xd19e4554src">4</a></p> +<div class="figure floatRight xd19e4562width"><img src= +"images/p246-1.jpg" alt="Moro Kris and Sheath." width="382" height= +"187"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e4564" title= +"Source: Filipino Creese">Moro Kris</span> and Sheath.</p> +</div> +<div class="figure floatLeft xd19e4568width"><img src= +"images/p246-2.jpg" alt="Moro Beheading Knives." width="351" height= +"179"> +<p class="figureHead"><span class="corr" id="xd19e4570" title= +"Source: Moro Creeses.">Moro Beheading Knives.</span></p> +</div> +<p><b>The Climax of Moro Piracy.</b>—The continued presence of +the Moros in Mindoro, where they haunted the bays and rivers of both +east and west coasts <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb247" href="#pb247" +name="pb247">247</a>]</span>for months at a time, stealing out from +this island for attack in every direction, was specially noted by Padre +Zuñiga, and indicated how feebly the Spaniards repulsed these +pirates a hundred years ago.</p> +<p>It was the last severe phase of Malay piracy, when even the strong +merchant ships of England and America dreaded the straits of Borneo and +passed with caution through the China Sea. Northern Borneo, the Sulu +archipelago, and the southern coasts of Mindanao were the centers from +which came these fierce sea-wolves, whose cruel exploits have left +their many traditions in the American and British merchant navies, just +as they periodically appear in the chronicles of the Philippines.</p> +<div class="figure floatRight xd19e4581width"><img src= +"images/p247.jpg" alt="Moro Hunting Spear." width="179" height="447"> +<p class="figureHead">Moro <span class="corr" id="xd19e4584" title= +"Source: Fish">Hunting</span> Spear.</p> +</div> +<p>Five hundred captives annually seem to have been the spoils taken by +these Moros in the Philippines Islands, and as far south as Batavia and +Macassar captive Filipinos were sold in the slave marts of the Malays. +The aged and infirm were inhumanly bartered to the savage tribes of +Borneo, who offered them up in their ceremonial sacrifices. The +measures of the Spanish government, though constant and expensive, were +ineffective. Between 1778 and 1793, a million and a half of pesos were +expended on the fleets and expeditions to drive back or punish the +Moros, but at the end of the century a veritable climax of piracy was +attained.</p> +<p>Pirates swarmed continually about the coasts of Mindoro, +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb248" href="#pb248" name= +"pb248">248</a>]</span>Burias, and Masbate, and even frequented the +esteros of Manila Bay. Some sort of peace seems to have been +established with Jolo and a friendly commerce was engaged in toward the +end of the century, but the Moros of Mindanao and Borneo were +increasing enemies. In 1798 a fleet of twenty-five Moro bancas passed +up the Pacific coast of Luzon and fell upon the isolated towns of +Paler, Casiguran, and Palanan, destroying the pueblos and taking 450 +captives. The cura of Casiguran was ransomed in Binangonan for the sum +of twenty-five hundred pesos. For four years this pirate fleet had its +rendezvous on Burias, whence it raided the adjacent coasts and the +Catanduanes.</p> +<div class="figure floatLeft xd19e4595width"><img src="images/p248.jpg" +alt="Moro “Kulintangan” or Xylophone." width="335" height= +"330"> +<p class="figureHead">Moro <span class="corr" id="xd19e4598" title= +"Source: Musical Instrument.">“Kulintangan” or +Xylophone.</span></p> +</div> +<p><b>The Great Wars in America and Europe.</b>—The English +reoccupied Balanbangan in 1803, but held the island for only three +years, when it was definitely abandoned. For some years, however, the +coasts of the Philippines were threatened by English vessels, and there +was reflected here in the Far East the tremendous conflicts which were +convulsing Europe at this time. The wars which changed Europe at the +close of the eighteenth century, following the French Revolution, form +one of the most important and interesting periods of European history, +but it is also one of the most difficult periods to judge and describe. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb249" href="#pb249" name= +"pb249">249</a>]</span>We will say of it here only so much as will be +sufficient to show the effect upon Spain and so upon the +Philippines.</p> +<p><b>The Revolution of the English Colonies in America.</b>—In +1776 the thirteen English colonies on the Atlantic coast of North +America declared their independence of Great Britain. In the unfair +treatment of the British king and Parliament they had, they believed, +just grounds for revolution. For nearly eight years a war continued by +which England strove to reduce them again to obedience. But at the end +of that time England, having successively lost two armies of invasion +by defeat and capture, made peace with the American colonists and +recognized their independence. In 1789 the Americans framed their +present constitution and established the United States of America.</p> +<p><b>The French Revolution.</b>—<i>Condition of the People in +France.</i>—In their struggle for independence the Americans had +been aided by France, who hoped through this opportunity to cripple her +great colonial rival, England. Between America and France there was +close sympathy of political ideas and theories, although in their +actual social conditions the two countries were as widely separated as +could be. In America the society and government were democratic. All +classes were experienced in politics and government. They had behind +them the priceless heritage of England’s long struggle for free +and representative government. There was an abundance of the +necessaries of life and nearly complete freedom of opportunity.</p> +<p>France, like nearly every other country of continental Europe, was +suffering from the obsolete burden of feudalism. The ownership of the +land was divided between the aristocracy and the church. The great bulk +of the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb250" href="#pb250" name= +"pb250">250</a>]</span>population were serfs bound to the estates, +miserably oppressed, and suffering from lack of food, and despoiled of +almost every blessing which can brighten and dignify human life. The +life of the court and of the nobility grew more luxurious, extravagant, +and selfish as the economic conditions in France became worse. The king +was nearly an absolute monarch. His will was law and the earlier +representative institutions, which in England had developed into the +splendid system of parliamentary government, had in France fallen into +decay.</p> +<p>In the other countries of Europe—the German States, Austria, +Italy, and Spain—the condition of the people was quite as bad, +probably in some places even worse than it was in France. But it was in +France that the revolt broke forth, and it was France which led Europe +in a movement for a better and more democratic order. Frenchmen had +fought in the armies of America; they had experienced the benefits of a +freer society, and it is significant that in the same year (1789) that +saw the founding of the American state the Revolution in France began. +It started in a sincere and conservative attempt to remedy the evils +under which France was suffering, but the accumulation of injustice and +misery was too great to be settled by slow and hesitating measures. The +masses, ignorant, and bitter with their wrongs, broke from the control +of statesman and reformer, threw themselves upon the established state +and church, both equally detestable to them, and tore them to pieces. +Both king and queen died by beheading. The nobility were either +murdered or expelled. The revolutionary government, if such it could be +called, fell into the hands of wicked and terrible leaders, who +maintained themselves by murder and terrorism. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb251" href="#pb251" name="pb251">251</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>Effects of the Revolution.</i>—These are the outward and +terrible expressions of the Revolution which were Seized upon by +European statesmen and which have been most dwelt upon by historical +writers. But, apart from the bloody acts of the years from 1793 to +1795, the Revolution modernized France and brought incalculable gains +to the French people. By the seizure of the great estates and their +division among the peasantry, the agricultural products of the country +were doubled in a single year, and that terrible condition of +semi-starvation which had prevailed for centuries was ended.</p> +<p>The other monarchies of Europe regarded the events in France with +horror and alarm. Monarchs felt their own thrones threatened, and a +coalition of European monarchies was formed to destroy the republic and +to restore the French monarchy and old régime. France found +herself invaded by armies upon every frontier. It was then that the +remarkable effects produced by the Revolution upon the people of France +appeared.</p> +<p>With a passionate enthusiasm which was irresistible, the people +responded to the call for war; great armies were enlisted, which by an +almost uninterrupted series of victories threw back the forces of the +allies. Men rose from obscurity to the command of armies, and there was +developed that famous group of commanders, the marshals of France. Out +of this terrible period of warfare there arose, too, another, who was +perhaps, if we except the Macedonian king, Alexander, the greatest man +ever permitted to lead armies and to rule men—Bonaparte, later +the emperor, Napoleon the First.</p> +<p><i>The New Republic under Napoleon the First.</i>—From 1795, +when Bonaparte was given command of the invasion of Italy, until 1815, +when he was finally defeated <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb252" href= +"#pb252" name="pb252">252</a>]</span>at Waterloo in Belgium, Europe +experienced almost continuous war. The genius of Napoleon reduced to +the position of vassal states Italy, Switzerland, Holland, Belgium, +Germany, and Austria. In all these countries the ancient thrones were +humbled, feudalism was swept away, and the power of a corrupt church +and aristocracy was broken. In spite of the humiliation of national +pride, these great benefits to Europe of Napoleon’s conquests can +not be overestimated. Wherever Napoleon’s power extended there +followed the results of the Revolution—a better system of law, +the introduction of the liberal “Code Napoleon,” the +liberation of the people from the crushing toils of mediævalism, +and the founding of a better society. These are the debts which Europe +owes to the French Revolution.</p> +<p><b>The Decline of Spain.</b>—<i>Lack of Progress.</i>—In +this advance and progress Spain did not share. The empire of Napoleon +was never established in the Peninsula. In 1811 the Spaniards, with, +the assistance of the English under the great general, Wellington, +repulsed the armies of the French. This victory, so gratifying to +national pride, was perhaps a real loss to Spain, for the reforms which +prevailed in other parts of Europe were never carried out in Spain, and +she remains even yet unliberated from aristocratic and clerical +power.</p> +<p>A liberal constitutional government was, however, set up in Spain in +1812 by the Cortes; but in 1814 King Ferdinand, aided by the Spanish +aristocracy and clergy, was able to overthrow this representative +government and with tyrannical power to cast reforms aside. Fifty +thousand people were imprisoned for their liberal opinions, the +Inquisition was restored, the Cortes abolished, and its acts nullified. +The effect of these acts upon the Philippines will be noticed +presently. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb253" href="#pb253" name= +"pb253">253</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>Separation of the Philippines from Mexico.</i>—The events +of these years served to separate the Philippines from their long +dependency on Mexico. In 1813 the Cortes decreed the suppression of the +subsidized Acapulco galleon. The Mexican trade had long been waning and +voyages had become less profitable. The last of the galleons left +Manila in 1811 and returned from Acapulco in 1815, never again to +attempt this classical voyage.</p> +<p>The cessation of these voyages only briefly preceded the complete +separation from America. From the first period of settlement, the +Philippines had in many respects been a sub-dependency of New Spain. +Mexico had until late afforded the only means of communication with the +mother-country, the only land of foreign trade. Mexican officials +frequently administered the government of the Islands, and Mexican +Indians formed the larger part of the small standing army of the +Philippines, including the “Regiment of the King.” As we +have seen, a large subsidy, the situado, was annually drawn from the +Mexican treasury to support the deficient revenues of the +Philippines.</p> +<p><i>Rebellion of the South American Countries.</i>—But the +grievances of the Spanish American colonists were very great and very +real. The revolution which had successively stirred North America and +Europe now passed back again to the Spanish countries of the New World, +and between 1810 and 1825 they fought themselves free of Spain. The +last of the colonies from which the Spaniards were forced to retire was +Peru. Mexico achieved her separation in 1820. Spain lost every +possession upon the mainland of both Americas, and the only vestiges of +her once vast American empire were the rich islands of the Greater +Antilles—Cuba and Porto Rico. <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb254" href="#pb254" name="pb254">254</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>Limited Trade with the Philippines.</i>—The Philippines +were now forced to communicate by ship directly with Spain. The route +for the next fifty years lay by sailing-vessels around the Cape of Good +Hope. It occupied from four to six months, but this route had now +become practically a neutral passage, its winds and currents were well +understood, and it was annually followed by great numbers of vessels of +Europe, England, and the United States.</p> +<p>Trade was still limited to the ships of the Royal Philippine +Company, and this shipping monopoly lasted until 1835, when a new era +in the commercial and industrial life of the Philippines opened. An +English commercial house was established in Manila as early as +1809.</p> +<p><b>Volcanic Eruptions.</b>—The terrible eruptions of Mount +Taal, the last of which occurred in 1754, were followed in the next +century by the destructive activity of Mount Mayon. In 1814 an +indescribable eruption of ashes and lava occurred, and the rich hemp +towns around the base of this mountain were destroyed. Father Francisco +Aragoneses, cura of Cagsaua, an eye-witness, states that twelve +thousand people perished; in the church of Budiao alone two hundred lay +dead.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e4671src" href="#xd19e4671" name= +"xd19e4671src">5</a></p> +<p><b>Rebellions in the Philippines.</b>—<i>The Liberal Spanish +Cortes.</i>—Two revolts in the Philippines that occurred at this +period are of much importance and show the effect in the Philippines of +the political changes in Spain. In 1810 the liberal Spanish Cortes had +declared that “the kingdoms and provinces of America and Asia +are, and ought to have been always, reputed an integral part of the +Spanish monarchy, and for that same, their natives <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb255" href="#pb255" name="pb255">255</a>]</span>and +free inhabitants are equal in rights and privileges to those of the +Peninsula.”</p> +<p>This important declaration, which if carried out would have +completely revolutionized Spain’s colonial policy, was published +in the Philippines, and with that remarkable and interesting facility +by which such news is spread, even among the least educated classes of +Filipinos, this proclamation had been widely disseminated and discussed +throughout the Islands. It was welcomed by the Filipino with great +satisfaction, because he believed it exempted him from the enforced +labor of the <i>polos</i> and <i>servicios</i>. These were the +unremunerated tasks required of Filipinos for the construction of +public works, bridges, roads, churches, and convents.</p> +<p><i>Effect of the Repeal of the Declaration of the +Cortes.</i>—King Ferdinand VII. in May, 1814, on his return to +power, as we have seen, published the famous decree abolishing +constitutional government in Spain and annulling all the acts of the +Cortes, including those which aimed to liberalize the government of the +colonies. These decrees, when published in the Philippines, appeared to +the Filipinos to return them to slavery, and in many places their +disaffection turned to rebellion. In Ilocos twelve hundred men banded +together, sacked convents and churches, and destroyed the books and +documents of the municipal archives. Their fury seems to have been +particularly directed against the petty tyrants of their own race, the +caciques or principales.</p> +<p>The result of Spanish civilization in the Philippines had been to +educate, and, to a certain degree, enrich a small class of Filipinos, +usually known as principales or the <i lang="es">gente ilustrada</i>. +It is this class which has absorbed the direction of municipal and +local affairs, and which almost <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb256" +href="#pb256" name="pb256">256</a>]</span>alone of the Filipino +population has shared in those benefits and opportunities which +civilized life should bring.</p> +<p>The vast majority of the population have, unfortunately, fallen or +remained in a dependent and almost semi-servile position beneath the +principales. In Ilocos this subordinate class, or dependientes, is +known as <i>kailian</i>, and it was these kailian who now fell upon +their more wealthy masters, burning their houses and destroying their +property, and in some instances killing them. The assignment of +compulsory labor had been left to the principales in their positions as +gobernadorcillos and cabezas de barangay, and these officials had +unquestionably abused their power and had drawn down upon themselves +the vengeance of the kailian.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e4711src" href= +"#xd19e4711" name="xd19e4711src">6</a></p> +<p>This revolt, it will be noticed, was primarily directed neither +against friars nor Spanish authorities, but against the unfortunate +social order which the rule of Spain maintained.</p> +<p><i>A Revolt Lead by Spaniards.</i>—A plot, with far more +serious motives, took place in 1823. The official positions in the +regiments and provinces had previously been held almost entirely by +Spaniards born in America or the Philippines. The government now +attempted to fill these positions with Spaniards from Manila. The +officials, deprived of their positions, incited the native troops which +they had commanded, into a revolt, which began in the walled city in +Manila. About eight hundred soldiers followed them, and they gained +possession of the Cuartel of the King, of the Royal Palace, and of the +Cabildo, but they failed to seize the fortress of Santiago. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb257" href="#pb257" name= +"pb257">257</a>]</span>It was not properly a revolt of Filipinos, as +the people were not involved and did not rise, but it had its influence +in inciting later insurrection.</p> +<p><i>Insurrection on Bohol.</i>—Since the insurrection on Bohol +in 1744, when the natives had killed the Jesuit missionaries, a large +part of the island had been practically independent under the leader +<span class="corr" id="xd19e4729" title= +"Source: Dogóhoy">Dagóhoy</span>. After the expulsion of +the Jesuits, Recollects were placed in special charge of those towns +along the seacoast, which had remained loyal to Spain. An effort was +made to secure the submission of the rebels by the proclamation of a +pardon, but the power of the revolt grew rather than declined, until in +1827 it was determined to reduce the rebellion by force. An expedition +of thirty-two hundred men was formed in Cebu, and in April, 1828, the +campaign took place, which resulted in the defeat of the rebels and +their settlement in the Christian towns.</p> +<p><b>The New Provinces of Benguet and Abra.</b>—It is proper to +notice also the slow advances of Spanish authority, which began to be +made about this time among the heathen tribes of northern Luzon. These +fierce and powerful tribes occupy the entire range of the Cordillera +Central. Missionary effort in the latter half of the eighteenth century +had succeeded in partly Christianizing the tribes along the river Magat +in Neuva Vizcaya, but the fierce, head-hunting hillmen remained +unsubdued and unchristianized.</p> +<p>Between 1823 and 1829 the mission of Pidigan, under an Augustinian +friar, Christianized some thousands of the Tinguianes of the river +Abra. In 1829 an expedition of about sixty soldiers, under Don +Guillermo Galvey, penetrated into the cool, elevated plateau of +Benguet. The diary of the leader recounts the difficult march up the +river Cagaling from Aringay and their delight upon emerging +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb258" href="#pb258" name= +"pb258">258</a>]</span>from the jungle and cogon upon the grassy, +pine-timbered slopes of the plateau.</p> +<p>They saw little cultivated valleys and small <span class="corr" id= +"xd19e4742" title="Source: culsters">clusters</span> of houses and +splendid herds of cattle, carabaos, and horses, which to this day have +continued to enrich the people of these mountains. At times they were +surrounded by the yelling bands of Igorrotes, and several times they +had to repulse attacks, but they nevertheless succeeded in reaching the +beautiful circular depression now known as the valley of La +Trinidad.</p> +<p>The Spaniards saw with enthusiasm the carefully separated and walled +fields, growing camotes, taro, and sugarcane. The village of about five +hundred houses was partly burned by the Spaniards, as the Igorrotes +continued hostile. The expedition returned to the coast, having +suffered only a few wounds. The commandancia of Benguet was not created +until 1846, in which year also Abra was organized as a province. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb259" href="#pb259" name= +"pb259">259</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4415" href="#xd19e4415src" name="xd19e4415">1</a></span> <i lang= +"es">Historia de Filipinas</i>, p. 682.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4441" href="#xd19e4441src" name="xd19e4441">2</a></span> These +orders and other documents dealing with the Jesuit expulsion are +printed in Montero y Vidal, <i lang="es">Historia de Filipinas</i>, +vol. II. p. 180 sq.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4539" href="#xd19e4539src" name="xd19e4539">3</a></span> But the +conquest was almost valueless, and a few years later the inhabitants +had to be transported to Cagayan because of the scarcity of food.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4554" href="#xd19e4554src" name="xd19e4554">4</a></span> Alava +made a series of journeys through the different provinces of the +Philippines, and on these trips he was accompanied by Friar Martinez de +Zuñiga, whose narrative of these expeditions forms a most +interesting and valuable survey of the conditions of the Islands and +the people at the beginning of the nineteenth century. +“<span lang="es"><i>Estadismo de las Islas Filipinas, 6 mis +viajes por este pais</i>, por el Padre Fr. Joaquin Martinez de +Zuñiga. Publica esta obra por primera vez extensamente anotada +W. E. Retana.</span>” 2 vols. Madrid, 1893.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4671" href="#xd19e4671src" name="xd19e4671">5</a></span> Jagor: +<i lang="es">Viajes por Filipinas</i>, p. 81. Translated from the +German. Madrid, 1895.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4711" href="#xd19e4711src" name="xd19e4711">6</a></span> See +<i lang="es">Estado de las Islas Filipinas en 1847</i>, by D. Sinibaldo +de Mas.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ch12" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Chapter XII.</h2> +<h2 class="main">Progress and Revolution. 1837–1897.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>Progress during the Last Half-Century of Spanish +Rule.</b>—We have now come to the last half-century and to the +last phase of Spanish rule. In many respects this period was one of +economic and social progress, and contained more of promise than any +other in the history of the Islands. During this last half-century the +Spanish rulers had numerous plans for the development and better +administration of the Philippines, and, in spite of a somewhat wavering +policy and the continual sore of official peculation, this was a period +of wonderful advancement. Revolution and separation from Spain came at +last, as revolutions usually do, not because there was no effort nor +movement for reform, but because progress was so discouragingly slow +and so irritatingly blocked by established interests that desired no +change.</p> +<p><b>Effect of Opening the Port of Manila to Foreign +Trade.</b>—<i>Increase in Agriculture.</i>—The opening of +the port of Manila to foreign trade, in 1837, was followed by a period +of rising industry and prosperity. Up to this time the archipelago had +not been a producing and exporting country, but the freeing of trade +led to the raising of great harvests for foreign export, which have +made world-wide the fame of certain Philippine productions. Chief among +these are of course Manila hemp and tobacco. These were followed by +sugar and coffee culture, the latter plant enriching the province of +Batangas, while the planting of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb260" +href="#pb260" name="pb260">260</a>]</span>new cocoanut groves yearly +made of greater importance the yield of that excellent product, copra. +These rich merchandises had entered very little into commerce during +the early decades of the century.</p> +<p><i>Increase in Exports.</i>—In 1810 the entire imports of the +Philippines amounted in value to 5,329,000 dollars, but more than half +of this consisted of silver sent from Mexico. From Europe and the +United States trade amounted to only 175,000 dollars. The exports in +the same year amounted to 4,795,000 dollars, but a million and a half +of this was Mexican silver exported on to China, and the whole amount +of exports to Europe and the United States was only 250,000 +dollars.</p> +<p>In 1831 the exportation of hemp amounted to only 346 tons. But the +effect upon production of opening Manila to foreign trade is seen in +the export six years later of 2,585 tons. By 1858 the exportation of +hemp had risen to 412,000 piculs, or 27,500 tons. Of this amount, +nearly two thirds, or 298,000 piculs, went to the United States. At +this time the North Atlantic seaboard of America was the center of a +most active ship-building and ship-carrying trade. The American flag +was conspicuous among the vessels that frequented these Eastern ports, +and “Manila hemp” was largely sought after by American +seamen to supply the shipyards at home. Of sugar, the export in 1858 +amounted to 557,000 piculs, of which more than half went to Great +Britain.</p> +<p>After 1814 general permission had been given to foreigners to +establish trading-houses in Manila, and by 1858 there were fifteen such +establishments, of which seven were English and three +American.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e4775src" href="#xd19e4775" name= +"xd19e4775src">1</a> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb261" href="#pb261" +name="pb261">261</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>Other Ports Opened to Foreign Commerce.</b>—In 1855 three +other ports were opened to foreign commerce—Sual in Pangasinan on +the Gulf of Lingayan, Iloilo, and Zamboanga. In 1863, Cebu likewise was +made an open port. The exports of Sual consisted only of rice, and in +spite of its exceptional harbor this port never flourished, and is +to-day no more than an unfrequented village.</p> +<p>Iloilo exported leaf tobacco, sugar, sapan or dyewood (an industry +long ago ruined), hemp, and hides. Zamboanga through the Chinese had a +small trade with Jolo and the Moro Islands, and exported the produce of +these seas—sea-slug (tripang), shark fins, mother-of-pearl, +tortoise shell, etc. For some years the customs laws in these ports +were trying and vexatious, and prevented full advantage being taken of +the privileges of export; but in 1869 this service was, by royal +decree, greatly liberalized and improved. Since that date the +Philippines have steadily continued to grow in importance in the +commercial world.</p> +<p><b>The Form of Government under the Spanish.</b>—<i>General +Improvements.</i>—This is perhaps a convenient place to examine +for the last time the political system which the Spaniards maintained +in the country. In 1850 there were thirty-four provinces and two +politico-military commandancias. In these provinces the Spanish +administration was still vested solely in the alcalde mayor, who until +after 1886 was both governor or executive officer and the judge or +court for the trial of provincial cases and crimes.</p> +<p>Many of the old abuses which had characterized the government of the +alcaldes had been at least partially remedied. After 1844 they had no +longer the much-abused monopoly privilege of trade, nor had they as +free <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb262" href="#pb262" name= +"pb262">262</a>]</span>a hand in controlling the labor of the +inhabitants; but opportunities for illegal enrichment existed in the +administration of the treasury and tax system, and these opportunities +were not slighted. Up to the very end of Spanish rule the officials, +high and low, are accused of stealing public money.</p> +<p><i>The Pueblo.</i>—The unit of administration was the pueblo, +or township, which ordinarily embraced many square miles of country and +contained, numerous villages, or “barrios.” The center of +the town was naturally the site where for centuries had stood the great +church and the convent of the missionary friars. These locations had +always been admirably chosen, and about them grew up the market and +trading-shops of Chinese and the fine and durable homes of the more +prosperous Filipinos and mestizos.</p> +<p>About 1860 the government began to concern itself with the +construction of public buildings and improvements, and the result is +seen in many pueblos in the finely laid-out plazas and well-built +municipal edifices grouped about the square—the +“tribunal,” or town house, the jail, and the small but +significant schoolhouses. The government of the town was vested in a +“<span lang="es">gobernadorcillo</span>” and a council, +each of the “<span lang="es">consejales</span>” usually +representing a hamlet or barrio.</p> +<p>But the Spanish friar, who in nearly every pueblo was the parish +curate, continued to be the paternal guardian and administrator of the +pueblo. In general, no matter was too minute for his dictation. Neither +gobernadorcillo nor councillors dared act in opposition to his wishes, +and the alcalde of the province was careful to keep on friendly terms +and leave town affairs largely to his dictation. The friar was the +local inspector of public instruction <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb263" href="#pb263" name="pb263">263</a>]</span>and ever vigilant to +detect and destroy radical ideas. To the humble Filipino, the friar was +the visible and only representative of Spanish authority.</p> +<p><b>The Revolt of 1841.</b>—<i>Repression of the People by the +Friars.</i>—Unquestionably in the past, the work of the friars +had been of very great value; but men as well as institutions may lose +their usefulness, as conditions change, and the time was now +approaching when the autocratic and paternal régime of the +friars no longer satisfied the Filipinos. Their zeal was no longer +disinterested, and their work had become materialized by the possession +of the vast estates upon which their spiritual charges lived and +labored as tenants or dependents. The policy of the religious orders +had, in fact, become one of repression, and as the aspirations of the +Filipinos increased, the friars, filled with doubt and fear, tried to +draw still tighter the bonds of their own authority, and viewed with +growing distrust the rising ambition of the people.</p> +<p><i>Apolinario de la Cruz.</i>—The unfortunate revolution of +1841 shows the wayward and misdirected enthusiasm of the Filipino; and +the unwisdom of the friars. Apolinario de la Cruz, a young Filipino, a +native of Lukban, Tayabas, came up to Manila filled with the ambition +to lead a monastic life, and engaged in theological studies. By his +attendance upon lectures and sermons and by imitation of the friar +preachers of Manila, Apolinario became, himself, quite an orator, and, +as subsequent events showed, was able to arouse great numbers of his +own people by his appeals.</p> +<p>It was his ambition to enter one of the regular monastic orders, but +this religious privilege was never granted to Filipinos, and he was +refused. He then entered a <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb264" href= +"#pb264" name="pb264">264</a>]</span>brotherhood known as the Cofradia, +or Brotherhood of San Juan de Dios, composed entirely of Filipinos. +After some years in this brotherhood, he returned in 1840 to Tayabas +and founded the Cofradia de San José, his aim being to form a +special cult in honor of Saint Joseph and the Virgin. For this he +requested authorization from Manila. It was here that the lack of +foresight of the friars appeared.</p> +<p><i>The Opposition of the Friars.</i>—Instead of sympathizing +with these religious aspirations, in which, up to this point, there +seems to have been nothing heretical, they viewed the rise of a +Filipino religious leader with alarm. Their policy never permitted to +the Filipino any position that was not wholly subordinate. They +believed that the permanence of Spanish power in these islands lay in +suppressing any latent ability for leadership in the Filipino himself. +Their influence, consequently, was thrown against Apolinario, and the +granting of the authority for his work. They secured not only a +condemnation of his plan, but an order for the arrest and imprisonment +of all who should attend upon his preaching.</p> +<p><i>Apolinario Forced to Rebel.</i>—Apolinario thereupon took +refuge in independent action. His movement had already become a strong +one, and his followers numbered several thousand people of Laguna, +Tayabas, and Batangas. The governor of Tayabas province, Don Joaquin +Ortega, organized an expedition to destroy the schism. Accompanied by +two Franciscan friars, he attacked Apolinario in the month of October, +1840, and was defeated and killed. One account says that Apolinario was +assisted by a band of Negritos, whose bowmanship was destructive. There +are still a very few of these little blacks in the woods in the +vicinity of Lukban. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb265" href="#pb265" +name="pb265">265</a>]</span></p> +<p>Apolinario was now in the position of an open rebel, and he +fortified himself in the vicinity of Alitao, where he built a fort and +chapel.</p> +<p>His religious movement became distinctly independent and heretical. +A church was formed, of which he was first elected archbishop and then +supreme pontiff. He was also charged with having assumed the title of +“King of the Tagálog.”</p> +<p>Finally a force under the new alcalde, Vital, and General Huet early +in November attacked Apolinario’s stronghold and after a fierce +struggle defeated the revolutionists. About a thousand Filipinos +perished in the final battle. Apolinario was captured and executed. He +was then twenty-seven years of age.</p> +<p><i>Organization of Municipal Governments.</i>—In 1844 an able +and liberal governor, General Claveria, arrived, and remained until the +end of the year 1849. A better organization of the provincial +governments, which we have seen, followed Claveria’s entrance +into office, and in October, 1847, came the important decree, +organizing the municipalities in the form which we have already +described, and which remained without substantial modification to the +end of Spanish rule, and which has to a considerable extent been +followed in the Municipal Code framed by the American government.</p> +<p><b>Subjection of the Igorrote Tribes.</b>—With Claveria began +a decisive policy of conquest among the Igorrote tribes of northern +Luzon, and by the end of Spanish rule these mountains were dotted with +cuartels and missions for the control of these unruly tribes. The +province of Nueva Vizcaya has been particularly subject to the raids of +these head-hunting peoples. Year after year the Christian towns of the +plains had yielded a distressing <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb266" +href="#pb266" name="pb266">266</a>]</span>sacrifice of life to satisfy +the savage ceremonials of the Igorrotes.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4857src" href="#xd19e4857" name="xd19e4857src">2</a></p> +<p>In 1847, Claveria nominated as governor of Nueva Vizcaya, Don +Mariano Ozcariz, whose severe and telling conquests for the first time +checked these Igorrote outrages and made possible the development of +the great valleys of northern Luzon.</p> +<p><b>Spanish Settlements on +Mindanao.</b>—<i>Zamboanga.</i>—With Claveria’s +governorship we enter also upon the last phase of Moro piracy. In spite +of innumerable expeditions, Spain’s occupation of South Mindanao +and the Sulu archipelago was limited to the presidio of Zamboanga. She +had occupied this strategic point continuously since the +reëstablishment of Spanish power in 1763, The great stone fort, +which still stands, had proved impregnable to Moro attack, and had long +been unmolested.</p> +<p>Distributed for a distance of some miles over the rich lands at this +end of the Zamboanga peninsula was a Christian population, which had +grown up largely from the descendants of rescued captives of the Moros. +Coming originally from all parts of the Bisayas, Calamianes, and Luzon, +this mixed population has grown to have a somewhat different character +from that of any other part of the Islands. A corrupt Spanish dialect, +known as the “Chabucano,” has become the common speech, the +only instance in the Philippines where the native dialect has been +supplanted. This population, loyal and devotedly Catholic, never failed +to sustain the defense of this isolated <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb267" href="#pb267" name="pb267">267</a>]</span>Spanish outpost, and +contributed brave volunteers to every expedition against the Moro +islands.</p> +<p><i>Activity of Other Nations.</i>—But Spain’s +maintenance of Zamboanga was insufficient to sustain her claims of +sovereignty over the Sulu and Tawi-Tawi groups. Both the Dutch and +English planned various moves for their occupation and acquisition, and +in 1844 a French fleet entered the archipelago and concluded a treaty +with the sultan of Sulu for the cession of the island of Basilan for +the sum of one million dollars. Writings of the French minister and +historian, M. Guizot, show that France hoped, by the acquisition of +this island, to obtain a needed naval base in the East and found a +great commercial port within the sphere of Chinese trade.<a class= +"noteref" id="xd19e4880src" href="#xd19e4880" name= +"xd19e4880src">3</a></p> +<p><i>Conquest of the Gulf of Davao.</i>—But this step roused the +Spaniards to activity and the occupation of the island. A naval vessel +subdued the towns along the north coast, and then proceeding to the +mouth of the Rio Grande, secured from the sultan of Maguindanao the +cession of the great Gulf of Davao. Spain took no immediate steps to +occupy this gulf, but in 1847 a Spaniard, Don José Oyanguran, +proposed to the governor, Claveria, to conquer the region at his own +expense, if he could be furnished with artillery and munitions and +granted a ten years’ government of Davao, with the exclusive +privilege of trade.</p> +<p>His offer was accepted by the governor and the Audiencia, and +Oyanguran organized a company to secure funds for the undertaking. In +two years’ time he had subdued the coast regions of this gulf, +expelled the pirates who harbored there, and founded the settlement of +Nueva <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb268" href="#pb268" name= +"pb268">268</a>]</span>Vergara. He seems to have been making progress +toward the conquest and commercial exploitation of this region, when +jealous attacks in Manila induced Governor Urbistondo to cancel his +privilege and to relieve him by an officer of the government.</p> +<p>In subsequent years the Jesuits had a few mission stations here and +made a few converts among the Bagobos; but the region is still an +unsubdued and unutilized country, whose inhabitants are mainly pagan +tribes, and whose rich agricultural possibilities lie undeveloped and +unclaimed.</p> +<p><b>The Samal Pirates.</b>—<i>The Sulu.</i>—The piratical +inhabitants of the Sulu archipelago are made of two distinct Malayan +peoples—the Sulu (or Sulug), and the Samal, who are known +throughout Malaysia as the “Bajau” or “Orang +laut” (Men of the Sea). The former appear to be the older +inhabitants. They occupy the rich and populous island of Jolo and some +islands of the Siassi group, immediately south.</p> +<p><i>The Samal.</i>—The Samal, or Bajau, are stated to have come +originally from Johore. Many of them live almost exclusively in their +boats, passing their lives from birth to death upon the sea. They are +found throughout most parts of Malaysia, the position of their little +fleets changing with the shifting of the monsoons. In the Sulu +archipelago and a few points in South Mindanao, many of these Samal +have shifted their homes from their boats to the shore. Their villages +are built on piles over the sea, and on many of the low coral reefs +south of Siassi and east of Tawi-Tawi there are great towns or +settlements which have apparently been in existence a long while.</p> +<p>Fifty years ago the Samal were very numerous in the many islands +between Jolo and Basilan, and this group is <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb269" href="#pb269" name= +"pb269">269</a>]</span>still known as the Islas Samales. Like the Sulu +and other Malays, the Samal are Mohammedans, and scarcely less +persistent pirates than their fellow-Malays. With the decline of +piratical power among the Sulu of Jolo, the focus of piracy shifted to +these settlements of the Samal, and in the time of Claveria the worst +centers were the islands of Balanguingui and Tonquil, lying just north +of the island of Jolo. From here pirate and slaving raids upon the +Bisayan Islands continued to be made, and nearly every year towns were +sacked and burned and several hundred unfortunate captives carried +away. The captives were destined for slavery, and regular marts existed +for this traffic at Jolo and on the Bay of Sandakan in Borneo.</p> +<p><i>Arrival of Steam Warships.</i>—In 1848 the Philippines +secured the first steam war vessels. These were the +“Magellanes,” the “Elcano,” and the +“Reina de Castilla.” They were destined to revolutionize +Moro relations.</p> +<p><i>The Destruction of the Samal Forts.</i>—Hitherto it had +been possible for the great Moro war praos, manned by many oarsmen, to +drop their masts on the approach of an armed sailing-vessel, and, +turning toward the “eye of the wind,” where no sailing-ship +could pursue, row calmly away from danger. Steam alone was effective in +combating these sea-wolves. Claveria took these newly arrived ships, +and with a strong force of infantry, which was increased by +Zamboangueño volunteers, he entered the Samal group in February, +1848, and landed on the island of Balanguingui.</p> +<p>There were four fortresses situated in the mangrove marshes of the +island. These, in spite of a desperate resistance, were carried by the +infantry and Zamboangueños and the pirates scattered. The +conduct of the campaign appears to have been admirable and the fighting +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb270" href="#pb270" name= +"pb270">270</a>]</span>heroic. The Moros were completely overwhelmed; +450 dead were burned or interred; 124 pieces of artillery—for the +most part, the small brass cannon called +“lantacas”—were captured, and 150 Moro boats were +destroyed. The Spaniards cut down the cocoanut groves, and with spoil +that included such rich pirate loot as silks, silver vases, ornaments, +and weapons of war, and with over two hundred prisoners and three +hundred rescued captives, returned to Zamboanga. This was the most +signal victory ever won by Europeans in conflict with Malay piracy. The +effectiveness of this campaign is shown by the fact that while in the +preceding year 450 Filipinos had suffered capture at the hands of Moro +pirates, in 1848 and the succeeding year there was scarcely a +depredation. But in 1850 a pirate squadron from Tonquil, an island +adjacent to Balanguingui, fell upon Samar and Camaguin. Fortunately, +Governor Urbistondo, who had succeeded Claveria, vigorously continued +the policy of his predecessor, and an expedition was promptly +dispatched which destroyed the settlements and strongholds on +Tonquil.</p> +<p><i>Destruction of the Moro Forts at Jolo.</i>—A year later war +broke out again with Jolo, and after a varied interchange of +negotiations and hostilities, the Spaniards stormed and took the town +in February, 1851. The question of permanent occupation of this +important site was debated by a council of war, but their forces +appearing unequal to the task, the forts of the Moros were destroyed, +and the expedition returned. Jolo is described at this time as a very +strongly guarded situation. Five forts and a double line of trenches +faced the shore. The Moro town is said to have contained about seven +thousand souls, and there was a barrio of Chinese traders, who numbered +about five hundred. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb271" href="#pb271" +name="pb271">271</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>Treaty with the Sultan of Jolo.</i>—A few months later the +governor of Zamboanga concluded a treaty with the sultan of Jolo by +which the archipelago was to be considered an incorporated part of the +Spanish possessions. The sultan bound himself to make no further +treaties with or cessions to foreign powers, to suppress piracy, and to +fly the Spanish flag. The Moros were guaranteed the practice of their +religion, the succession of the sultan and his descendants in the +established order, boats of Jolo were to enjoy the same trading +privileges in Spanish ports as other Filipino vessels, and the sultan +retained the right to all customs duties on foreign trading-vessels. +Finally, “in compensation for the damages of war,” the +sultan was to be paid an annual subsidy of 1,500 pesos and 600 pesos +each to three datos and 360 pesos to a sherif.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4933src" href="#xd19e4933" name="xd19e4933src">4</a></p> +<p><b>The End of Malay Piracy.</b>—In these very years that Malay +piracy was receiving such severe blows from the recuperating power and +activity of the Spanish government on the north, it was crushed also +from the south by the merciless warfare of a great Englishman, the Raja +Charles Brooke of Sarawak. The sources of pirate depredation were +Maguindanao, the Sulu archipelago, and the north and west coasts of the +great island of Borneo. We have seen how these fleets, century after +century, swept northward and wasted with fire and murder the fair +islands of the Philippines.</p> +<p>But this archipelago was not alone in suffering these ravages. The +peaceful trading inhabitants of the great island groups to the south +were persistently visited and despoiled. Moreover, as the Chinese trade +by the Cape of <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb272" href="#pb272" name= +"pb272">272</a>]</span>Good Hope route became established in the first +half of the nineteenth century, these pirates became a great menace to +European shipping. They swarmed the China Sea, and luckless indeed was +the ship carried too far eastward on its course. Every American +schoolboy is familiar with the stories of fierce hand-to-hand struggles +with Malay pirates, which have come down from those years when the +American flag was seen everywhere in the ports of the Far East.</p> +<p>About 1839 a young English officer,<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4949src" href="#xd19e4949" name="xd19e4949src">5</a> who had been +in the Indian service, Charles Brooke, having armed and equipped a +yacht of about 140 tons, set sail for the coast of Borneo, with the +avowed intent of destroying Malay piracy and founding an independent +state. In all the romantic stories of the East there is no career of +greater <span class="corr" id="xd19e4955" title= +"Source: during">daring</span> than that of this man. In 1841, having +engaged in several bloody exploits, Brooke forced from the sultan of +Borneo the cession of Sarawak, with the government vested in himself as +an independent raja.</p> +<p>Brooke now devoted himself with merciless severity to the +destruction of the pirates in the deep bays and swampy rivers, whence +they had so long made their excursions. Later he was assisted by the +presence of the English man-of-war “Dido,” and in 1847 the +sultan of Brunei ceded to Great Britain the island of Labuan. In 1849, +Brooke visited Zamboanga in the English man-of-war +“Mœander,<span class="corr" id="xd19e4960" title= +"Source: ’">”</span> and concluded a treaty with the sultan +of Sulu, which greatly alarmed the Spaniards.</p> +<p>Brooke’s private correspondence shows that he was ambitious +and hopeful of acquiring for England parts of the Dutch possessions in +the south and the Spanish Philippines <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb273" href="#pb273" name="pb273">273</a>]</span>in the north; but his +plans were never followed up by England, although in 1887 North Borneo +was ceded to an English company, and all the northern and eastern +portions of this great island are now under English +protection.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e4967src" href="#xd19e4967" name= +"xd19e4967src">6</a></p> +<p><b>Liberal Ideas among the Filipinos.</b>—The release from +Moro piracy, the opening of foreign commerce, and the development of +agricultural production were rapidly bringing about a great change in +the aspirations of the Filipino people themselves. Nearly up to the +middle of the nineteenth century the Filipinos had felt the full effect +of isolation from the life and thought of the modern world. But the +revolutionary changes in Europe and the struggles for constitutional +government in Spain had their influence, even in these far-away Spanish +possessions. Spaniards of liberal ideas, some of them in official +positions, found their way to the Islands, and an agitation began, +originating among Spaniards themselves, against the paternal powers of +the friars.</p> +<p><b>Influence of the Press.</b>—The growth of periodic +literature accelerated this liberalizing movement. The press, though +suffering a severe censorship, has played a large part in shaping +recent thought in these islands and in communicating to the Filipino +people those ideas and purposes which ever inspire and elevate +men.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e4985src" href="#xd19e4985" name= +"xd19e4985src">7</a> The first newspaper to make its appearance in the +Philippines was in 1822—“<span lang="es">El +Philantropo</span>”; but journalism assumed no <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb274" href="#pb274" name="pb274">274</a>]</span>real +importance until the forties, when there were founded +“<span lang="es">Semanario Filipino</span>” (1843), and +almost immediately after several others—“<span lang="es">El +Amigo de Pais</span>” (1845), “<span lang="es">La +Estrella</span>” (1846), and “<span lang="es">La +Esperanza</span>” (1847), the first daily. These were followed by +“<span lang="es">Diario de Manila</span>” (1848); in 1858 +“<span lang="es">El Comercio</span>” appeared, the oldest +of the papers still in existence.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e5012src" +href="#xd19e5012" name="xd19e5012src">8</a></p> +<p>Papers conducted by Filipinos and in the Filipino tongues are of +more recent origin, but these early Spanish periodicals had a real +effect upon the Filipinos themselves, training up a class familiar with +the conduct of journalism and preparing a way for the very influential +work of the Filipino press in recent years.</p> +<p><b>Establishment of an Educational System.</b>—<i>Return of +the Jesuits.</i>—But more important than all other influences was +the opening of education to Filipinos. In 1852 a royal decree +authorized the Jesuits to return to the Philippines. The conditions +under which they came back were that they should devote themselves +solely to missions in the unoccupied fields of Mindanao, and to the +higher education of the Filipinos.</p> +<p><i>The Public Schools.</i>—In 1860, O’Donnell, the +Spanish minister of war and colonies (Ultramar), founded the system of +public primary instruction. A primary school for boys and one for girls +was to be established in each pueblo of the Islands. In these schools, +instruction was to be given in the Spanish language. A superior +commission of education was formed, which consisted of the governor, +the archbishop, and seven other members added by the governor +himself.</p> +<p>The system was not secular, for it primarily was devoted +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb275" href="#pb275" name= +"pb275">275</a>]</span>to the teaching of religious doctrine. The +Spanish friar, the pueblo curate, was the local inspector of schools +and practically directed their conduct. It was not wholly a free +system, because tuition was required of all but the poorest children; +nor was it an adequate system, because, even when most complete, it +reached only a small proportion of the children of a parish, and these +very largely were of the well-to-do families. And yet this system, for +what it accomplished, is deserving of great credit.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e5034width"><img src="images/p275.jpg" alt= +"Cathedral, Manila." width="529" height="372"> +<p class="figureHead">Cathedral, Manila.</p> +</div> +<p>Besides the church, the convent, and the tribunal, nearly every town +in the Philippines, toward the close of Spanish rule, had also, in the +public plaza, its public school buildings for boys and for girls. In +these towns a number of Filipinos were taught to converse in the +Spanish language and at least the rudiments of Spanish education. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb276" href="#pb276" name= +"pb276">276</a>]</span>But this system did not give opportunity for +education to the little child of the humble fisherman and the +husbandman.</p> +<p><i>The Manila Normal School.</i>—To prepare Filipino teachers +to do this work of primary instruction, a decree of 1863 established +the Manila Normal School. In charge of the Jesuits, this school was +inaugurated in January, 1865. And about the same date the government +decreed the foundation of the Jesuit “Ateneo Municipal” for +higher instruction in the classics and sciences that should conduct the +student to the degree of bachelor of arts. The influence of these +institutions upon the development of the Filipino has been remarkable. +In one or the other of them have been trained nearly all of those young +men who in recent years have stirred the Filipino people to wide +ambitions and demands. At the same time the excellent Jesuit +observatory, which has done such important work in meteorology, was +established in charge of Padre Faura.</p> +<p><b>Increase in Spanish Population.</b>—The opening of the Suez +Canal in 1869 brought immense changes to the Islands. Previous to this +date Spanish residents had been few. Almost the only class deeply +interested in the Islands and permanently established here had been the +friars. But with communication by steamer in thirty days from Barcelona +to Manila, a new interest was felt by Spaniards in the Philippines, +though unfortunately this interest was greatest among the politicians. +Some of the projects planned and decreed can only be regarded as +visionary and beyond the point of serviceability, and others, more +unfortunately still, had for their purpose the creation of offices and +emoluments for Peninsula politicians; but they all contributed to bring +to an end the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb277" href="#pb277" name= +"pb277">277</a>]</span>paternal government under which there was no +prospect of further enlightenment or progress for the Filipino.</p> +<p><b>Increase in the Number of Wealthy, Educated +Filipinos.</b>—The Filipino had now become embarked upon a new +current of intellectual experience—a course of enlightenment +which has been so full of unexpected development, and which has already +carried him so far from his ancestor of one hundred years ago, that we +can not say what advance another generation or two may bring. +Throughout all the towns of the Islands a class was rapidly growing up +to which the new industries had brought wealth. Their means enabled +them to build spacious and splendid homes of the fine, hard woods of +the Philippines, and to surround themselves with such luxuries as the +life of the Islands permitted. This class was rapidly gaining +education. It acquired a knowledge of the Spanish language, and easily +assumed that graceful courtesy which distinguishes the Spaniard.</p> +<p>The only misfortune, as regards this class, was that it was very +small. It could embrace but a few families in each populous town. Some +of these had Chinese and Spanish blood in their veins, but other +notable families were pure Filipinos.</p> +<p><b>Attitude of the Spanish and the Friars toward Filipino +Education.</b>—The great mistake committed by the Spaniard was +that he rarely welcomed the further progress of the native population, +and the center of this opposition to the general enlightenment of the +race was the friars. Thus those who had been the early protectors and +educators, little by little, because of their extreme conservatism and +their fear of loosening the ties that bound the Filipino to the church +and to Spain, changed into opponents of his progress and enemies of his +enlightenment; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb278" href="#pb278" name= +"pb278">278</a>]</span>but the education which the church itself had +given to the Filipino, and which had been fostered by the state and +especially in recent times by the Jesuits, had made the Filipino +passionately ambitious for more enlightenment and freedom.</p> +<p><b>The Rule of Governor Torre.</b>—<i>Liberal +Reforms.</i>—In 1868, Queen Isabella II. of Spain was deposed, +and a little later a revolutionary government, the “Republic of +Spain,” was founded. It was the brief triumph of that reforming +and liberal spirit which for so many years had been struggling to free +Spain from the burdens of aristocracy and ecclesiasticism.</p> +<p>The natural consequence was the sending of a liberal governor to the +Philippines and the publication of liberal principles and reforms. This +governor was General de la Torre. He was a brave and experienced +soldier and a thorough democrat at heart. He dispensed with the +formality and petty pomp with which the governors of Manila had +surrounded themselves; he dismissed the escort of halberdiers, with +their mediæval uniforms and weapons, which had surrounded the +governor-generals since 1581, and rode out in civilian’s clothes +and without ostentation. His efforts were directed to encouraging the +Filipinos and to attaching them to Spain. In the eyes of the Spanish +law, for a brief period, Spaniard and colonists had become equal, and +La Torre tried to enforce this principle and make no distinction of +race or birth. While Filipinos were encouraged and delighted, it is +impossible to describe the disgust of the Spanish population and the +opposition of the friars. La Torre was attacked and opposed, and the +entire course of his governorship was filled with trouble, in which, +naturally, liberal ideas gained wider and wider currency among the +Filipinos. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb279" href="#pb279" name= +"pb279">279</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>Effect of the Opposition of the Friars.</i>—The friars, +being the most influential opponents of the Filipino, naturally came to +be regarded by the Filipinos as their greatest enemies, and the +anti-friar spirit daily spread and intensified. A party was formed +which demanded that the friars vacate the parishes, and that their +places be filled by secular priests, in accordance with the statutes of +the Council of Trent. This party was headed by a native priest, Dr. +José Burgos.</p> +<p><i>A Filipino Movement for Reform.</i>—After the fall of the +republic in Spain and the restoration of the monarchy, the +administration in the Philippines attempted to extirpate the rising +tide of liberal thought; but these ideas had taken root and could not +be suppressed. The Filipino party, if so we may call it, continued to +plan and work for reform. It numbered not only those of Filipino blood, +but many of Spanish descent, born in the Philippines. There is no +certain evidence that they were at this time plotting for independence, +or that their actions were treasonable; but the fear and hatred felt by +the Spaniards resulted frequently in the exile and punishment of known +advocates of reform.</p> +<p><b>The Cavite Revolt.</b>—In 1872 there occurred an important +outbreak known as the Cavite Revolt. Two hundred native soldiers at the +Cavite arsenal rose, killed their officers, and shouted “Death to +Spain!” They had fellow-conspirators among the troops in Manila, +but owing to mistakes in their plans these failed to rise with them and +the revolt was easily suppressed.</p> +<p>It was immediately followed by the arrest of a large number of +Filipinos who had been conspicuous in La Torre’s time and who +were advocates of reform. This number included the three priests, +Fathers Burgos, Zamora, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb280" href= +"#pb280" name="pb280">280</a>]</span>and Gomez, besides Don Antonio +Regidor, Don Joaquin Pardo de Tavera, Don Pedro Carillo, and others. A +council of war condemned to death forty-one of the participants in the +Cavite riot, and these were shot on the morning of the 27th of January, +1872, on the Field of Bagumbayan. On the 6th of February a council of +war condemned to death eleven more soldiers of the regiment of +artillery, but this sentence was commuted by the governor to life +imprisonment. On the 15th of February the same council of war sentenced +to death upon the garrote, the priests Burgos, Zamora, Gomez, and a +countryman, Saldua; and this sentence was executed on the morning of +the 17th.</p> +<p><b>The Spread of Secret +Organizations.</b>—<i>Masonry.</i>—New ground for fear was +now found in the spread of secret organizations, which were denounced +as Free Masonry. This is a very ancient institution which, in +Protestant countries like England and America, has a very large +membership, and in these countries its aims are wholly respectable. It +has never in any way been connected with sedition or other unworthy +movements. Its services are, in fact, largely of a religious character +and it possesses a beautiful and elaborate Christian ritual; but in +Latin countries Masonry has been charged with political intrigue and +the encouragement of infidelity, and this has resulted in clerical +opposition to the order wherever found. The first Masonic lodge in the +Philippines was established about 1861 and was composed entirely of +Spaniards. It was succeeded by others with Filipino membership, and in +one way or another seems to have inspired many secret +organizations.</p> +<p><i>The “Liga Filipina,” and Dr. Rizal.</i>—Large +numbers of Filipinos were now working, if not for independence, +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb281" href="#pb281" name= +"pb281">281</a>]</span>at least for the expulsion of the friars; and +while this feeling should have been met by a statesmanlike and liberal +policy of reform, the government constantly resorted to measures of +repression, which little by little changed the movement for reformation +into revolution.</p> +<p>In 1887 the “Liga Filipina,” was formed by a number of +the younger Filipino patriots, chief among whom was Dr. José +Rizal y Mercado. Rizal, by his gifts, his noble character, and his sad +fate, has gained a supreme place in the hearts of Filipinos and in the +history of the Islands. He was born in 1861 at Calamba, on Laguna de +Bay, and even as a child he was affected with sadness at the memory of +the events of 1872 and with the backward and unhappy condition of his +countrymen. He was educated by the Jesuits at the Ateneo Municipal in +Manila, and his family having means, he was enabled to study in Spain, +where he took a degree in medicine, and later to travel and study in +France, England, and Germany.</p> +<div class="figure floatRight xd19e5106width"><img src= +"images/p281.jpg" alt="Dr. Rizal." width="303" height="325"> +<p class="figureHead">Dr. Rizal.</p> +</div> +<p>It was in this latter country that he produced his first novel, +<i lang="la">Noli Me Tangere</i>. He had been a contributor to the +Filipino paper published in Spain, “<span lang="es">La +Solidaridad</span>,” and, to further bring the conditions and +needs of his country to more public notice, he wrote this novel +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb282" href="#pb282" name= +"pb282">282</a>]</span>dealing with Tagálog life as represented +at his old home on Laguna de Bay and in the city of Manila. Later he +published a sequel, <i lang="es">El Filibusterismo</i>, in which even +more courageously and significantly are set forth his ideas for +reform.</p> +<p>His work made him many enemies, and on his return to Manila he found +himself in danger and was obliged to leave. He returned again in 1893, +and was immediately arrested and sentenced to deportation to Dapitan, +Mindanao. Here he remained quietly in the practice of his profession +for some years.</p> +<p><i>The Katipunan.</i>—Meanwhile the ideas which had been +agitated by the wealthy and educated Filipinos had worked their way +down to the poor and humble classes. They were now shared by the +peasant and the fisherman. Especially in those provinces where the +religious orders owned estates and took as rental a portion of the +tenants’ crop, there was growing hatred and hostility to the +friars. The “Liga Filipina” had been composed of cultivated +and moderate men, who while pressing for reform were not inclined to +radical extremes, nor to obtain their ends by violent means.</p> +<p>But there now grew up and gradually spread, until it had its +branches and members in all the provinces surrounding Manila, a secret +association composed largely of the uneducated classes, whose object +was independence of Spain, and whose members, having little to lose, +were willing to risk all. This was the society which has since become +famous under the name of “Katipunan.” This secret +association was organized in Cavite about 1892. Its president and +founder was Andres Bonifacio. Its objects were frankly to expel the +friars, and, if possible, to destroy the Spanish government. +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb283" href="#pb283" name= +"pb283">283</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>Rebellion of 1896.</b>—A general attack and slaughter of +the Spaniards was planned for the 20th of August, 1896. The plot was +discovered by the priest of Binondo, Padre Gil, who learned of the +movement through the wife of one of the conspirators, and within a few +hours the government had seized several hundred persons who were +supposed to be implicated. The arrests included many rich and prominent +Filipinos, and at the end of some weeks the Spanish prisons contained +over five thousand suspects. Over one thousand of these were almost +immediately exiled to far-distant Spanish prisons—Fernando Po, on +the west coast of Africa, and the fortress of Ceuta, on the +Mediterranean.</p> +<p>Meanwhile the Katipunan was organizing its forces for struggle. On +the 26th of August, one thousand insurgents attacked Caloocan, and four +days later a pitched battle was fought at San Juan del Monte. In this +last fight the insurgents suffered great loss, their leader, +Valenzuela, was captured and, with three companions, shot on the Campo +de Bagumbayan. The rising continued, however, and the provinces of +Pampanga, Bulacan, and Nueva Ecija were soon in full rebellion. The +center of revolt, however, proved to be Cavite, This province was +almost immediately cleared of Spaniards, except the long neck of land +containing the town of Cavite and protected by the fleet. Here the +insurgents received some organization under a young man, who had been +prominent in the Katipunan—Emilio Aguinaldo.</p> +<p>The governor-general, Blanco, a humane man, who afterwards for a +short time commanded in Cuba, was recalled, and General Polavieja +replaced him. The Spanish army at the beginning of the revolt had +consisted of but fifteen hundred troops, but so serious was the revolt +regarded <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb284" href="#pb284" name= +"pb284">284</a>]</span>that Spain, although straining every energy at +the moment to end the rebellion in Cuba, strengthened the forces in the +Philippines, until Polavieja had an army of twenty-eight thousand +Spaniards assisted by several loyal Filipino regiments. With this army +a fierce campaign in Cavite province was conducted, which after +fifty-two days’ hard fighting ended in the defeat of the +insurgents and the scattering of their forces.</p> +<div class="figure floatLeft xd19e5143width"><img src="images/p284.jpg" +alt="Emilio Aguinaldo." width="336" height="512"> +<p class="figureHead">Emilio Aguinaldo.</p> +</div> +<p><i>Death of Dr. Rizal.</i>—For the moment it looked as though +the rebellion might pass. Then the Spanish government of Polavieja +disgraced itself by an act as wanton and cruel as it was inhuman and +impolitic.</p> +<p>Four years Dr. Rizal had spent in exile at Dapitan. He had lived +quietly and under surveillance, and it was impossible that he could +have had any share in this rebellion of 1898. Wearied, however, with +his inactivity, he solicited permission to go as an army doctor to the +dreadful <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb285" href="#pb285" name= +"pb285">285</a>]</span>Spanish hospitals in Cuba. This request was +granted in July, and Rizal had the misfortune to arrive in Manila at +the very moment of discovery of the rebellion in August. Governor +Blanco hastened to send him to Spain with a most kindly letter to the +minister of war, in which he vouched for his independence of the events +which were taking place in Manila.</p> +<p>His enemies, however, could not see him escape. Their persecution +followed him to the Peninsula, and, upon his arrival in Spain, Rizal +was at once arrested and sent back to Manila a prisoner. His friend +Blanco had gone. Polavieja, the friend and tool of the reactionary +party, was busy punishing by imprisonment, banishment or death all +Filipinos who could be shown to have the slightest part or association +in the movement for reform. And by this clique Dr. Rizal was sentenced +to execution. He was shot early on the morning of December 30, +1896.<a class="noteref" id="xd19e5157src" href="#xd19e5157" name= +"xd19e5157src">9</a> At his death the insurrection flamed out afresh. +It now spread to Pangasinan, Zambales, and Ilocos.</p> +<p><i>End of the Revolt by Promises of Reform.</i>—Polavieja +returned to Spain, and was succeeded by Gen. Primo de Rivera, who +arrived in the spring of 1897. The Spanish troops had suffered several +recent reverses and the country swarmed with insurgents. The policy of +Primo de Rivera was to gain by diplomacy where the energy of his +predecessor had failed. In July, 1897, an amnesty proclamation was +issued, and in August the governor-general opened negotiations with +Aguinaldo, whose headquarters were now in the mountains of Angat in +Bulacan. Primo de Rivera urged the home government <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb286" href="#pb286" name="pb286">286</a>]</span>to +make some reforms, which would greatly lessen the political importance +of the friars. He was vehemently opposed by the latter, but it was +probably upon the promise of reform that Aguinaldo and his +fellow-insurgents agreed, for the payment of 1,700,000 pesos, to +surrender their arms, dismiss the insurgent forces, and themselves +retire from the Islands. This agreement was made, and on December 27, +1897, Aguinaldo left the port of Sual for Hongkong.</p> +<p><b>The Spanish Misrule Ended.</b>—Conditions in the provinces +still continued very unsatisfactory, and in its very last hours the +Spanish government lost the remnant of its prestige with the people by +a massacre in Calle Camba, Binondo, of a company of Bisayan sailors. +Ten days after this occurrence a revolt blazed out on the island of +Cebu. Had events taken their course, what would have been the final +conclusion of the struggle between Spaniards and Filipinos it is +impossible to say. On the 25th day of April the United States declared +war upon Spain, and the first day of May an American fleet reached +Manila harbor, and in the naval fight off Cavite, Spanish dominion, +which had lasted with only one brief interruption for 332 years, was +broken. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb287" href="#pb287" name= +"pb287">287</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4775" href="#xd19e4775src" name="xd19e4775">1</a></span> Bowring: +<i>A Visit to the Philippine Islands</i>, p. 387.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4857" href="#xd19e4857src" name="xd19e4857">2</a></span> The +reports of the Dominican missionaries of Nueva Vizcaya and Isabela show +the extent and persistence of these raids. (See the files of the +missionary publication, <i lang="es">El Correo Sino-Annamita</i>, and +also the work by Padre Buenaventura Campa, Los Maybyaos y la Raza +Ifugao, Madrid, 1895.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4880" href="#xd19e4880src" name="xd19e4880">3</a></span> Montero +y Vidal: <i lang="es">Historia de Filipinas</i>, vol. III, p. 99.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4933" href="#xd19e4933src" name="xd19e4933">4</a></span> Montero +y Vidal: <i lang="es">Historia de Filipinas</i>, vol. III., p. 209. The +document is given in Appendix 4 of the same volume.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4949" href="#xd19e4949src" name="xd19e4949">5</a></span> See +<i>Rajah Brooke</i>, by Sir Spencer St. John, London, 1899.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4967" href="#xd19e4967src" name="xd19e4967">6</a></span> Keppel: +<i>Expedition to Borneo of H. M. S. Dido for the Suppression of Piracy, +with extracts from the Journal of James Brooke, Esq.</i> 2 vols. +London, 1846. Keppel: <i>A Visit to the Indian Archipelago in H. M. S. +Mœandar.</i> 2 vols. London, 1853.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e4985" href="#xd19e4985src" name="xd19e4985">7</a></span> Spain +established a permanent commission of censorship in 1856. It was +composed of eight persons, one half nominated by the governor and one +half by the archbishop.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e5012" href="#xd19e5012src" name="xd19e5012">8</a></span> <i lang= +"es">El Periodismo Filipino</i>, por W. E. Retana. Madrid, 1895.</p> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e5157" href="#xd19e5157src" name="xd19e5157">9</a></span> An +account of Rizal’s trial and execution, together with many papers +on the revolution, is printed by Retana. See <i lang="es">Archivo, Tomo +IV. Documentos politicos de Actualidad</i>.</p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ch13" class="div1 contents"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Chapter XIII.</h2> +<h2 class="main">America and the Philippines.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first"><b>Beginning of a New Era.</b>—With the passing +of the Spanish sovereignty to the Americans, a new era began in the +Philippines. Already the old Spanish rule seems so far removed that we +can begin to think of it without feeling and study it without +prejudice.</p> +<p><b>Development of the United States of America.</b>—The +American nation is the type of the New World. Beginning in a group of +colonies, planted half a century later than the settlement of the +Philippines, it has had a development unparalleled in the history of +states. Although peopled by emigrants from Europe, who rigidly +preserved both their purity of race and pride of ancestry, the American +colonists, at the end of a century, were far separated in spirit and +institutions from the Old World.</p> +<p>Struggle with the wilderness and with the savage produced among them +a society more democratic and more independent than Europe had ever +known; while their profound religious convictions saved the colonists +from barbarism and intellectual decline. It can truthfully be held, +that in 1775, at the outbreak of the American Revolution, the colonists +had abler men and greater political ability than the mother-country of +England. It was these men who, at the close of the Revolution, framed +the American Constitution, the greatest achievement in the history of +public law. This nation, endowed at its commencement with so precious +an inheritance of political genius, felt its civil superiority to the +illiberal or ineffective governments of Europe, and this feeling has +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb290" href="#pb290" name= +"pb290">290</a>]</span>produced in Americans a supreme and traditional +confidence in their own forms of government and democratic standards of +life. Certainly their history contains much to justify the choice of +their institutions.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e5192width" id="p288"><a href= +"images/p288h.jpg"><img src="images/p288.jpg" alt= +"Mindanao, Visayas, and Paragua" width="720" height="517"></a> +<p class="figureHead">Mindanao, Visayas, and Paragua</p> +</div> +<p>A hundred and twenty-five years ago, these colonies were a small +nation of 2,500,000 people, occupying no more than the Atlantic coast +of the continent. Great mountain chains divided them from the interior, +which was overrun by the fiercest and most warlike type of man that the +races have produced—the American Indian. With an energy which has +shown no diminishing from generation to generation, the American broke +through these mountain chains, subdued the wilderness, conquered the +Indian tribes, and in the space of three generations was master of the +continent of North America.</p> +<p>Even while engaged in the War for Independence, the American +frontiersman crossed the Appalachians and secured Kentucky and the +Northwest Territory, and with them the richest and most productive +regions of the Temperate Zone,—the Mississippi Valley. In 1803, +the great empire of Louisiana, falling from the hand of France, was +added to the American nation. In 1818, Florida was ceded by Spain, and +in 1857, as a result of war with Mexico, came the Greater West and the +Pacific seaboard. This vast dominion, nearly three thousand miles in +width from east to west, has been peopled by natural increase and by +immigration from Europe, until, at the end of the nineteenth century, +the American nation numbered seventy-four million souls.</p> +<p>This development has taken place without fundamental change in the +constitution or form of government, without loss of individual liberty, +and constantly increasing national prosperity. Moreover, the States +have survived the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb291" href="#pb291" +name="pb291">291</a>]</span>Civil War, the most bloody and persistently +fought war of all modern centuries—a war in which a million +soldiers fell, and to sustain which three and a half billion dollars in +gold were expended out of the national treasury. This war accomplished +the abolition of negro slavery, the greatest economic revolution ever +effected by a single blow.</p> +<p>Such in brief is the history of the American nation, so gifted with +political intelligence, so driven by sleepless energy, so proud of its +achievements, and inwardly so contemptuous of the more polished but +less liberal life of the Old World. Europe has never understood this +nation, and not until a few years ago did Europeans dream of its +progress and its power.</p> +<p><b>Relation of the United States to South American +Republics.</b>—Toward the republics of Spanish America the United +States has always stood in a peculiar relation. These countries +achieved their independence of Spain under the inspiration of the +success of the United States. Their governments were framed in +imitation of the American, and in spite of the turbulence and disorder +of their political life, the United States has always felt and +manifested a strong sympathy for these states as fellow-republics. She +has moreover pledged herself to the maintenance of their integrity +against the attacks of European powers. This position of the United +States in threatening with resistance the attempt of any European power +to seize American territory is known as the Monroe Doctrine, because it +was first declared by President Monroe in 1823.</p> +<p><b>Sympathy of American People for the Oppressed +Cubans.</b>—The fact that the American nation attained its own +independence by revolution has made the American people give ready +sympathy to the cause of the revolutionist. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb292" href="#pb292" name="pb292">292</a>]</span>The +people of Cuba, who made repeated ineffective struggles against Spanish +sovereignty, always had the good wishes of the American people. By +international usage, however, one nation may not recognize or assist +revolutionists against a friendly power until their independence is +practically effected.</p> +<p>Thus, when rebellion broke out afresh in Cuba in 1894, the United +States government actively suppressed the lending of assistance to the +Cubans, as was its duty, although the American people themselves +heartily wished Cuba free. The war in Cuba dragged along for years and +became more and more merciless. The passions of Cubans and Spaniards +were so inflamed that quarter was seldom given, and prisoners were not +spared. Spain poured her troops into the island until there were +120,000 on Cuban soil, but the rebellion continued.</p> +<p>The Spanish have always been merciless in dealing with +revolutionists. Americans, on the other hand, have always conceded the +moral right of a people to resist oppressive government, and in the +entire history of the United States there has scarcely been a single +punishment for political crime. Although probably the fiercest war in +history was the American Civil War from 1861 to 1865, there was not a +single execution for treason. Thus the stories of the constant +executions of political prisoners, on an island in sight of its own +shores, greatly exasperated America, as did the policy of +Governor-general Weyler, which was excessive in its severity.</p> +<p><b>War with Spain.</b>—<i>Destruction of the +“Maine.”</i>—As the contest proceeded without sign of +termination, the patience of the American people grew less. Then, +February 15, 1898, occurred one of the most deplorable events of recent +times. The American battleship “Maine,” lying <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb293" href="#pb293" name="pb293">293</a>]</span>in +the harbor of Havana, was, in the night, blown to destruction by mine +or torpedo, killing 266 American officers and sailors. It is impossible +to believe that so dastardly an act was done with the knowledge of the +higher Spanish officials; but the American people rightly demanded that +a government such as Spain maintained in Cuba, unable to prevent such +an outrage upon the vessel of a friendly power, and that could neither +suppress its rebellion nor wage war humanely, should cease.</p> +<p><i>Declaration of War.</i>—On April 19th the American Congress +demanded that Spain withdraw from the island and recognize the +independence of Cuba. This was practically a declaration of war. Spain +indignantly refused, and resolved upon resistance. Unfortunately, the +ignorant European press claimed for Spain military and naval +superiority.</p> +<p>The war was brief, and was an overwhelming disaster to Spain. Every +vessel of her proud navy that came under the fire of American guns was +destroyed.</p> +<p>For a few months battle raged along the coasts of Cuba, and then +Spain sued for peace.</p> +<p><i>Dewey’s Victory in Manila Bay.</i>—But meanwhile the +war, begun without the slightest reference to the Philippine Islands, +had brought about surprising consequences here.</p> +<p>At the opening of the war, both Spain and the United States had +squadrons in Asiatic waters. The Spanish fleet lay at Cavite, the +American ships gathered at Hongkong. Immediately on the declaration of +war, the American naval commander, Dewey, was ordered to destroy the +Spanish fleet, which was feared on the Pacific coast of America. Dewey +entered the Bay of Manila in darkness on the morning of May 1st, and +made direct for the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb294" href="#pb294" +name="pb294">294</a>]</span>Spanish vessels at Cavite. His fleet was +the more powerful and immeasurably the more efficient. In a few hours +the Spanish navy was utterly destroyed and Manila lay at the mercy of +his guns.</p> +<p><i>A New Insurrection, under Aguinaldo.</i>—At this signal +catastrophe to Spain, the smoldering insurrection in the Islands broke +out afresh. The Spanish troops not in Manila were driven in upon their +posts, and placed in a position of siege. The friars, so hated by the +revolutionists, were captured in large numbers and were in some cases +killed. With the permission and assistance of the American authorities, +Aguinaldo returned from Singapore, and landed at Cavite. Here he +immediately headed anew the Philippine insurrection.</p> +<p><i>Capture of Manila.</i>—Troops were dispatched from San +Francisco for the capture of Manila. By the end of July, 8,500 men lay +in the transports off Cavite. They were landed at the little estuary of +Parañaque, and advanced northwards upon Fort San Antonio and the +defenses of Malate. The Spaniards behind the city’s defenses, +although outnumbering the Americans, were sick and dispirited. One +attempt was made to drive back the invading army, but on the following +day the Americans swept through the defenses and line of blockhouses, +and Manila capitulated (August 13, 1898).</p> +<p>The Filipinos had scarcely participated in the attack on the city, +and they were excluded from occupying it after its surrender. This act +was justified, because the Filipino forces had been very recently +raised, the soldiers were undisciplined, and had they entered the city, +with passions as they were inflamed, it was feared by the Americans +that their officers might not be able to keep them from looting and +crime. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb295" href="#pb295" name= +"pb295">295</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>Misunderstanding between Americans and Filipinos.</b>—Up to +this point, the relations between the American and Filipino armies had +been friendly. But here began that misunderstanding and distrust which +for so many months were to alienate these two peoples and imbitter +their intercourse.</p> +<p><i>Provisional Government of the Filipinos.</i>—In the +interval between the destruction of the Spanish fleet and the capture +of Manila, the Filipinos in Cavite had organized a provisional +government and proclaimed the independence of the archipelago.</p> +<p><i>American Ideas in Regard to the Philippines.</i>—The idea +of returning these islands to the Spanish power was exceedingly +repugnant to American sentiment. Spain’s attitude toward +revolutionists was well understood in America, and the Filipinos had +acted as America’s friends and allies. On the other hand, the +American government was unwilling to turn over to the newly organized +Filipino republic the government of the archipelago. It was felt in +America, and with reason, that this Filipino government was not truly +representative of all the people in the Philippines, that the Filipino +leaders were untried men, and that the people themselves had not had +political training and experience. The United States, having overthrown +the Spanish government here, was under obligation to see that the +government established in its place would represent all and do +injustice to none. The Filipinos were very slightly known to Americans, +but their educated class was believed to be small and their political +ability unproven. Thus, no assurances were given to the Filipino +leaders that their government would be recognized, or that their wishes +would be consulted in the future of the Islands. In fact, these matters +could be settled only <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb296" href= +"#pb296" name="pb296">296</a>]</span>by action of the American +Congress, which was late in assembling and slow to act.</p> +<p><i>The Terms of Peace.</i>—Spain and America were now +negotiating terms of peace. These negotiations were conducted at Paris, +and dragged on during many critical weeks. The Filipinos were naturally +very much concerned over the outcome.</p> +<p>Finally, the American government demanded of Spain that she cede the +Islands to the United States and accept the sum of $20,000,000 gold, +for public works and improvements which she had made.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e5278width"><img src="images/p296.jpg" alt= +"General Luna." width="337" height="494"> +<p class="figureHead">General Luna.</p> +</div> +<p><i>Suspicions of the Filipino Leaders.</i>—These terms became +known in December, 1898. They served to awaken the worst suspicions of +the Filipino leaders. Many believed that they were about to exchange +the oppressive domination of Spain for the selfish and equally +oppressive domination of America. There is reason to believe that some +leaders counseled <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb297" href="#pb297" +name="pb297">297</a>]</span>patience, and during the succeeding months +made a constant effort to maintain the peace, but the radical party +among the Filipinos was led by a man of real gifts and fiery +disposition, Antonio Luna. He had received an education in Europe, had +had some instruction in military affairs, and when in September the +Filipino government was transferred to Malolos, Luna became the general +in chief of the military forces. He was also editor of the most radical +Filipino newspaper, “<span lang="es">La +Independencia</span>.”</p> +<div class="figure xd19e5291width"><img src="images/p297.jpg" alt= +"Apolinario Mabini." width="337" height="470"> +<p class="figureHead">Apolinario Mabini.</p> +</div> +<p><b>New Filipino Government.</b>—On January 4, 1899, President +McKinley issued a special message to General Otis, commanding the +armies of the United States in the Philippines, declaring that American +sovereignty must be recognized without conditions. It was thought in +the United States that a firm declaration of this kind would be +accepted by the Filipinos and that they would not dare to make +resistance. The intentions of the American president and nation, as +subsequent <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb298" href="#pb298" name= +"pb298">298</a>]</span>events have proven, were to deal with the +Filipinos with great liberality; but the president’s professions +were not trusted by the Filipinos, and the result of Mr. +McKinley’s message was to move them at once to frame an +independent government and to decide on war.</p> +<p>This new government was framed at Malolos, Bulacan, by a congress +with representatives from most of the provinces of central Luzon. The +“Malolos Constitution” was proclaimed January 23, 1899, and +Don Emilio Aguinaldo was elected president. The cabinet, or ministry, +included Don Apolinario Mabini, secretary of state; Don Teodoro +Sandico, secretary of interior; General Baldomero Aguinaldo, secretary +of war; General Mariano Trias, secretary of treasury; Don Engracio +Gonzaga, secretary of public instruction and agriculture.</p> +<p><b>War with the Americans.</b>—<i>Battle of +Manila.</i>—The Filipino forces were impatient for fighting, and +attack on the American lines surrounding Manila began on the night of +February 4th. It is certain that battle had been decided upon and in +preparation for some time, and that fighting would have been begun in +any case, before the arrival of reënforcements from America; but +the attack was precipitated a little early by the killing at San Juan +Bridge of a Filipino officer who refused to halt when challenged by an +American sentry. On that memorable and dreadful night, the battle raged +with great fury along the entire circle of defenses surrounding the +city, from Tondo on the north to Fort San Antonio de Abad, south of the +suburb of Malate. Along three main avenues from the north, east, and +south the Filipinos attempted to storm and enter the capital, but +although they charged with reckless bravery, and for hours sustained a +bloody <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb299" href="#pb299" name= +"pb299">299</a>]</span>combat, they had fatally underestimated the +fighting qualities of the American soldier.</p> +<p>The volunteer regiments of the American army came almost entirely +from the western United States, where young men are naturally trained +to the use of arms, and are imbued by inheritance with the powerful and +aggressive qualities of the American frontier. When morning broke, the +Filipino line of attack had, at every point, been shattered and thrown +back, and the Americans had advanced their positions on the north to +Caloocan, on the east to the Water Works and the Mariquina Valley, and +on the south to Pasay.</p> +<p><i>Declaration of War.</i>—Unfortunately, during the night +attack and before the disaster to Filipino arms was apparent, Aguinaldo +had launched against the United States a declaration of war. This +declaration prevented the Americans from trusting the Filipino +overtures which followed this battle, and peace was not made.</p> +<p><i>The Malolos Campaign.</i>—On March 25th began the American +advance upon the Filipino capital of Malolos. This Malolos campaign, as +it is usually called, occupied six days, and ended in the driving of +the Filipino army and government from their capital. Hard fighting took +place in the first days of this advance, and two extremely worthy +American officers were killed, Colonels Egbert and Stotsenberg.</p> +<p>The Filipino army was pursued in its retreat as far as Calumpit, +where on the southern bank of the Rio Grande de Pampanga the American +line rested during the height of the rainy season. During this interval +the volunteer regiments, whose terms of service had long expired, were +returned to the States, and their places taken by regiments of the +regular army. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb300" href="#pb300" name= +"pb300">300</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>The American Army.</i>—The American army at that time, +besides the artillery, consisted of twenty-five regiments of infantry +and ten of cavalry. Congress now authorized the organization of +twenty-four new regiments of infantry, to be known as the 26th to the +49th Regiments of U. S. Volunteers, and one volunteer regiment of +cavalry, the 11th, for a service of two years. These regiments were +largely officered by men from civil life, familiar with a great variety +of callings and professions,—men for the most part of fine +character, whose services in the months that followed were very great +not only in the field, but in gaining the friendship of the Filipino +people and in representing the character and intentions of the American +government.</p> +<p><i>Anti-War Agitators in America.</i>—Through the summer of +1899 the war was not pressed by the American general, nor were the +negotiations with the Filipino leaders conducted with success. The +Filipinos were by no means dismayed. In spite of their reverses, they +believed the conquest of the Islands impossible to foreign troops. +Furthermore, the war had met with tremendous opposition in America. +Many Americans believed that the war was against the fundamental rights +of the Filipino people. They attacked the administration with +unspeakable bitterness. They openly expressed sympathy for the Filipino +revolutionary cause, and for the space of two years their encouragement +was an important factor in sustaining the rebellion.</p> +<p><i>Spread of the Insurrection.</i>—In these same summer months +the revolutionary leaders spread their cause among the surrounding +provinces and islands. The spirit of resistance was prominent at first +only among the Tagálog, but gradually nearly all the +Christianized population was united in resistance to the American +occupation. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb301" href="#pb301" name= +"pb301">301</a>]</span></p> +<p><i>Occupation of Negros.</i>—The Americans had meanwhile +occupied Iloilo and the Bisayas, and shortly afterwards the presidios +in Mindanao surrendered by the Spaniards. In Negros, also, exceptional +circumstances had transpired. The people in this island invited +American sovereignty; and Gen. James Smith, sent to the island in March +as governor, assisted the people in forming a liberal government, +through which insurrection and disorder in that island were largely +avoided.</p> +<p><i>Death of General Luna.</i>—With the cessation of heavy +rains, the fighting was begun again in northern Luzon. The Filipino +army had its headquarters in Tarlac, and its lines occupied the towns +of the provinces of Pangasinan and Nueva Ecija, stretching in a long +line of posts from the Zambales Mountains almost to the upper waters of +the Rio Pampanga. It was still well armed, provisioned, and resolute; +but the brilliant, though wayward, organizer of this army was dead. The +Nationalist junta, which had directed the Philippine government and +army, had not been able to reconcile its differences. It is reported +that Luna aspired to a dictatorship. He was killed by soldiers of +Aguinaldo at Cabanatuan.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e5347width" id="p302"><a href= +"images/p302h.gif"><img src="images/p302.gif" alt= +"American Campaigns in Northern Luzón" width="439" height= +"720"></a> +<p class="figureHead">American Campaigns in Northern Luzón</p> +</div> +<p><i>The Campaign in Northern Luzon.</i>—The American generals +now determined upon a strategic campaign. General MacArthur was to +command an advance up the railroad from Calumpit upon Tarlac; General +Lawton, with a flying column of swift infantry and cavalry, was to make +a flanking movement eastward through Nueva Ecija and hem the Filipino +forces in upon the east. Meanwhile, General Wheaton was to convey a +force by transport to the Gulf of Lingayen, to throw a cordon across +the Ilocano coast that should cut off the retreat of the Filipino army +northward. As a strategic movement, this <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb303" href="#pb303" name="pb303">303</a>]</span>campaign was only +partially successful. MacArthur swept northward, crushing the Filipino +line on his front, his advance being led by the active regiment of +General J. Franklin Bell. Lawton’s column scoured the country +eastward, marching with great rapidity and tremendous exertions. +Swollen rivers were crossed with great loss of life, and the column, +cutting loose from its supplies, was frequently in need of food. It was +in this column that the Filipino first saw with amazement the great +American cavalry horse, so large beside the small pony of the +Philippines. Lawton’s descent was so swift that the Philippine +government and staff narrowly escaped capture.</p> +<p>On the night of November 11th, the Filipino generals held their last +council of war at Bayambang on the Rio Agno, and resolved upon +dispersal. Meanwhile, Wheaton had landed at San Fabian, upon the +southern Ilocano coast, but his force was insufficient to establish an +effective cordon, and on the night of November 15th Aguinaldo, with a +small party of ministers and officers, closely pursued by the cavalry +of Lawton under the command of General Young, slipped past, through the +mountains of Pozorubio and Rosario, and escaped up the Ilocano +coast.</p> +<p>Then began one of the most exciting pursuits in recent wars. The +chase never slackened, except in those repeated instances when for the +moment the trail of the Filipino general was lost. From Candon, +Aguinaldo turned eastward through the comandancias of Lepanto and +Bontoc, into the wild Igorrote country of the Cordillera Central. The +trail into Lepanto leads over the lofty mountains through the +precipitous Tila Pass. On the summit, in what was regarded as an +impregnable position, Gregorio del Pilar, little more than a boy, but a +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb304" href="#pb304" name= +"pb304">304</a>]</span>brigadier-general, with a small force of +soldiers, the remnant of his command, attempted to cover the retreat of +his president. But a battalion of the 33d Infantry, under Major March, +carried the pass, with the total destruction of Pilar’s command, +he himself falling amid the slain.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e5363width"><img src="images/p304.jpg" alt= +"General Pilar." width="338" height="496"> +<p class="figureHead">General Pilar.</p> +</div> +<p><i>Capture of Aguinaldo.</i>—Major March then pursued +Aguinaldo into Bontoc and thence southward into the wild and +mountainous territory of Quiangan. On Christmas night, 1899, the +American soldiers camped on the crest of the Cordillera, within a few +miles of the Igorrote village where the Filipino force was sleeping. +Both parties were broken down and in dire distress through the +fierceness of the flight and pursuit, but for several weeks longer +Aguinaldo’s party was able to remain in these mountains and elude +its pursuers. A month later, his trail was finally lost in the valley +of the Cagayan. He and his small party had passed over the exceedingly +difficult trail through the <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb305" href= +"#pb305" name="pb305">305</a>]</span>Sierra Madre Mountains, to the +little Tagálog town of Palanan near the Pacific coast. Here, +almost entirely cut off from active participation in the insurrection, +Aguinaldo remained until June of 1901, when he was captured by the +party of General Funston.</p> +<p>For some weeks following the disintegration of the Filipino army, +the country appeared to be pacified and the insurrection over. The new +regiments arriving from the United States, an expedition was formed +under General Schwan, which in December and January marched southward +through Cavite and Laguna provinces and occupied Batangas, Tayabas, and +the Camarines. Other regiments were sent to the Bisayas and to northern +Luzon, until every portion of the archipelago, except the islands of +Mindoro and Palawan, contained large forces of American troops.</p> +<p><b>Reorganization of the Filipino Army.</b>—The Filipinos had, +by no means, however, abandoned the contest, and this period of quiet +was simply a calm while the insurgent forces were perfecting their +organization and preparing for a renewal of the conflict under a +different form. It being found impossible for a Filipino army to keep +the field, there was effected a secret organization for the purpose of +maintaining irregular warfare through every portion of the archipelago. +The Islands were partitioned into a great number of districts or +“zones.” At the head of each was a zone commander, usually +with the rank of general. The operations of these men were, to a +certain extent, guided by the counsel or directions of the secret +revolutionary juntas in Manila or Hongkong, but, in fact, they were +practically absolute and independent, and they exercised extraordinary +powers. They recruited their own forces and commissioned subordinate +commanders. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb306" href="#pb306" name= +"pb306">306</a>]</span>They levied “contributions” upon +towns, owners of haciendas, and individuals of every class, and there +was a secret civil or municipal organization for collecting these +revenues. The zone commanders, moreover, exercised the terrible power +of execution by administrative order.</p> +<p><i>Assassination of Filipinos.</i>—Many of the Filipino +leaders were necessarily not well instructed in those rules for the +conduct of warfare which civilized peoples have agreed upon as being +humane and honorable. Many of them tried, especially in the latter +months of the war, when understanding was more widely diffused, to make +their conduct conform to international usage; but the revolutionary +junta had committed the great crime of ordering the punishment by +assassination of all Filipinos who failed to support the insurgent +cause. No possible justification, in the light of modern morality, can +be found for such a step as this. The very worst passions were let +loose in carrying out this policy. Scores of unfortunate men were +assassinated, many of them as the results of private enmity. Endless +blackmail was extorted and communities were terrorized from one end of +the archipelago to the other.</p> +<p><i>Irregular Warfare of the Filipinos.</i>—Through the +surrender of Spanish forces, the capture of the arsenals of Cavite and +Olongapo, and by purchase through Hongkong, the revolutionary +government possessed between thirty thousand and forty thousand rifles. +These arms were distributed to the different military zones, and the +secret organization which existed in each municipality received its +proportion. These guns were secreted by the different members of the +command, except when occasion arose for effecting a surprise or making +an attack. There <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb307" href="#pb307" +name="pb307">307</a>]</span>were no general engagements, but in some +towns there was almost nightly shooting. Pickets and small detachments +were cut off, and roads became so unsafe throughout most of the +archipelago that there was no travel by Americans except under heavy +escort. For a long time, also, the orders of the commanding general +were so lenient that it was impossible to punish properly this conduct +when it was discovered.</p> +<p><b>Death of General Lawton.</b>—The American army, in its +attempt to garrison every important town in the Islands, was cut up +into as many as 550 small detachments of post garrisons. Thus, while +there were eventually sixty thousand American soldiers in the Islands, +it was rare for as many as five hundred to take the field, and most of +the engagements of the year 1900 were by small detachments of fifty to +one hundred men.</p> +<p>It was in one of these small expeditions that the American army +suffered the greatest single loss of the war. A few miles east of +Manila is the beautiful Mariquina Valley, from which is derived the +city’s supply of water, and the headwaters of this pretty stream +lie in the wild and picturesque fastness of San Mateo and Montalban. +Although scarce a dozen miles from the capital and the headquarters of +a Filipino brigade, San Mateo was not permanently occupied by the +Americans until after the 18th of December, 1899, when a force under +General Lawton was led around through the hills to surprise the +town.</p> +<p>Early in the morning the American force came pouring down over the +hills that lie across the river from the village. They were met by a +brisk fire from the insurgent command scattered along the banks of the +river and in a sugar hacienda close to the stream. Here Lawton, +conspicuous in white uniform and helmet, accompanying, as <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb308" href="#pb308" name="pb308">308</a>]</span>was +his custom, the front line of skirmishers, was struck by a bullet and +instantly killed.</p> +<p><b>Filipino Leaders Sent to Guam.</b>—In November, 1900, after +the reëlection in the United States of President McKinley, a much +more vigorous policy of war was inaugurated. In this month General +MacArthur, commanding the division, issued a notable general order, +defining and explaining the laws of war which were being violated, and +threatening punishment by imprisonment of those guilty of such conduct. +Some thousands of Filipinos under this order were arrested and +imprisoned. Thirty-nine leaders, among them the high-minded but +irreconcilable Mabini, were in December, 1900, sent to a military +prison on the island of Guam.</p> +<p>Campaigning was much more vigorously prosecuted in all military +districts. By this time all the American officers had become familiar +with the insurgent leaders, and these were now obliged to leave the +towns and establish cuartels in remote barrios and in the +mountains.</p> +<p>These measures, pursued through the winter of 1900–01, broke +the power of the revolution.</p> +<p><b>The Philippine Civil Commission.</b>—Another very +influential factor in producing peace resulted from the presence and +labors of the Civil Philippine Commission. These gentlemen, Judge +William H. Taft, Judge Luke E. Wright, Judge Henry C. Ide, Professor +Dean C. Worcester, and Professor Bernard Moses, were appointed by the +president in the spring of 1900 to legislate for the Islands and to +prepare the way for the establishment of civil government. President +McKinley’s letter of instructions to this commission will +probably be ranked as one of the ablest and most notable public papers +in American history.</p> +<p>The commission reached the Islands in June and began <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb309" href="#pb309" name= +"pb309">309</a>]</span>their legislative work on September 1st. This +body of men, remarkable for their high character, was able at last to +bring about an understanding with the Filipino leaders and to assure +them of the unselfish and honorable purposes of the American +government. Thus, by the early winter of 1900–01 many Filipino +gentlemen became convinced that the best interests of the Islands lay +in accepting American sovereignty, and that they could honorably +advocate the surrender of the insurgent forces. These men represented +the highest attainments and most influential positions in the Islands. +In December they formed an association known as the Federal Party, for +the purpose of inducing the surrender of military leaders, obedience to +the American government, and the acceptance of peace.</p> +<p><b>End of the Insurrection.</b>—Under these influences, the +insurrection, in the spring of 1901, went rapidly to pieces. Leader +after leader surrendered his forces and arms, and took the oath of +allegiance and quietly returned home. By the end of June there were but +two zone commanders who had not surrendered,—General Malvar in +Batangas, and General Lukban in Samar.</p> +<div class="figure floatRight xd19e5423width"><img src= +"images/p309.jpg" alt="Governor Taft." width="297" height="322"> +<p class="figureHead">Governor Taft.</p> +</div> +<p><b>The First Civil Governor.</b>—Peaceful conditions and +security almost immediately followed these surrenders and <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb310" href="#pb310" name= +"pb310">310</a>]</span>determined the president to establish at once +civil government. On July 4, 1901, this important step was taken, Judge +Taft, the president of the Philippine Commission, taking office on that +date as the first American civil governor of the Philippines. On +September 1st, the Philippine Commission was increased by the +appointment of three Filipino members,—the Hon. T. H. Pardo de +Tavera, M. D., the Hon. Benito Legarda, and the Hon. José +Luzuriaga of Negros.</p> +<p>The Philippine Commission has achieved a remarkable amount of +legislation of a very high order. From September, 1900, to the end of +December, 1902, the commission passed no less than 571 acts of +legislation. Some of these were of very great importance and involved +long preparation and labor. Few administrative bodies have ever worked +harder and with greater results than the Philippine Commission during +the first two years of its activity. The frame of government in all its +branches had to be organized and set in motion, the civil and criminal +law liberalized, revenue provided, and public instruction remodeled on +a very extensive scale.</p> +<p><b>The New Government.</b>—The government is a very liberal +one, and one which gives an increasing opportunity for participation to +the Filipinos. It includes what is called local self-government. There +are in the Islands about 1,132 municipalities. In these the residents +practically manage their own affairs. There are thirty-eight organized +provinces in the archipelago, in which the administration rests with +the Provincial Board composed of the governor, treasurer, and +supervisor or engineer. The governor is elected for the term of one +year by the councilors of all the towns united in assembly. The +treasurer and supervisor are appointed by the governor of the +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb311" href="#pb311" name= +"pb311">311</a>]</span>Philippine archipelago under the rules of the +Civil Service Board. The civil service is a subject which has commanded +the special consideration of the Commission. It gives equal opportunity +to the Filipino and to the American to enter the public service and to +gain public promotion; and the Filipino is by law even given the +preference where possessed of the requisite ability.</p> +<div class="figure xd19e5441width"><img src="images/p311.jpg" alt= +"The Palace, Manila. Headquarters of the Government." width="532" +height="371"> +<p class="figureHead">The Palace, Manila. Headquarters of the +Government.</p> +</div> +<p><i>The Insular Government.</i>—For the purposes of +administration, the insular, or central government of the Islands is +divided into four branches, called departments, each directed by a +secretary who is also a member of the Philippine Commission. These +departments are, interior, Secretary Worcester; finance and justice, +Secretary Ide; commerce and police, Secretary Wright; and public +instruction, Secretary Moses, until January 1, 1903, and since +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb312" href="#pb312" name= +"pb312">312</a>]</span>that date Secretary Smith. Under each of these +departments are a large number of bureaus, by which the many important +activities of the government are performed.</p> +<p>We have only to examine a list of these bureaus to see how +many-sided is the work which the government is performing. It is a +veritable commonwealth, complete in all the branches which demand the +attention of modern governments. Thus, under the Department of the +Interior, there is the Bureau of Public Health, with its extremely +important duties of combating epidemic diseases and improving public +sanitation, with its public hospitals, sanitariums, and charities; the +Bureau of Government Laboratories for making bacteriological and +chemical investigations; a Bureau of Forestry; a Bureau of Mining; the +Philippine Weather Bureau; a Bureau of Agriculture; a Bureau of +Non-Christian Tribes for conducting the government work in ethnology +and for framing legislation for pagan and Mohammedan tribes; and a +Bureau of Public Lands.</p> +<p>Under the department of Commerce and Police are the Bureau of Posts; +Signal Service; the Philippines Constabulary, really an insular army, +with its force of some sixty-five hundred officers and men; Prisons; +the Coast Guard and Transportation Service, with a fleet of about +twenty beautiful little steamers, nearly all of them newly built for +this service and named for islands of the archipelago; the Coast and +Geodetic Survey, doing the much-needed work of charting the dangerous +coasts and treacherous waters of the archipelago; and the Bureau of +Engineering, which has under its charge great public works, many of +which are already under way.</p> +<p>Under the Department of Finance and Justice are the Insular +Treasurer; the Insular Auditor; the Bureau of <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb313" href="#pb313" name= +"pb313">313</a>]</span>Customs and Immigration; the Bureau of Internal +Revenue; the Insular Cold Storage and Ice Plant; and the great Bureau +of Justice.</p> +<p>Under the Department of Public Instruction there is the Bureau of +Education in charge of the system of public schools; a Bureau of +Printing and Engraving, with a new and fully equipped plant; a Bureau +of Architecture; a Bureau of Archives; a Bureau of Statistics; and the +Philippine Museum.</p> +<p><i>Revenues and Expenditures.</i>—The maintenance of these +numerous activities calls for an expenditure of large sums of money, +but the insular government and the Filipino people are fortunate in +having had their finances managed with exceptional ability. The +revenues of the Islands for the past fiscal year have amounted to about +$10,638,000, gold. Public expenditures, including the purchase of +equipment such as the coast-guard fleet and the forwarding of great +public works such as the improving of the harbor of Manila, amounted +during fiscal year of 1903 to about $9,150,000, gold. The government +has at all times preserved a good balance in its treasury; but the past +year has seen some diminution in the amount of revenues, owing to the +great depreciation of silver money, the falling off of imports, the +wide prevalence of cholera, and the poverty of many parts of the +country as a result of war and the loss of livestock through pest. To +assist the government of the Philippines, the Congress of the United +States in February, 1903, with great and characteristic generosity +appropriated the sum of $3,000,000, gold, as a free gift to the people +and government of the Philippines.</p> +<p><i>The Judicial System.</i>—Especially fortunate, also, have +been the labors of the commission in establishing a judicial system and +revising the Spanish law. The legal <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb314" href="#pb314" name="pb314">314</a>]</span>ability of the +commission is unusually high. As at present constituted, the judicial +system consists of a Supreme Court composed of seven justices, three of +whom at the present time are Filipinos, which, besides trying cases +over which it has original jurisdiction, hears cases brought on appeal +from the Courts of First Instance, fifteen in number, which sit in +different parts of the Islands. Each town, moreover, has its justices +of the peace for the trial of small cases and for holding preliminary +examinations in cases of crimes. By the new Code of Civil Procedure, +the administration of justice has been so simplified that there are +probably no courts in the world where justice can be more quickly +secured than here.</p> +<p><i>System of Public Schools.</i>—Probably no feature of the +American government in the Islands has attracted more attention than +the system of public schools. Popular education, while by no means +wholly neglected under the Spanish government, was inadequate, and was +continually opposed by the clerical and conservative Spanish forces, +who feared that the liberalizing of the Filipino people would be the +loosening of the control of both Spanish state and church. On the +contrary, the success of the American government, as of any government +in which the people participate, depends upon the intelligence and +education of the people. Thus, the American government is as anxious to +destroy ignorance and poverty as the Spanish government and the Spanish +church were desirous of preserving these deeply unfortunate +conditions.</p> +<p>Americans believe that if knowledge is generally spread among the +Filipino people, if there can be a real understanding of the genius and +purpose of our American institutions, there will come increasing +content and satisfaction <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb315" href= +"#pb315" name="pb315">315</a>]</span>to dwell under American law. Thus, +education was early encouraged by the American army, and it received +the first attention of the commission. The widespread system of public +schools which now exists in these islands was organized by the first +General Superintendent of Public Instruction, Dr. Fred W. Atkinson, and +by Professor Bernard Moses of the Philippine Commission.</p> +<p><i>Instruction in the English Language.</i>—The basis of this +public instruction is the English language. This was early decided upon +in view of the great number of Filipino dialects, the absence of a +common native language or literature, and the very moderate +acquaintance with Spanish by any except the educated class.</p> +<p>It is fortunate for the Filipino people that English has been +introduced here and that its knowledge is rapidly spreading. Knowledge +of language is power, and the more widely spoken the tongue, the +greater the possession of the individual who acquires it. Of all the +languages of the world, English is to-day the most widely spoken and is +most rapidly spreading. Moreover, English is preëminently the +language of the Far East. From Yokohama to Australia, and from Manila +to the Isthmus of Suez, English is the common medium of communication. +It is the language alike of business and of diplomacy. The Filipino +people, so eager to participate in all the busy life of eastern Asia, +so ambitious to make their influence felt and their counsels regarded, +will be debarred from all this unless they master this mighty English +tongue.</p> +<p><b>The Filipino Assembly.</b>—Thus, after four and a half +years of American occupation, the sovereignty of the United States has +been established in the archipelago, and a form of government, unique +in the history of colonial administration, inaugurated. One other step +in the contemplation <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb316" href="#pb316" +name="pb316">316</a>]</span>of Congress, which will still further make +the government a government of the Filipino people, remains to be +taken. This is the formation of a Filipino assembly of delegates or +representatives, chosen by popular vote from all the Christianized +provinces of the archipelago. The recent census of the Philippines will +form the basis for the apportionment of this representation. This +assembly will share the legislative power on all matters pertaining to +the Christian people of the Philippines and those parts of the Islands +inhabited by them. When this step shall have been taken, the government +of the Philippine Islands will be like the typical and peculiarly +American form of government known as territorial.</p> +<p><b>Territorial Form of Government in the United +States.</b>—The American Union is composed of a number of states +or commonwealths which, while differing vastly in wealth and +population, are on absolutely equal footing in the Union. The +inhabitants of these states form politically the American sovereignty. +They elect the president and Congress, and through their state +legislatures may change or amend the form of the American state +itself.</p> +<p>Besides these states, there have always been large possessions of +the nation called territories. These territories are extensive +countries, too sparsely inhabited or too undeveloped politically to be +admitted, in the judgment of the American Congress, to statehood in the +Union. Their inhabitants do not have the right to vote for the +president; neither have they representation in the American Congress. +These territories are governed by Congress, through territorial +governments, and over them Congress has full sovereign powers. That is, +as the Supreme Court of the United States has decided and explained, +while Congress when legislating for the states in the Union has +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb317" href="#pb317" name= +"pb317">317</a>]</span>only those powers of legislation which have been +specifically granted by the Constitution, in legislating for the +territories it has all the powers which the Constitution has not +specifically denied. The only limitations on Congress are those which, +under the American system of public law, guarantee the liberty of the +individual,—his freedom of religious belief and worship; his +right to just, open, and speedy trial; his right to the possession of +his property; and other precious privileges, the result of centuries of +development in the English-speaking race, which make up civil liberty. +These priceless securities, which no power of the government can take +away, abridge, or infringe, are as much the possession of the +inhabitants of a territory as of a state.<a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e5500src" href="#xd19e5500" name="xd19e5500src">1</a></p> +<p>The government of these territories has varied greatly in form and +may be changed at any time by Congress, but it usually consists of a +governor and supreme court, appointed by the president of the United +States, and a legislature elected by the people. Since 1783 there has +always been territory so held and governed by the United States, and if +we may judge from the remarkable history of these regions, this form of +government of dependent possessions is the most successful and most +advantageous to the territory itself that has ever been devised.</p> +<p>At the present time, the territories of the United States are +Oklahoma, the Indian Territory, New Mexico, Arizona, <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb318" href="#pb318" name= +"pb318">318</a>]</span>Alaska, the Hawaiian Islands, Porto Rico, the +Philippines, and Guam.</p> +<p>The territorial form of government has frequently been regarded by +American statesmen as a temporary condition to be followed at a +comparatively early date by statehood. But after more than a century of +development, territorial government, as shaped by Congress and as +defined by the Supreme Court, shows itself so flexible and advantageous +that there is no reason why it should not be regarded as a permanent +and final form. Whether it will long prevail in the Philippines, +depends very largely upon the political development and ultimate +desires of the Filipino people themselves. For the present, it is the +only suitable form of government and the only form which it is +statesmanlike to contemplate.</p> +<p><b>Filipino Independence.</b>—The events of the last few years +seem to indicate that the American nation will not intrust the +Philippines with independence until they have immeasurably gained in +political experience and social self-control. The question is too great +to be discussed here, but this much may be said: The rapid march of +international politics in this coming century will not be favorable to +the independence of the small and imperfectly developed state. +Independence, while it may fascinate the popular leader, may not be +most advantageous for this people. Independence, under present +tendencies of international trade, means economic isolation. +Independence, in the present age, compels preparedness for war; +preparedness for war necessitates the maintenance of strong armies, the +building of great navies, and the great economic burdens required to +sustain these armaments. Especially would this be true of an +archipelago so exposed to attack, so surrounded by ambitious powers, +and so <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb319" href="#pb319" name= +"pb319">319</a>]</span>near the center of coming struggle, as are the +Philippines. Japan, with a population of forty-two million, wonderful +for their industry and economy, and passionately devoted to their +emperor, is independent, but at great cost. The burden of her splendid +army and her modern navy weighs heavily upon her people, consumes a +large proportion of their earnings, and sometimes seems to be +threatening to strain the resources of the nation almost to the point +of breaking.</p> +<p><b>Advantages of American Control.</b>—Surely, a people is +economically far more privileged if, like the Philippines under the +American government, or Australia under the British, they are compelled +to sustain no portion of the burden of exterior defense. The navies of +the United States to-day protect the integrity of the Philippine +archipelago. The power of a nation so strong and so terrible, when once +aroused, that no country on the globe would think for a minute of +wantonly molesting its territory, shields the Filipino from all outside +interference and permits him to expend all his energy in the +development of those abilities to which his temperament and endowment +inspire him.</p> +<p>American government means freedom of opportunity. There is no +honorable pursuit, calling, or walk of life under heaven in which the +Filipino may not now engage and in which he will not find his endeavors +encouraged and his success met with generous appreciation. In politics, +his progress may be slow, because progress here is not the development +of the individual nor of the few, but of the whole. But in the no less +noble pursuits of science, literature, and art, we may in this very +generation see Filipinos achieving more than notable success and +distinction, not only for themselves but for their land. <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb320" href="#pb320" name="pb320">320</a>]</span></p> +<p><b>Patriotic Duty.</b>—Patriotic duty, as regards the +Philippines, means for the American a wholesome belief in the +uprightness of the national purposes; a loyal appreciation of the men +who have here worked wisely and without selfishness, and have borne the +brunt of the toil; a loyalty to the government of the Philippines and +of the United States, so long as these governments live honestly, rule +justly, and increase liberty; and a frank and hearty recognition of +every advance made by the Filipino people themselves. And for the +Filipinos, patriotic duty means a full acceptance of government as it +has now been established, as better than what has preceded, and perhaps +superior to what he himself would have chosen and could have devised; a +loyalty to his own people and to their interests and to the public +interests, that shall, overcome the personal selfishness that has set +its cruel mark on every native institution in this land; and a +resolution to obey the laws, preserve the peace, and use faithfully +every opportunity for the development of his own character and the +betterment of the race. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb321" href= +"#pb321" name="pb321">321</a>]</span></p> +</div> +<div class="footnotes"> +<hr class="fnsep"> +<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id= +"xd19e5500" href="#xd19e5500src" name="xd19e5500">1</a></span> See the +decisions of the Supreme Court in the cases of <i>American Insurance +Co.</i> v. <i>Canter</i> (1 Peters, 511), decided in 1828; <i>National +Bank</i> v. <i>County of Yankton</i> (101 U. S. Reports, 129), decided +in 1879; <i>The Mormon Church</i> v. <i>United States</i> (136 U. S. +Reports, 1), decided May, 1890. On the domain of personal liberty +possessed by the inhabitants of a territory, in addition to above +cases, see also the cases of <i>Reynolds</i> v. <i>United States</i> +(98 U. S. Reports, 154), 1878; and <i>Murphy</i> v. <i>Ramsey</i> (114 +U. S. Reports, 15), 1884.</p> +</div> +</div> +</div> +<div class="back"> +<div id="app" class="div1 appendix"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="label">Appendix.</h2> +<h2 class="main">Spanish Governors of the Philippines.</h2> +<h2 class="main">(1571–1898.)</h2> +<ul> +<li>1571–1572 Don Miguel Lopez de Legaspi.</li> +<li>1572–1575 (Tesorero) Guido do Labezares.</li> +<li>1575–1580 Don Francisco La-Sande.</li> +<li>1580–1583 Don Gonzalo Ronquillo.</li> +<li>1583–1584 Don Diego Ronquillo.</li> +<li>1584–1590 Dr. Don Santiago de Vera.</li> +<li>1590–1593 Don Gomez Perez de Dasmariñas.</li> +<li>1593–1595 Luis Perez Dasmariñas.</li> +<li>1595–1596 Don Antonio de Morga.</li> +<li>1596–1602 Don Francisco Tello de Guzman.</li> +<li>1602–1606 Don Pedro Bravo de Acuña.</li> +<li>1606–1608 Royal Audiencia.</li> +<li>1608–1609 Don Rodrigo Vivero.</li> +<li>1609–1616 Don Juan de Silva.</li> +<li>1616–1618 Don Andres Alcazar.</li> +<li>1618–1624 Don Alonso Faxardo y Tenza.</li> +<li>1624–1625 Royal Audiencia.</li> +<li>1625–1626 Don Fernando de Silva.</li> +<li>1626–1632 Don Juan Niño de Tabora.</li> +<li>1632–1633 Royal Audiencia.</li> +<li>1633–1635 Don Juan Zerezo de Salamanca.</li> +<li>1635–1644 Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera.</li> +<li>1644–1653 Don Diego Faxardo y Chacon.</li> +<li>1653–1663 Sabiano Manrique de Lara.</li> +<li>1663–1668 Don Diego Salcedo.</li> +<li>1668–1669 Señor Peña Bonifaz.</li> +<li>1669–1677 Don Manuel de Leon.</li> +<li>1677–1678 Royal Audiencia.</li> +<li>1678–1684 Don Juan de Vargas.</li> +<li>1684–1689 Don Gabriel de Curuzalequi.</li> +<li>1689–1690 Don Alonso de Avila Fuertes.<span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb322" href="#pb322" name= +"pb322">322</a>]</span></li> +<li>1690–1701 Don Fausto Cruzat y Gongora.</li> +<li>1701–1709 Don Domingo Zabalburu.</li> +<li>1709–1715 Conde de Lizarraga.</li> +<li>1715–1717 Royal Audiencia.</li> +<li>1717–1719 Don Fernando Manuel de Bustamante.</li> +<li>1719–1721 Archbishop Cuesta.</li> +<li>1721–1729 Don Toribio José de Cosio y Campo +(Marqués de Torre Campo).</li> +<li>1729–1739 Don Fernando Valdes y Tamon.</li> +<li>1739–1745 Don Gaspar de la Torre.</li> +<li>1745–1750 Bishop Father Juan de Arrechedra.</li> +<li>1750–1754 Don Francisco José de Obando y Solis.</li> +<li>1754–1759 Don Pedro Manuel de Arandía y +Santisteban.</li> +<li>1759–1761 Don Miguel Lino de Ezpeleta (Bishop of Zebu).</li> +<li>1761–1764 Archbishop Don Manuel Antonio Rojo del Rio y +Vieyra.</li> +<li>1764–1764 Dr. Don Simon de Anda y Salazar.</li> +<li><span class="corr" id="xd19e5668" title= +"Source: 1164">1764</span>–1765 Don Francisco de la Torre.</li> +<li>1765–1770 Don José Raon.</li> +<li>1770–1778 Dr. Don Simon de Anda y Salazar.</li> +<li>1778–1787 Don José Basco y Vargas.</li> +<li>1787–1788 Don Pedro Sarrio.</li> +<li>1788–1793 Don Felix Berenguer de Marquina.</li> +<li>1793–1806 Don Rafael Maria de Aguilar y Ponce de Leon.</li> +<li>1806–1810 Don Mariano Fernandez de Folgueras.</li> +<li>1810–1813 Don Manuel Gonzalez Aguilar.</li> +<li>1813–1816 Don José de Gardoqui Jaraveitia.</li> +<li>1816–1822 Don Mariano Fernandez de Folgueras.</li> +<li>1822–1825 Don Juan Antonio Martinez.</li> +<li>1825–1830 Don Mariano Ricafort Palacio y Abarca.</li> +<li>1830–1835 Don Pascual Enrile y Alcedo.</li> +<li>1835–1836 Don Gabriel de Torres.</li> +<li>1836–1838 Don Andres Garcia Camba.</li> +<li>1838–1841 Don Luis Lardizabal y Montojo.</li> +<li>1841–1843 Don Marcelino de Oraa Lecumberri.</li> +<li>1843–1844 Don Francisco de Paula Alcalá de la +Torre.</li> +<li>1844–1850 Don Narciso Clavería y Zaldua.</li> +<li>1850–1850 Don Antonio Maria Blanco.</li> +<li>1850–1853 D. Antonio de Urbistondo, Marqués de la +Solana y Teniente General.<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb323" href= +"#pb323" name="pb323">323</a>]</span></li> +<li>1853–1854 El Mariscal de Campo de Ramon Montero, General +Segundo Cabo (acting).</li> +<li>1854–1854 El Teniente General Marqués de +Novaliches.</li> +<li>1854–1854 El Mariscal de Campo de Ramon Montero +(acting).</li> +<li>1854–1856 El Teniente General de Manuel Crespo.</li> +<li>1856–1857 El Mariscal de Campo de Ramon Montero +(acting).</li> +<li>1857–1860 El Teniente General de Fernando de Norzagaray.</li> +<li>1860–1860 El Mariscal de Campo de Ramon Solano y +Llánderal (acting).</li> +<li>1860–1861 El Brigadier de Artilleria de Juan Herrera +Dávila (acting).</li> +<li>1861–1862 El Teniente General de José Lemery.</li> +<li>1862–1865 El Teniente General de Rafael Echagüe.</li> +<li>1865–1865 El Mariscal de Campo de Joaquin Solano +(acting).</li> +<li>1865–1866 El Teniente General de Juan de Lara é +Irigoyen.</li> +<li>1866–1866 El Mariscal de Campo de Juan Laureano Sanz +(acting).</li> +<li>1866–1866 El Comandante General de Marina de Antonio Ossorio +(acting).</li> +<li>1866–1866 El Mariscal de Campo de Joaquin Solano +(acting).</li> +<li>1866–1866 El Teniente General de José de la +Gándara.</li> +<li>1866–1869 El Mariscal de Campo de Manuel Maldonado +(acting).</li> +<li>1869–1871 El Teniente General de Carlos de la Torre.</li> +<li>1871–1873 El Teniente General de Rafael Izquierdo.</li> +<li>1873–1873 El Comandante General de Marina de Manuel MacCrohon +(acting).</li> +<li>1873–1874 El Teniente General de Juan Alaminos y Vivar.</li> +<li>1874–1874 El Mariscal de Campo de Manuel Blanco Valderrama +(acting).</li> +<li>1874–1877 El Contra Almirante de la Armada de José +Malcampo y Monje.</li> +<li>1877–1880 El Teniente General de Domingo Moriones y +Murillo.</li> +<li>1880–1880 El Comandante General de Marina de Rafael Rodriguez +Arias (acting).</li> +<li>1880–1883 El Teniente General de Fernando Primo de Rivera, +Marqués de Estella.</li> +<li>1883–1883 El Mariscal de Campo de Emilio de Molins, General +Segundo Cabo (acting).</li> +<li>1883–1885 El Capitan General del Ejercito de Joaquin Jovellar +y Soler.<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb324" href="#pb324" name= +"pb324">324</a>]</span></li> +<li>1885–1885 El Mariscal de Campo de Emilio de Molins +(acting).</li> +<li>1885–1888 El Teniente General de Emilio Terrero.</li> +<li>1888–1888 El Mariscal de Campo de Antonio Molto +(acting).</li> +<li>1888–1888 El Cotra Almirante de la Armada de Federico +Lobatón (acting).</li> +<li>1888–1891 El Teniente General de Valeriano Weyler.</li> +<li>1891–1893 El Teniente General de Eulogio Despojol, Conde de +Caspe.</li> +<li>1893–1893 El General de Division de Federico Ochando, General +Segundo Cabo (acting).</li> +<li>1893–1896 El Teniente General de Ramon Blanco y Erenas, +Marqués de Peña-Plata.</li> +<li>1896–1897 El Teniente General de Camilo G. de Polavieja, +Marqués de Polavieja.</li> +<li>1897–1897 de José de Lacharmbre y Dominguez, Teniente +General (acting).</li> +<li>1897–1898 de Fernando Primo de Rivera, Capitan General, +Marqués de Estella.</li> +<li>1898–1898 de Basilio Augustin Teniente General del +Ejercito.</li> +<li>1898–1898 El General Segundo Cabo de Fermin Jaudenes y +Alvarez.</li> +</ul> +<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb325" href="#pb325" name= +"pb325">325</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div id="ix" class="div1 index"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="main">Index.</h2> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">Abra <a href="#pb257" class="pageref">257</a></p> +<p>Acuña, Don Pedro Bravo de <a href="#pb191" class= +"pageref">191</a></p> +<p>Adelantado <a href="#pb109" class="pageref">109</a></p> +<p>Aeta <a href="#pb25" class="pageref">25</a>, <a href="#pb34" class= +"pageref">34</a>, <a href="#pb99" class="pageref">99</a></p> +<p>African coast, exploration of <a href="#pb62" class= +"pageref">62</a></p> +<p>Agriculture <a href="#pb212" class="pageref">212</a>, <a href= +"#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Aguinaldo, Emilio <a href="#pb283" class="pageref">283</a>, <a href= +"#pb294" class="pageref">294</a>, <a href="#pb298" class= +"pageref">298</a>, <a href="#pb304" class="pageref">304</a></p> +<p>Aguinaldo, Gen. Baldomero <a href="#pb298" class= +"pageref">298</a></p> +<p>Albuquerque <a href="#pb66" class="pageref">66</a></p> +<p>Aleandora, Raja <a href="#pb133" class="pageref">133</a></p> +<p>Alim ud Din, conversion of <a href="#pb226" class= +"pageref">226</a></p> +<p>Aliping namamahay <a href="#pb103" class="pageref">103</a></p> +<p>Almanzar <a href="#pb82" class="pageref">82</a></p> +<p>Alphabet, Filipino <a href="#pb96" class="pageref">96</a></p> +<p>America—<br> +and the Philippines <a href="#pb287" class= +"pageref">287</a>–321<br> +named <a href="#pb71" class="pageref">71</a><br> +revolution in <a href="#pb249" class="pageref">249</a><br> +wars in <a href="#pb248" class="pageref">248</a></p> +<p>American control <a href="#pb319" class="pageref">319</a></p> +<p>Anda y Salazar, Don Simon de <a href="#pb236" class= +"pageref">236</a></p> +<p>Anitos <a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a></p> +<p>Anson <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a></p> +<p>Anti-War Agitators in America <a href="#pb300" class= +"pageref">300</a></p> +<p>Arandía, Governor <a href="#pb228" class= +"pageref">228</a></p> +<p>Architecture, Bureau of <a href="#pb313" class="pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Archives, Bureau of <a href="#pb313" class="pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Arévalo <a href="#pb147" class="pageref">147</a>, <a href= +"#pb172" class="pageref">172</a></p> +<p>Argensola, Leonardo de <a href="#pb17" class="pageref">17</a></p> +<p>Armada, destruction of <a href="#pb177" class="pageref">177</a></p> +<p>Atkinson, Dr. Fred W. <a href="#pb315" class="pageref">315</a></p> +<p>Audiencia, Royal <a href="#pb109" class="pageref">109</a><br> +abolished <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a><br> +reëstablished <a href="#pb153" class="pageref">153</a></p> +<p>Auditor, Insular <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Augustinian Order <a href="#pb121" class="pageref">121</a></p> +<p>Azores discovered <a href="#pb63" class="pageref">63</a></p> +<p>Bajan <a href="#pb268" class="pageref">268</a></p> +<p>Balboa <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a></p> +<p>Bantilan <a href="#pb226" class="pageref">226</a></p> +<p>Barangay <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a></p> +<p>Batanes Islands <a href="#pb244" class="pageref">244</a></p> +<p>Bathala <a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a></p> +<p>Bell, General J. Franklin <a href="#pb303" class= +"pageref">303</a></p> +<p>Benedictines <a href="#pb120" class="pageref">120</a></p> +<p>Benguet <a href="#pb257" class="pageref">257</a></p> +<p>Bibliographies <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a></p> +<p>Bicol <a href="#pb35" class="pageref">35</a></p> +<p>Biscaino, Sebastian <a href="#pb171" class="pageref">171</a></p> +<p>Bisaya <a href="#pb35" class="pageref">35</a>, <a href="#pb130" +class="pageref">130</a></p> +<p>Blair, Miss E. H. <a href="#pb22" class="pageref">22</a></p> +<p>Blood compact <a href="#pb80" class="pageref">80</a></p> +<p>Bohol <a href="#pb200" class="pageref">200</a>, <a href="#pb225" +class="pageref">225</a>, <a href="#pb257" class="pageref">257</a></p> +<p>Bonifacio, Andres <a href="#pb282" class="pageref">282</a></p> +<p>Borneo—<br> +Mohammedans in <a href="#pb40" class="pageref">40</a><br> +Spanish expedition to <a href="#pb145" class="pageref">145</a></p> +<p>Bowring, Sir John <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a></p> +<p>Brooke, Charles <a href="#pb272" class="pageref">272</a></p> +<p>Burgos, Dr. José <a href="#pb279" class="pageref">279</a></p> +<p>Búshido <a href="#pb59" class="pageref">59</a></p> +<p>Bustamante, Fernando Manuel de <a href="#pb217" class= +"pageref">217</a></p> +<p>Cabalian discovered <a href="#pb127" class="pageref">127</a></p> +<p>Cabots, voyage of the <a href="#pb70" class="pageref">70</a></p> +<p>Caceres, Nueva <a href="#pb172" class="pageref">172</a></p> +<p>Cagayanes <a href="#pb35" class="pageref">35</a></p> +<p>Calambú Raja <a href="#pb79" class="pageref">79</a></p> +<p>Calvin, John <a href="#pb122" class="pageref">122</a> <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb326" href="#pb326" name="pb326">326</a>]</span></p> +<p>Campo, Governor Torre, <a href="#pb219" class="pageref">219</a></p> +<p>Canaries discovered, <a href="#pb63" class="pageref">63</a></p> +<p>Cano, Juan Sebastian del, <a href="#pb83" class="pageref">83</a>, +<a href="#pb114" class="pageref">114</a></p> +<p>Cantava, Padre, <a href="#pb225" class="pageref">225</a></p> +<p>Carreri, <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a></p> +<p>Caribs, <a href="#pb72" class="pageref">72</a></p> +<p>Carillo, Don Pedro, <a href="#pb280" class="pageref">280</a></p> +<p>Carolines, <a href="#pb117" class="pageref">117</a>, <a href= +"#pb224" class="pageref">224</a></p> +<p>Casas, Las, <a href="#pb72" class="pageref">72</a>, <a href="#pb111" +class="pageref">111</a></p> +<p>Cavendish, Thomas, <a href="#pb175" class="pageref">175</a></p> +<p>Cavite revolt, <a href="#pb279" class="pageref">279</a></p> +<p>Cebu, <a href="#pb79" class="pageref">79</a>, <a href="#pb130" +class="pageref">130</a>, <a href="#pb172" class="pageref">172</a></p> +<p>Cedulas, Royal, <a href="#pb20" class="pageref">20</a></p> +<p>Century of obscurity, <a href="#pb212" class="pageref">212</a></p> +<p>Chabucano, <a href="#pb266" class="pageref">266</a></p> +<p>Chamorros, <a href="#pb214" class="pageref">214</a></p> +<p>Chao Ju-kua, <a href="#pb97" class="pageref">97</a></p> +<p>Charles V., <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a></p> +<p>Chavés, Captain Juan, <a href="#pb146" class= +"pageref">146</a></p> +<p>Chavés, Don Juan de, <a href="#pb197" class= +"pageref">197</a></p> +<p>China about 1400, <a href="#pb56" class="pageref">56</a></p> +<p>Chinese—<br> +attempt to capture Manila, <a href="#pb140" class="pageref">140</a><br> +distrust of, <a href="#pb182" class="pageref">182</a><br> +immigration restricted, <a href="#pb183" class="pageref">183</a><br> +in the Philippines, <a href="#pb97" class="pageref">97</a><br> +first massacre of, <a href="#pb182" class="pageref">182</a><br> +treaty with the, <a href="#pb144" class="pageref">144</a><br> +uprising of, <a href="#pb207" class="pageref">207</a></p> +<p>Chirino, Father Predo, <a href="#pb16" class="pageref">16</a></p> +<p>Church, <a href="#pb119" class="pageref">119</a>, <a href="#pb147" +class="pageref">147</a></p> +<p>Ciagu, Raja, <a href="#pb79" class="pageref">79</a></p> +<p>Cipango, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a></p> +<p>Cities, largest, <a href="#pb171" class="pageref">171</a></p> +<p>Civil commission, <a href="#pb308" class="pageref">308</a></p> +<p>Civil Governor, first, <a href="#pb309" class="pageref">309</a></p> +<p>Claudio, Don Juan, <a href="#pb202" class="pageref">202</a></p> +<p>Claveria, General, <a href="#pb265" class="pageref">265</a></p> +<p>Clemente, Juan, <a href="#pb170" class="pageref">170</a></p> +<p>Clive, Lord, <a href="#pb233" class="pageref">233</a></p> +<p>Coast and Geodetic Survey, <a href="#pb312" class= +"pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Coast Guard, <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Code of Civil Procedure, <a href="#pb314" class= +"pageref">314</a></p> +<p>Cofradia, <a href="#pb264" class="pageref">264</a></p> +<p>Cold Storage and Ice Plant, <a href="#pb313" class= +"pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Colin, Father Francisco, <a href="#pb17" class="pageref">17</a></p> +<p>Colonial Policy of Spain, <a href="#pb113" class= +"pageref">113</a></p> +<p>Colonization restricted, <a href="#pb112" class= +"pageref">112</a></p> +<p>Columbus, Christopher, <a href="#pb66" class="pageref">66</a></p> +<p>Combes, Father Francisco, <a href="#pb18" class="pageref">18</a></p> +<p>Commerce restricted, <a href="#pb112" class="pageref">112</a></p> +<p>Commerce and Police, <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Commercial House, <a href="#pb113" class="pageref">113</a></p> +<p>Conquest and Settlement, <a href="#pb125" class= +"pageref">125</a></p> +<p>Constabulary, <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Constitution, American, <a href="#pb287" class="pageref">287</a></p> +<p>Contratacion, Casa de, <a href="#pb113" class="pageref">113</a></p> +<p>Corala, <a href="#pb82" class="pageref">82</a></p> +<p>Corcuera, Hortado de, <a href="#pb197" class="pageref">197</a></p> +<p>Cornish, Admiral, <a href="#pb234" class="pageref">234</a></p> +<p>Corregidor, battles near, <a href="#pb193" class= +"pageref">193</a></p> +<p>Cortes, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a>, <a href="#pb109" +class="pageref">109</a>, <a href="#pb116" class="pageref">116</a></p> +<p>Courts, <a href="#pb314" class="pageref">314</a></p> +<p>Crusades, <a href="#pb48" class="pageref">48</a></p> +<p>Cruz, Apolinario de la, <a href="#pb263" class="pageref">263</a></p> +<p>Cuba discovered, <a href="#pb68" class="pageref">68</a></p> +<p>Cubans, American sympathy for, <a href="#pb291" class= +"pageref">291</a></p> +<p>Customs and Immigration, Bureau of, <a href="#pb313" class= +"pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Da Gamma, Vasco, <a href="#pb65" class="pageref">65</a></p> +<p>Dampier, <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a></p> +<p><span class="corr" id="xd19e6557" title= +"Source: Dogóhoy">Dagóhoy</span>, <a href="#pb226" class= +"pageref">226</a>, <a href="#pb257" class="pageref">257</a></p> +<p>Dasmariñas, <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a></p> +<p>Dato, <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a></p> +<p>Decree of 1589, <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a></p> +<p>Desventuradas, <a href="#pb76" class="pageref">76</a></p> +<p>De Vera, Dr. Santiago, <a href="#pb148" class="pageref">148</a></p> +<p>Dewey’s victory, <a href="#pb293" class="pageref">293</a></p> +<p>Díaz, Bartholomew, <a href="#pb65" class="pageref">65</a></p> +<p>Dominic, Saint, <a href="#pb120" class="pageref">120</a></p> +<p>Dominicans, <a href="#pb120" class="pageref">120</a>, <a href= +"#pb148" class="pageref">148</a></p> +<p>Drake, Sir Francis, <a href="#pb144" class="pageref">144</a></p> +<p>Draper, General, <a href="#pb234" class="pageref">234</a></p> +<p>Ducos, Father, <a href="#pb229" class="pageref">229</a></p> +<p>Dutch—<br> +at Mariveles, <a href="#pb154" class="pageref">154</a><br> +capture Chinese Junks, <a href="#pb193" class="pageref">193</a> +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb327" href="#pb327" name= +"pb327">327</a>]</span><br> +conflicts with <a href="#pb208" class="pageref">208</a><br> +expedition against <a href="#pb191" class="pageref">191</a><br> +expeditions to Indies <a href="#pb189" class="pageref">189</a><br> +in Formosa <a href="#pb194" class="pageref">194</a><br> +trading methods of <a href="#pb190" class="pageref">190</a></p> +<p>Dutch and Moro wars <a href="#pb187" class= +"pageref">187</a>–211</p> +<p>Dyaks <a href="#pb33" class="pageref">33</a></p> +<p>East, Far <a href="#pb51" class="pageref">51</a>, <a href="#pb56" +class="pageref">56</a></p> +<p>Earth <a href="#pb53" class="pageref">53</a>, <a href="#pb66" class= +"pageref">66</a></p> +<p>Education, Bureau of <a href="#pb313" class="pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Educational system <a href="#pb274" class="pageref">274</a></p> +<p>Educational work of the religious orders <a href="#pb205" class= +"pageref">205</a></p> +<p>Encomenderos <a href="#pb111" class="pageref">111</a></p> +<p>Encomiendas <a href="#pb157" class="pageref">157</a></p> +<p>Engineering, Bureau of <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>England about 1400 <a href="#pb46" class="pageref">46</a></p> +<p>England and France <a href="#pb232" class="pageref">232</a></p> +<p>English Language <a href="#pb315" class="pageref">315</a></p> +<p>Esteybar, Don Francisco de <a href="#pb208" class= +"pageref">208</a></p> +<p>Ethnology, study of <a href="#pb25" class="pageref">25</a></p> +<p>Europe, wars in <a href="#pb218" class="pageref">218</a></p> +<p>Explorers, Spanish <a href="#pb109" class="pageref">109</a></p> +<p>Fernandina <a href="#pb172" class="pageref">172</a></p> +<p>Fetishes among the Filipinos <a href="#pb103" class= +"pageref">103</a></p> +<p>Feudalism <a href="#pb43" class="pageref">43</a></p> +<p>Figueroa, Rodriguez de <a href="#pb151" class="pageref">151</a></p> +<p>Filipino alphabet, source of <a href="#pb96" class= +"pageref">96</a></p> +<p>Filipino independence <a href="#pb318" class="pageref">318</a></p> +<p>Filipino people before the arrival of the Spaniards <a href="#pb88" +class="pageref">88</a>–107</p> +<p>Filipino writings, early <a href="#pb96" class="pageref">96</a></p> +<p>Filipinos—<br> +assassination of <a href="#pb306" class="pageref">306</a><br> +classes of <a href="#pb103" class="pageref">103</a><br> +converted to Christianity <a href="#pb168" class="pageref">168</a><br> +distribution of <a href="#pb88" class="pageref">88</a><br> +in eighteenth century <a href="#pb225" class="pageref">225</a><br> +in movement for reform <a href="#pb279" class="pageref">279</a><br> +increase in educated <a href="#pb277" class="pageref">277</a><br> +liberal ideas among <a href="#pb273" class="pageref">273</a><br> +life and progress of <a href="#pb206" class="pageref">206</a><br> +material progress of <a href="#pb106" class="pageref">106</a><br> +misunderstanding between Americans and <a href="#pb295" class= +"pageref">295</a><br> +reorganize army <a href="#pb305" class="pageref">305</a><br> +religion of <a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a><br> +under the Encomiendas <a href="#pb161" class="pageref">161</a></p> +<p>Finance and Justice, Department of <a href="#pb312" class= +"pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Florida discovered <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a></p> +<p>Food, scarcity of <a href="#pb165" class="pageref">165</a></p> +<p>Forestry, Bureau of <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Formosa <a href="#pb194" class="pageref">194</a>, <a href="#pb202" +class="pageref">202</a></p> +<p>France—<br> +about 1400 <a href="#pb46" class="pageref">46</a><br> +war between England and <a href="#pb232" class="pageref">232</a></p> +<p>Francis of Assisi, Saint <a href="#pb121" class= +"pageref">121</a></p> +<p>Franciscans <a href="#pb121" class="pageref">121</a>, <a href= +"#pb152" class="pageref">152</a>, <a href="#pb205" class= +"pageref">205</a></p> +<p>French revolution <a href="#pb249" class="pageref">249</a></p> +<p>Friars—<br> +attitude toward education <a href="#pb277" class="pageref">277</a><br> +coming of <a href="#pb168" class="pageref">168</a><br> +Missionary, efforts of <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a><br> +opposed <a href="#pb279" class="pageref">279</a><br> +organization of <a href="#pb120" class="pageref">120</a><br> +repress the people <a href="#pb263" class="pageref">263</a><br> +resist English <a href="#pb236" class="pageref">236</a></p> +<p>Funston, General <a href="#pb305" class="pageref">305</a></p> +<p>Galleons, capture of <a href="#pb175" class="pageref">175</a></p> +<p>Gallinato Juan <a href="#pb153" class="pageref">153</a></p> +<p>Gama, Vasco da <a href="#pb65" class="pageref">65</a></p> +<p>Geographical discoveries <a href="#pb61" class= +"pageref">61</a>–87</p> +<p>Germany about 1400 <a href="#pb46" class="pageref">46</a></p> +<p>Gibbon, Edward <a href="#pb42" class="pageref">42</a></p> +<p>Gil, Padre <a href="#pb283" class="pageref">283</a></p> +<p>Goiti, Mertin de <a href="#pb133" class="pageref">133</a></p> +<p>Gomez, Father <a href="#pb280" class="pageref">280</a></p> +<p>Gonzaga, Don Eugracio <a href="#pb298" class="pageref">298</a></p> +<p>Goyti <a href="#pb127" class="pageref">127</a></p> +<p>Guam <a href="#pb214" class="pageref">214</a>, <a href="#pb308" +class="pageref">308</a></p> +<p>Guzman, Don Francisco Tello de <a href="#pb152" class= +"pageref">152</a> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb328" href="#pb328" +name="pb328">328</a>]</span></p> +<p>Hai-tan <a href="#pb99" class="pageref">99</a></p> +<p>Haiti discovered <a href="#pb68" class="pageref">68</a></p> +<p>Hamalbar <a href="#pb80" class="pageref">80</a></p> +<p>Hari <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a></p> +<p>Health, Bureau of Public <a href="#pb312" class= +"pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Henry, Prince <a href="#pb61" class="pageref">61</a></p> +<p>Herrada, Friar Martin <a href="#pb130" class="pageref">130</a></p> +<p>Hindus—<br> +in the Philippines <a href="#pb92" class="pageref">92</a><br> +Malays and <a href="#pb36" class="pageref">36</a></p> +<p>Hispaniola discovered <a href="#pb68" class="pageref">68</a></p> +<p>Historical materials, recent <a href="#pb19" class= +"pageref">19</a></p> +<p>History <a href="#pb12" class="pageref">12</a>, <a href="#pb15" +class="pageref">15</a></p> +<p>Holy Child of Cebu <a href="#pb129" class="pageref">129</a></p> +<p>Homonhón <a href="#pb78" class="pageref">78</a></p> +<p>Hospitals <a href="#pb205" class="pageref">205</a></p> +<p>Horses <a href="#pb107" class="pageref">107</a></p> +<p>Ibanag dialect <a href="#pb35" class="pageref">35</a></p> +<p>Ibilao <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a></p> +<p>Ide, Henry C <a href="#pb308" class="pageref">308</a></p> +<p>Idols among the Filipinos <a href="#pb105" class= +"pageref">105</a></p> +<p>Igorrote provinces <a href="#pb214" class="pageref">214</a></p> +<p>Igorrotes <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a></p> +<p>Ilocano <a href="#pb35" class="pageref">35</a></p> +<p>Iloilo <a href="#pb172" class="pageref">172</a>, <a href="#pb262" +class="pageref">262</a></p> +<p>Ilongotes <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a></p> +<p>India <a href="#pb36" class="pageref">36</a>, <a href="#pb56" class= +"pageref">56</a>, <a href="#pb61" class="pageref">61</a>, <a href= +"#pb66" class="pageref">66</a></p> +<p>Indies, Dutch expedition to <a href="#pb189" class= +"pageref">189</a></p> +<p>Indies, West <a href="#pb70" class="pageref">70</a></p> +<p>Instruction, Department of <a href="#pb313" class= +"pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Interior, Department of <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Instruction in English <a href="#pb315" class="pageref">315</a></p> +<p>Insular Government <a href="#pb311" class="pageref">311</a></p> +<p>Internal Revenue, Bureau of <a href="#pb313" class= +"pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Inquisition <a href="#pb122" class="pageref">122</a>, <a href= +"#pb212" class="pageref">212</a></p> +<p>Islands, naming of <a href="#pb118" class="pageref">118</a></p> +<p>It Coan <a href="#pb209" class="pageref">209</a></p> +<p>Ita <a href="#pb25" class="pageref">25</a></p> +<p>Italy—<br> +about 1400 <a href="#pb46" class="pageref">46</a></p> +<p>Iyeyásu <a href="#pb59" class="pageref">59</a></p> +<p>Jagor <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a></p> +<p>Japan—<br> +about 1400 <a href="#pb57" class="pageref">57</a><br> +development of <a href="#pb9" class="pageref">9</a></p> +<p>Japanese colony <a href="#pb185" class="pageref">185</a></p> +<p>Jesuits—<br> +activity of <a href="#pb226" class="pageref">226</a><br> +arrival of <a href="#pb151" class="pageref">151</a><br> +a source of historical information <a href="#pb17" class= +"pageref">17</a><br> +expulsion of <a href="#pb238" class="pageref">238</a><br> +increase in wealth <a href="#pb237" class="pageref">237</a><br> +organized <a href="#pb123" class="pageref">123</a><br> +return of <a href="#pb274" class="pageref">274</a></p> +<p>John I of Portugal <a href="#pb61" class="pageref">61</a></p> +<p>Jolo—<br> +conquest of <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a><br> +forts destroyed at <a href="#pb270" class="pageref">270</a><br> +treaty with sultan of <a href="#pb220" class="pageref">220</a>, +<a href="#pb271" class="pageref">271</a></p> +<p>Jomonjól <a href="#pb78" class="pageref">78</a></p> +<p>Judicial system <a href="#pb313" class="pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Justice, Bureau of <a href="#pb313" class="pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Kaan, the Great <a href="#pb54" class="pageref">54</a></p> +<p>Kabunsuan <a href="#pb40" class="pageref">40</a></p> +<p>Kabunian <a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a></p> +<p>Katipunan <a href="#pb282" class="pageref">282</a></p> +<p>Koxinga <a href="#pb209" class="pageref">209</a></p> +<p>Kue-Sing <a href="#pb209" class="pageref">209</a></p> +<p>Laboratories, Government <a href="#pb312" class= +"pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Lacandola, Raja <a href="#pb133" class="pageref">133</a></p> +<p>Ladrone Islands—<br> +colonized <a href="#pb213" class="pageref">213</a><br> +depopulation of <a href="#pb215" class="pageref">215</a><br> +discovered <a href="#pb76" class="pageref">76</a><br> +visited by Dampier <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a></p> +<p>Lands, Bureau of Public <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Language, development of <a href="#pb49" class="pageref">49</a></p> +<p>Languages of the Malayans <a href="#pb90" class="pageref">90</a></p> +<p>Laon <a href="#pb105" class="pageref">105</a></p> +<p>Lara, Don Sabiano Maureque de <a href="#pb210" class= +"pageref">210</a></p> +<p>La-Sande, Dr. Francisco <a href="#pb144" class="pageref">144</a></p> +<p>Las Casas <a href="#pb72" class="pageref">72</a>, <a href="#pb111" +class="pageref">111</a></p> +<p>Lavazares, Guido de <a href="#pb164" class="pageref">164</a> +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb329" href="#pb329" name= +"pb329">329</a>]</span></p> +<p>Laws of the Indies, <a href="#pb123" class="pageref">123</a></p> +<p>Lawton, General, <a href="#pb301" class="pageref">301</a>, <a href= +"#pb307" class="pageref">307</a></p> +<p>Ledesma, Bartolomé de, <a href="#pb162" class= +"pageref">162</a></p> +<p>Legarda, Hon. Benito, <a href="#pb310" class="pageref">310</a></p> +<p>Legaspi, <a href="#pb126" class="pageref">126</a>, <a href="#pb137" +class="pageref">137</a></p> +<p>Leyte, religious revolt at, <a href="#pb206" class= +"pageref">206</a></p> +<p>Liga Filipina, <a href="#pb280" class="pageref">280</a></p> +<p>Lima, Pablo de, <a href="#pb162" class="pageref">162</a></p> +<p>Limahong, <a href="#pb140" class="pageref">140</a></p> +<p>Limasana, <a href="#pb78" class="pageref">78</a></p> +<p>Loaisa, Jofre de, <a href="#pb16" class="pageref">16</a>, <a href= +"#pb115" class="pageref">115</a></p> +<p>Lobo, Sabastian, <a href="#pb203" class="pageref">203</a></p> +<p>Loyola, Ignatius, <a href="#pb123" class="pageref">123</a></p> +<p>Lukban, General, <a href="#pb309" class="pageref">309</a></p> +<p>Luna, Antonio de, <a href="#pb296" class="pageref">296</a></p> +<p>Luis, Don, <a href="#pb151" class="pageref">151</a></p> +<p>Luther, Martin, <a href="#pb74" class="pageref">74</a>, <a href= +"#pb122" class="pageref">122</a></p> +<p>Luzon, conquest of, <a href="#pb136" class="pageref">136</a></p> +<p>Luzuriaga, Hon. José, <a href="#pb310" class= +"pageref">310</a></p> +<p>Mabini, Don Apolinario, <a href="#pb298" class="pageref">298</a></p> +<p>MacArthur, General, <a href="#pb301" class="pageref">301</a>, +<a href="#pb308" class="pageref">308</a></p> +<p>Madeira Islands, <a href="#pb62" class="pageref">62</a></p> +<p>Magellan, <a href="#pb16" class="pageref">16</a>, <a href="#pb74" +class="pageref">74</a>, <a href="#pb81" class="pageref">81</a>, +<a href="#pb114" class="pageref">114</a></p> +<p>Magellan, Straits of, <a href="#pb75" class="pageref">75</a></p> +<p>Maharlica, <a href="#pb103" class="pageref">103</a></p> +<p>Maine, destruction of the, <a href="#pb292" class= +"pageref">292</a></p> +<p>Malaspina, Captain, <a href="#pb245" class="pageref">245</a></p> +<p>Malay Archipelago about 1400, <a href="#pb59" class= +"pageref">59</a></p> +<p>Malayo-Polynesian speech, <a href="#pb90" class="pageref">90</a></p> +<p>Malayan peoples, <a href="#pb31" class="pageref">31</a>, <a href= +"#pb32" class="pageref">32</a>, <a href="#pb35" class="pageref">35</a>, +<a href="#pb90" class="pageref">90</a></p> +<p>Malays, Mohammedan, <a href="#pb106" class="pageref">106</a></p> +<p>Malays and Hindus, <a href="#pb36" class="pageref">36</a></p> +<p>Malolos campaign, <a href="#pb299" class="pageref">299</a></p> +<p>Malvar, General, <a href="#pb309" class="pageref">309</a></p> +<p>Manchus, <a href="#pb57" class="pageref">57</a></p> +<p>Mandaya, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a></p> +<p>Manguianes, <a href="#pb33" class="pageref">33</a></p> +<p>Manobo, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a></p> +<p>Manila—<br> +about 1600, <a href="#pb177" class="pageref">177</a><br> +attacked by Chinese, <a href="#pb140" class="pageref">140</a><br> +battle of, <a href="#pb298" class="pageref">298</a><br> +capture of, <a href="#pb294" class="pageref">294</a><br> +Chinese in, <a href="#pb180" class="pageref">180</a><br> +decline of, <a href="#pb185" class="pageref">185</a><br> +earthquake at, <a href="#pb155" class="pageref">155</a><br> +founded, <a href="#pb135" class="pageref">135</a><br> +importance of, <a href="#pb173" class="pageref">173</a><br> +improvements in, <a href="#pb218" class="pageref">218</a><br> +opened to trade, <a href="#pb259" class="pageref">259</a><br> +taken by the English, <a href="#pb235" class="pageref">235</a><br> +taken by the Spanish, <a href="#pb133" class="pageref">133</a></p> +<p>Manila Normal School, <a href="#pb276" class="pageref">276</a></p> +<p>March, Major, <a href="#pb304" class="pageref">304</a></p> +<p>Mariveles, Dutch fleet captured at, <a href="#pb192" class= +"pageref">192</a></p> +<p>Masonry, <a href="#pb280" class="pageref">280</a></p> +<p>Maximilian, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a></p> +<p>May-nila, <a href="#pb133" class="pageref">133</a></p> +<p>Mediæval period, <a href="#pb42" class="pageref">42</a></p> +<p>Mendoza, viceroy of Mexico, <a href="#pb109" class= +"pageref">109</a></p> +<p>Mexico, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a>, <a href="#pb253" +class="pageref">253</a></p> +<p>Mincopies, <a href="#pb31" class="pageref">31</a></p> +<p>Mindoro, pirates of, <a href="#pb132" class="pageref">132</a></p> +<p>Mindanao—<br> +early history of, <a href="#pb18" class="pageref">18</a><br> +people of, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a><br> +Spanish settlements on, <a href="#pb266" class="pageref">266</a></p> +<p>Ming dynasty, <a href="#pb57" class="pageref">57</a></p> +<p>Mining, Bureau of, <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Missionary, the Spanish, <a href="#pb123" class= +"pageref">123</a></p> +<p>Mogul, Great, <a href="#pb56" class="pageref">56</a></p> +<p>Mohammed, <a href="#pb37" class="pageref">37</a></p> +<p>Mohammedans, <a href="#pb47" class="pageref">47</a></p> +<p>Moluccas abandoned, <a href="#pb208" class="pageref">208</a></p> +<p>Monasticism, rise of, <a href="#pb119" class="pageref">119</a></p> +<p>Mongols, Tartar, <a href="#pb54" class="pageref">54</a></p> +<p>Morga, Antonio de, <a href="#pb17" class="pageref">17</a>, <a href= +"#pb20" class="pageref">20</a></p> +<p>Moro forts destroyed, <a href="#pb270" class="pageref">270</a></p> +<p>Moro Malays, trade with, <a href="#pb99" class="pageref">99</a></p> +<p>Moro pirates—<br> +activity of, <a href="#pb207" class="pageref">207</a><br> +first expedition against, <a href="#pb132" class="pageref">132</a><br> +in 1771, <a href="#pb240" class="pageref">240</a><br> +increase of, <a href="#pb228" class="pageref">228</a><br> +of Tawi Tawi, <a href="#pb220" class="pageref">220</a><br> +rise of, <a href="#pb153" class="pageref">153</a> <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb330" href="#pb330" name="pb330">330</a>]</span></p> +<p>Moros of Jolo, attacked, <a href="#pb146" class= +"pageref">146</a></p> +<p>Moros—<br> +Corcucra’s expedition against, <a href="#pb198" class= +"pageref">198</a><br> +origin of name, <a href="#pb41" class="pageref">41</a></p> +<p>Morones, Juan de, <a href="#pb162" class="pageref">162</a></p> +<p>Moses, Prof. Bernard, <a href="#pb308" class="pageref">308</a>, +<a href="#pb315" class="pageref">315</a></p> +<p>Mota, Captain Lorenzo de la, <a href="#pb163" class= +"pageref">163</a></p> +<p>Municipal governments, <a href="#pb265" class="pageref">265</a></p> +<p>Museum, Philippine, <a href="#pb313" class="pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Napoleon I., <a href="#pb251" class="pageref">251</a></p> +<p>Natives under Spanish rule, <a href="#pb110" class= +"pageref">110</a></p> +<p>Navarrete, Father Fernandez, <a href="#pb18" class= +"pageref">18</a></p> +<p>Navigator, the, <a href="#pb61" class="pageref">61</a></p> +<p>Navy established, <a href="#pb245" class="pageref">245</a></p> +<p>Negritos, <a href="#pb25" class="pageref">25</a>, <a href="#pb98" +class="pageref">98</a></p> +<p>Negros, occupation of, <a href="#pb301" class="pageref">301</a></p> +<p>Netherlands independent, <a href="#pb188" class= +"pageref">188</a></p> +<p>Newspapers, <a href="#pb273" class="pageref">273</a></p> +<p>Non-Christian Tribes, Bureau of, <a href="#pb312" class= +"pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Normal School, Manila, <a href="#pb276" class="pageref">276</a></p> +<p>Northern route discovered, <a href="#pb131" class= +"pageref">131</a></p> +<p>Nueva Caceres, founded, <a href="#pb146" class="pageref">146</a></p> +<p>Nueva Segovia, <a href="#pb147" class="pageref">147</a>, <a href= +"#pb172" class="pageref">172</a></p> +<p>Nueva Caceres, <a href="#pb172" class="pageref">172</a></p> +<p>Nueva Vergara, <a href="#pb268" class="pageref">268</a></p> +<p>Obando, Marquis of, <a href="#pb228" class="pageref">228</a></p> +<p>Orang benua, <a href="#pb32" class="pageref">32</a></p> +<p>Orang laut, <a href="#pb268" class="pageref">268</a></p> +<p>Orinoco River, <a href="#pb70" class="pageref">70</a></p> +<p>Ortega, Don Joaquin, <a href="#pb264" class="pageref">264</a></p> +<p>Oscariz, Don Mariano, <a href="#pb266" class="pageref">266</a></p> +<p>Otis, General, <a href="#pb297" class="pageref">297</a></p> +<p>Oyanguran, Don José, <a href="#pb267" class= +"pageref">267</a></p> +<p>Pacific Ocean discovered, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a></p> +<p>Palaos, <a href="#pb224" class="pageref">224</a></p> +<p>Pampangas, revolt of, <a href="#pb206" class="pageref">206</a></p> +<p>Pampango, <a href="#pb35" class="pageref">35</a></p> +<p>Pangasinian, <a href="#pb35" class="pageref">35</a></p> +<p>Papuans, <a href="#pb31" class="pageref">31</a></p> +<p>Pardo de Tavera, Dr. Joaquin, <a href="#pb22" class= +"pageref">22</a>, <a href="#pb92" class="pageref">92</a>, <a href= +"#pb192" class="pageref">192</a>, <a href="#pb280" class= +"pageref">280</a>, <a href="#pb310" class="pageref">310</a></p> +<p>Pelews, <a href="#pb224" class="pageref">224</a>, <a href="#pb253" +class="pageref">253</a></p> +<p>Pelew Islands, <a href="#pb117" class="pageref">117</a></p> +<p>Peru, conquest of, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a></p> +<p>Philip the Handsome, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a></p> +<p>Philippine civil commission, <a href="#pb308" class= +"pageref">308</a></p> +<p>Philippine Islands discovered, <a href="#pb78" class= +"pageref">78</a></p> +<p>Philippines—<br> +America and, <a href="#pb287" class="pageref">287</a>–320<br> +a subject for historical study, <a href="#pb9" class= +"pageref">9</a>–24<br> +American ideas about, <a href="#pb295" class="pageref">295</a><br> +as a Spanish colony, <a href="#pb108" class="pageref">108</a><br> +Chinese in the, <a href="#pb97" class="pageref">97</a><br> +coming of the Spaniards, <a href="#pb40" class="pageref">40</a><br> +development of, <a href="#pb9" class="pageref">9</a><br> +during the period of European revolution, <a href="#pb231" class= +"pageref">231</a>–258<br> +expedition to, <a href="#pb115" class="pageref">115</a>, <a href= +"#pb117" class="pageref">117</a>, <a href="#pb126" class= +"pageref">126</a><br> +first archbishop in, <a href="#pb152" class="pageref">152</a><br> +historical accounts of, <a href="#pb15" class="pageref">15</a><br> +Inquisition in, <a href="#pb212" class="pageref">212</a><br> +Jesuits expelled from, <a href="#pb239" class="pageref">239</a><br> +navy established in, <a href="#pb245" class="pageref">245</a><br> +peoples of, <a href="#pb25" class="pageref">25</a>–42<br> +political decline of, <a href="#pb212" class="pageref">212</a><br> +rebellions in, <a href="#pb254" class="pageref">254</a><br> +returned to Spain, <a href="#pb236" class="pageref">236</a><br> +separated from Mexico, <a href="#pb253" class="pageref">253</a><br> +Spanish occupation of, <a href="#pb16" class="pageref">16</a><br> +threatened by Chinese, <a href="#pb210" class="pageref">210</a><br> +under the English, <a href="#pb234" class="pageref">234</a><br> +visited by Dampier, <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a></p> +<p>Philosophy of the eighteenth<br> +century, new, <a href="#pb231" class="pageref">231</a></p> +<p>Pigafetta, Antonio, <a href="#pb16" class="pageref">16</a></p> +<p>Pilar, Gregorio del, <a href="#pb303" class="pageref">303</a></p> +<p>Pineda, Don Antonio, <a href="#pb245" class="pageref">245</a></p> +<p>Pintados, Islas de los, <a href="#pb131" class="pageref">131</a></p> +<p>Piracy, <a href="#pb196" class="pageref">196</a>, <a href="#pb228" +class="pageref">228</a>, <a href="#pb246" class="pageref">246</a>, +<a href="#pb271" class="pageref">271</a></p> +<p>Pirates, <a href="#pb132" class="pageref">132</a>, <a href="#pb153" +class="pageref">153</a>, <a href="#pb220" class="pageref">220</a>, +<a href="#pb240" class="pageref">240</a>, <a href="#pb268" class= +"pageref">268</a></p> +<p>Pizarro, <a href="#pb73" class="pageref">73</a></p> +<p>Polistas, <a href="#pb168" class="pageref">168</a> <span class= +"pagenum">[<a id="pb331" href="#pb331" name="pb331">331</a>]</span></p> +<p>Polo, Marco <a href="#pb54" class="pageref">54</a></p> +<p>Poniente, Islas del <a href="#pb79" class="pageref">79</a></p> +<p>Portuguese colonies <a href="#pb147" class="pageref">147</a>, +<a href="#pb195" class="pageref">195</a></p> +<p>Portuguese discover Eastern passage <a href="#pb61" class= +"pageref">61</a></p> +<p>Posts, Bureau of <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Press, influence of <a href="#pb273" class="pageref">273</a></p> +<p>Primo de Rivera, General <a href="#pb285" class= +"pageref">285</a></p> +<p>Printing, Bureau of <a href="#pb313" class="pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Prisons <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Progress and revolution <a href="#pb259" class="pageref">259</a></p> +<p>Pueblo <a href="#pb262" class="pageref">262</a></p> +<p>Raja <a href="#pb102" class="pageref">102</a></p> +<p>Rebellion of 1896 <a href="#pb283" class="pageref">283</a></p> +<p>Recollects <a href="#pb169" class="pageref">169</a></p> +<p>Reformation <a href="#pb121" class="pageref">121</a></p> +<p>Regidor, Don Antonio <a href="#pb280" class="pageref">280</a></p> +<p>Religion of the Filipinos <a href="#pb105" class= +"pageref">105</a></p> +<p>Renaissance <a href="#pb45" class="pageref">45</a></p> +<p>Repartimientos <a href="#pb111" class="pageref">111</a></p> +<p>Residencia <a href="#pb201" class="pageref">201</a></p> +<p>Retana, W.E. <a href="#pb20" class="pageref">20</a></p> +<p>Revenues and Expenditures <a href="#pb313" class= +"pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Revolt of 1811 <a href="#pb263" class="pageref">263</a></p> +<p>Revolution <a href="#pb249" class="pageref">249</a></p> +<p>Rizal y Mercado, Dr. José, <a href="#pb17" class= +"pageref">17</a>, <a href="#pb280" class="pageref">280</a>, <a href= +"#pb281" class="pageref">281</a></p> +<p>Rojo, Don Manuel <a href="#pb229" class="pageref">229</a></p> +<p>Ronquillo, Don Gonzalo de, <a href="#pb146" class="pageref">146</a>, +<a href="#pb164" class="pageref">164</a></p> +<p>Robertson, J.A. <a href="#pb22" class="pageref">22</a></p> +<p>Saavedra, Don Alvaro de <a href="#pb16" class="pageref">16</a>, +<a href="#pb116" class="pageref">116</a></p> +<p>Salazar, Domingo de <a href="#pb168" class="pageref">168</a></p> +<p>Salamanca, Juan Cerozo de <a href="#pb196" class= +"pageref">196</a></p> +<p>Salcedo, Don Diego de <a href="#pb212" class="pageref">212</a></p> +<p>Salcedo, Juan de <a href="#pb132" class="pageref">132</a></p> +<p>Samal pirates <a href="#pb268" class="pageref">268</a></p> +<p>Samal ports destroyed <a href="#pb269" class="pageref">269</a></p> +<p>Samar discovered <a href="#pb78" class="pageref">78</a></p> +<p>San Andres, orphanage of <a href="#pb170" class= +"pageref">170</a></p> +<p>San Augustin, Fr. Gaspar de <a href="#pb17" class= +"pageref">17</a></p> +<p>Sanchez, Alonso <a href="#pb149" class="pageref">149</a></p> +<p>San Augustin, Padre <a href="#pb100" class="pageref">100</a></p> +<p>Sanchez, Padre Alonzo <a href="#pb168" class="pageref">168</a></p> +<p>Sandico, Don Teodoro <a href="#pb298" class="pageref">298</a></p> +<p>Sangleyes <a href="#pb184" class="pageref">184</a></p> +<p>San Juan de Dios hospital <a href="#pb120" class= +"pageref">120</a></p> +<p>Sarangani <a href="#pb118" class="pageref">118</a></p> +<p>Santa Potenciana <a href="#pb170" class="pageref">170</a></p> +<p>Santibañez Ignacio <a href="#pb152" class= +"pageref">152</a></p> +<p>Santo Niño <a href="#pb129" class="pageref">129</a></p> +<p>Sanvitores Padre Diego Luis de <a href="#pb213" class= +"pageref">213</a></p> +<p>Sedeño, Padre Antonio <a href="#pb168" class= +"pageref">168</a></p> +<p>Segovia, Nueva <a href="#pb172" class="pageref">172</a></p> +<p>Seljuks <a href="#pb47" class="pageref">47</a></p> +<p>Schwan, General <a href="#pb305" class="pageref">305</a></p> +<p>School, Manila Normal <a href="#pb276" class="pageref">276</a></p> +<p>Schools <a href="#pb169" class="pageref">169</a>, <a href="#pb274" +class="pageref">274</a>, <a href="#pb314" class="pageref">314</a></p> +<p>Siam, treaty with <a href="#pb218" class="pageref">218</a></p> +<p>Sierra, Don Juan <a href="#pb218" class="pageref">218</a></p> +<p>Signal Service <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Silonga <a href="#pb151" class="pageref">151</a></p> +<p>Silva, Juan de <a href="#pb192" class="pageref">192</a></p> +<p>Sioco <a href="#pb141" class="pageref">141</a></p> +<p>Slavery <a href="#pb63" class="pageref">63</a>, <a href="#pb103" +class="pageref">103</a></p> +<p>Smith, Gen. James <a href="#pb301" class="pageref">301</a></p> +<p>Soliman, Raja <a href="#pb133" class="pageref">133</a></p> +<p>Sonnerat, M. <a href="#pb21" class="pageref">21</a></p> +<p>South America, rebellion in <a href="#pb253" class= +"pageref">253</a></p> +<p>Spaniards <a href="#pb171" class="pageref">171</a>, <a href="#pb256" +class="pageref">256</a></p> +<p>Spain—<br> +colonial policy of <a href="#pb113" class="pageref">113</a><br> +decline of <a href="#pb252" class="pageref">252</a><br> +economic policy of <a href="#pb220" class="pageref">220</a><br> +war with United States <a href="#pb292" class="pageref">292</a></p> +<p>Spanish—<br> +found a post at Zamboanga <a href="#pb196" class="pageref">196</a><br> +increase in population <a href="#pb276" class="pageref">276</a><br> +settle Mindanao <a href="#pb266" class="pageref">266</a><br> +take Moro city of Manila <a href="#pb133" class="pageref">133</a></p> +<p>Spanish and Portuguese <a href="#pb177" class="pageref">177</a></p> +<p>Spanish attitude toward education <a href="#pb277" class= +"pageref">277</a></p> +<p>Spanish expedition to Borneo <a href="#pb145" class= +"pageref">145</a></p> +<p>Spanish government <a href="#pb163" class="pageref">163</a> +<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb332" href="#pb332" name= +"pb332">332</a>]</span></p> +<p>Spanish occupation, <a href="#pb140" class="pageref">140</a></p> +<p>Spanish misrule ended, <a href="#pb286" class="pageref">286</a></p> +<p>Spanish rule established, <a href="#pb156" class="pageref">156</a>, +<a href="#pb165" class="pageref">165</a></p> +<p>Spanish soldier and the Spanish missionary, <a href="#pb108" class= +"pageref">108</a></p> +<p>Spilbergen, Admiral, <a href="#pb193" class="pageref">193</a></p> +<p>Statistics, Bureau of, <a href="#pb313" class="pageref">313</a></p> +<p>Sual opened to trade, <a href="#pb261" class="pageref">261</a></p> +<p>Subanon, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a></p> +<p>Sulu, <a href="#pb268" class="pageref">268</a></p> +<p>Swingli, <a href="#pb122" class="pageref">122</a></p> +<p>Taft, William H, <a href="#pb308" class="pageref">308</a></p> +<p>Tagálog language, <a href="#pb90" class="pageref">90</a></p> +<p>Tagálog people, <a href="#pb35" class="pageref">35</a></p> +<p>Tagal, Moro pirate, <a href="#pb197" class="pageref">197</a></p> +<p>Tagbanúa, <a href="#pb34" class="pageref">34</a></p> +<p>Tamerlane, <a href="#pb56" class="pageref">56</a></p> +<p>Tartar Mongols, <a href="#pb54" class="pageref">54</a></p> +<p>Tattooing, <a href="#pb131" class="pageref">131</a></p> +<p>Tawi Tawi, pirates of, <a href="#pb220" class="pageref">220</a></p> +<p>Taycosama, <a href="#pb152" class="pageref">152</a></p> +<p>Ternate, taken by Spanish, <a href="#pb17" class= +"pageref">17</a></p> +<p>Tierra del Fuego, <a href="#pb76" class="pageref">76</a></p> +<p>Timour, <a href="#pb56" class="pageref">56</a></p> +<p>Tobacco industry, <a href="#pb242" class="pageref">242</a></p> +<p>Tondo, District of, <a href="#pb185" class="pageref">185</a></p> +<p>Torre, Don Carlos de la, <a href="#pb278" class= +"pageref">278</a></p> +<p>Torre, Don Francisco de la, <a href="#pb236" class= +"pageref">236</a></p> +<p>Torre, Hernando de la, <a href="#pb116" class="pageref">116</a></p> +<p>Toscanelli, <a href="#pb67" class="pageref">67</a></p> +<p>Totanes, Padre, <a href="#pb96" class="pageref">96</a></p> +<p>Trade—<br> +restricted, <a href="#pb174" class="pageref">174</a><br> +routes of, <a href="#pb51" class="pageref">51</a><br> +Venetian monopoly of, <a href="#pb52" class="pageref">52</a><br> +with the East, <a href="#pb51" class="pageref">51</a></p> +<p>Treasurer, Insular, <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Trias, Gen. Mariano, <a href="#pb298" class="pageref">298</a></p> +<p>Turks, <a href="#pb47" class="pageref">47</a></p> +<p>United States—<br> +development of, <a href="#pb287" class="pageref">287</a><br> +war with Spain, <a href="#pb292" class="pageref">292</a></p> +<p>Urbistondo, Governor, <a href="#pb268" class="pageref">268</a></p> +<p>Urdaneta, Andres de, <a href="#pb100" class="pageref">100</a>, +<a href="#pb115" class="pageref">115</a>, <a href="#pb125" class= +"pageref">125</a></p> +<p>Van Noort, <a href="#pb154" class="pageref">154</a></p> +<p>Vargas, Don José Basco de, <a href="#pb242" class= +"pageref">242</a></p> +<p>Velarde, Father Murillo, <a href="#pb17" class="pageref">17</a></p> +<p>Venice, <a href="#pb49" class="pageref">49</a></p> +<p>Vespucci, Amerigo, <a href="#pb71" class="pageref">71</a></p> +<p>Vera, Dr. Santiago de, <a href="#pb148" class="pageref">148</a>, +<a href="#pb162" class="pageref">162</a></p> +<p>Vidal, Montero y, <a href="#pb20" class="pageref">20</a></p> +<p>Vigan, <a href="#pb172" class="pageref">172</a></p> +<p>Villalobos, Lopez de, <a href="#pb16" class="pageref">16</a>, +<a href="#pb117" class="pageref">117</a></p> +<p>Volcanic eruptions, <a href="#pb254" class="pageref">254</a></p> +<p>Weather Bureau, <a href="#pb312" class="pageref">312</a></p> +<p>Wellington, <a href="#pb252" class="pageref">252</a></p> +<p>Weyler, Governor-General, <a href="#pb292" class= +"pageref">292</a></p> +<p>Wheaton, General, <a href="#pb301" class="pageref">301</a></p> +<p>Wittert, Admiral, <a href="#pb192" class="pageref">192</a></p> +<p>Wolfe, General, <a href="#pb233" class="pageref">233</a></p> +<p>Worcester, Dean C, <a href="#pb308" class="pageref">308</a></p> +<p>Worms, Diet at, <a href="#pb74" class="pageref">74</a></p> +<p>Wright, Luke E, <a href="#pb308" class="pageref">308</a></p> +<p>Writing, systems of, <a href="#pb93" class="pageref">93</a></p> +<p>Writings, early Filipino, <a href="#pb96" class="pageref">96</a></p> +<p>Xavier, Saint Francis, <a href="#pb118" class="pageref">118</a></p> +<p>Young, General, <a href="#pb303" class="pageref">303</a></p> +<p>Yusef, <a href="#pb82" class="pageref">82</a></p> +<p>Zamal, <a href="#pb78" class="pageref">78</a></p> +<p>Zamboanga—<br> +abandoned, <a href="#pb18" class="pageref">18</a>, <a href="#pb208" +class="pageref">208</a><br> +opened to trade, <a href="#pb261" class="pageref">261</a><br> +refounded, <a href="#pb218" class="pageref">218</a><br> +Spanish post at, <a href="#pb196" class="pageref">196</a><br> +settled, <a href="#pb266" class="pageref">266</a></p> +<p>Zamora, Father, <a href="#pb279" class="pageref">279</a></p> +<p>Zulueta, M, <a href="#pb22" class="pageref">22</a></p> +<p>Zuñiga, Father Joaquin Martinez de, <a href="#pb19" class= +"pageref">19</a> <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb333" href="#pb333" +name="pb333">333</a>]</span></p> +</div> +</div> +<div class="div1 ads"><span class="pagenum">[<a href= +"#toc">Contents</a>]</span> +<div class="divHead"> +<h2 class="main">Best Books for Philippine Schools</h2> +<ul> +<li>Baldwin Primer—Tagalog Edition</li> +<li>Gibbs’s Natural Number Primer</li> +<li>Gibbs’s Insular Primer</li> +<li>Gibbs’s Insular First Reader</li> +<li>Gibbs’s Insular Second Reader</li> +<li>Gibbs’s Insular Third Reader</li> +<li>Gibbs’s Insular First Lessons in Language</li> +<li>Barrows’s History of the Philippines</li> +<li>Roddy-Gibbs’s Philippine School Geography</li> +<li>Milne’s Elements of Arithmetic—Metric Edition</li> +<li>MacClintock’s The Philippines</li> +</ul> +</div> +<div class="divBody"> +<p class="first">These books have been prepared with special reference +to the pedagogical conditions of the Philippine Islands, and are +therefore suited to the requirements of the insular schools. They are +all new, embodying the best methods of presentation and the best +mechanical workmanship. The bindings are substantial, and the +illustrations numerous and attractive.</p> +<hr class="tb"> +<p>For detailed descriptions, terms for introduction, etc., address</p> +<p><span class="sc">American Book Company</span></p> +<p>100 Washington Square, New York City <span class="pagenum">[<a id= +"pb334" href="#pb334" name="pb334">334</a>]</span></p> +<p>A UNIQUE BOOK</p> +<p>The Natural Number Primer</p> +<p>By DAVID GIBBS, S.B. (Harvard)</p> +<p><i>Formerly Superintendent of Schools, Hudson and Groton, Mass., and +Division Superintendent of Schools, Philippine Islands</i></p> +<p>Price, 25 cents</p> +<p>Unlike all other books, this primer teaches the most elementary +ideas and forms of number and of language, at the same time. It may be +used either with or independently of the regular reading primer. As a +Language Primer it develops a practical vocabulary and the power of +reading and expression. As a Number Primer it teaches in a very simple, +logical way, the first steps in number. It is easy, and appeals to the +natural interest of the child in counting, besides being adapted to his +various capacities. There are abundant illustrations and very simple +drawings which serve as models for the child. Each new term is +illustrated and introduced in script. In the footnotes are helpful +suggestions for teachers, outlining the oral work and blackboard drill. +The book will overcome many difficulties now commonly found in teaching +this subject, and will supplement thoroughly and satisfactorily the +work of the teacher.</p> +<p>Write for Descriptive Circular</p> +<p>AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY</p> +<p>NEW YORK CINCINNATI CHICAGO <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb335" +href="#pb335" name="pb335">335</a>]</span></p> +<p>Milne’s Arithmetics</p> +<p>By WILLIAM J. MILNE, <span class="sc">Ph.D.,LL.D.</span></p> +<p>President of the New York State Normal College, Albany, N.Y.</p> +<p>TWO-BOOK SERIES</p> +<ul> +<li>Elements of Arithmetic $0.30</li> +<li>Standard Arithmetic .65</li> +</ul> +<p>THREE-BOOK SERIES</p> +<ul> +<li>Primary Arithmetic $0.25</li> +<li>Intermediate Arithmetic .30</li> +<li>Standard Arithmetic .65</li> +</ul> +<p>It is not enough for pupils to understand arithmetical processes; +they must be able to use them accurately and rapidly. It is evident, +therefore, that the best text-books in arithmetic are those which give +the pupil a thorough and practical knowledge of the study, and, +following this, readiness in applying this knowledge to the common +affairs of everyday life.</p> +<p>Milne’s Arithmetics meet all these conditions and requirements +in a natural, logical, and practical manner.</p> +<p><b>In Either a Two-Book or a Three-Book Series.</b> To meet the +varying needs of teachers these arithmetics are now issued in two +editions—a two-book series and a three-book series. Other books +of a similar nature have been published from time to time, but none +have ever attained the extraordinary popularity of Milne’s +Arithmetics. Their success has been entirely without precedent. The +method employed is inductive for the most part, yet it is neither +tedious nor redundant. The large number and practical character of the +problems included, and the application of business methods of +computation in their solution, form noteworthy and valuable features of +the books. Other important characteristics are their admirable +arrangement, their use of sound pedagogical principles, the absence of +all useless matter, their comprehensive character, and their exact +statements. No other arithmetics are more modern in every respect.</p> +<p>AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY</p> +<p>NEW YORK CINCINNATI CHICAGO <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb336" +href="#pb336" name="pb336">336</a>]</span></p> +<p>Webster’s School Dictionaries</p> +<p>REVISED EDITIONS</p> +<p>WEBSTER’S SCHOOL DICTIONARIES in their revised form constitute +a progressive series, carefully graded and especially adapted for +Primary Schools, Common Schools, High Schools, Academies, and private +students. These Dictionaries have all been thoroughly revised, entirely +reset, and made to conform in all essential respects to that great +standard authority in English—Webster’s International +Dictionary.</p> +<p>WEBSTER’S PRIMARY SCHOOL DICTIONARY $0.48</p> +<p>Containing over 20,000 words and meanings, with over 400 +illustrations.</p> +<p>WEBSTER’S COMMON SCHOOL DICTIONARY $0.72</p> +<p>Containing over 25,000 words and meanings, with over 500 +illustrations.</p> +<p>WEBSTER’S HIGH SCHOOL DICTIONARY $0.98</p> +<p>Containing about 37,000 words and definitions, and an appendix +giving a pronouncing vocabulary of Biblical, Classical, Mythological, +Historical, and Geographical proper names, with over 800 +illustrations.</p> +<p>WEBSTER’S ACADEMIC DICTIONARY</p> +<div class="table"> +<table> +<tr> +<td>Cloth,</td> +<td>$1.50;</td> +<td>Indexed,</td> +<td>$1.80</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Half Calf,</td> +<td>2.75;</td> +<td>Indexed,</td> +<td>3.00</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p>Abridged directly from the International Dictionary, and giving the +orthography, pronunciations, definitions, and synonyms of the large +vocabulary of words in common use, with an appendix containing various +useful tables, with over 800 illustrations.</p> +<p>SPECIAL EDITIONS</p> +<div class="table"> +<table> +<tr> +<td>Webster’s Countinghouse Dictionary</td> +<td>Sheep, Indexed,</td> +<td>$2.40</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Webster’s Condensed Dictionary</td> +<td>Cloth, $1.44; Indexed,</td> +<td>1.75</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>The Same</td> +<td>Half Calf, 2.75; Indexed,</td> +<td>3.00</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Webster’s Handy Dictionary</td> +<td></td> +<td>.15</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Webster’s Pocket Dictionary.</td> +<td>Cloth</td> +<td>.57</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>The Same.</td> +<td>Roan Flexible</td> +<td>.69</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>The Same.</td> +<td>Roan Tucks</td> +<td>.78</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>The Same.</td> +<td>Morocco, Indexed</td> +<td>.90</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td>Webster’s Practical Dictionary</td> +<td></td> +<td>.80</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +<p><i>Copies of any of Webster’s Dictionaries will be sent, +prepaid. to any address on receipt of the price by the +Publishers:</i></p> +<p>AMERICAN BOOK COMPANY</p> +<p>NEW YORK CINCINNATI CHICAGO</p> +</div> +</div> +<div class="transcribernote"> +<h2 class="main">Colophon</h2> +<h3 class="main">Availability</h3> +<p class="first">This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no +cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give +it away or re-use it under the terms of the <a class="exlink xd19e41" +title="External link" href="https://www.gutenberg.org/license" rel= +"license">Project Gutenberg License</a> included with this eBook or +online at <a class="exlink xd19e41" title="External link" href= +"https://www.gutenberg.org/" rel="home">www.gutenberg.org</a>.</p> +<p>This eBook is produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at <a class="exlink xd19e41" title= +"External link" href="https://www.pgdp.net/">www.pgdp.net</a>.</p> +<p>Another version of this book is available at <a class= +"exlink xd19e41" title="External link" href= +"http://www.archive.org/details/historyofphilipp00barriala">The +Internet Archive</a>.</p> +<p>This ebook was prepared from the first edition from 1905, except for +the cover image and most of the illustrations, which were taken from +the second edition. Since this book was used in Philippine schools for +many years, numerous editions are available from the Internet +Archive:</p> +<ul> +<li><a class="exlink xd19e41" title="External link" href= +"http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924008594933">First edition, +American Book Company, 1905</a> (Used for this digital edition).</li> +<li><a class="exlink xd19e41" title="External link" href= +"http://www.archive.org/details/historyofphilipp00barriala">Bobbs-Merrill, +1907</a> (Used for most of the illustrations).</li> +<li><a class="exlink xd19e41" title="External link" href= +"http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924023497997">World Book Company, +1911</a>.</li> +<li><a class="exlink xd19e41" title="External link" href= +"http://www.archive.org/details/ahistoryphilipp00barrgoog">World Book +Company, 1914</a>.</li> +</ul> +<p>Furthermore, a <a class="exlink xd19e41" title="External link" href= +"http://www.archive.org/details/history_of_the_philippines_0908_librivox1"> +spoken book</a> edition is available from LibriVox.</p> +<p>The HTML version of this eBook contains a few characters in the old +Tagalog or Baybayin script. This script has been encoded following the +Unicode standard, and requires a Unicode-compliant Baybayin font to +render correctly. A suitable font was developed by Paul Morrow and can +be downloaded from his <a class="exlink xd19e41" title="External link" +href="http://www.mts.net/~pmorrow/bayeng1.htm">website</a>.</p> +<p>Related Library of Congress catalog page: <a class="catlink" href= +"http://lccn.loc.gov/05026123">05026123</a>.</p> +<p>Related Open Library catalog page (for source): <a class="catlink" +href="http://openlibrary.org/books/OL24155017M">OL24155017M</a>.</p> +<p>Related Open Library catalog page (for work): <a class="catlink" +href="http://openlibrary.org/works/OL16306157W">OL16306157W</a>.</p> +<p>Related WorldCat catalog page: <a class="catlink" href= +"http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/12309762">12309762</a>.</p> +<h3 class="main">Encoding</h3> +<p class="first">This book was written in 1903 for use by Filipino +Students. Note that it reflects the state of knowledge and political +bias as prevalent at the time of its writing. In particular, the +author’s writing on the end of Spanish rule, and the onset of +American rule in the Philippines should be read in light of the then +recent American occupation of the Islands. Later in his life, the +author admitted he downplayed the support for the independence +movement. See “Humanitarian Imperialism: David Prescott Barrows +and the White Man’s Burden in the Philippines” by Kenton J. +Clymer in <i>The Pacific Historical Review</i>, Vol. 45, No. 4 (Nov., +1976), pp. 495–517.</p> +<h3 class="main">Revision History</h3> +<ul> +<li>10-JAN-2008 Started.</li> +</ul> +<h3 class="main">External References</h3> +<p>This Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These +links may not work for you.</p> +<h3 class="main">Corrections</h3> +<p>The following corrections have been applied to the text:</p> +<table class="correctiontable" summary= +"Overview of corrections applied to the text."> +<tr> +<th>Page</th> +<th>Source</th> +<th>Correction</th> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e730">23</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">the the</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">the</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e737">23</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">re-regrettable</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">regrettable</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e835">32</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">graduually</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">gradually</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e881">35</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Belt of Rattan.</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Mindanao Belt of Bamboo Fiber.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e1337">73</a>, +<a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3008">147</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">.</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">,</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e1470">84</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">circum dedit</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">circumdedisti</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2220">98</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Filipino Iron Treasure Box.</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Moro Brass Betel Box.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2257">101</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Filipino Portable Iron Cannon.</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Moro Brass Cannon, or +“Lantaka.”</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2337">105</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">whch</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">which</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2449">114</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">degrees</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">leagues</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2478">115</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Augustian</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Augustinian</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e2731">133</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">,</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">[<i>Deleted</i>]</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3025">148</a>, +<a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3033">148</a>, <a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e3053">149</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Malay</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Moro</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3048">149</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">adminstrative</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">administrative</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3120">154</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Prao.</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">“Vinta.”</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3208">160</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">repartimentos</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">repartimientos</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3321">167</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Tagáloes</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Tagalos</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3328">167</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">barangayes</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">barangays</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3399">170</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Filipians</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Filipinas</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3492">176</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Capture of a Galleon (from an old +print).</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Capture of the Galleon +“Cabadonga,” off the Coast of Samar.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3513">177</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">beween</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">between</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3791">193</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Grand Vittoria</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">gran vitoria</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3794">193</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Orlandeses</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Olandeses</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3908">200</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Moro Short Sword and Sheath.</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Sulu Barong and Sheath.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e3931">201</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Pirate</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Sailing</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4040">209</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">turbulance</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">turbulence</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4278">226</a>, +<a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4281">226</a>, <a class="pageref" href= +"#xd19e4729">257</a>, <a class="pageref" href="#xd19e6557">326</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Dogóhoy</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Dagóhoy</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4455">240</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Anda Monument.</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">The Anda Monument in Manila.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4462">240</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Calinga Axe.</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Igorot Ax.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4480">242</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Brass Vessel</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Gong</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4504">243</a>, +<a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4514">243</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Igorrote</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Igorot</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4564">246</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Filipino Creese</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Moro Kris</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4570">246</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Moro Creeses.</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Moro Beheading Knives.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4584">247</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Fish</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Hunting</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4598">248</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">Musical Instrument.</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">“Kulintangan” or Xylophone.</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4742">258</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">culsters</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">clusters</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4955">272</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">during</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">daring</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e4960">272</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">’</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">”</td> +</tr> +<tr> +<td class="width20"><a class="pageref" href="#xd19e5668">322</a></td> +<td class="width40 bottom">1164</td> +<td class="width40 bottom">1764</td> +</tr> +</table> +</div> +</div> + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's A History of the Philippines, by David P. 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0000000..6ff60e6 --- /dev/null +++ b/38269-h/images/titlepage.gif diff --git a/38269.txt b/38269.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2a41dbd --- /dev/null +++ b/38269.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9107 @@ +Project Gutenberg's A History of the Philippines, by David P. Barrows + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: A History of the Philippines + +Author: David P. Barrows + +Release Date: December 11, 2011 [EBook #38269] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF THE PHILIPPINES *** + + + + +Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project +Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously +made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + + + + A HISTORY OF THE PHILIPPINES + + By + + DAVID P. BARROWS, Ph.D. + + General Superintendent of Public Instruction + for the Philippine Islands + + + + New York . Cincinnati . Chicago + + American Book Company + + + + + + + +PREFACE + + +This book has been prepared at the suggestion of the educational +authorities for pupils in the public high schools of the Philippines, +as an introduction to the history of their country. Its preparation +occupied about two years, while the author was busily engaged in other +duties,--much of it being written while he was traveling or exploring +in different parts of the Archipelago. No pretensions are made to an +exhaustive character for the book. For the writer, as well as for the +pupil for whom it is intended, it is an introduction into the study +of the history of Malaysia. + +Considerable difficulty has been experienced in securing the necessary +historical sources, but it is believed that the principal ones have +been read. The author is greatly indebted to the Honorable Dr. Pardo +de Tavera for the use of rare volumes from his library, and he wishes +to acknowledge also the kindness of Mr. Manuel Yriarte, Chief of the +Bureau of Archives, for permission to examine public documents. The +occasional reprints of the old Philippine histories have, however, +been used more frequently than the original editions. The splendid +series of reprinted works on the Philippines, promised by Miss Blair +and Mr. Robertson, was not begun in time to be used in the preparation +of this book. The appearance of this series will make easy a path +which the present writer has found comparatively difficult, and will +open the way for an incomparably better History of the Philippines +than has ever yet been made. + +The drawings of ethnographic subjects, which partly illustrate this +book, were made from objects in the Philippine Museum by Mr. Anselmo +Espiritu, a teacher in the public schools of Manila. They are very +accurate. + +Above every one else, in writing this book, the author is under +obligations to his wife, without whose constant help and encouragement +it could not have been written. + + + David P. Barrows. + + Manila, Philippine Islands, + March 1st, 1903. + + + + + + + +CONTENTS. + + + Page + + I. The Philippines as a Subject for Historical Study 9 + II. The Peoples of the Philippines 25 + III. Europe and the Far East about 1400 A.D. 42 + IV. The Great Geographical Discoveries 61 + V. Filipino People Before the Arrival of the Spaniards 88 + VI. The Spanish Soldier and the Spanish Missionary 108 + VII. Period of Conquest and Settlement, 1565-1600 125 + VIII. The Philippines Three Hundred Years Ago 156 + IX. The Dutch and Moro Wars, 1600-1663 187 + X. A Century of Obscurity and Decline, 1633-1762 212 + XI. The Philippines During the Period of European + Revolution, 1762-1837 231 + XII. Progress and Revolution, 1837-1897 259 + XIII. America and the Philippines 287 + Appendix 321 + Index 325 + + + + + +LIST OF MAPS. + + + Page + + Philippine Islands 6, 7 + Countries and Peoples of Malaysia 26, 27 + Races and Tribes of the Philippines 30 + The Spread of Mohammedanism 39 + Europe about 1400 AD. 44 + Routes of Trade to the Far East 50 + The Countries of the Far East 58 + Restoration of Toscanelli's Map 69 + Early Spanish Discoveries in the Philippines 77 + The New World and the Indies as divided between + Spain and Portugal 85 + Conquest and Settlement by the Spaniards in the + Philippines, 1505-1590 124 + Straits of Manila 133 + The City of Manila 134 + Luzon 158, 159 + Mindanao, Visayas, and Paragua 288, 289 + American Campaigns in Northern Luzon 302 + + + + + + + +HISTORY OF THE PHILIPPINES. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +THE PHILIPPINES AS A SUBJECT FOR HISTORICAL STUDY. + + +Purpose of this Book.--This book has been written for the young +men and young women of the Philippines. It is intended to introduce +them into the history of their own island country. The subject of +Philippine history is much broader and more splendid than the size +and character of this little book reveal. Many subjects have only +been briefly touched upon, and there are many sources of information, +old histories, letters and official documents, which the writer had +not time and opportunity to study in the preparation of this work. It +is not too soon, however, to present a history of the Philippines, +even though imperfectly written, to the Philippine people themselves; +and if this book serves to direct young men and young women to a study +of the history of their own island country, it will have fulfilled +its purpose. + +The Development of the Philippines and of Japan.--In many ways the +next decade of the history of the Philippine Islands may resemble +the splendid development of the neighboring country of Japan. Both +countries have in past times been isolated more or less from the +life and thought of the modern world. Both are now open to the full +current of human affairs. Both countries promise to play an important +part in the politics and commerce of the Far East. Geographically, +the Philippines occupy the more central and influential position, +and the success of the institutions of the Philippines may react upon +the countries of southeastern Asia and Malaysia, to an extent that +we cannot appreciate or foresee, Japan, by reason of her larger +population, the greater industry of her people, a more orderly +social life, and devoted public spirit, is at the present time far +in the lead. + +The Philippines.--But the Philippines possess certain advantages which, +in the course of some years, may tell strongly in her favor. There are +greater natural resources, a richer soil, and more tillable ground. The +population, while not large, is increasing rapidly, more rapidly, in +fact, than the population of Japan or of Java. And in the character of +her institutions the Philippines have certain advantages. The position +of woman, while so unfortunate in Japan, as in China and nearly all +eastern countries, in the Philippines is most fortunate, and is certain +to tell effectually upon the advancement of the race in competition +with other eastern civilizations. The fact that Christianity is the +established religion of the people makes possible a sympathy and +understanding between the Philippines and western countries. + +Japan.--Yet there are many lessons which Japan can teach the +Philippines, and one of these is of the advantages and rewards +of fearless and thorough study. Fifty years ago, Japan, which had +rigorously excluded all intercourse with foreign nations, was forced to +open its doors by an American fleet under Commodore Perry. At that time +the Japanese knew nothing of western history, and had no knowledge of +modern science. Their contact with the Americans and other foreigners +revealed to them the inferiority of their knowledge. The leaders of +the country awoke to the necessity of a study of western countries +and their great progress, especially in government and in the sciences. + +Japan had at her service a special class of people known as the +samurai, who, in the life of Old Japan, were the free soldiers of +the feudal nobility, and who were not only the fighters of Japan, +but the students and scholars as well. The young men of this samurai +class threw themselves earnestly and devotedly into the study of the +great fields of knowledge, which had previously been unknown to the +Japanese. At great sacrifice many of them went abroad to other lands, +in order to study in foreign universities. Numbers of them went to +the United States, frequently working as servants in college towns +in order to procure the means for the pursuit of their education. + +The Japanese Government in every way began to adopt measures for +the transformation of the knowledge of the people. Schools were +opened, laboratories established, and great numbers of scientific +and historical books were translated into Japanese. A public school +system was organized, and finally a university was established. The +Government sent abroad many young men to study in almost every +branch of knowledge and to return to the service of the people. The +manufacturers of Japan studied and adopted western machinery and modern +methods of production. The government itself underwent revolution +and reorganization upon lines more liberal to the people and more +favorable to the national spirit of the country. The result has been +the transformation, in less than fifty years, of what was formerly +an isolated and ignorant country. + +The Lesson for the Filipinos.--This is the great lesson which Japan +teaches the Philippines. If there is to be transformation here, with +a constant growth of knowledge and advancement, and an elevation of +the character of the people as a whole, there must be a courageous +and unfaltering search for the truth: and the young men and young +women of the Philippines must seek the advantages of education, not +for themselves, but for the benefit of their people and their land; +not to gain for themselves a selfish position of social and economic +advantage over the poor and less educated Filipinos, but in order +that, having gained these advantages for themselves, they may in turn +give them to their less fortunate countrymen. The young Filipino, +man or woman, must learn the lessons of truthfulness, courage, and +unselfishness, and in all of his gaining of knowledge, and in his +use of it as well, he must practice these virtues, or his learning +will be an evil to his land and not a blessing. + +The aim of this book is to help him to understand, first of all, the +place that the Philippines occupy in the modern history of nations, so +that he may understand how far and from what beginnings the Filipino +people have progressed, toward what things the world outside has +itself moved during this time, and what place and opportunities the +Filipinos, as a people, may seek for in the future. + +The Meaning of History.--History, as it is written and understood, +comprises many centuries of human life and achievement, and we must +begin our study by discussing a little what history means. Men may +live for thousands of years without having a life that may be called +historical; for history is formed only where there are credible +written records of events. Until we have these records, we have no +ground for historical study, but leave the field to another study, +which we call Archeology, or Prehistoric Culture. + +Historical Races.--Thus there are great races which have no history, +for they have left no records. Either the people could not write, +or their writings have been destroyed, or they told nothing about +the life of the people. The history of these races began only with +the coming of a historical, or more advanced race among them. + +Thus, the history of the black, or negro, race begins only with +the exploration of Africa by the white race, and the history of the +American Indians, except perhaps of those of Peru and Mexico, begins +only with the white man's conquest of America. The white, or European, +race is, above all others, the great historical race; but the yellow +race, represented by the Chinese, has also a historical life and +development, beginning many centuries before the birth of Christ. + +The European Race.--For thousands of years the white race was confined +to the countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea. It had but little +contact with other races of men and almost no knowledge of countries +beyond the Mediterranean shores. The great continents of America and +Australia and the beautiful island-world of the Pacific and Indian +oceans were scarcely dreamed of. This was the status of the white race +in Europe a little more than five hundred years ago. How different +is the position of this race to-day! It has now explored nearly the +entire globe. The white people have crossed every continent and every +sea. On every continent they have established colonies and over many +countries their power. + +During these last five centuries, besides this spread of geographical +discoveries, the mingling of all the races, and the founding of great +colonies, has come also the development of scientific knowledge--great +discoveries and inventions, such as the utilization of steam and +electricity, which give to man such tremendous power over the material +world. Very important changes have also marked the religious and +political life of the race. Within these years came the Protestant +revolt from the Roman Catholic Church, destroying in some degree the +unity of Christendom; and the great revolutions of Europe and America, +establishing democratic and representative governments. + +The European Race and the Filipino People.--This expansion and progress +of the European race early brought it into contact with the Filipino +people, and the historical life of the Philippines dates from this +meeting of the two races. Thus the history of the Philippines has +become a part of the history of nations. During these centuries the +people of these islands, subjects of a European nation, have progressed +in social life and government, in education and industries, in numbers, +and in wealth. They have often been stirred by wars and revolutions, +by centuries of piratical invasion, and fear of conquest by foreign +nations. But these dangers have now passed away. + +There is no longer fear of piratical ravage nor of foreign invasion, +nor is there longer great danger of internal revolt; for the +Philippines are at the present time under a government strong enough +to defend them against other powers, to put down plunder and ravage, +and one anxious and disposed to afford to the people such freedom +of opportunity, such advantages of government and life, that the +incentive to internal revolution will no longer exist. Secure from +external attack and rapidly progressing toward internal peace, the +Philippines occupy a position most fortunate among the peoples of the +Far East. They have representative government, freedom of religion, +and public education, and, what is more than all else to the aspiring +or ambitious race or individual, freedom of opportunity. + +How History is Written.--One other thing should be explained +here. Every child who reads this book should understand a little how +history is written. A most natural inquiry to be made regarding any +historical statement is, "How is this known?" And this is as proper a +question for the school boy as for the statesman. The answer is, that +history rests for its facts largely upon the written records made by +people who either lived at the time these things took place, or so +near to them that, by careful inquiry, they could learn accurately +of these matters and write them down in some form, so that we to-day +can read their accounts, and at least know how these events appeared +to men of the time. + +But not all that a man writes, or even puts in a book, of things +he has seen and known, is infallibly accurate and free from error, +partiality, and untruthfulness. So the task of the historian is not +merely to read and accept all the contemporary records, but he must +also compare one account with another, weighing all that he can find, +making due allowance for prejudice, and on his own part trying to +reach a conclusion that shall be true. Of course, where records are +few the task is difficult indeed, and, on the other hand, material +may be so voluminous as to occupy a writer a lifetime, and make it +impossible for any one man completely to exhaust a subject. + +Historical Accounts of the Philippines.--For the Philippines we +are so fortunate as to have many adequate sources of a reliable and +attractive kind. In a few words some of these will be described. Nearly +all exist in at least a few libraries in the Philippines, where they +may sometime be consulted by the Filipino student, and many of them, +at least in later editions, may be purchased by the student for his +own possession and study. + +The Voyages of Discovery.--European discovery of the Philippines began +with the great voyage of Magellan; and recounting this discovery of +the islands, there is the priceless narrative of one of Magellan's +company, Antonio Pigafetta. His book was written in Italian, but was +first published in a French translation. The original copies made +by Pigafetta have disappeared, but in 1800 a copy was discovered in +the Ambrosian Library of Milan, Italy, and published. Translations +into English and other languages exist. It may be found in several +collections of Voyages, and there is a good Spanish translation and +edition of recent date. (El Primer Viaje alrededor del Mundo, por +Antonio Pigafetta, traducido por Dr. Carlos Amoretti y anotado por +Manuel Walls y Merino, Madrid, 1899.) There are several other accounts +of Magellan's voyage; but Pigafetta's was the only one written by +an eye-witness, and his descriptions of the Bisaya Islands, Cebu, +Borneo, and the Moluccas are wonderfully interesting and accurate. + +There were several voyages of discovery between Magellan's time (1521) +and Legaspi's time (1565). These include the expeditions of Loaisa, +Saavedra, and Villalobos, and accounts of them are to be found in +the great series of publications made by the Spanish Government and +called Coleccion de documentos ineditos, and, in another series, +Navarrete's Coleccion de los viajes y descubrimientos. + +Spanish Occupation and Conquest.--As we come to the history of Spanish +occupation and conquest of the Philippines, we find many interesting +letters and reports sent by both soldiers and priests to the king, or +to persons in Spain. The first complete book on the Philippines was +written by a missionary about 1602, Father Predo Chirino's Relacion +de las Islas Filipinas, printed in Rome in 1604. This important and +curious narrative is exceedingly rare, but a reprint, although rude +and poor, was made in Manila in 1890, which is readily obtainable. The +Relacion de las Islas Filipinas was followed in 1609 by the work of +Judge Antonio de Morga, Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas. This very +rare work was printed in Mexico. In 1890 a new edition was brought +out by Dr. Jose Rizal, from the copy in the British Museum. There is +also an English translation. + +These two works abound in curious and valuable information upon +the Filipino people as they were at the time of the arrival of the +Spaniards, as does also a later work, the Conquista de las Islas +Filipinas, by Friar Gaspar de San Augustin, printed in Madrid in +1698. This latter is perhaps the most interesting and most important +early work on the Philippine Islands. + +As we shall see, the history of the Philippines is closely connected +with that of the East Indian Spice Islands. When the Spanish forces +took the rich island of Ternate in 1606, the triumph was commemorated +by a volume, finely written, though not free from mistakes, the +Conquista de las Islas Moluccas, by Leonardo de Argensola, Madrid, +1609. There is an old English translation, and also French and Dutch +translations. + +To no other religious order do we owe so much historical information as +to the Jesuits. The scholarship and literary ability of the Company +have always been high. Chirino was a Jesuit, as was also Father +Francisco Colin, who wrote the Labor Evangelica, a narrative of +the Jesuit missions in the Philippines, China, and Japan, which was +printed in Madrid in 1663. This history was continued years later by +Father Murillo Velarde, who wrote what he called the Segunda Parte, +the Historia de la Provincia de Filipinas de la Compania de Jesus, +Manila, 1749. + +There is another notable Jesuit work to which we owe much of the +early history of the great island of Mindanao: this is the Historia de +Mindanao y Jolo, by Father Francisco Combes. The year 1663 marked, as +we shall see, an epoch in the relations between the Spaniards and the +Mohammedan Malays. In that year the Spaniards abandoned the fortress +of Zamboanga, and retired from southern Mindanao. The Jesuits had +been the missionaries in those parts of the southern archipelago, +and they made vigorous protests against the abandonment of Moro +territory. One result of their efforts to secure the reoccupancy +of these fortresses was the notable work mentioned above. It is the +oldest and most important writing about the island and the inhabitants +of Mindanao. It was printed in Madrid in 1667. A beautiful and exact +edition was brought out a few years ago, by Retana. + +A Dominican missionary, Father Diego Aduarte, wrote a very important +work, the Historia de la Provincia del Sancto Rosario de la Orden de +Predicadores en Filipinas, Japon y China, which was printed in Manila +at the College of Santo Tomas in 1640. + +We may also mention as containing a most interesting account of +the Philippines about the middle of the seventeenth century, the +famous work on China, by the Dominican, Father Fernandez Navarrete, +Tratados historicos, politicos, ethnicos, y religiosos de la Monarchia +de China, Madrid, 1767. Navarrete arrived in these islands in 1648, +and was for a time a cura on the island of Mindoro. Later he was a +missionary in China, and then Professor of Divinity in the University +of Santo Tomas. His work is translated into English in Churchill's +Collection of Voyages and Travels, London, 1744, second volume. + +The eighteenth century is rather barren of interesting historical +matter. There was considerable activity in the production of grammars +and dictionaries of the native languages, and more histories of the +religious orders were also produced. These latter, while frequently +filled with sectarian matter, should not be overlooked. + +Between the years 1788 and 1792 was published the voluminous Historia +General de Filipinas, in fourteen volumes, by the Recollect friar, +Father Juan de la Concepcion. The work abounds in superfluous matter +and trivial details, yet it is a copious source of information, +a veritable mine of historical data, and is perhaps the best known +and most frequently used work upon the Philippine Islands. There +are a number of sets in the Philippines which can be consulted by +the student. + +Some years after, and as a sort of protest against so extensive +a treatment of history, the sane and admirable Augustinian, Father +Joaquin Martinez de Zuniga, wrote his Historia de las Islas Filipinas, +a volume of about seven hundred pages. It was printed in Sampaloc, +Manila, in 1803. This writer is exceptional for his fairmindedness, +his freedom from the narrow prejudices which have characterized +most of the writers on the Philippines. His language is terse and +spirited, and his volume is the most readable and, in many ways, the +most valuable attempt at a history of the Philippines. His narrative +closes with the English occupation of Manila in 1763. + +Recent Histories and Other Historical Materials.--The sources for +the conditions and history of the islands during the last century +differ somewhat from the preceding. The documentary sources in the +form of public papers and reports are available, and there is a +considerable mass of pamphlets dealing with special questions in +the Philippines. The publication of the official journal of the +Government, the Gazeta de Manila, commenced in 1861. It contains +all acts of legislation, orders of the Governors, pastoral letters, +and other official matters, down to the end of Spanish rule. + +A vast amount of material, for the recent civil history of the +islands exists in the Archives of the Philippines, at Manila, but +these documents have been very little examined. Notable among these +original documents is the series of Royal Cedulas, each bearing the +signature of the King of Spain, "Yo, el Rey." They run back from the +last years of sovereignty to the commencement of the seventeenth +century. The early cedulas, on the establishment of Spanish rule, +are said to have been carried away by the British army in 1763, +and to be now in the British Museum. + +Of the archives of the Royal Audiencia at Manila, the series of +judgments begins with one of 1603, which is signed by Antonia +de Morga. From this date they appear to be complete. The earliest +records of the cases which came before this court that can be found, +date from the beginning of the eighteenth century. + +Of modern historical writings mention must be made of the Historia +de Filipinas, three volumes, 1887, by Montero y Vidal, and the +publications of W. E. Retana. To the scholarship and enthusiasm of +this last author much is owed. His work has been the republication +of rare and important sources. His edition of Combes has already +been mentioned, and there should also be mentioned, and if possible +procured, his Archivo del Bibliofilo, four volumes, a collection of +rare papers on the islands, of different dates; and his edition, the +first ever published, of Zuniga's Estadismo de las Islas Filipinas, +an incomparable survey of the islands made about 1800, by the priest +and historian whose history was mentioned above. + +Accounts of Voyagers Who Visited the Philippines.--These references +give some idea of the historical literature of the Philippines. They +comprise those works which should be chiefly consulted. There should +not be omitted the numerous accounts of voyagers who have visited +these islands from time to time, and who frequently give us very +valuable information. The first of these are perhaps the English and +Dutch freebooters, who prowled about these waters to waylay the richly +laden galleons. One of these was Dampier, who, about 1690, visited +the Ladrones and the Philippines. His New Voyage Around the World was +published in 1697. There was also Anson, who in 1743 took the Spanish +galleon off the coast of Samar, and whose voyage is described in a +volume published in 1745. There was an Italian physician, Carreri, +who visited the islands in 1697, in the course of a voyage around the +world, and who wrote an excellent description of the Philippines, which +is printed in English translation in Churchill's Collection of Voyages. + +A French expedition visited the East between 1774 and 1781, and the +Commissioner, M. Sonnerat, has left a brief account of the Spanish +settlements in the islands as they then appeared. (Voyage aux Indes +Orientales et a la Chine, Paris, 1782, Vol. 3.) + +There are a number of travellers' accounts written in the last century, +of which may be mentioned Sir John Bowring's Visit to the Philippine +Islands, 1859, and Jagor's Reisen in der Philippinen, travels in the +year 1859 and 1860, which has received translation into both English +and Spanish. + +Bibliographies.--For the historical student a bibliographical guide +is necessary. Such a volume was brought out in 1898, by Retana, +Catalogo abreviado de la Biblioteca Filipina. It contains a catalogue +of five thousand seven hundred and eighty works, published in or upon +the Philippines. A still more exact and useful bibliography has been +prepared by the Honorable T. H. Pardo de Tavera, Biblioteca Filipina, +and is published by the United States Government. + +It is lamentable that the Philippines Government possesses no library +of works on the Archipelago. The foundation of such an institution +seems to have been quite neglected by the Spanish Government, and works +on the Philippines are scarcely to be found, except as they exist in +private collections. The largest of these is said to be that of the +Compania General de Tabacos, at Barcelona, which has also recently +possessed itself of the splendid library of Retana. In Manila the +Honorable Dr. Pardo de Tavera possesses the only notable library in +the islands. + +Since the above was written the Philippines Government has commenced +the collection of historic works in the Philippines, and a talented +young Filipino scholar, Mr. Zulueta, has gone to Spain for extensive +search, both of archives and libraries, in order to enrich the public +collection in the Philippines. + +The publication of a very extensive series of sources of Philippine +history has also been begun by the Arthur H. Clark Company in +the United States, under the editorship of Miss E. H. Blair and +Mr. J. A. Robertson. The series will embrace fifty-five volumes, and +will contain in English translations all available historical material +on the Philippines, from the age of discovery to the nineteenth +century. This notable collection will place within the reach of the +student all the important sources of his country's history, and will +make possible a more extensive and accurate writing of the history +of the islands than has ever before been possible. + +In addition to the published works, there repose numerous unstudied +documents of Philippine history in the Archives of the Indies at +Seville. + +Historical Work for the Filipino Student.--After reading this book, +or a similar introductory history, the student should procure, one +by one, as many as he can of the volumes which have been briefly +described above, and, by careful reading and patient thought, try +to round out the story of his country and learn the lessons of the +history of his people. He will find it a study that will stimulate +his thought and strengthen his judgment; but always he must search +for the truth, even though the truth is sometimes humiliating and +sad. If there are regrettable passages in our own lives, we cannot +find either happiness or improvement in trying to deny to ourselves +that we have done wrong, and so conceal and minimize our error. So if +there are dark places in the history of our land and people, we must +not obscure the truth in the mistaken belief that we are defending +our people's honor, for, by trying to conceal the fact and excuse +the fault, we only add to the shame. It is by frank acknowledgment +and clear depiction of previous errors that the country's honor will +be protected now and in the future. + +Very interesting and important historical work can be done by the +Filipino student in his own town or province. The public and parish +records have in many towns suffered neglect or destruction. In +all possible cases these documents should be gathered up and cared +for. For many things, they are worthy of study. They can show the +growth of population, the dates of erection of the public buildings, +the former system of government, and social conditions. + +This is a work in which the patriotism of every young man and +woman can find an expression. Many sites throughout the islands are +notable for the historic occurrences which they witnessed. These +should be suitably marked with tablets or monuments, and the exact +facts of the events that took place should be carefully collected, +and put in writing. Towns and provinces should form public libraries +containing, among other works, books on the Philippines; and it +should be a matter of pride to the young Filipino scholar to build +up such local institutions, and to educate his townsmen in their use +and appreciation. + +But throughout such studies the student should remember that his town +or locality is of less importance, from a patriotic standpoint, than +his country as a whole; that the interests of one section should never +be placed above those of the Archipelago; and that, while his first and +foremost duty is to his town and to his people, among whom he was born +and nurtured, he owes a greater obligation to his whole country and +people, embracing many different islands and different tongues, and to +the great Government which holds and protects the Philippine Islands, +and which is making possible the free development of its inhabitants. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +THE PEOPLES OF THE PHILIPPINES. + + +The Study of Ethnology.--The study of races and peoples forms a +separate science from history, and is known as ethnology, or the +science of races. Ethnology informs us how and where the different +races of mankind originated. It explains the relationships between +the races as well as the differences of mind, of body, and of mode +of living which different people exhibit. + +All such knowledge is of great assistance to the statesman as he +deals with the affairs of his own people and of other peoples, +and it helps private individuals of different races to understand +one another and to treat each other with due respect, kindness, and +sympathy. Inasmuch, too, as the modern history which we are studying +deals with many different peoples of different origin and race, and +as much of our history turns upon these differences, we must look +for a little at the ethnology of the Philippines. + +The Negritos.--Physical Characteristics.--The great majority of the +natives of our islands belong to what is usually called the Malayan +race, or the Oceanic Mongols. There is, however, one interesting +little race scattered over the Philippines, which certainly has no +relationship at all with Malayans. These little people are called by +the Tagalog, "Aeta" or "Ita." The Spaniards, when they arrived, called +them "Negritos," or "little negroes," the name by which they are best +known. Since they were without question the first inhabitants of these +islands of whom we have any knowledge, we shall speak of them at once. + +They are among the very smallest peoples in the world, the average +height of the men being about 145 centimeters, or the height of +an American boy of twelve years; the women are correspondingly +smaller. They have such dark-brown skins that many people suppose +them to be quite black; their hair is very wooly or kinky, and forms +thick mats upon their heads. In spite of these peculiarities, they +are not unattractive in appearance. Their eyes are large and of a +fine brown color, their features are quite regular, and their little +bodies often beautifully shaped. + +The appearance of these little savages excited the attention of the +first Spaniards, and there are many early accounts of them. Padre +Chirino, who went as a missionary in 1592 to Panay, begins the +narrative of his labors in that island as follows: "Among the Bisayas, +there are also some Negroes. They are less black and ugly than those +of Guinea, and they are much smaller and weaker, but their hair and +beard are just the same. They are much more barbarous and wild than +the Bisayas and other Filipinos, for they have neither houses nor +any fixed sites for dwelling. They neither plant nor reap, but live +like wild beasts, wandering with their wives and children through +the mountains, almost naked. They hunt the deer and wild boar, +and when they kill one they stop right there until all the flesh is +consumed. Of property they have nothing except the bow and arrow." [1] + +Manners and Customs.--The Negritos still have this wild, timid +character, and few have ever been truly civilized in spite of the +efforts of some of the Spanish missionaries. They still roam through +the mountains, seldom building houses, but making simply a little +wall and roof of brush to keep off the wind and rain. They kill deer, +wild pigs, monkeys, and birds, and in hunting they are very expert; +but their principal food is wild roots and tubers, which they roast +in ashes. Frequently in traveling through the mountains, although one +may see nothing of these timid little folk, he will see many large, +freshly dug holes from each of which they have taken out a root. + +The Negritos ornament their bodies by making little rows of cuts on the +breast, back, and arms, and leaving the scars in ornamental patterns; +and some of them also file their front teeth to points. In their hair +they wear bamboo combs with long plumes of hair or of the feathers +of the mountain cock. They have curious dances, and ceremonies for +marriage and for death. + +Distribution.--The Negritos have retired from many places where they +lived when the Spaniards first arrived, but there are still several +thousand in Luzon, especially in the Cordillera Zambales, on the +Pacific coast, and in the Sierra Madre range; and in the interior of +Panay, Negros, Tablas, and in Surigao of Mindanao. + +Relation of the Negritos to Other Dwarfs of the World.--Although the +Negritos have had very little effect on the history of the Philippines, +they are of much interest as a race to scientists, and we can not +help asking, Whence came these curious little people, and what does +their presence here signify? While science can not at present fully +answer these questions, what we do actually know about these pygmies +is full of interest. + +The Aetas of the Philippines are not the only black dwarfs in the +world. A similar little people, who must belong to the same race, +live in the mountains and jungles of the Malay peninsula. On the +Andaman Islands in the Indian Ocean, all the aboriginal inhabitants +are similar pygmies, called "Mincopies." Some traces of their former +existence are reported from many other places in the East Indies. + +Thus it may be that there was a time when these little men and women +had much of this island-world quite to themselves, and their race +stretched unbrokenly from the Philippines across Malacca to the Indian +Ocean. As it would have been impossible for so feeble a people to force +their way from one island to another after the arrival of the stronger +races, who have now confined them to the mountainous interiors, we +are obliged to believe that the Negritos were on the ground first, +and that at one time they were more numerous. The Indian archipelago +was then a world of black pygmies. It may be that they were even more +extensive than this, for one of the most curious discoveries of modern +times has been the finding of similar little blacks in the equatorial +forests of Africa. + +The Negritos must not be confused with the black or negro race of +New Guinea or Melanesia, who are commonly called Papuans; for those +Negroes are of tall stature and belong with the true Negroes of +Africa, though how the Negro race thus came to be formed of two so +widely separated branches we do not know. + +The Malayan Race.--Origin of the Race.--It is thought that the Malayan +race originated in southeastern Asia. From the mainland it spread +down into the peninsula and so scattered southward and eastward over +the rich neighboring islands. Probably these early Malayans found +the little Negritos in possession and slowly drove them backward, +destroying them from many islands until they no longer exist except +in the places we have already named. + +With the beginning of this migratory movement which carried them from +one island to another of the great East Indian Archipelago, these +early Malayans must have invented the boats and praos for which they +are famed, and have become skillful sailors living much upon the sea. + +Effect of the Migration.--Life for many generations, upon these +islands, so warm, tropical, and fruitful, gradually modified these +emigrants from Asia, until they became in mind and body quite a +different race from the Mongol inhabitants of the mainland. + +Characteristics.--The Malayan peoples are of a light-brown color, +with a light yellowish undertone on some parts of the skin, with +straight black hair, dark-brown eyes, and, though they are a small +race in stature, they are finely formed, muscular, and active. The +physical type is nearly the same throughout all Malaysia, but the +different peoples making up the race differ markedly from one another +in culture. They are divided also by differences in religion. There +are many tribes which are pagan. On Bali and Lombok, little islands +south of Java, the people are still Brahmin, like most inhabitants +of India. In other parts of Malaysia they are Mohammedans, while in +the Philippines alone they are mostly Christians. + +The Wild Malayan Tribes.--Considering first the pagan or the wild +Malayan peoples, we find that in the interior of the Malay Peninsula +and of many of the islands, such as Sumatra, Borneo and the Celebes, +there are wild Malayan tribes, who have come very little in contact +with the successive civilizing changes that have passed over this +archipelago. The true Malays call these folk "Orang benua," or +"men of the country," Many are almost savages, some are cannibals, +and others are headhunters like some of the Dyaks of Borneo. + +In the Philippines, too, we find what is probably this same class of +wild people living in the mountains. They are warlike, savage, and +resist approach. Sometimes they eat human flesh as a ceremonial act, +and some prize above all other trophies the heads of their enemies, +which they cut from the body and preserve in their homes. It is +probable that these tribes represent the earliest and rudest epoch +of Malayan culture, and that these were the first of this race to +arrive in the Philippines and dispute with the Negritos for the +mastery of the soil. In such wild state of life, some of them, like +the Manguianes of Mindoro, have continued to the present day. + +The Tribes in Northern Luzon.--In northern Luzon, in the great +Cordillera Central, there are many of these primitive tribes. These +people are preeminently mountaineers. They prefer the high, cold, +and semi-arid crests and valleys of the loftiest ranges. Here, +with great industry, they have made gardens by the building of +stone-walled terraces on the slopes of the hills. Sometimes hundreds +of these terraces can be counted in one valley, and they rise one +above the other from the bottom of a canyon for several miles almost +to the summit of a ridge. These terraced gardens are all under +most careful irrigation. Water is carried for many miles by log +flumes and ditches, to be distributed over these little fields. The +soil is carefully fertilized with the refuse of the villages. Two +and frequently three crops are produced each year. Here we find +undoubtedly the most developed and most nearly scientific agriculture +in the Philippines. They raise rice, cotton, tobacco, the taro, +maize, and especially the camote, or sweet potato, which is their +principal food. These people live in compact, well-built villages, +frequently of several hundred houses. Some of these tribes, like +the Igorrotes of Benguet and the Tinguianes of Abra, are peaceable +as well as industrious. In Benguet there are fine herds of cattle, +much excellent coffee, and from time immemorial the Igorrotes here +have mined gold. + +Besides these peaceful tribes there are in Bontoc, and in the northern +parts of the Cordillera, many large tribes, with splendid mountain +villages, who are nevertheless in a constant and dreadful state of +war. Nearly every town is in feud with its neighbors, and the practice +of taking heads leads to frequent murder and combat. A most curious +tribe of persistent head hunters are the Ibilao, or Ilongotes, who live +in the Caraballo Sur Mountains between Nueva Ecija and Nueva Vizcaya. + +On other islands of the Philippines there are similar wild tribes. On +the island of Paragua there are the Tagbanua and other savage folk. + +Characteristics of the Tribes of Mindanao.--In Mindanao, there are many +more tribes. Three of these tribes, the Aetas, Mandaya, and Manobo, +are on the eastern coast and around Mount Apo. In Western Mindanao, +there is quite a large but scattered tribe called the Subanon. These +people make clearings on the hillsides and support themselves by +raising maize and mountain rice. They also raise hemp, and from the +fiber they weave truly beautiful blankets and garments, artistically +dyed in very curious patterns. These peoples are nearly all pagans, +though a few are being gradually converted to Mohammedanism, and some +to Christianity. The pagans occasionally practice the revolting rites +of human sacrifice and ceremonial cannibalism. + +The Civilized Malayan Peoples.--Their Later Arrival.--At a later +date than the arrival of these primitive Malayan tribes, there came +to the Philippines others of a more developed culture and a higher +order of intelligence. These peoples rapidly mastered the low country +and the coasts of all the islands, driving into the interior the +earlier comers and the aboriginal Negritos. These later arrivals, +though all of one stock, differed considerably, and spoke different +dialects belonging to one language family. They were the ancestors +of the present civilized Filipino people. + +Distribution of These Peoples.--All through the central islands, +Panay, Negros, Leyte, Samar, Marinduque, and northern Mindanao, are +the Bisaya, the largest of these peoples. At the southern extremity +of Luzon, in the provinces of Sorsogon and the Camarines, are the +Bicol. North of these, holding central Luzon, Batangas, Cavite, +Manila, Laguna, Bataan, Bulacan, and Nueva Ecija, are the Tagalog, +while the great plain of northern Luzon is occupied by the Pampango +and Pangasinan. All the northwest coast is inhabited by the Ilocano, +and the valley of the Cagayan by a people commonly called Cagayanes, +but whose dialect is Ibanag. In Nueva Vizcaya province, on the Batanes +Islands and the Calamianes, there are other distinct branches of +the Filipino people, but they are much smaller in numbers and less +important than the tribes marked above. + +Importance of These Peoples.--They form politically and historically +the Filipino people. They are the Filipinos whom the Spaniards ruled +for more than three hundred years. All are converts to Christianity, +and all have attained a somewhat similar stage of civilization. + +Early Contact of the Malays and Hindus.--These people at the time +of their arrival in the Philippines were probably not only of a +higher plane of intelligence than any who had preceded them in the +occupation of the islands, but they appear to have had the advantages +of contact with a highly developed culture that had appeared in the +eastern archipelago some centuries earlier. + +Early Civilization in India.--More than two thousand years ago, +India produced a remarkable civilization. There were great cities of +stone, magnificent palaces, a life of splendid luxury, and a highly +organized social and political system. Writing, known as the Sanskrit, +had been developed, and a great literature of poetry and philosophy +produced. Two great religions, Brahminism and Buddhism, arose, the +latter still the dominant religion of Tibet, China, and Japan. The +people who produced this civilization are known as the Hindus. Fourteen +or fifteen hundred years ago Hinduism spread over Burma, Siam, and +Java. Great cities were erected with splendid temples and huge idols, +the ruins of which still remain, though their magnificence has gone +and they are covered to-day with the growth of the jungle. + +Influence of Hindu Culture on the Malayan Peoples.--This powerful +civilization of the Hindus, established thus in Malaysia, greatly +affected the Malayan people on these islands, as well as those who +came to the Philippines. Many words in the Tagalog have been shown to +have a Sanskrit origin, and the systems of writing which the Spaniards +found in use among several of the Filipino peoples had certainly been +developed from the alphabet then in use among these Hindu peoples +of Java. + +The Rise of Mohammedanism.--Mohammed.--A few hundred years later +another great change, due to religious faith, came over the Malayan +race,--a change which has had a great effect upon the history of +the Philippines, and is still destined to modify events far into the +future. This was the conversion to Mohammedanism. Of all the great +religions of the world, Mohammedanism was the last to arise, and +its career has in some ways been the most remarkable. Mohammed, its +founder, was an Arab, born about 572 A.D. At that time Christianity +was established entirely around the Mediterranean and throughout +most of Europe, but Arabia was idolatrous. Mohammed was one of those +great, prophetic souls which arise from time to time in the world's +history. All he could learn from Hebrewism and Christianity, together +with the result of his own thought and prayers, led him to the belief +in one God, the Almighty, the Compassionate, the Merciful, who as he +believed would win all men to His knowledge through the teachings of +Mohammed himself. Thus inspired, Mohammed became a teacher or prophet, +and by the end of his life he had won his people to his faith and +inaugurated one of the greatest eras of conquest the world has seen. + +Spread of Mohammedanism to Africa and Europe.--The armies of Arabian +horsemen, full of fanatical enthusiasm to convert the world to their +faith, in a century's time wrested from Christendom all Judea, Syria, +and Asia Minor, the sacred land where Jesus lived and taught, and the +countries where Paul and the other apostles had first established +Christianity. Thence they swept along the north coast of Africa, +bringing to an end all that survived of Roman power and religion, +and by 720 they had crossed into Europe and were in possession of +Spain. For nearly the eight hundred years that followed, the Christian +Spaniards fought to drive Mohammedanism from the peninsula, before +they were successful. + +The Conversion of the Malayans to Mohammedanism.--Not only did +Mohammedanism move westward over Africa and Europe, it was carried +eastward as well. Animated by their faith, the Arabs became the +greatest sailors, explorers, merchants, and geographers of the +age. They sailed from the Red Sea down the coast of Africa as far as +Madagascar, and eastward to India, where they had settlements on both +the Malabar and Coromandel coasts. Thence Arab missionaries brought +their faith to Malaysia. + +At that time the true Malays, the tribe from which the common term +"Malayan" has been derived, were a small people of Sumatra. At least +as early as 1250 they were converted to Mohammedanism, brought to +them by these Arabian missionaries, and under the impulse of this +mighty faith they broke from their obscurity and commenced that +great conquest and expansion that has diffused their power, language, +and religion throughout the East Indies. + +Mohammedan Settlement in Borneo.--A powerful Mohammedan Malay +settlement was established on the western coasts of Borneo certainly +as early as 1400. The more primitive inhabitants, like the Dyaks, +who were a tribe of the primitive Malayans, were defeated, and the +possession of the coast largely taken from them. From this coast of +Borneo came many of the adventurers who were traversing the seas of +the Philippines when the Spaniards arrived. + +The Mohammedan Population of Mindanao and Jolo owes something +certainly to this same Malay migration which founded the colony +of Borneo. But the Maguindanao and Illano Moros seem to be largely +descendants of primitive tribes, such as the Manobo and Tiruray, who +were converted to Mohammedanism by Malay and Arab proselyters. The +traditions of the Maguindanao Moros ascribe their conversion to +Kabunsuan, a native of Johore, the son of an Arab father and Malay +mother. He came to Maguindanao with a band of followers, and from him +the datos of Maguindanao trace their lineage. Kabunsuan is supposed +to be descended from Mohammed through his Arab father, Ali, and so +the datos of Maguindanao to the present day proudly believe that in +their veins flows the blood of the Prophet. + +The Coming of the Spaniards.--Mohammedanism was still increasing in +the Philippines when the Spaniards arrived. The Mohammedans already +had a foothold on Manila Bay, and their gradual conquest of the +archipelago was interrupted only by the coming of the Europeans. It +is a strange historical occurrence that the Spaniards, having fought +with the Mohammedans for nearly eight centuries for the possession of +Spain, should have come westward around the globe to the Philippine +Islands and there resumed the ancient conflict with them. Thus the +Spaniards were the most determined opponents of Mohammedanism on both +its western and eastern frontiers. Their ancient foes who crossed +into Spain from Morocco had been always known as "Moros" or "Moors," +and quite naturally they gave to these new Mohammedan enemies the +same title, and Moros they are called to the present day. + +Summary.--Such, then, are the elements which form the population of +these islands,--a few thousands of the little Negritos; many wild +mountain tribes of the primitive Malayans; a later immigration of +Malayans of higher cultivation and possibilities than any that preceded +them, who had been influenced by the Hinduism of Java and who have +had in recent centuries an astonishing growth both in numbers and in +culture; and last, the fierce Mohammedan sea-rovers, the true Malays. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +EUROPE AND THE FAR EAST ABOUT 1400 A.D. + + +The Mediaeval Period in Europe.--Length of the Middle Age.--By the +Middle Ages we mean the centuries between 500 and 1300 A.D. This +period begins with the fall of the Roman Empire and the looting of +the Imperial City by the rude German tribes, and ends with the rise +of a new literature, a new way of looking at the world in general, +and a passion for discovery of every kind. + +These eight hundred years had been centuries of cruel struggle, +intellectual darkness, and social depression, but also of great +religious devotion. Edward Gibbon, one of the greatest historians, +speaks of this period as "the triumph of barbarism and religion." + +The population of Europe was largely changed, during the first few +centuries of the Christian Era, as the Roman Empire, that greatest +political institution of all history, slowly decayed. New peoples +of German or Teutonic origin came, fighting their way into western +Europe and settling wherever the land attracted them. Thus Spain and +Italy received the Goths; France, the Burgundians and Franks; England, +the Saxons and Angles or English. + +These peoples were all fierce, warlike, free, unlettered +barbarians. Fortunately, they were all converted to Christianity by +Roman priests and missionaries. They embraced this faith with ardor, +at the same time that other peoples and lands were being lost to +Christendom. Thus it has resulted that the countries where Christianity +arose and first established itself, are now no longer Christian, and +this religion, which had an Asiatic and Semitic origin, has become the +distinguishing faith of the people of western Europe. For centuries the +countries of Europe were fiercely raided and disturbed by pillaging +and murdering hordes; by the Huns, who followed in the Germans from +the East; by the Northmen, cruel pirating seamen from Scandinavia; +and, as we have already seen, by the Mohammedans, or Saracens as they +were called, who came into central Europe by way of Spain. + +Character of the Life during this Period.--Feudalism.--Life was so +beset with peril that independence or freedom became impossible, +and there was developed a society which has lasted almost down to +the present time, and which we call Feudalism. The free but weak man +gave up his freedom and his lands to some stronger man, who became +his lord. He swore obedience to this lord, while the lord engaged to +furnish him protection and gave him back his lands to hold as a "fief," +both sharing in the product. This lord swore allegiance to some still +more powerful man, or "overlord," and became his "vassal," pledged +to follow him to war with a certain number of armed men; and this +overlord, on his part, owed allegiance to the prince, who was, perhaps, +a duke or bishop (bishops at this time were also feudal lords), +or to the king or emperor. Thus were men united into large groups +or nations for help or protection. There was little understanding +of love of country. Patriotism, as we feel it, was replaced by the +passion of fidelity or allegiance to one's feudal superior. + +Disadvantages of Feudalism.--The great curse of this system was that +the feudal lords possessed the power to make war upon one another, +and so continuous were their jealousies and quarrelings that the land +was never free from armed bands, who laid waste an opponent's country, +killing the miserable serfs who tilled the soil, and destroying their +homes and cattle. + +There was little joy in life and no popular learning. If a man did not +enjoy warfare, but one other life was open to him, and that was in the +Church. War and religion were the pursuits of life, and it is no wonder +that many of the noblest and best turned their backs upon a life that +promised only fighting and bloodshed and, renouncing the world, became +monks. Monasticism developed in Europe under such conditions as these, +and so strong were the religious feelings of the age that at one time +a third of the land of France was owned by the religious orders. + +The Town.--The two typical institutions of the early Middle Age were +the feudal castle, with its high stone walls and gloomy towers, +with its fierce bands of warriors armed in mail and fighting on +horseback with lance and sword, and the monastery, which represented +inn, hospital, and school. Gradually, however, a third structure +appeared. This was the town. And it is to these mediaeval cities, with +their busy trading life, their free citizenship, and their useful +occupations, that the modern world owes much of its liberty and its +intellectual light. + +The Renaissance.--Changes in Political Affairs.--By 1400, however, +the Middle Age had nearly passed and a new life had appeared, a new +epoch was in progress, which is called the Renaissance, which means +"rebirth." In political affairs the spirit of nationality had arisen, +and feudalism was already declining. Men began to feel attachment to +country, to king, and to fellow-citizens; and the national states, +as we now know them, each with its naturally bounded territory, +its common language, and its approximately common race, were appearing. + +France and England were, of these states, the two most advanced +politically just previous to the fifteenth century. At this distant +time they were still engaged in a struggle which lasted quite a +century and is known as the Hundred Years' War. In the end, England +was forced to give up all her claims to territory on the continent, +and the power of France was correspondingly increased. In France +the monarchy (king and court) was becoming the supreme power in the +land. The feudal nobles lost what power they had, while the common +people gained nothing. In England, however, the foundations for a +representative government had been laid. The powers of legislation and +government were divided between the English king and a Parliament. The +Parliament was first called in 1265 and consisted of two parts,--the +Lords, representing the nobility; and the Commons, composed of persons +chosen by the common people. + +Germany was divided into a number of small principalities,--Saxony, +Bavaria, Franconia, Bohemia, Austria, the Rhine principalities, and +many others,--which united in a great assembly, or Diet, the head of +which was some prince, chosen to be emperor. + +Italy was also divided. In the north, in the valley of the Po, +or Lombardy, were the duchy of Milan and the Republic of Venice; +south, on the western coast, were the Tuscan states, including the +splendid city of Florence. Thence, stretching north and south across +the peninsula, were states of the church, whose ruler was the pope, +for until less than fifty years ago the pope was not only the head +of the church but also a temporal ruler. Embracing the southern part +of the peninsula was the principality of Naples. + +In the Spanish peninsula Christian states had arisen,--in the west, +Portugal, in the center and east, Castile, Aragon, and Leon, from all +of which the Mohammedans had been expelled. But they still held the +southern parts of Spain, including the beautiful plain of Andalusia +and Grenada. + +The Mohammedans, in the centuries of their life in Spain, had +developed an elegant and prosperous civilization. By means of +irrigation and skillful planting, they had converted southern Spain +into a garden. They were the most skillful agriculturists and breeders +of horses and sheep in Europe, and they carried to perfection many +fine arts, while knowledge and learning were nowhere further advanced +than here. Through contact with this remarkable people the Christian +Spaniards gained much. Unfortunately, however, the spirit of religious +intolerance was so strong, and the hatred engendered by the centuries +of religious war was so violent, that in the end the Spaniard became +imbued with so fierce a fanaticism that he has ever since appeared +unable properly to appreciate or justly to treat any who differed +from him in religious belief. + +The Conquests of the Mohammedans.--In the fifteenth century, +religious toleration was but little known in the world, and the +people of the great Mohammedan faith still threatened to overwhelm +Christian Europe. Since the first great conquests of Islam in the +eighth century had been repulsed from central Europe, that faith had +shown a wonderful power of winning its way. In the tenth century Asia +Minor was invaded by hordes of Seljuks, or Turks, who poured down from +central Asia in conquering bands. These tribes had overthrown the +Arab's power in Mesopotamia and Asia Minor only to become converts +to his faith. With freshened zeal they hurled themselves upon the +old Christian empire, which at Constantinople had survived the fall +of the rest of the Roman world. + +The Crusades.--The Seljuk Turks had conquered most of Asia Minor, +Syria, and the Holy Land. A great fear came over the people of Europe +that the city of Constantinople would be captured and they, too, be +overwhelmed by these new Mohammedan enemies. The passionate religious +zeal of the Middle Age also roused the princes and knights of Europe +to try to wrest from the infidel the Holy Land of Palestine, where +were the birthplace of Christianity and the site of the Sepulcher of +Christ. Palestine was recovered and Christian states were established +there, which lasted for over a hundred and eighty years. Then the Arab +power revived and, operating from Egypt, finally retook Jerusalem and +expelled the Christian from the Holy Land, to which he has never yet +returned as a conqueror. + +Effects of the Crusades.--These long, holy wars, or "Crusades," had a +profound effect upon Europe. The rude Christian warrior from the west +was astonished and delighted with the splendid and luxurious life which +he met at Constantinople and the Arabian East. Even though he was a +prince, his life at home was barren of comforts and beauty. Glass, +linen, rugs, tapestries, silk, cotton, spices, and sugar were some +of the things which the Franks and the Englishmen took home with +them from the Holy Land. Demand for these treasures of the East +became irresistible, and trade between western Europe and the East +grew rapidly. + +The Commercial Cities of Italy.--The cities of Italy developed this +commerce. They placed fleets upon the Mediterranean. They carried the +crusaders out and brought back the wares that Europe desired. In this +way these cities grew and became very wealthy. On the west coast, +where this trade began, were Amalfi, Pisa, Genoa, and Florence, and +on the east, at the head of the Adriatic, was Venice. The rivalry +between these cities of Italy was very fierce. They fought and +plundered one another, each striving to win a monopoly for itself of +this invaluable trade. + +Venice, finally, was victorious. Her location was very favorable. From +her docks the wares could be carried easily and by the shortest +routes up the Po River and thence into France or northward over the +Alps to the Danube. In Bavaria grew up in this trade the splendid +German cities of Augsburg and Nuremberg, which passed these goods on +to the cities of the Rhine, and so down this most beautiful river +to the coast. Here the towns of Flanders and of the Low Countries, +or Holland, received them and passed them on again to England and +eastward to the countries of the Baltic. + +Development of Modern Language.--Thus commerce and trade grew up +in Europe, and, with trade and city life, greater intelligence, +learning, and independence. Education became more common, and the +universities of Europe were thronged. Latin in the Middle Age had +been the only language that was written by the learned class. Now +the modern languages of Europe took their form and began to be used +for literary purposes. Italian was the first to be so used by the +great Dante, and in the same half-century the English poet Chaucer +sang in the homely English tongue, and soon in France, Germany, and +Spain national literatures appeared. With this went greater freedom +of expression. Authority began to have less weight. + +Men began to inquire into causes and effects, to doubt certain things, +to seek themselves for the truth, and so the Renaissance came. With +it came a greater love for the beautiful, a greater joy in life, a +fresh zest for the good of this world, a new passion for discovery, +a thirst for adventure, and, it must also be confessed a new laxity of +living and a new greed for gold. Christian Europe was about to burst +its narrow bounds. It could not be repressed nor confined to its old +limitations. It could never turn backward. Of all the great changes +which have come over life and thought, probably none are greater than +those which saw the transition from the mediaeval to the modern world. + +Trade with the East.--Articles of Trade.--Now we must go back for +a moment and pursue an old inquiry further. Whence came all these +beautiful and inviting wares that had produced new tastes and passions +in Europe? The Italian traders drew them from the Levant, but the +Levant had not produced them. Neither pepper, spices, sugarcane, costly +gems, nor rich silks, were produced on the shores of the Mediterranean. + +Only the rich tropical countries of the East were capable of growing +these rare plants, and up to that time of delivering to the delver +many precious stones. India, the rich Malaysian archipelago, the +kingdom of China,--these are the lands and islands which from time +immemorial have given up their treasures to be forwarded far and wide +to amaze and delight the native of colder and less productive lands. + +Routes of Trade to the Far East.--Three old sailing and caravan routes +connect the Mediterranean with the Far East. They are so old that we +can not guess when men first used them. They were old in the days of +Solomon and indeed very ancient when Alexander the Great conquered the +East. One of these routes passed through the Black Sea, and across +the Caspian Sea to Turkestan to those strange and romantic ancient +cities, Bokhara and Samarkand. Thence it ran northeasterly across Asia, +entering China from the north. Another crossed Syria and went down +through Mesopotamia to the Indian Ocean, A third began in Egypt and +went through the Red Sea, passing along the coast of Arabia to India. + +All of these had been in use for centuries, but by the year 1400 two +had been closed. A fresh immigration of Turks, the Ottomans, in the +fourteenth century came down upon the scourged country of the Euphrates +and Syria, and although these Turks also embraced Mohammedanism, +their hostility closed the first two routes and commerce over them +has never since been resumed. + +Venetian Monopoly of Trade.--Thus all interest centered upon the +southern route. By treaty with the sultan or ruler of Egypt, Venice +secured a monopoly of the products which came over this route. Goods +from the East now came in fleets up the Red Sea, went through the +hands of the sultan of Egypt, who collected a duty for them, and +then were passed on to the ships of the wealthy Venetian merchant +princes, who carried them throughout Europe. Although the object of +intense jealousy, it seemed impossible to wrest this monopoly from +Venice. Her fleet was the strongest on the Mediterranean, and her +rule extended along the Adriatic to the Grecian islands. All eager +minds were bent upon the trade with the East, but no way was known, +save that which now Venice had gained. + +Extent of Geographical Knowledge.--The Maps of this Period.--To +realize how the problem looked to the sailor of Genoa or the merchant +of Flanders at that time, we must understand how scanty and erroneous +was the geographical knowledge of even the fifteenth century. It +was believed that Jerusalem was the center of the world, a belief +founded upon a biblical passage. The maps of this and earlier dates +represent the earth in this way: In the center, Palestine, and beneath +it the Mediterranean Sea, the only body of water which was well known; +on the left side is Europe; on the right, Africa; and at the top, +Asia--the last two continents very indefinitely mapped. Around the +whole was supposed to flow an ocean, beyond the first few miles of +which it was perilous to proceed lest the ship be carried over the +edge of the earth or encounter other perils. + +Ideas about the Earth.--The Greek philosophers before the time of +Christ had discovered that the world is a globe, or ball, and had +even computed rudely its circumference. But in the Middle Ages this +knowledge had been disputed and contradicted by a geographer named +Cosmas, who held that the world was a vast plane, twice as long as +it was broad and surrounded by an ocean. This belief was generally +adopted by churchmen, who were the only scholars of the Middle Ages, +and came to be the universal belief of Christian Europe. + +The Renaissance revived the knowledge of the writings of the old Greek +geographers who had demonstrated the earth's shape to be round and had +roughly calculated its size; but these writings did not have sufficient +circulation in Europe to gain much acceptance among the Christian +cosmographers. The Arabs, however, after conquering Egypt, Syria and +northern Africa, translated into their own tongue the wisdom of the +Greeks and became the best informed and most scientific geographers +of the Middle Age, so that intercourse with the Arabs which began with +the Crusades helped to acquaint Europe somewhat with India and China. + +The Far East.--The Tartar Mongols.--Then in the thirteenth century +all northern Asia and China fell under the power of the Tartar +Mongols. Russia was overrun by them and western Europe threatened. At +the Danube, however, this tide of Asiatic conquest stopped, and then a +long period when Europe came into diplomatic and commercial relations +with these Mongols and through them learned something of China. + +Marco Polo Visits the Great Kaan.--Several Europeans visited the +court of the Great Kaan, or Mongol king, and of one of them, Marco +Polo, we must speak in particular. He was a Venetian, and when a +young man started in 1271 with his father and uncle on a visit to +the Great Kaan. They passed from Italy to Syria, across to Bagdad, +and so up to Turkestan, where they saw the wonderful cities of this +strange oasis, thence across the Pamirs and the Desert of Gobi to +Lake Baikal, where the Kaan had his court. Here in the service of +this prince Marco Polo spent over seventeen years. So valuable indeed +were his services that the Kaan would not permit him to return. Year +after year he remained in the East. He traversed most of China, and +was for a time "taotai," or magistrate, of the city of Yang Chan near +the Yangtze River. He saw the amazing wonders of the East. He heard of +"Zipangu," or Japan. He probably heard of the Philippines. + +Finally the opportunity came for the three Venetians to return. The +Great Kaan had a relative who was a ruler of Persia, and ambassadors +came from this ruler to secure a Mongol princess for him to marry. The +dangers and hardships of the travel overland were considered too +difficult for the delicate princess, and it was decided to send her +by water. Marco Polo and his father and uncle were commissioned to +accompany the expedition to Persia. + +History of Marco Polo's Travels.--They sailed from the port of Chin +Cheu, probably near Amoy, [2] in the year 1292. They skirted the +coasts of Cambodia and Siam and reached the eastern coasts of Sumatra, +where they waited five months for the changing of the monsoon. Of +the Malay people of Sumatra, as well as of these islands, their +animals and productions, Marco Polo has left us most interesting and +quite accurate accounts. The Malays on Sumatra were beginning to be +converted to Mohammedanism, for Marco Polo says that many of them were +"Saracens." He gained a good knowledge of the rich and mysterious +Indian Isles, where the spices and flavorings grew. It was two years +before the party, having crossed the Indian Ocean, reached Persia +and the court of the Persian king. When they arrived they found that +while they were making this long voyage the Persian king had died; +but they married the Mongol princess to his son, the young prince, +who had succeeded him, and that did just as well. + +From Persia the Venetians crossed to Syria and thence sailed to +Italy, and at last reached home after an absence of twenty-six +years. But Marco Polo's adventures did not end with his return to +Venice. In a fierce sea fight between the Venetians and Genoese, +he was made a prisoner and confined in Genoa. Here a fellow captive +wrote down from Marco's own words the story of his eastern adventures, +and this book we have to-day. It is a record of adventure, travel, +and description, so wonderful that for years it was doubted and +its accuracy disbelieved. But since, in our own time, men have been +able to traverse again the routes over which Marco Polo passed, fact +after fact has been established, quite as he truthfully stated them +centuries ago. To have been the first European to make this mighty +circuit of travel is certainly a strong title to enduring fame. + +Countries of the Far East.--India.--Let us now briefly look at the +countries of the Far East, which by the year 1400 had come to exercise +over the mind of the European so irresistible a fascination. First +of all, India, as we have seen, had for centuries been the principal +source of the western commerce. But long before the date we are +considering, the scepter of India had fallen from the hand of the +Hindu. From the seventh century, India was a prey to Mohammedan +conquerors, who entered from the northwest into the valley of the +Indus. At first these were Saracens or Arabs; later they were the +same Mongol converts to Mohammedanism, whose attacks upon Europe we +have already noticed. + +In 1398 came the furious and bloody warrior, the greatest of all +Mongols,--Timour, or Tamerlane. He founded, with capital at Delhi, +the empire of the Great Mogul, whose rule over India was only broken +by the white man. Eastward across the Ganges and in the Dekkan, +or southern part of India, were states ruled over by Indian princes. + +China.--We have seen how, at the time of Marco Polo, China also was +ruled by the Tartar Mongols. The Chinese have ever been subject to +attack from the wandering horse-riding tribes of Siberia. Two hundred +years before Christ one of the Chinese kings built the Great Wall that +stretches across the northern frontier for one thousand three hundred +miles, for a defense against northern foes. Through much of her history +the Chinese have been ruled by aliens, as they are to-day. About 1368, +however, the Chinese overthrew the Mongol rulers and established the +Ming dynasty, the last Chinese house of emperors, who ruled China until +1644, when the Manchus, the present rulers, conquered the country. + +China was great and prosperous under the Mings. Commerce flourished +and the fleets of Chinese junks sailed to India, the Malay Islands, +and to the Philippines for trade. The Grand Canal, which connects +Peking with the Yangtze River basin and Hangchau, was completed. It +was an age of fine productions of literature. + +The Chinese seem to have been much less exclusive then than they +are at the present time; much less a peculiar, isolated people than +now. They did not then shave their heads nor wear a queue. These +customs, as well as that hostility to foreign intercourse which they +have to-day, has been forced upon China by the Manchus. China appeared +at that time ready to assume a position of enormous influence among +the peoples of the earth,--a position for which she was well fitted +by the great industry of all classes and the high intellectual power +of her learned men. + +Japan.--Compared with China or India, or even some minor states, +the development of Japan at this time was very backward. Her people +were divided and there was constant civil war. The Japanese borrowed +their civilization from the Chinese. From them they learned writing +and literature, and the Buddhist religion, which was introduced +about 550 A.D. But in temperament they are a very different people, +being spirited, warlike, and, until recent years, despising trading +and commerce. + +Since the beginning of her history, Japan has been an empire. The +ruler, the Mikado, is believed to be of heavenly descent; but in the +centuries we are discussing the government was controlled by powerful +nobles, known as the Shogun, who kept the emperors in retirement in +the palaces of Kyoto, and themselves directed the State. The greatest +of these shoguns was Iyeyasu, who ruled Japan about 1600, soon after +Manila was founded. They developed in Japan a species of feudalism, +the great lords, or "daimios," owning allegiance to the shoguns, and +about the daimios, as feudal retainers, bodies of samurai, who formed +a partly noble class of their own. The samurai carried arms, fought +at their lords' command, were students and literati, and among them +developed that proud, loyal, and elevated code of morality known as +"Bushido," which has done so much for the Japanese people. It is this +samurai class who in modern times have effected the immense revolution +in the condition and power of Japan. + +The Malay Archipelago.--If now we look at the Malay Islands, we find, +as we have already seen, that changes had been effected there. Hinduism +had first elevated and civilized at least a portion of the race, and +Mohammedanism and the daring seamanship of the Malay had united these +islands under a common language and religion. There was, however, +no political union. The Malay peninsula was divided. Java formed a +central Malay power. Eastward among the beautiful Celebes and Moluccas, +the true Spice Islands, were a multitude of small native rulers, rajas +or datos, who surrounded themselves with retainers, kept rude courts, +and gathered wealthy tributes of cinnamon, pepper, and cloves. The +sultans of Ternate, Tidor, and Amboina were especially powerful, +and the islands they ruled the most rich and productive. + +Between all these islands there was a busy commerce. The Malay is +an intrepid sailor, and an eager trader. Fleets of praos, laden with +goods, passed with the changing monsoons from part to part, risking the +perils of piracy, which have always troubled this archipelago. Borneo, +while the largest of all these islands, was the least developed, and +down to the present day has been hardly explored. The Philippines +were also outside of most of this busy intercourse and had at that +date few products to offer for trade. Their only connection with the +rest of the Malay race was through the Mohammedan Malays of Jolo +and Borneo. The fame of the Spice Islands had long filled Europe, +but the existence of the Philippines was unknown. + +Summary.--We have now reviewed the condition of Europe and of +farther Asia as they were before the period of modern discovery +and colonization opened. The East had reached a condition of quiet +stability. Mohammedanism, though still spreading, did not promise to +effect great social changes. The institutions of the East had become +fixed in custom and her peoples neither made changes nor desired +them. On the other hand western Europe had become aroused to an excess +of ambition. New ideas, new discoveries and inventions were moving +the nations to activity and change. That era of modern discovery and +progress, of which we cannot yet perceive the end, had begun. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +THE GREAT GEOGRAPHICAL DISCOVERIES. + + +An Eastern Passage to India.--The Portuguese.--We have seen in the +last chapter how Venice held a monopoly of the only trading-route +with the Far East. Some new way of reaching India must be sought, +that would permit the traders of other Christian powers to reach the +marts of the Orient without passing through Mohammedan lands. This +surpassing achievement was accomplished by the Portuguese. So low at +the present day has the power of Portugal fallen that few realize the +daring and courage once displayed by her seamen and soldiers and the +enormous colonial empire that she established. + +Portugal freed her territory of the Mohammedan Moors nearly a century +earlier than Spain; and the vigor and intelligence of a great king, +John I., brought Portugal, about the year 1400, to an important place +among the states of Europe. This king captured from the Moors the city +of Ceuta, in Morocco; and this was the beginning of modern European +colonial possessions, and the first bit of land outside of Europe to +be held by a European power since the times of the Crusades. King +John's youngest son was Prince Henry, famous in history under the +title of "the Navigator." This young prince, with something of the +same adventurous spirit that filled the Crusaders, was ardent to +extend the power of his father's kingdom and to widen the sway of the +religion which he devotedly professed. The power of the Mohammedans in +the Mediterranean was too great for him hopefully to oppose and so he +planned the conquest of the west coast of Africa, and its conversion +to Christianity. With these ends in view, he established at Point +Sagres, on the southwestern coast of Portugal, a naval academy and +observatory. Here he brought together skilled navigators, charts, +and geographies, and all scientific knowledge that would assist in +his undertaking. [3] + +He began to construct ships larger and better than any in use. To +us they would doubtless seem very clumsy and small, but this was the +beginning of ocean ship-building. The compass and the astrolabe, or +sextant, the little instrument with which, by calculating the height +of the sun above the horizon, we can tell distance from the equator, +were just coming into use. These, as well as every other practicable +device for navigation known at that time, were supplied to these ships. + +Exploration of the African Coast.--Thus equipped and ably manned, the +little fleets began the exploration of the African coast, cautiously +feeling their way southward and ever returning with reports of progress +made. Year after year this work went on. In 1419 the Madeira Islands +were rediscovered and colonized by Portuguese settlers. The growing of +sugarcane was begun, and vines were brought from Burgundy and planted +there. The wine of the Madeiras has been famous to this day. Then +were discovered the Canaries and in 1444 the Azores. The southward +exploration of the coast of the mainland steadily continued until +in 1445 the Portuguese reached the mouth of the Senegal River. Up to +this point the African shore had not yielded much of interest to the +Portuguese explorer or trader. Below Morocco the great Sahara Desert +reaches to the sea and renders barren the coast for hundreds of miles. + +South of the mouth of the Senegal and comprising the whole Guinea +coast, Africa is tropical, well watered, and populous. This is the home +of the true African Negro. Here, for almost the first time, since the +beginning of the Middle Ages, Christian Europe came in contact with +a race of ruder culture and different color than its own. This coast +was found to be worth exploiting; for it yielded, besides various +desirable resinous gums, three articles which have distinguished the +exploitation of Africa, namely, gold, ivory, and slaves. + +Beginning of Negro Slavery in Europe.--At this point begins the +horrible and revolting story of European Negro slavery. The ancient +world had practiced this ownership of human chattels, and the Roman +Empire had declined under a burden of half the population sunk +in bondage. To the enormous detriment and suffering of mankind, +Mohammed had tolerated the institution, and slavery is permitted +by the Koran. But it is the glory of the mediaeval church that it +abolished human slavery from Christian Europe. However dreary and +unjust feudalism may have been, it knew nothing of that institution +which degrades men and women to the level of cattle and remorselessly +sells the husband from his family, the mother from her child. + +Slaves in Portugal.--The arrival of the Portuguese upon the coast of +Guinea now revived not the bondage of one white man to another, but +that of the black to the white. The first slaves carried to Portugal +were regarded simply as objects of peculiar interest, captives to +represent to the court the population of those shores which had been +added to the Portuguese dominion. But southern Portugal, from which +the Moors had been expelled, had suffered from a lack of laborers, +and it was found profitable to introduce Negroes to work these fields. + +Arguments to Justify Slavery.--So arose the institution of Negro +slavery, which a century later upon the shores of the New World was +to develop into so tremendous and terrible a thing. Curiously enough, +religion was evoked to justify this enslavement of the Africans. The +Church taught that these people, being heathen, were fortunate to +be captured by Christians, that they might thereby be brought to +baptism and conversion; for it is better for the body to perish than +for the soul to be cast into hell. At a later age, when the falsity +of this teaching had been realized, men still sought to justify the +institution by arguing that the Almighty had created the African of +a lower state especially that he might serve the superior race. + +The coast of Guinea continued to be the resort of slavers down to the +middle of the last century, and such scenes of cruelty, wickedness, +and debauchery have occurred along its shores as can scarcely be +paralleled in brutality in the history of any people. + +The Portuguese can hardly be said to have colonized the coast in the +sense of raising up there a Portuguese population. As he approached +the equator the white man found that, in spite of his superior +strength, he could not permanently people the tropics. Diseases new +to his experience attacked him. His energy declined. If he brought +his family with him, his children were few or feeble and shortly his +race had died out. + +The settlements of the Portuguese were largely for the purposes of +trade. At Sierra Leone, Kamerun, or Loango, they built forts and +established garrisons, mounting pieces of artillery that gave them +advantage over the attacks of the natives, and erecting warehouses +and the loathsome "barracoon," where the slaves were confined to +await shipment. Such decadent little settlements still linger along +the African coast, although the slave-trade happily has ended. + +The Successful Voyage of Vasco da Gama.--Throughout the century Prince +Henry's policy of exploration was continued. Slowly the middle coast +of Africa became known. At last in 1486, Bartholomew Diaz rounded +the extremity of the continent. He named it the Cape of Storms; but +the Portuguese king, with more prophetic sight, renamed it the Cape +of Good Hope. It was ten years, however, before the Portuguese could +send another expedition. Then Vasco da Gama rounded the cape again, +followed up the eastern coast until the Arab trading-stations were +reached. Then he struck across the sea, landed at the Malabar coast +of India, and in 1498 arrived at Calcutta. The end dreamed of by +all of Europe had been achieved. A sea-route to the Far East had +been discovered. + +Results of Da Gama's Voyage.--The importance of this performance +was instantly recognized in Europe. Venice was ruined. "It was a +terrible day," said a contemporary writer, "when the word reached +Venice. Bells were rung, men wept in the streets, and even the bravest +were silent." The Arabs and the native rulers made a desperate effort +to expel the Portuguese from the Indian Ocean, but their opponents were +too powerful. In the course of twenty years Portugal had founded an +empire that had its forts and trading-marts from the coast of Arabia +to Malaysia. Zanzibar, Aden, Oman, Goa, Calicut, and Madras were all +Portuguese stations, fortified and secured. In the Malay peninsula was +founded the colony of Malacca. It retained its importance and power +until in the last century, when it dwindled before the competition +of Singapore. + +The work of building up this great domain was largely that of one man, +the intrepid Albuquerque. Think what his task was! He was thousands of +miles from home and supplies, he had only such forces and munitions as +he could bring with him in his little ships, and opposed to him were +millions of inhabitants and a multitude of Mohammedan princes. Yet this +great captain built up an Indian empire. Portugal at one bound became +the greatest trading and colonizing power in the world. Her sources +of wealth appeared fabulous, and, like Venice, she made every effort +to secure her monopoly. The fleets of other nations were warned that +they could not make use of the Cape of Good Hope route, on penalty +of being captured or destroyed. + +Reaching India by Sailing West.--The Earth as a Sphere.--Meanwhile, +just as Portugal was carrying to completion her project of reaching +India by sailing east, Europe was electrified by the supposed +successful attempt of reaching India by sailing directly west, +across the Atlantic. This was the plan daringly attempted in 1492 by +Christopher Columbus. Columbus was an Italian sailor and cosmographer +of Genoa. The idea of sailing west to India did not originate with +him, but his is the immortal glory of having persistently sought the +means and put the idea into execution. + +The Portuguese discoveries along the African coast gradually +revealed the extension of this continent and the presence of people +beyond the equator, and the possibility of passing safely through +the tropics. This knowledge was a great stimulus to the peoples +of Europe. The geographical theory of the Greeks, that the world +is round, was revived. The geographers, however, in making their +calculations of the earth's circumference, had fallen into an error +of some thousands of miles; that is, instead of finding that it is +fully twelve thousand miles from Europe around to the East Indies, +they had supposed it about four thousand, or even less. Marco Polo +too had exaggerated the distance he had traveled and from his accounts +men had been led to believe that China, Japan, and the Spice Islands +lie much further to the east than they actually do. + +By sailing west across one wide ocean, with no intervening lands, it +was thought that one could arrive at the island-world off the continent +of Asia. This was the theory that was revived in Italy and which clung +in men's minds for years and years, even after America was discovered. + +An Italian, named Toscanelli, drew a map showing how this voyage could +be made, and sent Columbus a copy. By sailing first to the Azores, a +considerable portion of the journey would be passed, with a convenient +resting-stage. Then about thirty-five days' favorable sailing would +bring one to the islands of "Cipango," or Japan, which Marco Polo +had said lay off the continent of Asia. From here the passage could +readily be pursued to Cathay and India. + +The Voyage of Christopher Columbus.--The romantic and inspiring story +of Columbus is told in many books,--his poverty, his genius, his +long and discouraging pursuit of the means to carry out his plan. He +first applied to Portugal; but, as we have seen, this country had been +pursuing another plan steadily for a century, and, now that success +appeared almost at hand, naturally the Portuguese king would not turn +aside to favor Columbus's plan. + +For years Columbus labored to interest the Spanish court. A great event +had happened in Spanish history. Ferdinand, king of Aragon, had wedded +Isabella of Castile, and this marriage united these two kingdoms into +the modern country of Spain. Soon the smaller states except Portugal +were added, and the war for the expulsion of the Moors was prosecuted +with new vigor. In 1492, Grenada, the last splendid stronghold of +the Mohammedans in the peninsula, surrendered, and in the same year +Isabella furnished Columbus with the ships for his voyage of discovery. + +Columbus sailed from Palos, August 3, 1492, reached the Canaries +August 24, and sailed westward on September 6. Day after day, pushed +by the strong winds, called the "trades," they went forward. Many +doubts and fears beset the crews, but Columbus was stout-hearted. At +the end of thirty-four days from the Canaries, on October 12, they +sighted land. It was one of the groups of beautiful islands lying +between the two continents of America. But Columbus thought that he +had reached the East Indies that really lay many thousands of miles +farther west. Columbus sailed among the islands of the archipelago, +discovered Cuba and Hispaniola (Haiti), and then returned to convulse +Europe with excitement over the new-found way to the East. He had +not found the rich Spice Islands, the peninsula of India, Cathay or +Japan, but every one believed that these must be close to the islands +on which Columbus had landed. + +The tall, straight-haired, copper-colored natives, whom Columbus met on +the islands, he naturally called "Indians"; and this name they still +bear. Afterwards the islands were called the "West Indies." Columbus +made three more voyages for Spain. On the fourth, in 1498, he touched +on the coast of South America. Here he discovered the great Orinoco +River. Because of its large size, he must have realized that a large +body of land opposed the passage to the Orient. He died in 1506, +disappointed at his failure to find India, but never knowing what he +had found, nor that the history of a new hemisphere had begun with him. + +The Voyage of the Cabots.--In the same year that Columbus discovered +the Orinoco, Sebastian Cabot, of Italian parentage, like Columbus, +secured ships from the king of England, hoping to reach China and +Japan by sailing west on a northern route. What he did discover was +a rugged and uninviting coast, with stormy headlands, cold climate, +and gloomy forests of pine reaching down to the sandy shores. For nine +hundred miles he sailed southward, but everywhere this unprofitable +coast closed the passage to China. It was the coast of Labrador and +the United States. Yet for years and years it was not known that a +continent three thousand miles wide and the greatest of all oceans +lay between Cathay and the shore visited by Cabot's ships. This land +was thought to be a long peninsula, an island, or series of islands, +belonging to Asia. No one supposed or could suppose that there was +a continent here. + +Naming the New World.--But in a few years Europe did realize that a +new continent had been discovered in South America. If you will look +at your maps, you will see that South America lies far to the eastward +of North America and in Brazil approaches very close to Africa. This +Brazilian coast was visited by a Portuguese fleet on the African route +in 1499, and two years later an Italian fleet traversed the coast from +the Orinoco to the harbor of Rio Janeiro. Their voyage was a veritable +revelation. They entered the mighty current of the Amazon, the greatest +river of the earth. They saw the wondrous tropical forests, full of +monkeys, great snakes, and stranger animals. They dealt and fought +with the wild and ferocious inhabitants, whose ways startled and +appalled the European. All that they saw filled them with greatest +wonder. This evidently was not Asia, nor was it the Indies. Here, +in fact, was a new continent, a veritable "Mundus Novus." + +The pilot of this expedition was an Italian, named Amerigo Vespucci. On +the return this man wrote a very interesting letter or little pamphlet, +describing this new world, which was widely read, and brought the +writer fame. A few years later a German cosmographer, in preparing +a new edition of Ptolemy's geography, proposed to give to this new +continent the name of the man who had made known its wonders in Europe, +So it was called "America." Long after, when the northern shores were +also proved to be those of a continent, this great land was named +"North America." No injustice was intended to Columbus when America +was so named. It was not then supposed that Columbus had discovered +a continent. The people then believed that Columbus had found a new +route to India and had discovered some new islands that lay off the +coast of Asia. + +Spain Takes Possession of the New Lands.--Of these newly found islands +and whatever wealth they might be found to contain, Spain claimed +the possession by right of discovery. And of the European nations, +it was Spain which first began the exploration and colonization of +America. Spain was now free from her long Mohammedan wars, and the +nation was being united under Ferdinand and Isabella. The Spaniards +were brave, adventurous, and too proud to engage in commerce or +agriculture, but ready enough to risk life and treasure in quest of +riches abroad. The Spaniards were devotedly religious, and the Church +encouraged conquest, that missionary work might be extended. So Spain +began her career that was soon to make her the foremost power of Europe +and one of the greatest colonial empires the world has seen. It is +amazing what the Spaniards accomplished in the fifty years following +Columbus's first voyage. + +Hispaniola was made the center from which the Spaniards extended +their explorations to the continents of both North and South +America. On these islands of the West Indies they found a great tribe +of Indians,--the Caribs. They were fierce and cruel. The Spaniards +waged a warfare of extermination against them, killing many, and +enslaving others for work in the mines. The Indian proved unable to +exist as a slave. And his sufferings drew the attention of a Spanish +priest, Las Casas, who by vigorous efforts at the court succeeded in +having Indian slavery abolished and African slavery introduced to +take its place. This remedy was in the end worse than the disease, +for it gave an immense impetus to the African slave-trade and peopled +America with a race of Africans in bondage. + +Other Spanish Explorations and Discoveries.--Meanwhile, the Spanish +soldier, with incredible energy, courage, and daring, pushed his +conquests. In 1513, Florida was discovered, and in the same year, +Balboa crossed the narrow isthmus of Panama and saw the Pacific +Ocean. Contrary to what is often supposed, he did not dream of its vast +extent, but supposed it to be a narrow body of water lying between +Panama, and the Asian islands. He named it the "South Sea," a name +that survived after its true character was revealed by Magellan. Then +followed the two most romantic and surprising conquests of colonial +history,--that of Mexico by Cortes in 1521, and of Peru by Pizarro +in 1533-34. These great countries were inhabited by Indians, the +most advanced and cultured on the American continents. And here the +Spaniards found enormous treasures of gold and silver. Then, the +discovery of the mines of Bogota opened the greatest source of the +precious metal that Europe had ever known. Spaniards flocked to the +New World, and in New Spain, as Mexico was called, was established a +great vice-royalty. Year after year enormous wealth was poured into +Spain from these American possessions. + +Emperor Charles V.--Meanwhile great political power had been added +to Spain in Europe. In 1520 the throne of Spain fell to a young man, +Charles, the grandson of Ferdinand and Isabella. His mother was Juana, +the Spanish princess, and his father was Philip the Handsome, of +Burgundy. Philip the Handsome was the son of Maximilian, the Archduke +of Austria. Now it curiously happened that the thrones of each of these +three countries was left without other heirs than Charles, and in 1520 +he was King of Spain, Archduke of Austria, and Duke of Burgundy and +the Low Countries, including the rich commercial cities of Holland +and Belgium. In addition to all this, the German princes elected him +German emperor, and although he was King Charles the First of Spain, +he is better known in history as Emperor Charles the Fifth. [4] + +He was then an untried boy of twenty years, and no one expected to +find in him a man of resolute energy, cold persistence, and great +executive ability. But so it proved, and this was the man that +made of Spain the greatest power of the time. He was in constant +warfare. He fought four wars with King Francis I. of France, five +wars with the Turks, both in the Danube valley and in Africa, and +an unending succession of contests with the Protestant princes of +Germany. For Charles, besides many other important changes, saw the +rise of Protestantism, and the revolt of Germany, Switzerland, and +England from Catholicism. The first event in his emperorship was the +assembling of the famous German Diet at Worms, where was tried and +condemned the real founder of the Protestant religion, Martin Luther. + +The Voyage of Hernando Magellan.--In the mean time a way had at last +been found to reach the Orient from Europe by sailing west. This +discovery, the greatest voyage ever made by man, was accomplished, in +1521, by the fleet of Hernando Magellan. Magellan was a Portuguese, who +had been in the East with Albuquerque. He had fought with the Malays +in Malacca, and had helped to establish the Portuguese power in India. + +On his return to Portugal, the injustice of the court drove him from +his native country, and he entered the service of Spain. Charles the +Fifth commissioned him to attempt a voyage of discovery down the +coast of South America, with the hope of finding a passage to the +East. This was Magellan's great hope and faith,--that south of the +new continent of America must lie a passage westward, by which ships +could sail to China. As long as Portugal was able to keep closed the +African route to all other ships than her own, the discovery of some +other way was imperative. + +On the 20th of September, 1519, Magellan's fleet of five ships set +sail from Seville, which was the great Spanish shipping-port for the +dispatch of the colonial fleets. On December 13 they reached the coast +of Brazil and then coasted southward. They traded with the natives, +and at the mouth of the Rio de la Plata stayed some days to fish. + +The weather grew rapidly colder and more stormy as they went farther +south, and Magellan decided to stop and winter in the Bay of San +Julian. Here the cold of the winter, the storms, and the lack of +food caused a conspiracy among his captains to mutiny and return to +Spain. Magellan acted with swift and terrible energy. He went himself +on board one of the mutinous vessels, killed the chief conspirator with +his own hand, executed another, and then "marooned," or left to their +fate on the shore, a friar and one other, who were leaders in the plot. + +The Straits of Magellan.--The fleet sailed southward again in August +but it was not until November 1, 1520, that Magellan entered the +long and stormy straits that bear his name and which connect the +Atlantic and Pacific oceans. South of them were great bleak islands, +cold and desolate. They were inhabited by Indians, who are probably +the lowest and most wretched savages on the earth. They live on fish +and mussels. As they go at all times naked, they carry with them in +their boats brands and coals of fire. Seeing the numerous lights on +the shore, Magellan named these islands Tierra del Fuego (the Land +of Fire). For twenty days the ships struggled with the contrary and +shifting winds that prevail in this channel, during which time one +ship deserted and returned to Spain. Then the remaining four ships +passed out onto the boundless waters of the Pacific. + +Westward on the Pacific Ocean.--But we must not make the mistake +of supposing that Magellan and his followers imagined that a great +ocean confronted them. They expected that simply sailing northward to +the latitude of the Spice Islands would bring them to these desired +places. This they did, and then turned westward, expecting each day +to find the Indies; but no land appeared. The days lengthened into +weeks, the weeks into months, and still they went forward, carried +by the trade winds over a sea so smooth and free from tempests that +Magellan named it the "Pacific." + +But they suffered horribly from lack of food, even eating in their +starvation the leather slings on the masts. It was a terrible trial +of their courage. Twenty of their number died. The South Pacific +is studded with islands, but curiously their route lay just too far +north to behold them. From November 28, when they emerged from the +Straits of Magellan, until March 7, when they reached the Ladrones, +they encountered only two islands, and these were small uninhabited +rocks, without water or food, which in their bitter disappointment +they named las Desventuradas (the Unfortunate Islands). + +The Ladrone Islands.--Their relief must have been inexpressible when, +on coming up to land on March the 7th, they found inhabitants and +food, yams, cocoanuts, and rice. At these islands the Spaniards +first saw the prao, with its light outrigger, and pointed sail. So +numerous were these craft that they named the group las Islas de las +Velas (the Islands of Sails); but the loss of a ship's boat and other +annoying thefts led the sailors to designate the islands Los Ladrones +(the Thieves), a name which they still retain. + +The Philippine Islands.--Samar.--Leaving the Ladrones Magellan +sailed on westward looking for the Moluccas, and the first land +that he sighted was the eastern coast of Samar. Pigafetta says: +"Saturday, the 16th of March, we sighted an island which has very +lofty mountains. Soon after we learned that it was Zamal, distant +three hundred leagues from the islands of the Ladrones." [5] + +Homonhon.--On the following day the sea-worn expedition, landed on +a little uninhabited island south of Samar which Pigafetta called +Humunu, and which is still known as Homonhon or Jomonjol. + +It was while staying at this little island that the Spaniards first +saw the people of the Philippines. A prao which contained nine men +approached their ship. They saw other boats fishing near and learned +that all of these people came from the island of Suluan, which lies +off to the eastward from Jomonjol about twenty kilometres. In their +life and appearance these fishing people were much like the present +Samal laut of southern Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago. + +Limasaua.--Pigafetta says that they stayed on the island of Jomonjol +eight days but had great difficulty in securing food. The natives +brought them a few cocoanuts and oranges, palm wine, and a chicken +or two, but this was all that could be spared, so, on the 25th, +the Spaniards sailed again, and near the south end of Leyte landed +on the little island of Limasaua. Here there was a village, where +they met two chieftains, whom Pigafetta calls "kings," and whose +names were Raja Calambu and Raja Ciagu. These two chieftains were +visiting Limasaua and had their residences one at Butuan and one +at Cagayan on the island of Mindanao. Some histories have stated +that the Spaniards accompanied one of these chieftains to Butuan, +but this does not appear to have been the case. + +On the island of Limasaua the natives had dogs, cats, hogs, goats, +and fowls. They were cultivating rice, maize, breadfruit, and had +also cocoanuts, oranges, bananas, citron, and ginger. Pigafetta tells +how he visited one of the chieftains at his home on the shore. The +house was built as Filipino houses are today, raised on posts and +thatched. Pigafetta thought it looked "like a haystack." + +It had been the day of San Lazarus when the Spaniards first reached +these islands, so that Magellan gave to the group the name of the +Archipelago of Saint Lazarus, the name under which the Philippines were +frequently described in the early writings, although another title, +Islas del Poniente or Islands of the West, was more common up to the +time when the title Filipinas became fixed. + +Cebu.--Magellan's people were now getting desperately in need of +food, and the population on Limasaua had very inadequate supplies; +consequently the natives directed him to the island of Cebu, and +provided him with guides. + +Leaving Limasaua the fleet sailed for Cebu, passing several large +islands, among them Bohol, and reaching Cebu harbor on Sunday, the +7th of April. A junk from Siam was anchored at Cebu when Magellan's +ships arrived there; and this, together with the knowledge that the +Filipinos showed of the surrounding countries, including China on +the one side and the Moluccas on the other, is additional evidence +of the extensive trade relations at the time of the discovery. + +Cebu seems to have been a large town and it is reported that more +than two thousand warriors with their lances appeared to resist the +landing of the Spaniards, but assurances of friendliness finally won +the Filipinos, and Magellan formed a compact with the dato of Cebu, +whose name was Hamalbar. + +The Blood Compact.--The dato invited Magellan to seal this compact in +accordance with a curious custom of the Filipinos. Each chief wounded +himself in the breast and from the wound each sucked and drank the +other's blood. It is not certain whether Magellan participated in this +"blood compact," as it has been called; but later it was observed many +times in the Spanish settlement of the islands, especially by Legaspi. + +The natives were much struck by the service of the mass, which the +Spaniards celebrated on their landing, and after some encouragement +desired to be admitted to the Spaniards' religion. More than eight +hundred were baptized, including Hamalbar. The Spaniards established +a kind of "factory" or trading-post on Cebu, and for some time a +profitable trade was engaged in. The Filipinos well understood trading, +had scales, weights, and measures, and were fair dealers. + +Death of Magellan.--And now follows the great tragedy of +the expedition. The dato of Cebu, or the "Christian king," as +Pigafetta called their new ally, was at war with the islanders of +Mactan. Magellan, eager to assist one who had adopted the Christian +faith, landed on Mactan with fifty men and in the battle that ensued +was killed by an arrow through the leg and spear-thrust through the +breast. So died the one who was unquestionably the greatest explorer +and most daring adventurer of all time. "Thus," says Pigafetta, +"perished our guide, our light, and our support." It was the crowning +disaster of the expedition. + +The Fleet Visits Other Islands.--After Magellan's death, the natives of +Cebu rose and killed the newly elected leader, Serrano, and the fleet +in fear lifted its anchors and sailed southward from the Bisayas. They +had lost thirty-five men and their numbers were reduced to one hundred +and fifteen. One of the ships was burned, there being too few men +surviving to handle three vessels. After touching at western Mindanao, +they sailed westward, and saw the small group of Cagayan Sulu. The few +inhabitants they learned were Moros, exiled from Borneo. They landed +on Paragua, called Puluan (hence Palawan), where they observed the +sport of cock-fighting, indulged in by the natives. + +From here, still searching for the Moluccas, they were guided to +Borneo, the present city of Brunei. Here was the powerful Mohammedan +colony, whose adventurers were already in communication with Luzon and +had established a colony on the site of Manila. The city was divided +into two sections, that of the Mohammedan Malays, the conquerors, and +that of the Dyaks, the primitive population of the island. Pigafetta +exclaims over the riches and power of this Mohammedan city. It +contained twenty-five thousand families, the houses built for most +part on piles over the water. The king's house was of stone, and +beside it was a great brick fort, with over sixty brass and iron +cannon. Here the Spaniards saw elephants and camels, and there was +a rich trade in ginger, camphor, gums, and in pearls from Sulu. + +Hostilities cut short their stay here and they sailed eastward +along the north coast of Borneo through the Sulu Archipelago, +where their cupidity was excited by the pearl fisheries, and on +to Maguindanao. Here they took some prisoners, who piloted them +south to the Moluccas, and finally, on November 8, they anchored +at Tidor. These Molucca islands, at this time, were at the height +of the Malayan power. The ruler, or raja of Tidor was Almanzar, +of Ternate Corala; the "king" of Gilolo was Yusef. With all these +rulers the Spaniards exchanged presents, and the rajas are said by +the Spaniards to have sworn perpetual amnesty to the Spaniards and +acknowledged themselves vassals of the king. In exchange for cloths, +the Spaniards laid in a rich cargo of cloves, sandalwood, ginger, +cinnamon, and gold. They established here a trading-post and hoped +to hold these islands against the Portuguese. + +The Return to Spain.--It was decided to send one ship, the "Victoria," +to Spain by way of the Portuguese route and the Cape of Good Hope, +while the other would return to America. Accordingly the "Victoria," +with a little crew of sixty men, thirteen of them natives, under +the command of Juan Sebastian del Cano, set sail. The passage was +unknown to the Spaniards and full of perils. They sailed to Timor +and thence out into the Indian Ocean. They rounded Africa, sailing +as far south as 42 degrees. Then they went northward, in constant +peril of capture by some Portuguese fleet, encountering storms and +with scarcity of food. Their distress must have been extreme, for on +this final passage twenty-one of their small number died. + +At Cape Verdi they entered the Portuguese port for supplies, +trusting that at so northern a point their real voyage would +not be suspected. But some one of the party, who went ashore for +food, in an hour of intoxication boasted of the wonderful journey +they had performed and showed some of the products of the Spice +Islands. Immediately the Portuguese governor gave orders for the +seizure of the Spanish vessel and El Cano, learning of his danger, left +his men, who had gone on shore, raised sail, and put out for Spain. + +On the 6th of September, 1522, they arrived at San Lucar, at the mouth +of the Guadalquivir River, on which is situated Seville, one ship +out of the five, and eighteen men out of the company of 234, who had +set sail almost three full years before. Spain welcomed her worn and +tired seamen with splendid acclaim. To El Cano was given a title of +nobility and the famous coat-of-arms, showing the sprays of clove, +cinnamon, and nutmeg, and the effigy of the globe with the motto, +the proudest and worthiest ever displayed on any adventurer's shield, +"Hic primus circumdedisti me." + +The First Circumnavigation of the Earth.--Thus with enormous suffering +and loss of life was accomplished the first circumnavigation of the +earth. It proved that Asia could be reached, although by a long and +circuitous route, by sailing westward from Europe. It made known to +Europe that the greatest of all oceans lies between the New World and +Asia, and it showed that the earth is incomparably larger than had been +believed and supposed. It was the greatest voyage of discovery that has +ever been accomplished, and greater than can ever be performed again. + +New Lands Divided between Spain and Portugal.--By this discovery of the +Philippines and a new way to the Spice Islands, Spain became engaged +in a long dispute with Portugal. At the beginning of the modern age, +there was in Europe no system of rules by which to regulate conduct +between states. That system of regulations and customs which we +call International Law, and by which states at the present time are +guided in their dealings, had not arisen. During the middle age, +disputes between sovereigns were frequently settled by reference to +the emperor or to the pope, and the latter had frequently asserted +his right to determine all such questions as might arise. The pope +had also claimed to have the right of disposing of all heathen and +newly discovered lands and peoples. + +So, after the discovery of the East Indies by Portugal and of the West +Indies by Spain, Pope Alexander VI., divided the new lands between +them. He declared that all newly discovered countries halfway around +the earth to the east of a meridian 100 leagues west of the Azores +should be Portuguese, and all to the west Spanish. Subsequently he +shifted this line to 270 leagues west of the Azores. This division, +it was supposed, would give India and the Malay islands to Portugal, +and to Spain the Indies that Columbus had discovered, and the New +World, except Brazil. + +As a matter of fact, 180 degrees west of the meridian last set by +the pope extended to the western part of New Guinea, and not quite +to the Moluccas; but in the absence of exact geographical knowledge +both parties claimed the Spice Islands. Portugal denied to Spain all +right to the Philippines as well, and, as we shall see, a conflict in +the Far East began, which lasted nearly through the century. Portugal +captured the traders, whom El Cano had left at Tidor, and broke up the +Spanish station in the Spice Islands. The "Trinidad," the other ship, +which was intended to return to America, was unable to sail against +the strong winds, and had to put back to Tidor, after cruising through +the waters about New Guinea. + +Effect of the Century of Discoveries.--This circumnavigation of the +globe completed a period of discovery which had begun a hundred years +before with the timid, slow attempts of the Portuguese along the coast +of Africa. In these years a new era had opened. At its beginning the +European knew little of any peoples outside of his own countries, +and he held not one mile of land outside the continent of Europe. At +the end of a hundred years the earth had become fairly well known, +the African race, the Malay peoples, the American Indians, and the +Pacific islanders had all been seen and described, and from now on the +history of the white race was to be connected with that of these other +races. The age of colonization, of world-wide trade and intercourse, +had begun. The white man, who had heretofore been narrowly pressed +in upon Europe, threatened again and again with conquest by the +Mohammedan, was now to cover the seas with his fleets and all lands +with his power. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +THE FILIPINO PEOPLE BEFORE THE ARRIVAL OF THE SPANIARDS. + + +Position of Tribes.--On the arrival of the Spaniards, the population +of the Philippines seems to have been distributed by tribes in much +the same manner as at present. Then, as now, the Bisaya occupied the +central islands of the archipelago and some of the northern coast of +Mindanao. The Bicol, Tagalog, and Pampango were in the same parts of +Luzon as we find them to-day. The Ilocano occupied the coastal plain +facing the China Sea, but since the arrival of the Spaniards they +have expanded considerably and their settlements are now numerous in +Pangasinan, Nueva Vizcaya, and the valley of the Cagayan. + +The Number of People.--These tribes which to-day number nearly +7,000,000 souls, at the time of Magellan's discovery were, probably, +not more than 500,000. The first enumeration of the population made +by the Spaniards in 1591, and which included practically all of these +tribes, gives a population of less than 700,000. (See Chapter VIII., +The Philippines Three Hundred Years Ago.) + +There are other facts too that show us how sparse the population must +have been. The Spanish expeditions found many coasts and islands in +the Bisayan group without inhabitants. Occasionally a sail or a canoe +would be seen, and then these would disappear in some small "estero" +or mangrove swamp and the land seem as unpopulated as before. At +certain points, like Limasaua, Butuan, and Bohol, the natives were +more numerous, and Cebu was a large and thriving community; but the +Spaniards had nearly everywhere to search for settled places and +cultivated lands. + +The sparsity of population is also well indicated by the great scarcity +of food. The Spaniards had much difficulty in securing sufficient +provisions. A small amount of rice, a pig and a few chickens, +were obtainable here and there, but the Filipinos had no large +supplies. After the settlement of Manila was made, a large part of +the food of the city was drawn from China. The very ease with which +the Spaniards marched where they willed and reduced the Filipinos +to obedience shows that the latter were weak in numbers. Laguna and +the Camarines seem to have been the most populous portions of the +archipelago. All of these things and others show that the Filipinos +were but a small fraction of their present number. + +On the other hand, the Negritos seem to have been more numerous, +or at least more in evidence. They were immediately noticed on the +island of Negros, where at the present they are few and confined to +the interior; and in the vicinity of Manila and in Batangas, where they +are no longer found, they were mingling with the Tagalog population. + +Conditions of Culture.--The culture of the various tribes, which +is now quite the same throughout the archipelago, presented some +differences. In the southern Bisayas, where the Spaniards first entered +the archipelago, there seem to have been two kinds of natives: the +hill dwellers, who lived in the interior of the islands in small +numbers, who wore garments of tree bark and who sometimes built +their houses in the trees; and the sea dwellers, who were very much +like the present day Moro tribes south of Mindanao, who are known as +the Samal, and who built their villages over the sea or on the shore +and lived much in boats. These were probably later arrivals than the +forest people. From both of these elements the Bisaya Filipinos are +descended, but while the coast people have been entirely absorbed, +some of the hill-folk are still pagan and uncivilized, and must be +very much as they were when the Spaniards first came. + +The highest grade of culture was in the settlements where there was +regular trade with Borneo, Siam, and China, and especially about +Manila, where many Mohammedan Malays had colonies. + +Languages of the Malayan Peoples.--With the exception of the Negrito, +all the languages of the Philippines belong to one great family, +which has been called the "Malayo-Polynesian." All are believed to +be derived from one very ancient mother-tongue. It is astonishing how +widely this Malayo-Polynesian speech has spread. Farthest east in the +Pacific there is the Polynesian, then in the groups of small islands, +known as Micronesian; then Melanesian or Papuan; the Malayan throughout +the East Indian archipelago, and to the north the languages of the +Philippines. But this is not all; for far westward on the coast of +Africa is the island of Madagascar, many of whose languages have no +connection with African but belong to the Malayo-Polynesian family. [6] + +The Tagalog Language.--It should be a matter of great interest to +Filipinos that the great scientist, Baron William von Humboldt, +considered the Tagalog to be the richest and most perfect of all +the languages of the Malayo-Polynesian family, and perhaps the type +of them all. "It possesses," he said, "all the forms collectively +of which particular ones are found singly in other dialects; and it +has preserved them all with very trifling exceptions unbroken, and in +entire harmony and symmetry." The Spanish friars, on their arrival in +the Philippines, devoted themselves at once to learning the native +dialects and to the preparation of prayers and catechisms in these +native tongues. They were very successful in their studies. Father +Chirino tells us of one Jesuit who learned sufficient Tagalog in +seventy days to preach and hear confession. In this way the Bisayan, +the Tagalog, and the Ilocano were soon mastered. + +In the light of the opinion of Von Humboldt, it is interesting to +find these early Spaniards pronouncing the Tagalog the most difficult +and the most admirable. "Of all of them," says Padre Chirino, "the +one which most pleased me and filled me with admiration was the +Tagalog. Because, as I said to the first archbishop, and afterwards +to other serious persons, both there and here, I found in it four +qualities of the four best languages of the world: Hebrew, Greek, +Latin, and Spanish; of the Hebrew, the mysteries and obscurities; of +the Greek, the articles and the precision not only of the appellative +but also of the proper nouns; of the Latin, the wealth and elegance; +and of the Spanish, the good breeding, politeness, and courtesy." [7] + +An Early Connection with the Hindus.--The Malayan languages contain +also a considerable proportion of words borrowed from the Sanskrit, +and in this the Tagalog, Bisayan, and Ilocano are included. Whether +these words were passed along from one Malayan group to another, +or whether they were introduced by the actual presence and power of +the Hindu in this archipelago, may be fair ground for debate; but the +case for the latter position has been so well and brilliantly put by +Dr. Pardo de Tavera that his conclusions are here given in his own +words. "The words which Tagalog borrowed," he says, "are those which +signify intellectual acts, moral conceptions, emotions, superstitions, +names of deities, of planets, of numerals of high number, of botany, +of war and its results and consequences, and finally of titles and +dignities, some animals, instruments of industry, and the names +of money." + +From the evidence of these works, Dr. Pardo argues for a period +in the early history of the Filipinos, not merely of commercial +intercourse, like that of the Chinese, but of Hindu political and +social domination. "I do not believe," he says, "and I base my opinion +on the same words that I have brought together in this vocabulary, +that the Hindus were here simply as merchants, but that they dominated +different parts of the archipelago, where to-day are spoken the +most cultured languages,--the Tagalo, the Visayan, the Pampanga, +and the Ilocano; and that the higher culture of these languages comes +precisely from the influence of the Hindu race over the Filipino." + +The Hindus in the Philippines.--"It is impossible to believe that the +Hindus, if they came only as merchants, however great their number, +would have impressed themselves in such a way as to give to these +islanders the number and the kind of words which they did give. These +names of dignitaries, of caciques, of high functionaries of the court, +of noble ladies, indicate that all of these high positions with +names of Sanskrit origin were occupied at one time by men who spoke +that language. The words of a similar origin for objects of war, +fortresses, and battle-songs, for designating objects of religious +belief, for superstitions, emotions, feelings, industrial and farming +activities, show us clearly that the warfare, religion, literature, +industry, and agriculture were at one time in the hands of the Hindus, +and that this race was effectively dominant in the Philippines." [8] + +Systems of Writing among the Filipinos.--When the Spaniards arrived in +the Philippines, the Filipinos were using systems of writing borrowed +from Hindu or Javanese sources. This matter is so interesting that +one can not do better than to quote in full Padre Chirino's account, +as he is the first of the Spanish writers to mention it and as his +notice is quite complete. + +"So given are these islanders to reading and writing that there is +hardly a man, and much less a woman, that does not read and write in +letters peculiar to the island of Manila, very different from those +of China, Japan, and of India, as will be seen from the following +alphabet. + +"The vowels are three; but they serve for five, and are, + + + a e, i o, u + + +The consonants are no more than twelve, and they serve to write both +consonant and vowel, in this form. The letter alone, without any +point either above or below, sounds with a. + + + Ba ca da ga ha la + ma na pa sa ta ya + + +Placing the point above, each one sounds with e or with i. + + + Bi qui di gui hi li + be que de gue he le + + mi ni pi si ti yi + me ne pe se te ye + + +Placing the point below, it sounds with o or with u. + + + bo co do go ho lo + bu cu du gu hu lu + + mo no po so to yo + mu nu pu su tu yu + + +For instance, in order to say 'cama,' the two letters alone suffice. + + + ca ma + + +If to the ka there is placed a point above, it will say + + + que ma + + +If it is given to both below, it will say + + + co mo + + +The final consonants are supplied or understood in all cases, and so +to say 'cantar,' they write + + + ca ta + + +barba, + + + ba ba + + +But with all, and that without many evasions, they make themselves +understood, and they themselves understand marvellously. And the +reader supplies, with much skill and ease, the consonants that are +lacking. They have learned from us to write running the lines from +the left hand to the right, but formerly they only wrote from above +downwards, placing the first line (if I remember rightly) at the left +hand, and continuing with the others to the right, the opposite of +the Chinese and Japanese.... They write upon canes or on leaves of a +palm, using for a pen a point of iron. Nowadays in writing not only +their own but also our letters, they use a feather very well cut, +and paper like ourselves. + +They have learned our language and pronunciation, and write as well +as we do, and even better; for they are so bright that they learn +everything with the greatest ease. I have brought with me handwriting +with very good and correct lettering. In Tigbauan, I had in school a +very small child, who in three months' time learned, by copying from +well-written letters that I set him, to write enough better than I, +and transcribed for me writings of importance very faithfully, and +without errors or mistakes. But enough of languages and letters; +now let us return to our occupation with human souls." [9] + +Sanskrit Source of the Filipino Alphabet.--Besides the Tagalog, +the Bisaya, Pampango, Pangasinan, and Ilocano had alphabets, or +more properly syllabaries similar to this one. Dr. Pardo de Tavera +has gathered many data concerning them, and shows that they were +undoubtedly received by the Filipinos from a Sanskrit source. + +Early Filipino Writings.--The Filipinos used this writing for setting +down their poems and songs, which were their only literature. None +of this, however, has come down to us, and the Filipinos soon adopted +the Spanish alphabet, forming the syllables necessary to write their +language from these letters. As all these have phonetic values, +it is still very easy for a Filipino to learn to pronounce and so +read his own tongue. These old characters lingered for a couple of +centuries, in certain places. Padre Totanes [10] tells us that it was +rare in 1705 to find a person who could use them; but the Tagbanua, +a pagan people on the island of Paragua, use a similar syllabary +to this day. Besides poems, they had songs which they sang as they +rowed their canoes, as they pounded the rice from its husk, and as +they gathered for feast or entertainment; and especially there were +songs for the dead. In these songs, says Chirino, they recounted the +deeds of their ancestors or of their deities. + +Chinese in the Philippines.--Early Trade.--Very different from the +Hindu was the early influence of the Chinese. There is no evidence +that, previous to the Spanish conquest, the Chinese settled or +colonized in these islands at all; and yet three hundred years +before the arrival of Magellan their trading-fleets were coming here +regularly and several of the islands were well known to them. One +evidence of this prehistoric trade is in the ancient Chinese jars and +pottery which have been exhumed in the vicinity of Manila, but the +Chinese writings themselves furnish us even better proof. About the +beginning of the thirteenth century, though not earlier than 1205, +a Chinese author named Chao Ju-kua wrote a work upon the maritime +commerce of the Chinese people. One chapter of his work is devoted to +the Philippines, which he calls the country of Mayi. [11] According +to this record it is indicated that the Chinese were familiar with +the islands of the archipelago seven hundred years ago. [12] + +Chinese, Description of the People.--"The country of Mayi," says this +interesting classic, "is situated to the north of Poni (Burney, or +Borneo). About a thousand families inhabit the banks of a very winding +stream. The natives clothe themselves in sheets of cloth resembling +bed sheets, or cover their bodies with sarongs. (The sarong is the +gay colored, typical garment of the Malay.) Scattered through the +extensive forests are copper Buddha images, but no one knows how they +got there. [13] + +"When the merchant (Chinese) ships arrive at this port they anchor +in front of an open place ... which serves as a market, where they +trade in the produce of the country. When a ship enters this port, +the captain makes presents of white umbrellas (to the mandarins). The +merchants are obliged to pay this tribute in order to obtain the +good will of these lords." The products of the country are stated to +be yellow wax, cotton, pearls, shells, betel nuts, and yuta cloth, +which was perhaps one of the several cloths still woven of abaca, +or pina. The articles imported by the Chinese were "porcelain, trade +gold, objects of lead, glass beads of all colors, iron cooking-pans, +and iron needles." + +The Negritos.--Very curious is the accurate mention in this Chinese +writing, of the Negritos, the first of all accounts to be made of +the little blacks. "In the interior of the valleys lives a race +called Hai-tan (Acta). They are, of low stature, have round eyes of +a yellow color, curly hair, and their teeth are easily seen between +their lips. (That is, probably, not darkened by betel-chewing or +artificial stains.) They build their nests in the treetops and in +each nest lives a family, which only consists of from three to five +persons. They travel about in the densest thickets of the forests, and, +without being seen themselves, shoot their arrows at the passers-by; +for this reason they are much feared. If the trader (Chinese) throws +them a small porcelain bowl, they will stoop down to catch it and +then run away with it, shouting joyfully." + +Increase in Chinese Trade.--These junks also visited the more central +islands, but here traffic was conducted on the ships, the Chinese +on arrival announcing themselves by beating gongs and the Filipinos +coming out to them in their light boats. Among other things here +offered by the natives for trade are mentioned "strange cloth," +perhaps cinamay or jusi, and fine mats. + +This Chinese trade continued probably quite steadily until the arrival +of the Spaniards. Then it received an enormous increase through the +demand for Chinese food-products and wares made by the Spaniards, +and because of the value of the Mexican silver which the Spaniards +offered in exchange. + +Trade with the Moro Malays of the South.--The spread of Mohammedanism +and especially the foundation of the colony of Borneo brought the +Philippines into important commercial relations with the Malays of the +south. Previous to the arrival of the Spaniards these relations seem +to have been friendly and peaceful. The Mohammedan Malays sent their +praos northward for purposes of trade, and they were also settling +in the north Philippines as they had in Mindanao. + +When Legaspi's fleet, soon after its arrival, lay near the island +of Bohol, the "Maestro de Campo" had a hard fight with a Moro vessel +which had come up for trade, and took six prisoners. One of them, whom +they call the "pilot," was closely interrogated by the Adelantado +and some interesting information obtained, which is recorded by +Padre San Augustin. [14] Legaspi had a Malay slave interpreter with +him and San Augustin says that Padre Urdaneta "knew well the Malayan +language." The pilot said that "those of Borneo brought for trade with +the Filipinos, copper and tin, which was brought to Borneo from China, +porcelain, dishes, and bells made in their fashion, very different from +those that the Christians use, and benzoin, and colored blankets from +India, and cooking-pans made in China, and that they also brought iron +lances very well tempered, and knives and other articles of barter, +and that in exchange for them they took away from the islands gold, +slaves, wax, and a kind of small seashell which they call 'sijueyes,' +and which passes for money in the kingdom of Siam and other places; +and also they carry off some white cloths, of which there is a great +quantity in the islands." + +Butuan, on the north coast of Mindanao, seems to have been quite a +trading-place resorted to by vessels from all quarters. This country, +like many other parts of the Philippines, has produced from time +immemorial small quantities of gold, and all the early voyagers +speak of the gold earrings and ornaments of the natives. Butuan +also produced sugarcane and was a trading-port for slaves. This +unfortunate traffic in human life seems to have been not unusual, +and was doubtless stimulated by the commerce with Borneo. Junks from +Siam trading with Cebu were also encountered by the Spaniards. + +Result of this Intercourse and Commerce.--This intercourse and +traffic had acquainted the Filipinos with many of the accessories +of civilized life long before the arrival of the Spaniards. Their +chiefs and datos dressed in silks, and maintained some splendor of +surroundings; nearly the whole population of the tribes of the coast +wrote and communicated by means of a syllabary; vessels from Luzon +traded as far south as Mindanao and Borneo, although the products of +Asia proper came through the fleets of foreigners; and perhaps what +indicates more clearly than anything else the advance the Filipinos +were making through their communication with outside people is their +use of firearms. Of this point there is no question. Everywhere in +the vicinity of Manila, on Lubang, in Pampanga, at Cainta and Laguna +de Bay, the Spaniards encountered forts mounting small cannon, or +"lantakas." [15] The Filipinos seem to have understood, moreover, +the arts of casting cannon and of making powder. The first gun-factory +established by the Spaniards was in charge of a Filipino from Pampanga. + +Early Political and Social Life.--The Barangay.--The weakest side +of the culture of the early Filipinos was their political and social +organization, and they were weak here in precisely the same way that +the now uncivilized peoples of northern Luzon are still weak. Their +state did not embrace the whole tribe or nation; it included simply +the community. Outside of the settlers in one immediate vicinity, +all others were enemies or at most foreigners. There were in the +Philippines no large states, nor even great rajas and sultans such +as were found in the Malay Archipelago, but instead on every island +were a multitude of small communities, each independent of the other +and frequently waging war. + +The unit of their political order was a little cluster of houses from +thirty to one hundred families, called a "barangay," and which still +exists in the Philippines as the "barrio." At the head of each barangay +was a chief known as the "dato," a word no longer used in the northern +Philippines, though it persists among the Moros of Mindanao. The +powers of these datos within their small areas appear to have been +great, and they were treated with utmost respect by the people. + +The barangays were grouped together in tiny federations including +about as much territory as the present towns, whose affairs were +conducted by the chiefs or datos, although sometimes they seem to have +all been in obedience to a single chief, known in some places as the +"hari," at other times by the Hindu word "raja," or the Mohammedan +term "sultan." Sometimes the power of one of these rajas seems to +have extended over the whole of a small island, but usually their +"kingdoms" embraced only a few miles. + +Changes Made by the Spaniards.--The Spaniards, in enforcing their +authority through the islands, took away the real power from the +datos, grouping the barangays into towns, or "pueblos," but making +the datos "cabezas de barrio," or "gobernadorcillos." Something of +the old distinction between the dato, or "principal," and the common +man may be still represented in the "gente illustrada," or the more +wealthy, educated, and influential class found in each town, and the +"gente baja," or the poor and uneducated. + +Classes of Filipinos under the Datos.--Beneath the datos, according +to Chirino and Morga, there were three classes of Filipinos; the +free persons, or "maharlica," who paid no tribute to the dato, +but who accompanied him to war, rowed his boat when he went on a +journey, and attended him in his house. This class is called by Morga +"timauas." [16] + +Then there was a very large class, who appear to have been freedmen or +liberated slaves, who had acquired their own homes and lived with their +families, but who owed to dato or maharlica heavy debts of service; +to sow and harvest in his ricefields, to tend his fish-traps, to +row his canoe, to build his house, to attend him when he had guests, +and to perform any other duties that the chief might command. These +semi-free were called "aliping namamahay," and their condition of +bondage descended to their children. + +Beneath these existed a class of slaves. These were the +"siguiguiliris," and they were numerous. Their slavery arose in several +ways. Some were those who as children had been captured in war and +their lives spared. Some became slaves by selling their freedom in +times of hunger. But most of them became slaves through debt, which +descended from father to son. The sum of five or six pesos was enough +in some cases to deprive a man of his freedom. + +These slaves were absolutely owned by their lord, who could +theoretically sell them like cattle; but, in spite of its bad +possibilities, this Filipino slavery was ordinarily not of a cruel +or distressing nature. The slaves frequently associated on kindly +relations with their masters and were not overworked. This form of +slavery still persists in the Philippines among the Moros of Mindanao +and Jolo. Children of slaves inherited their parents' slavery. If +one parent was free and the other slave, the first, third, and fifth +children were free and the second, fourth, and sixth slaves. This +whole matter of inheritance of slavery was curiously worked out in +minute details. + +Life in the Barangay.--Community feeling was very strong within the +barangay. A man could not leave his own barangay for life in another +without the consent of the community and the payment of money. If a man +of one barrio married a woman of another, their children were divided +between the two barangays. The barangay was responsible for the good +conduct of its members, and if one of them suffered an injury from +a man outside, the whole barangay had to be appeased. Disputes and +wrongs between members of the same barangay were referred to a number +of old men, who decided the matter in accordance with the customs of +the tribe, which were handed down by tradition. [17] + +The Religion of the Filipinos.--The Filipinos on the arrival of +the Spaniards were fetish-worshipers, but they had one spirit whom +they believed was the greatest of all and the creator or maker of +things. The Tagalog called this deity Bathala, [18] the Bisaya, +Laon, and the Ilocano, Kabunian. They also worshiped the spirits +of their ancestors, which were represented by small images called +"anitos." Fetishes, which are any objects believed to possess +miraculous power, were common among the people, and idols or images +were worshiped. Pigafetta describes some idols which he saw in Cebu, +and Chirino tells us that, within the memory of Filipinos whom he knew, +they had idols of stone, wood, bone, or the tooth of a crocodile, +and that there were some of gold. + +They also reverenced animals and birds, especially the crocodile, +the raven, and a mythical bird of blue or yellow color, which was +called by the name of their deity Bathala. [19] They had no temples +or public places of worship, but each one had his anitos in his own +house and performed his sacrifices and acts of worship there. As +sacrifices they killed pigs or chickens, and made such occasions +times of feasting, song, and drunkenness. The life of the Filipino +was undoubtedly filled with superstitious fears and imaginings. + +The Mohammedan Malays.--The Mohammedans outside of southern Mindanao +and Jolo, had settled in the vicinity of Manila Bay and on Mindoro, +Lubang, and adjacent coasts of Luzon. The spread of Mohammedanism +was stopped by the Spaniards, although it is narrated that for a +long time many of those living on the shores of Manila Bay refused to +eat pork, which is forbidden by the Koran, and practiced the rite of +circumcision. As late as 1583, Bishop Salazar, in writing to the king +of affairs in the Philippines, says the Moros had preached the law +of Mohammed to great numbers in these islands and by this preaching +many of the Gentiles had become Mohammedans; and further he adds, +"Those who have received this foul law guard it with much persistence +and there is great difficulty in making them abandon it; and with +cause too, for the reasons they give, to our shame and confusion, +are that they were better treated by the preachers of Mohammed than +they have been by the preachers of Christ." [20] + +Material Progress of the Filipinos.--The material surroundings of +the Filipino before the arrival of the Spaniards were in nearly every +way quite as they are to-day. The "center of population" of each town +to-day, with its great church, tribunal, stores and houses of stone +and wood, is certainly in marked contrast; but the appearance of a +barrio a little distance from the center is to-day probably much as it +was then. Then, as now, the bulk of the people lived in humble houses +of bamboo and nipa raised on piles above the dampness of the soil; +then, as now, the food was largely rice and the excellent fish which +abound in river and sea. There were on the water the same familiar +bancas and fish corrals, and on land the rice fields and cocoanut +groves. The Filipinos had then most of the present domesticated +animals,--dogs, cats, goats, chickens, and pigs,--and perhaps in Luzon +the domesticated buffalo, although this animal was widely introduced +into the Philippines from China after the Spanish conquest. Horses came +with the Spaniards and their numbers were increased by the bringing +in of Chinese mares, whose importation is frequently mentioned. + +The Spaniards introduced also the cultivation of tobacco, coffee, +and cacao, and perhaps also the native corn of America, the maize, +although Pigafetta says they found it already growing in the Bisayas. + +The Filipino has been affected by these centuries of Spanish +sovereignty far less on his material side than he has on his spiritual, +and it is mainly in the deepening and elevating of his emotional and +mental life and not in the bettering of his material condition that +advance has been made. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +THE SPANISH SOLDIER AND THE SPANISH MISSIONARY. + + +History of the Philippines as a Part of the History of the Spanish +Colonies.--We have already seen how the Philippines were discovered by +Magellan in his search for the Spice Islands. Brilliant and romantic +as is the story of that voyage, it brought no immediate reward to +Spain. Portugal remained in her enjoyment of the Eastern trade and +nearly half a century elapsed before Spain obtained a settlement +in these islands. But if for a time he neglected the Far East, the +Spaniard from the Peninsula threw himself with almost incredible +energy and devotion into the material and spiritual conquest of +America. All the greatest achievements of the Spanish soldier and +the Spanish missionary had been secured within fifty years from the +day when Columbus sighted the West Indies. + +In order to understand the history of the Philippines, we must not +forget that these islands formed a part of this great colonial empire +and were under the same administration; that for over two centuries +the Philippines were reached through Mexico and to a certain extent +governed by Mexico; that the same governors, judges, and soldiers held +office in both hemispheres, passing from America to the Philippines +and being promoted from the Islands to the higher official positions of +Mexico and Peru. So to understand the rule of Spain in the Philippines, +we must study the great administrative machinery and the great body +of laws which she developed for the government of the Indies. [21] + +Character of the Spanish Explorers.--The conquests themselves +were largely effected through the enterprise and wealth of private +individuals; but these men held commissions from the Spanish crown, +their actions were subject to strict royal control, and a large +proportion of the profits and plunder of their expeditions were +paid to the royal treasury. Upon some of these conquerors the crown +bestowed the proud title of "adelantado." The Spanish nobility threw +themselves into these hazardous undertakings with the courage and +fixed determination born of their long struggle with the Moors. Out +of the soul-trying circumstances of Western conquest many obscure men +rose, through their brilliant qualities of spirit, to positions of +eminence and power; but the exalted offices of viceroy and governor +were reserved for the titled favorites of the king. + +The Royal Audiencia.--Very early the Spanish court, in order +to protect its own authority, found it necessary to succeed the +ambitious and adventurous conqueror by a ruler in close relationship +with and absolute dependence on the royal will. Thus in Mexico, +Cortes the conqueror was removed and replaced by the viceroy Mendoza, +who established upon the conquests of the former the great Spanish +colony of New Spain, to this day the most successful of all the states +planted by Spain in America. + +To limit the power of the governor or viceroy, as well as to act as +a supreme court for the settlement of actions and legal questions, +Spain created the "Royal Audiencia." This was a body of men of noble +rank and learned in the law, sent out from Spain to form in each +country a colonial court; but their powers were not alone judicial; +they were also administrative. In the absence of the governor they +assumed his duties. + +Treatment of the Natives by the Spanish.--In his treatment of +the natives, whose lands he captured, the Spanish king attempted +three things,--first, to secure to the colonist and to the crown +the advantages of his labor, second, to convert the Indians to the +Christian religion as maintained by the Roman Catholic Church, and +third, to protect them from cruelty and inhumanity. Edict after +edict, law after law, issued from the Spanish throne with these +ends in view. As they stand upon the greatest of colonial law-books, +the Recopilacion de Leyes de las Indias, they display an admirable +sensitiveness to the needs of the Indian and an appreciation of the +dangers to which he was subjected; but in the actual practice these +beneficent provisions were largely useless. + +The first and third of Spain's purposes in her treatment of the native +proved incompatible. History has shown that liberty and enlightenment +can not be taken from a race with one hand and protection given it +with the other. All classes of Spain's colonial government were +frankly in pursuit of wealth. Greed filled them all, and was the +mainspring of every discovery and every settlement. The king wanted +revenue for his treasury; the noble and the soldier, booty for their +private purse; the friar, wealth for his order; the bishop, power +for his church. All this wealth had to come out of the native toiler +on the lands which the Spanish conqueror had seized; and while noble +motives were probably never absent and at certain times prevailed, +yet in the main the native of America and of the Philippines was a +sufferer under the hand and power of the Spaniard. + +"The Encomenderos."--Spain's system of controlling the lives and +the labor of the Indians was based to a certain extent on the feudal +system, still surviving in the Peninsula at the time of her colonial +conquests. The captains and soldiers and priests of her successful +conquests had assigned to them great estates or fruitful lands with +their native inhabitants, which they managed and ruled for their own +profit. Such estates were called first "repartimientos." But very +soon it became the practice, in America, to grant large numbers of +Indians to the service of a Spaniard, who had over them the power +of a master and who enjoyed the profits of their labor. In return +he was supposed to provide for the conversion of the Indians and +their religious instruction. Such a grant of Indians was called an +"encomienda." The "encomendero" was not absolute lord of the lives +and properties of the Indians, for elaborate laws were framed for the +latter's protection. Yet the granting of subjects without the land +on which they lived made possible their transfer and sale from one +encomendero to another, and in this way thousands of Indians of America +were made practically slaves, and were forced into labor in the mines. + +As we have already seen, the whole system was attacked by the Dominican +priest, Las Casas, a truly noble character in the history of American +colonization, and various efforts were made in America to limit the +encomiendas and to prevent their introduction into Mexico and Peru; +but the great power of the encomendero in America, together with +the influence of the Church, which held extensive encomiendas, had +been sufficient to extend the institution, even against Las Casas' +impassioned remonstrances. Its abolition in Mexico was decreed in +1544, but "commissioners representing the municipality of Mexico and +the religious orders were sent to Spain to ask the king to revoke at +least those parts of the 'New Laws' which threatened the interests +of the settlers. By a royal decree of October 20, 1545, the desired +revocation was granted. This action filled the Spanish settlers with +joy and the enslaved Indians with despair." [22] + +Thus was the institution early established as a part of the colonial +system and came with the conquerors to the Philippines. + +Restrictions on Colonization and Commerce.--For the management of all +colonial affairs the king created a great board, or bureau, known as +the "Council of the Indies," which sat in Madrid and whose members +were among the highest officials of Spain. The Spanish government +exercised the closest supervision over all colonial matters, and +colonization was never free. All persons, wares, and ships, passing +from Spain to any of her colonial possessions, were obliged to pass +through Seville, and this one port alone. + +This wealthy ancient city, situated on the river Guadalquivir in +southwestern Spain, was the gateway to the Spanish Empire. From this +port went forth the mailed soldier, the robed friar, the adventurous +noble, and the brave and highborn Spanish ladies, who accompanied their +husbands to such great distances over the sea. And back to this port +were brought the gold of Peru, the silver of Mexico, and the silks +and embroideries of China, dispatched through the Philippines. + +It must be observed that all intercourse between Spain and her colonies +was rigidly controlled by the government. Spain sought to create and +maintain an exclusive monopoly of her colonial trade. To enforce and +direct this monopoly, there was at Seville the Commercial House, or +"Casa de Contratacion." No one could sail from Spain to a colonial +possession without a permit and after government registration. No one +could send out goods or import them except through the Commercial House +and upon the payment of extraordinary imposts. Trade was absolutely +forbidden to any except Spaniards. And by her forts and fleets Spain +strove to isolate her colonies from the approach of Portuguese, Dutch, +or English, whose ships, no less daringly manned than those of Spain +herself, were beginning to traverse the seas in search of the plunder +and spoils of foreign conquest and trade. + +Summary of the Colonial Policy of Spain.--Spain sought foreign +colonies, first, for the spoils of accumulated wealth that could be +seized and carried away at once, and, secondly, for the income that +could be procured through the labor of the inhabitants of the lands she +gained. In framing her government and administration of her colonies, +she sought primarily the political enlightenment and welfare neither +of the Spanish colonist nor the native race, but the glory, power, +and patronage of the crown. The commercial and trade regulations were +devised, not to develop the resources and increase the prosperity of +the colonies, but to add wealth to the Peninsula. Yet the purposes of +Spain were far from being wholly selfish. With zeal and success she +sought the conversion of the heathen natives, whom she subjected, +and in this showed a humanitarian interest in advance of the Dutch +and English, who rivaled her in colonial empire. + +The colonial ideals under which the policy of Spain was framed were +those of the times. In the centuries that have succeeded, public wisdom +and conscience on these matters have immeasurably improved. Nations no +longer make conquests frankly to exploit them, but the public opinion +of the world demands that the welfare of the colonial subject be +sought and that he be protected from official greed. There is great +advance still to be made. It can hardly be said that the world yet +recognizes that a stronger people should assist a weaker without +assurance of material reward, but this is the direction in which +the most enlightened feeling is advancing. Every undertaking of the +white race, which has such aims in view, is an experiment worthy of +the most profound interest and most solicitous sympathy. + +Result of the Voyage of Magellan and El Cano.--The mind of the +Spanish adventurer was greatly excited by the results of Sebastian +del Cano's voyage. Here was the opportunity for rich trade and great +profit. Numerous plans were laid before the king, one of them for +the building of an Indian trading-fleet and an annual voyage to the +Moluccas to gather a great harvest of spices. + +Portugal protested against this move until the question of her +claim to the Moluccas, under the division of Pope Alexander, could be +settled. The exact longitude of Ternate west from the line 370 leagues +beyond the Verde Islands was not well known. Spaniards argued that +it was less than 180 degrees, and, therefore, in spite of Portugal's +earlier discovery, belonged to them. The pilot, Medina, for example, +explained to Charles V. that from the meridian 370 leagues west of +San Anton (the most westerly island of the Verde group) to the city +of Mexico was 59 degrees, from Mexico to Navidad, 9 degrees, and from +this port to Cebu, 100 degrees, a total of only 168 degrees, leaving +a margin of 12 degrees; therefore by the pope's decision the Indies, +Moluccas, Borneo, Gilolo, and the Philippines were Spain's. [23] +A great council of embassadors and cosmographers was held at Badajoz +in 1524, but reached no agreement. Spain announced her resolution to +occupy the Moluccas, and Portugal threatened with death the Spanish +adventurers who should be found there. + +The First Expedition to the Philippines.--Spain acted immediately +upon her determination, and in 1525 dispatched an expedition under +Jofre de Loaisa to reap the fruits of Magellan's discoveries. [24] +The captain of one vessel was Sebastian del Cano, who completed the +voyage of Magellan. On his ship sailed Andres de Urdaneta, who later +became an Augustinian friar and accompanied the expedition of Legaspi +that finally effected the settlement of the Philippines. Not without +great hardship and losses did the fleet pass the Straits of Magellan +and enter the Pacific Ocean. In mid-ocean Loaisa died, and four days +later the heroic Sebastian del Cano. Following a route somewhat similar +to that of Magellan, the fleet reached first the Ladrone Islands and +later the coast of Mindanao. From here they attempted to sail to Cebu, +but the strong northeast monsoon drove them southward to the Moluccas, +and they landed on Tidor the last day of the year 1526. + +The Failure of the Expedition.--The Portuguese were at this +moment fighting to reduce the native rajas of these islands to +subjection. They regarded the Spaniards as enemies, and each party of +Europeans was shortly engaged in fighting and in inciting the natives +against the other. The condition of the Spaniards became desperate +in the extreme, and indicates at what cost of life the conquests of +the sixteenth century were made. Their ships had become so battered +by storm as to be no longer sea-worthy. The two officers, who had +successively followed Loaisa and El Cano in command, had likewise +perished. Of the 450 men who had sailed from Spain, but 120 now +survived. These, under the leadership of Hernando de la Torre, threw +up a fort on the island of Tidor, unable to go farther or to retire, +and awaited hoped-for succor from Spain. + +Relief came, not from the Peninsula, but from Mexico. Under +the instructions of the Spanish king, in October, 1527, Cortes +dispatched from Mexico a small expedition in charge of D. Alvaro de +Saavedra. Swept rapidly by the equatorial trades, in a few months +Saavedra had traversed the Carolines, reprovisioned on Mindanao, +and reached the survivors on Tidor. Twice they attempted to return +to New Spain, but strong trade winds blow without cessation north and +south on either side of the equator for the space of more than twelve +hundred miles, and the northern latitude of calms and prevailing +westerly winds were not yet known. + +Twice Saavedra beat his way eastward among the strange islands of +Papua and Melanesia, only to be at last driven back upon Tidor and +there to die. The survivors were forced to abandon the Moluccas. By +surrendering to the Portuguese they were assisted to return to Europe +by way of Malacca, Ceylon, and Africa, and they arrived at Lisbon +in 1536, the survivors of Loaisa's expedition, having been gone from +Spain eleven years. + +The efforts of the Spanish crown to obtain possession of the Spice +Islands, the Celebes and Moluccas, with their coveted products of +nutmeg, cinnamon, and pepper, were for the time being ended. By the +Treaty of Zaragoza (1529) the Emperor, Charles V., for the sum of +three hundred and fifty thousand gold ducats, renounced all claim +to the Moluccas. For thirteen years the provisions of this treaty +were respected by the Spaniards, and then another attempt was made +to obtain a foothold in the East Indies. + +The Second Expedition to the Philippines.--The facts that disaster +had overwhelmed so many, that two oceans must be crossed, and that +no sailing-route from Asia back to America was known, did not deter +the Spaniards from their perilous conquests; and in 1542 another +expedition sailed from Mexico, under command of Lopez de Villalobos, +to explore the Philippines and if possible to reach China. + +Across the Pacific they made a safe and pleasant voyage. In the +warm waters of the Pacific they sailed among those wonderful coral +atolls, rings of low shore, decked with palms, grouped in beautiful +archipelagoes, whose appearance has never failed to delight the +navigator, and whose composition is one of the most interesting +subjects known to students of the earth's structure and history. Some +of these coral islands Villalobos took possession of in the name of +Spain. These were perhaps the Pelew Islands or the Carolines. + +At last Villalobos reached the east coast of Mindanao, but after +some deaths and sickness they sailed again and were carried south by +the monsoon to the little island of Sarangani, south of the southern +peninsula of Mindanao. The natives were hostile, but the Spaniards +drove them from their stronghold and made some captures of musk, +amber, oil, and gold-dust. In need of provisions, they planted the +maize, or Indian corn, the wonderful cereal of America, which yields +so bounteously, and so soon after planting. Food was greatly needed +by the Spaniards and was very difficult to obtain. + +The Naming of the Islands.--Villalobos equipped a small vessel and +sent it northward to try to reach Cebu. This vessel reached the +coast of Samar. Villalobos gave to the island the name of Filipina, +in honor of the Spanish Infante, or heir apparent, Philip, who was +soon to succeed his father Charles V. as King Philip the Second of +Spain. Later in his correspondence with the Portuguese Villalobos +speaks of the archipelago as Las Filipinas. Although for many years +the title of the Islas del Poniente continued in use, Villalobos' +name of Filipinas gradually gained place and has lived. + +The End of the Expedition.--While on Sarangani demands were made by +the Portuguese, who claimed that Mindanao belonged with the Celebes, +that the Spaniards should leave. Driven from Mindanao by lack of +food and hostility of the natives, Villalobos was blown southward +by storms to Gilolo. Here, after long negotiations, the Portuguese +compelled him to surrender. The survivors of the expedition dispersed, +some remaining in the Indies, and some eventually reaching Spain; +but Villalobos, overwhelmed by discouragement, died on the island of +Amboyna. The priest who ministered to him in his last hours was the +famous Jesuit missionary to the Indies, Saint Francis Xavier. + +Twenty-three years were to elapse after the sailing of Villalobos' +fleet before another Spanish expedition should reach the +Philippines. The year 1565 dates the permanent occupation of the +archipelago by the Spanish. + +Increase in Political Power of the Church.--Under Philip the Second, +the champion of ecclesiasticism, the Spanish crown cemented the +union of the monarchy with the church and devoted the resources of +the empire, not only to colonial acquisition, but to combating the +Protestant revolution on the one hand and heathenism on the other. The +Spanish king effected so close a union of the church and state in +Spain, that from this time on churchmen rose higher and higher in the +Spanish councils, and profoundly influenced the policy and fate of +the nation. The policy of Philip the Second, however, brought upon +Spain the revolt of the Dutch Lowlands and the wars with England, +and her struggle with these two nations drained her resources both on +land and sea, and occasioned a physical and moral decline. But while +Spain was constantly losing power and prestige in Europe, the king +was extending his colonial domain, lending royal aid to the ambitious +adventurer and to the ardent missionary friar. Spain's object being +to christianize as well as to conquer, the missionary became a very +important figure in the history of every colonial enterprise, and +these great orders to whom missions were intrusted thus became the +central institutions in the history of the Philippines. + +The Rise of Monasticism.--Monasticism was introduced into Europe from +the East at the very commencement of the Middle Ages. The fundamental +idea of the old monasticism was retirement from human society in the +belief that the world was bad and could not be bettered, and that men +could lead holier lives and better please God by forsaking secular +employments and family relations, and devoting all their attention +to purifying their characters. The first monastic order in Europe +were the Benedictines, organized in the seventh century, whose rule +and organization were the pattern for those that followed. + +The clergy of the church were divided thus into two groups,--first, +the parish priests, or ministers, who lived among the people over +whom they exercised the care of souls, and who, because they were of +the people themselves and lived their lives in association with the +community, were known as the "secular clergy," and second, the monks, +or "regular clergy," were so called because they lived under the +"rule" of their order. + +In the early part of the thirteenth century monasticism, which had +waned somewhat during the preceding two centuries, received a new +impetus and inspiration from the organization of new orders known +as brethren or "Friars." The idea underlying their organization was +noble, and above that of the old monasticism; for it was the idea of +service, of ministry both to the hearts and bodies of depressed and +suffering men. + +The Dominicans.--The Order of Dominicans was organized by Saint +Dominic, an Italian, about 1215. The primary object of its members +was to defend the doctrines of the Church and, by teaching and +preaching, destroy the doubts and protests which in the thirteenth +century were beginning to disturb the claims of the Catholic Church +and the Papacy. The Dominican friars did not live in communities, but +traveled about, humbly clad, preaching in the villages and towns, and +seeking to expose and punish the heretic. The mediaeval universities, +through their study of philosophy and the Roman law, were producing +a class of men disposed to hold opinions contrary to the teachings +of the Church. The Dominicans realized the importance of these great +centers of instruction and entered them as teachers and masters, and +by the beginning of the fifteenth century had made them strongholds +of conservatism and orthodoxy. + +The Franciscans.--A few years after this organization, the Order of +Franciscans was founded by Saint Francis of Assisi, of Spain. The aims +of this order were not only to preach and administer the sacraments, +but to nurse the sick, provide for the destitute, and alleviate the +dreadful misery which affected whole classes in the Middle Ages. They +took vows of absolute poverty, and so humble was the garb prescribed +by their rule that they went barefooted from place to place. + +The Augustinian Order was founded by Pope Alexander IV., in 1265, +and still other orders came later. + +The Degeneration of the Orders.--Without doubt the early ministrations +of these friars were productive of great good both on the religious +and humanitarian sides. But, as the orders became wealthy, the friars +lost their spirituality and their lives grew vicious. By the beginning +of the sixteenth century the administration of the Church throughout +Europe had become so corrupt, the economic burden of the religious +orders so great, and religious teaching and belief so material, that +the best and noblest minds in all countries were agitating for reform. + +The Reformation.--In addition to changes in church administration, +many Christians were demanding a greater freedom of religious thinking +and radical changes in the Church doctrine which had taken form in +the Middle Ages. Thus, while all the best minds in the Church were +united in seeking a reformation of character and of administration, +great differences arose between them as to the possibility of change +in Church doctrines. These differences accordingly separated them +into two parties, the Papacy adhering strongly to the doctrine as +it was then accepted, while various leaders in the north of Europe, +including Martin Luther in Germany, Swingli in Switzerland, and John +Calvin in France and Geneva, broke with the authority of the Pope +and declared for a liberation of the individual conscience. + +Upon the side of the Papacy, the Emperor Charles the Fifth threw the +weight of the Spanish monarchy, and to enforce the Papal authority +he attacked the German princes by force of arms. The result was +a great revolt from the Roman Catholic Church, which spread all +over northern Germany, a large portion of Switzerland, the lowlands +of the Rhine, and England, and which included a numerous and very +influential element among the French people. These countries, with +the exception of France, have remained Protestant to the present day; +and the great expansion of the English people in America and the East +has established Protestantism in all parts of the world. + +Effects of the Reformation in the Roman Catholic Church.--The reform +movement, which lasted through the century, brought about a great +improvement in the Roman Catholic Church. Many, who remained devoted +to Roman Catholic orthodoxy, were zealous for administrative reform. A +great assembly of Churchmen, the Council of Trent, for years devoted +itself to legislation to correct abuses. The Inquisition was revived +and put into force against Protestants, especially in the dominions +of Spain, and the religious orders were reformed and stimulated to +new sacrifices and great undertakings. + +But greater, perhaps, than any of these agencies in re-establishing +the power of the Pope and reviving the life of the Roman Catholic +Church was the organization of a new order, the "Society of Jesus." The +founder was a Spaniard, Ignatius Loyola, The Jesuits devoted themselves +especially to education and missionary activity. Their schools soon +covered Europe, while their mission stations were to be found in both +North and South America, India, the East Indies, China, and Japan. + +The Spanish Missionary.--The Roman Catholic Church, having lost a large +part of Europe, thus strove to make up the loss by gaining converts +in heathen lands. Spain, being the power most rapidly advancing her +conquests abroad, was the source of the most tireless missionary +effort. From the time of Columbus, every fleet that sailed to gain +plunder and lands for the Spanish kingdom carried bands of friars +and churchmen to convert to Christianity the heathen peoples whom +the sword of the soldier should reduce to obedience. + +"The Laws of the Indies" gave special power and prominence to the +priest. In these early days of Spain's colonial empire many priests +were men of piety, learning, and unselfish devotion. Their efforts +softened somewhat the violence and brutality that often marred the +Spanish treatment of the native, and they became the civilizing agents +among the peoples whom the Spanish soldiers had conquered. + +In Paraguay, California, and the Philippines the power and importance +of the Spanish missionary outweighed that of the soldier or governor +in the settlement of those countries and the control of the native +inhabitants. Churchmen, full of the missionary spirit, pressed upon +the king the duties of the crown in advancing the cross, and more than +one country was opened to Spanish settlement through the enthusiasm +of the priest. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +PERIOD OF CONQUEST AND SETTLEMENT, 1565-1600. + + +Cause of Settlement and Conquest of the Philippines.--The previous +Spanish expeditions whose misfortunes have been narrated, seemed +to have proved to the Court of Spain that they could not drive the +Portuguese from the Moluccas. But to the east of the Moluccas lay +great unexplored archipelagoes, which might lie within the Spanish +demarcation and which might yield spices and other valuable articles +of trade; and as the Portuguese had made no effective occupation of +the Philippines, the minds of Spanish conquerors turned to this group +also as a coveted field of conquest, even though it was pretty well +understood that they lay in the latitude of the Moluccas, and so were +denied by treaty to Spain. + +In 1559 the Spanish king, Felipe II., commanded the viceroy of Mexico +to undertake again the discovery of the islands lying "toward the +Moluccas," but the rights of Portugal to islands within her demarcation +were to be respected. Five years passed before ships and equipments +could be prepared, and during these years the objects of the expedition +received considerable discussion and underwent some change. + +The king invited Andres de Urdaneta, who years before had been a +captain in the expedition of Loaisa, to accompany the expedition as +a guide and director. Urdaneta, after his return from the previous +expedition, had renounced military life and had become an Augustinian +friar. He was known to be a man of wise judgment, with good knowledge +of cosmography, and as a missionary he was able to give to the +expedition that religious strength which characterized all Spanish +undertakings. + +It was Urdaneta's plan to colonize, not the Philippines, but New +Guinea; but the Audiencia of Mexico, which had charge of fitting +out the expedition, charged it in minute instructions to reach +and if possible colonize the Philippines, to trade for spices +and to discover the return sailing route back across the Pacific +to New Spain. The natives of the islands were to be converted to +Christianity, and missionaries were to accompany the expedition. In +the quaint language of Fray Gaspar de San Augustin, there were sent +"holy guides to unfurl and wave the banners of Christ, even to the +remotest portions of the islands, and to drive the devil from the +tyrannical possession, which he had held for so many ages, usurping +to himself the adoration of those peoples." [25] + +The Third Expedition to the Philippines.--The expedition sailed from +the port of Natividad, Mexico, November 21, 1564, under the command +of Miguel Lopez de Legaspi. The ships followed for a part of the +way a course further south than was necessary, and touched at some +inhabited islands of Micronesia. About the 22d of January they reached +the Ladrones and had some trouble with the natives. They reached the +southern end of Samar about February the 13th. Possession of Samar +was taken by Legaspi in the name of the king, and small parties were +sent both north and south to look for villages of the Filipinos. + +A few days later they rounded the southern part of Samar, crossed the +strait to the coast of southern Leyte, and the field-marshal, Goyti, +discovered the town of Cabalian, and on the 5th of March the fleet +sailed to this town. Provisions were scarce on the Spanish vessels, +and great difficulty was experienced in getting food from the few +natives met in boats or in the small settlements discovered. + +Legaspi at Bohol.--About the middle of March the fleet arrived at +Bohol, doubtless the southern or eastern shore. While near here Goyti +in a small boat captured a Moro prao from Borneo and after a hard +fight brought back the Moros as prisoners to Legaspi. There proved +to be quite a trade existing between the Moros from Borneo and the +natives of Bohol and Mindanao. + +Here on Bohol they were able to make friendly terms with the natives, +and with Sicatuna, the dato of Bohol, Legaspi performed the ceremony +of blood covenant. The Spanish leader and the Filipino chief each +made a small cut in his own arm or breast and drank the blood of the +other. According to Gaspar de San Augustin, the blood was mixed with +a little wine or water and drunk from a goblet. [26] This custom was +the most sacred bond of friendship among the Filipinos, and friendship +so pledged was usually kept with great fidelity. + +Legaspi in Cebu.--On the 27th of April, 1565, Legaspi's fleet reached +Cebu. Here, in this beautiful strait and fine anchoring-ground, +Magellan's ships had lingered until the death of their leader +forty-four years before. A splendid native settlement lined the +shore, so Father Chirino tells us, for a distance of more than a +league. The natives of Cebu were fearful and greatly agitated, and +seemed determined to resist the landing of the Spaniards. But at the +first discharge of the guns of the ships, the natives abandoned the +shore, and, setting fire to the town, retreated into the jungles and +hills. Without loss of life the Spaniards landed, and occupied the +harbor and town. + +Finding of "the Holy Child of Cebu."--The Spanish soldiers found in +one of the houses of the natives a small wooden image of the Child +Jesus. A similar image, Pigafetta tells us, he had himself given to +a native while in the island with Magellan. It had been preserved by +the natives and was regarded by them as an object of veneration. To +the pious Spaniards the discovery of this sacred object was hailed +as an event of great good fortune. It was taken by the monks, and +carried to a shrine especially erected for it. It still rests in the +church of the Augustinians, an object of great devotion. + +Settlement Made at Cebu.--In honor of this image this first settlement +of the Spaniards in the Philippines received the name of "City of +the Most Holy Name of Jesus." Here Legaspi established himself, and, +by great tact and skill, gradually won the confidence and friendship +of the inhabitants. A formal peace was at last concluded in which the +dato, Tupas, recognized the sovereignty of Spain; and the people of +Cebu and the Spaniards bound themselves to assist each other against +the enemies of either. + +They had some difficulty in understanding one another, but the +Spaniards had with them a Mohammedan Malay of Borneo, called Cid-Hamal, +who had been taken from the East Indies to the Peninsula and thence +to Mexico and Legaspi's expedition. The languages of Malaysia and +the Philippines are so closely related that this man was able to +interpret. Almost immediately, however, the missionaries began the +study of the native dialect, and Padre Chirino tells us that Friar +Martin Herrada made here the first Filipino vocabulary, and was soon +preaching the Gospel to the natives in their own language. + +The great difficulty experienced by Legaspi was to procure sufficient +food for his expedition. At different times he sent a ship to the +nearest islands, and twice his ship went south to Mindanao to procure +a cargo of cinnamon to be sent back to New Spain. + +Thus month by month the Spaniards gained acquaintance with the +beautiful island sea of the archipelago, with its green islands +and brilliant sheets of water, its safe harbors and picturesque +settlements. + +The Bisayans.--In 1569, Legaspi discovered the great island of +Panay. Here they were fortunate in securing a great abundance +of supplies and the friendship of the natives, who received them +well. These beautiful central islands of the Philippines are inhabited +by Bisaya. The Spaniards found this tribe tattooing their bodies +with ornamental designs, a practice widespread throughout Oceanica, +and which still is common among the tribes of northern Luzon. This +practice caused the Spaniards to give to the Bisayas the title of +"Islas de los Pintados" (the Islands of the Painted). + +Discovery of the Northern Return Route across the Pacific.--Before +the arrival of the expedition in the Philippines, the captain of one +of Legaspi's ships, inspired by ungenerous ambition and the hopes +of getting a reward, outsailed the rest of the fleet. Having arrived +first in the islands, he started at once upon the return voyage. Unlike +preceding captains who had tried to return to New Spain by sailing +eastward from the islands against both wind and ocean current, this +captain sailed northward beyond the trades into the more favorable +westerly winds, and found his way back to America and New Spain. + +Soon after arriving in the Philippines, Legaspi's instructions +required him to dispatch at least one vessel on the return voyage to +New Spain. Accordingly on June 1st the San Pablo set sail, carrying +about two hundred men, including Urdenata and another friar. This +vessel also followed the northern route across the Pacific, and +after a voyage of great hardship, occupying three and a half months, +it reached the coast of North America at California and followed it +southward to Acapulco. + +The discovery made by these captains of a favorable route for vessels +returning from the islands to New Spain safe from capture by the +Portuguese, completed the plans of the Spanish for the occupation +of the Philippines. In 1567 another vessel was dispatched by Legaspi +and made this voyage successfully. + +The sailing of these vessels left Legaspi in Cebu with a colony +of only one hundred and fifty Spaniards, poorly provided with +resources, to commence the conquest of the Philippines. But he won the +friendship and respect of the inhabitants, and in 1568 two galleons +with reinforcements arrived from Acapulco. From this time on nearly +yearly communication was maintained, fresh troops with munitions and +supplies arriving with each expedition. + +The First Expedition against the Moro Pirates.--Pirates of +Mindoro.--The Spaniards found the Straits of San Bernardino and the +Mindoro Sea swarming with the fleets of Mohammedan Malays from Borneo +and the Jolo Archipelago. To a race living so continuously upon the +water, piracy has always possessed irresistible attractions. In the +days of Legaspi, the island of Mindoro had been partially settled by +Malays from the south, and many of these settlements were devoted +to piracy, preying especially upon the towns on the north coast of +Panay. In January, 1570, Legaspi dispatched his grandson, Juan de +Salcedo, to punish these marauders. [27] + +Capture of Pirate Strongholds.--Salcedo had a force of forty Spaniards +and a large number of Bisaya. He landed on the western coast of +Mindoro and took the pirate town of Mamburao. The main stronghold of +the Moros he found to be on the small island of Lubang, northwest of +Mindanao. Here they had three strong forts with high walls, on which +were mounted small brass cannon, or "lantakas." Two of these forts +were surrounded by moats. There were several days of fighting before +Lubang was conquered. The possession of Lubang brought the Spaniards +almost to the entrance of Manila Bay, Meanwhile, a captain, Enriquez +de Guzman, had discovered Masbate, Burias, and Ticao, and had landed +on Luzon in the neighborhood of Albay, called then, "Italon." + +Conquest of the Moro City of Manila.--Expedition from Panay.--Reports +had come to Legaspi of an important Mohammedan settlement named +"May-nila," on the shore of a great bay, and a Mohammedan chieftain, +called Maomat, was procured to guide the Spaniards on their conquest +of this region. [28] For this purpose Legaspi sent his field-marshal, +Martin de Goiti, with Salcedo, one hundred and twenty Spanish soldiers, +and fourteen or fifteen boats filled with Bisayan allies. They left +Panay early in May, and, after stopping at Mindoro, came to anchor +in Manila Bay, off the mouth of the Pasig River. + +The Mohammedan City.--On the south bank of the river was the fortified +town of the Mohammedan chieftain, Raja Soliman; on the north bank was +the town of Tondo, under the Raja Alcandora, or Lacandola. Morga [29] +tells us that these Mohammedan settlers from the island of Borneo had +commenced to arrive on the island only a few years before the coming +of the Spaniards. They had settled and married among the Filipino +population already occupying Manila Bay, and had introduced some of the +forms and practices of the Mohammedan religion. The city of Manila was +defended by a fort, apparently on the exact sight of the present fort +of Santiago. It was built of the trunks of palms, and had embrasures +where were mounted a considerable number of cannon, or lantakas. + +Capture of the City.--The natives received the foreigners at first +with a show of friendliness, but after they had landed on the banks of +the Pasig, Soliman, with a large force, assaulted them. The impetuous +Spaniards charged, and carried the fortifications, and the natives +fled, setting fire to their settlement. When the fight was over the +Spaniards found among the dead the body of a Portuguese artillerist, +who had directed the defense. Doubtless he was one who had deserted +from the Portuguese garrison far south in the Indian archipelago +to cast in his fortunes with the Malays. It being the commencement +of the season of rains and typhoons, the Spaniards decided to defer +the occupation of Manila, and, after exploring Cavite harbor, they +returned to Panay. + +A year was spent in strengthening their hold on the Bisayas and in +arranging for their conquest of Luzon. On Masbate was placed a friar +and six soldiers, so small was the number that could be spared. + +Founding of the Spanish City of Manila.--With a force of 280 men +Legaspi returned in the spring of 1571 to the conquest of Luzon. It was +a bloodless victory. The Filipino rajas declared themselves vassals +of the Spanish king, and in the months of May and June the Spaniards +established themselves in the present site of the city. + +At once Legaspi gave orders for the reconstruction of the fort, the +building of a palace, a convent for the Augustinian monks, a church, +and 150 houses. The boundaries of this city followed closely the +outlines of the Tagalog city "Maynila," and it seems probable that the +location of buildings then established have been adhered to until the +present time. This settlement appeared so desirable to Legaspi that +he at once designated it as the capital of the archipelago. Almost +immediately he organized its governing assembly, or ayuntamiento. + +The First Battle on Manila Bay.--In spite of their ready submission, +the rajas, Soliman and Lacandola, did not yield their sovereignty +without a struggle. They were able to secure assistance in the Tagalog +and Pampanga settlements of Macabebe and Hagonoy. A great fleet of +forty war-praos gathered in palm-lined estuaries on the north shore +of Manila Bay, and came sweeping down the shallow coast to drive the +Spaniards from the island. Against them were sent Goiti and fifty +men. The protective mail armor, the heavy swords and lances, the +horrible firearms, coupled with the persistent courage and fierce +resolution of the Spanish soldier of the sixteenth century, swept +back this native armament. The chieftain Soliman was killed. + +The Conquest of Central Luzon.--Goiti continued his marching and +conquering northward until nearly the whole great plain of central +Luzon, that stretches from Manila Bay to the Gulf of Lingayen, +lay submissive before him. A little later the raja Lacandola died, +having accepted Christian baptism, and the only powerful resistance +on the island of Luzon was ended. + +Goiti was sent back to the Bisayas, and the command of the army of +Luzon fell to Salcedo, the brilliant and daring grandson of Legaspi, +at this time only twenty-two years of age. This young knight led +his command up the Pasig River. Cainta and Taytay, at that time +important Tagalog towns, were conquered, and then the country south +of Laguna de Bay. The town of Cainta was fortified and defended by +small cannon, and although Salcedo spent three days in negotiations, +it was only taken by storm, in which four hundred Filipino men and +women perished. [30] From here Salcedo marched over the mountains to +the Pacific coast and south into the Camarines, where he discovered +the gold mines of Paracale and Mamburao. + +At about this time the Spaniards conquered the Cuyos and Calamianes +islands and the northern part of Paragua. + +Exploration of the Coast of Northern Luzon.--In 1572, Salcedo, with a +force of only forty-five men, sailed northward from Manila, landed in +Zambales and Pangasinan, and on the long and rich Ilocos coast effected +a permanent submission of the inhabitants. He also visited the coast +farther north, where the great and fertile valley of the Cagayan, +the largest river of the archipelago, reaches to the sea. From here he +continued his adventurous journey down the Pacific coast of Luzon to +the island of Polillo, and returned by way of Laguna de Bay to Manila. + +Death of Legaspi.--He arrived in September, 1572, to find that his +grandfather and commander, Legaspi, had died a month before (August 20, +1572). After seven years of labor the conqueror of difficulties was +dead, but almost the entire archipelago had been added to the crown +of Spain. Three hundred years of Spanish dominion secured little +more territory than that traversed and pacified by the conquerors +of those early years. In spite of their slender forces, the daring +of the Spaniards induced them to follow a policy of widely extending +their power, effecting settlements, and enforcing submission wherever +rich coasts and the gathering of population attracted them. + +Within a single year's time most of the coast country of Luzon had +been traversed, important positions seized, and the inhabitants +portioned out in encomiendas. On the death of Legaspi, the command +fell to Guido de Lavezares. + +Reasons for this Easy Conquest of the Philippines.--The explanation of +how so small a number of Europeans could so rapidly and successfully +reduce to subjection the inhabitants of a territory like the +Philippines, separated into so many different islands, is to be found +in several things. + +First.--The expedition had a great leader, one of those knights +combining sagacity with resolution, who glorify the brief period when +Spanish prestige was highest. No policy could ever be successful in the +Philippines which did not depend for its strength upon giving a measure +of satisfaction to the Filipino people. Legaspi did this. He appears +to have won the native datos, treating them with consideration, and +holding out to them the expectations of a better and more prosperous +era, which the sovereignty of the Spaniard would bring. Almost from +the beginning, the natives of an island already reduced flocked to +his standard to assist in the conquest of another. The small forces +of the Spanish soldiers were augmented by hundreds of Filipino allies. + +Second.--Another reason is found in the wonderful courage and great +fighting power of the Spanish soldier. Each man, splendidly armored +and weaponed, deadly with either sword or spear, carrying in addition +the arquebus, the most efficient firearm of the time, was equal in +combat to many natives who might press upon him with their naked +bodies and inferior weapons. + +Third.--Legaspi was extremely fortunate in his captains, who included +such old campaigners as the field-marshal Martin de Goiti, who had +been to the Philippines before with Villalobos, and such gallant +youths as Salcedo, one of the most attractive military figures in +all Spanish history. + +Fourth.--In considering this Spanish conquest, we must understand +that the islands were far more sparsely inhabited than they are +to-day. The Bisayan islands, the rich Camarines, the island of Luzon, +had, in Legaspi's time, only a small fraction of their present great +populations. This population was not only small, but it was also +extremely disunited. Not only were the great tribes separated by +the differences of language, but, as we have already seen, each tiny +community was practically independent, and the power of a dato very +limited. There were no great princes, with large forces of fighting +retainers whom they could call to arms, such as the Portuguese had +encountered among the Malays south in the Moluccas. + +Fifth.--But certainly one of the greatest factors in the yielding +of the Filipino to the Spaniard was the preaching of the missionary +friars. No man is so strong with an unenlightened and barbarous race as +he who claims power from God. And the preaching of the Catholic faith, +with its impressive and dramatic services, its holy sacraments, its +power to arrest the attention and to admit at once the rude mind into +the circle of its ministry, won the heart of the Filipino. Without +doubt he was ready and eager for a loftier and truer religious belief +and ceremonial. There was no powerful native priesthood to oppose +the introduction of Christianity. The preaching of the faith and the +baptism of converts proceeded almost as rapidly as the marching of +Salcedo's soldiers. + +The Dangers of the Spanish Occupation.--Such conditions assured the +success of the Spanish occupation, provided the small colony could +be protected from outside attacks. But even from the beginning the +position of this little band of conquerors was perilous. Their numbers +were small and of necessity much scattered, and their only source +of succor lay thousands of miles away, across the greatest body of +water on the earth, in a land itself a colony newly wrested from +the hand of the Indian. Across the narrow waters of the China Sea, +only a few days' distant, even in the slow-sailing junks, lay the +teeming shores of the most populous country in the world, in those +days not averse to foreign conquest. + +Attempt of the Chinese under Limahong to Capture Manila.--Activity of +the Southern Chinese.--It was from the Chinese that the first heavy +blow fell. The southeastern coast of China, comprising the provinces of +Kwangtung and Fukien, has always exhibited a restlessness and passion +for emigration not displayed by other parts of the country. From these +two provinces, through the ports of Amoy and Canton, have gone those +Chinese traders and coolies to be found in every part of the East +and many other countries of the world. Two hundred years before the +arrival of the Spaniards, Chinese junks traversed the straits and +seas and visited regularly the coast of Mindanao. + +Limahong's Expedition to the Philippines.--This coast of China has +always been notorious for its piracy. The distance of the capital at +Peking and the weakness of the provincial viceroys have made impossible +its suppression. It was one of these bold filibusters of the China Sea, +called Limahong, who two years after the death of Legaspi attempted +the conquest of the Philippines. The stronghold of this corsair was the +island of Pehon, where he fortified himself and developed his power. + +Here, reports of the prosperous condition of Manila reached him, +and he prepared a fleet of sixty-two war-junks, with four thousand +soldiers and sailors. The accounts even state that a large number of +women and artisans were taken on board to form the nucleus of the +settlement, as soon as the Spaniards should be destroyed. In the +latter part of November, 1574, this powerful fleet came sweeping +down the western coast of Luzon and on the 29th gathered in the +little harbor of Mariveles, at the entrance to Manila Bay. Eight +miles south of Manila is the town of Paranaque, on an estuary which +affords a good landing-place for boats entering from the bay. Here +on the night following, Limahong put ashore six hundred men, under +one of his generals, Sioco, who was a Japanese. + +The Attack upon Manila.--From here they marched rapidly up the beach +and fell furiously upon the city. Almost their first victim was the +field-marshal Goiti. The fort of Manila was at this date a weak affair, +without ditches or escarpment, and it was here that the struggle took +place. The Spaniards, although greatly outnumbered, were able to +drive back the Chinese; but they themselves lost heavily. Limahong +now sent ashore heavy reinforcements, and prepared to overwhelm the +garrison. The Spaniards were saved from defeat by the timely arrival +of Salcedo with fifty musketeers. From his station at Vigan he had +seen the sails of Limahong's fleet, cruising southward along the Luzon +coast, and, suspecting that so great an expedition could have no other +purpose than the capture of Manila, he embarked in seven small boats, +and reached the city in six days, just in time to participate in the +furious battle between the Spaniards and the entire forces of the +Chinese pirate. The result was the complete defeat of the Chinese, +who were driven back upon their boats at Paranaque. + +The Result of Limahong's Expedition.--Although defeated in his attack +on Manila, Limahong was yet determined on a settlement in Luzon, and, +sailing northward, he landed in Pangasinan and began constructing +fortifications at the mouth of the river Lingayen. The Spaniards +did not wait for him to strengthen himself and to dispute with them +afresh for the possession of the island, but organized in March an +expedition of two hundred and fifty Spaniards and fifteen hundred +Filipinos under Salcedo. They landed suddenly in the Gulf of Lingayen, +burned the entire fleet of the Chinese, and scattered a part of the +forces in the surrounding mountains. The rest, though hemmed in by +the Spaniards, were able to construct small boats, in which they +escaped from the islands. + +Thus ended this formidable attack, which threatened for a time to +overthrow the power of Spain in the East. It was the beginning, +however, of important relations with China. Before Limahong's escape +a junk arrived from the viceroy of Fukien, petitioning for the +delivery of the Chinese pirate. Two Augustinian friars accompanied +his junk back to China, eager for such great fields of missionary +conquest. They carried letters from Lavezares inviting Chinese +friendship and intercourse. + +Beginning of a New Period of Conquest.--In the spring of 1576, Salcedo +died at Vigan, at the age of twenty-seven. With his death may be said +to close the first period of the history in the Philippines,--that of +the Conquest, extending from 1565 to 1576. For the next twenty-five +years the ambitions of the Spaniards were not content with the +exploration of this archipelago, but there were greater and more +striking conquests, to which the minds of both soldier and priest +aspired. + +Despite the settlement with Portugal, the rich Spice Islands to the +south still attracted them, and there were soon revealed the fertile +coasts of Siam and Cambodia, the great empire of China, the beautiful +island of Formosa, and the Japanese archipelago. These, with their +great populations and wealth, were more alluring fields than the poor +and sparsely populated coasts of the Philippines. So, for the next +quarter of a century, the policy of the Spaniards in the Philippines +was not so much to develop these islands themselves, as to make them +a center for the commercial and spiritual conquest of the Orient. [31] + +A Treaty with the Chinese.--The new governor arrived in the Islands +in August, 1575. He was Dr. Francisco La-Sande. In October there +returned the ambassadors who had been sent to China by Lavezares. The +viceroy of Fukien had received them with much ceremony. He had not +permitted the friars to remain, but had forwarded the governor's +letter to the Chinese emperor. In February following came a Chinese +embassy, granting a port of the empire with which the Spaniards could +trade. This port, probably, was Amoy, which continued to be the chief +port of communication with China to the present day. + +It was undoubtedly commerce and not the missionaries that the Chinese +desired. Two Augustinians attempted to return with this embassy to +China, but the Chinese on leaving the harbor of Manila landed on +the coast of Zambales, where they whipped the missionaries, killed +their servants and interpreter, and left the friars bound to trees, +whence they were rescued by a small party of Spaniards who happened +to pass that way. + +Sir Francis Drake's Noted Voyage.--The year 1577 is notable for the +appearance in the East of the great English sea-captain, freebooter, +and naval hero, Francis Drake. England and Spain, at this moment, while +not actually at war, were rapidly approaching the conflict which made +them for centuries traditional enemies. Spain was the champion of Roman +ecclesiasticism. Her king, Philip the Second, was not only a cruel +bigot, but a politician of sweeping ambition. His schemes included the +conquest of France and England, the extermination of Protestantism, +and the subjection of Europe to his own and the Roman authority. + +The English people scented the danger from afar, and while the two +courts nominally maintained peace, the daring seamen of British Devon +were quietly putting to sea in their swift and terrible vessels, +for the crippling of the Spanish power. The history of naval warfare +records no more reckless adventures than those of the English mariners +during this period. Audacity could not rise higher. + +Drake's is the most famous and romantic figure of them all. In the +year 1577, he sailed from England with the avowed purpose of sweeping +the Spanish Main. He passed the Straits of Magellan, and came up the +western coast of South America, despoiling the Spanish shipping from +Valparaiso to Panama. Thence he came on across the Pacific, touched +the coast of Mindanao, and turned south to the Moluccas. + +The Portuguese had nominally annexed the Moluccas in 1522, but at +the time of Drake's visit they had been driven from Ternate, though +still holding Tidor. Drake entered into friendly relations with the +sultan of Ternate, and secured a cargo of cloves. From here he sailed +boldly homeward, daring the Portuguese fleets, as he had defied the +Spanish, and by way of Good Hope returned to England, his fleet the +first after Magellan's to circumnavigate the globe. + +A Spanish Expedition to Borneo.--The appearance of Drake in the +Moluccas roused La-Sande to ambitious action. The attraction of +the southern archipelagoes was overpowering, and at this moment the +opportunity seemed to open to the governor to force southward his +power. One of the Malay kings of Borneo, Sirela, arrived in Manila, +petitioning aid against his brother, and promising to acknowledge the +sovereignty of the king of Spain over the island of Borneo. La-Sande +went in person to restore this chieftain to power. He had a fleet of +galleys and frigates, and, according to Padre Gaspar de San Augustin, +more than fifteen hundred Filipino bowmen from Pangasinan, Cagayan, +and the Bisayas accompanied the expedition. He landed on the coast +of Borneo, destroyed the fleet of praos and the city of the usurper, +and endeavored to secure Sirela in his principality. Sickness among +his fleet and the lack of provisions forced him to return to Manila. + +The First Attack upon the Moros of Jolo.--On his return he sent an +officer against the island of Jolo. This officer forced the Joloanos +to recognize his power, and from there he passed to the island of +Mindanao, where he further enforced obedience upon the natives. This +was the beginning of the Spanish expeditions against the Moros, which +had the effect of arousing in these Mohammedan pirates such terrible +retaliatory vengeance. Under La-Sande the conquest of the Camarines was +completed by Captain Juan Chaves and the city of Nueva Caceres founded. + +The Appointment of Governor Ronquillo.--It was the uniform policy of +the Spanish government to limit the term of office of the governor +to a short period of years. This was one of the futile provisions by +which Spain attempted to control both the ambition and the avarice +of her colonial captains. But Don Gonzalo Ronquillo had granted to +him the governorship of the Philippines for life, on the condition of +his raising and equipping a force of six hundred in Spain, largely at +his own expense, for the better protection and pacification of the +archipelago. This Ronquillo did, bringing his expedition by way of +Panama. He arrived in April, 1580, and although he died at the end +of three years, his rule came at an important time. + +The Spanish and the Portuguese Colonies Combined.--In 1580, Philip +II, conquered and annexed to Spain the kingdom of Portugal, and with +Portugal came necessarily to the Spanish crown those rich eastern +colonies which the valor of Da Gama and Albuquerque had won. Portugal +rewon her independence in 1640, but for years Manila was the capital +of a colonial empire, extending from Goa in India to Formosa. + +Events of Ronquillo's Rule.--Ronquillo, under orders from the crown, +entered into correspondence with the captain of the Portuguese +fortress on the island of Tidor, and the captain of Tidor petitioned +Ronquillo for assistance in reconquering the tempting island of +Ternate. Ronquillo sent south a considerable expedition, but after +arriving in the Moluccas the disease of beri-beri in the Spanish +camp defeated the undertaking. Ronquillo also sent a small armada to +the coasts of Borneo and Malacca, where a limited amount of pepper +was obtained. + +The few years of Ronquillo's reign were in other ways important. A +colony of Spaniards was established at Oton, on the island of Panay, +which was given the name of Arevalo (Iloilo). And under Ronquillo +was pacified for the first time the great valley of the Cagayan. At +the mouth of the river a Japanese adventurer, Tayfusa, or Tayzufu, +had established himself and was attempting the subjugation of this +important part of northern Luzon. Ronquillo sent against him Captain +Carreon, who expelled the intruder and established on the present +site of Lao-lo the city of Nueva Segovia. Two friars accompanied +this expedition and the occupation of this valley by the Spaniards +was made permanent. + +The First Conflicts between the Church and the State.--In March, 1581, +there arrived the first Bishop of Manila, Domingo de Salazar. Almost +immediately began those conflicts between the spiritual and civil +authorities, and between bishop and the regular orders, which have +filled to such an extent the history of the islands. The bishop +was one of those authoritative, ambitious, and arrogant characters, +so typical in the history of the Church. It was largely due to his +protests against the autocratic power of the governor that the king +was induced to appoint the first Audiencia. The character and power +of these courts have already been explained. The president and judges +arrived the year following the death of Ronquillo, and the president, +Dr. Santiago de Vera, became acting governor during the succeeding +five years. + +In 1587, the first Dominicans, fifteen in number, arrived, and founded +their celebrated mission, La Provincia del Santisimo Rosario. + +Increasing Strength of the Malays.--De Vera continued the policy of +his predecessors and another fruitless attack was made on Ternate +in 1585. The power of the Malay people was increasing, while that of +the Europeans was decreasing. The sultans had expelled their foreign +masters, and neither Spaniard nor Portuguese were able to effect +the conquest of the Moluccas. There were uprisings of the natives in +Manila and in Cagayan and Ilocos. + +The Decree of 1589.--Affairs in the Islands did not yet, however, +suit Bishop Salazar, and as the representative of both governor and +bishop, the Jesuit, Alonso Sanchez, was dispatched in 1586 to lay the +needs of the colony before the king. Philip was apparently impressed +with the necessity of putting the government of the Islands upon a +better administrative basis. To this end he published the important +decree of 1589. + +The governor now became a paid officer of the crown, at a salary of +ten thousand ducats. For the proper protection of the colony and the +conquest of the Moluccas, a regular force of four hundred soldiers +accompanied the governor. His powers were extended to those of an +actual viceregent of the king, and the Audiencia was abolished. The man +selected to occupy this important post was Don Gomez Perez Dasmarinas, +who arrived with the new constitution in May, 1590. So great was +the chagrin of the bishop at the abolition of the Audiencia and the +increase of the governor's power, that he himself set out for Spain +to lay his wishes before the court. + +The Missionary Efforts of the Friars.--Twenty-four Franciscans came +with Dasmarinas and the presence of the three orders necessitated the +partition of the Islands among them. The keenest rivalry and jealousy +existed among them over the prosecution of missions in still more +foreign lands. To the missionaries of this age it seemed a possible +thing to convert the great and conservative nations of China and +Japan to the Western religion. + +In the month of Dasmarinas' arrival, a company of Dominicans attempted +to found a mission in China, and, an embassy coming from Japan to +demand vassalage from the Philippines, four of the newly arrived +Franciscans accompanied the Japanese on their return. + +A year later, in 1592, another embassy from the king of Cambodia +arrived, bringing gifts that included two elephants, and petitioning +for succor against the king of Siam. This was the beginning of an +alliance between Cambodia and the Philippines which lasted for many +years, and which occasioned frequent military aid and many efforts +to convert that country. + +Death of Dasmarinas.--But the center of Dasmarinas' ambitions was the +effective conquest of the East Indies and the extension of Spanish +power and his own rule through the Moluccas. With this end in view, +for three years he made preparations. For months the shores were lined +with the yards of the shipbuilders, and the great forests of Bulacan +fell before the axes of the Indians. More than two hundred vessels, +"galeras," "galeotas," and "virrayes," were built, and assembled +at Cavite. + +In the fall of 1593, the expedition, consisting of over nine +hundred Spaniards, Filipino bowmen and rowers, was ready. Many of the +Filipinos, procured to row these boats, were said to have been slaves, +purchased through the Indian chiefs by the Spanish encomenderos. The +governor sent forward this great fleet under the command of his son, +Don Luis, and in the month of October he himself set sail in a galley +with Chinese rowers. But on the night of the second day, while off the +island of Maricaban, the Chinese oarsmen rose against the Spaniards, +of whom there were about forty on the ship, and killed almost the +entire number, including the governor. They then escaped in the boat +to the Ilocos coast and thence to China. + +The murder of this active and illustrious general was a determining +blow to the ambitious projects for the conquest of the East +Indies. Among other papers which Dasmarinas brought from Spain was a +royal cedula giving him power to nominate his successor, who proved to +be his son, Don Luis, who after some difficulty succeeded temporarily +to his father's position. + +Arrival of the Jesuits.--In June, 1595, there arrived Don Antonio de +Morga, who had been appointed assessor and lieutenant-governor of +the Islands, to succeed Don Luis. With Morga came the first Jesuit +missionaries. He was also the bearer of an order granting to the +Jesuits the exclusive privilege of conducting missions in China and +Japan. The other orders were forbidden to pass outside the Islands. + +An attempt to Colonize Mindanao.--In the year 1596, the Captain +Rodriguez de Figueroa received the title of governor of Mindanao, +with exclusive right to colonize the island for "the space of +two lives." He left Iloilo in April with 214 Spaniards, two Jesuit +priests, and many natives. They landed in the Rio Grande of Mindanao, +where the defiant dato, Silonga, fortified himself and resisted +them. Almost immediately Figueroa rashly ventured on shore and was +killed by Moros. Reinforcements were sent under Don Juan Ronquillo, +who, after nearly bringing the datos to submission, abandoned all he +had gained. The Spaniards burned their forts on the Rio Grande and +retired to Caldera, near Zamboanga, where they built a presidio. + +Death of Franciscans in Japan.--The new governor, Don Francisco +Tello de Guzman, arrived on June 1, 1596. He had previously been +treasurer of the Casa de Contratacion in Seville. Soon after his +arrival an important and serious tragedy occurred in Japan. The ship +for Acapulco went ashore on the Japanese coast and its rich cargo was +seized by the feudal prince where the vessel sought assistance. The +Franciscans had already missions in these islands, and a quarrel +existed between them and the Portuguese Jesuits over this missionary +field. The latter succeeded in prejudicing the Japanese court against +the Franciscans, and when they injudiciously pressed for the return +of the property of the wrecked galleon, "San Felipe," the emperor, +greedy for the rich plunder, and exasperated by their preaching, +met their petitions with the sentence of death. They were horribly +crucified at the port of Nagasaki, February 5, 1597. This emperor was +the proud and cruel ruler, Taycosama. He was planning the conquest +of the Philippines themselves, when death ended his plans. + +The First Archbishop in the Philippines.--Meanwhile the efforts of +Salazar at the Spanish court had effected further important changes +for the Islands. The reestablishment of the Royal Audiencia was +ordered, and his own position was elevated to that of archbishop, +with the three episcopal sees of Ilocos, Cebu, and the Camarines. He +did not live to assume this office, and the first archbishop of the +Philippines was Ignacio Santibanez, who also died three months after +his arrival, on May 28, 1598. + +Reestablishment of the Audiencia.--The Audiencia was reestablished with +great pomp and ceremony. The royal seal was borne on a magnificently +caparisoned horse to the cathedral, where a Te Deum was chanted, +and then to the Casas Reales, where was inaugurated the famous court +that continued without interruption down to the end of Spanish +rule. Dr. Morga was one of the first oidores, and the earliest +judicial record which can now be found in the archives of this court +is a sentence bearing his signature. + +The Rise of Moro Piracy.--The last years of De Guzman's governorship +were filled with troubles ominous for the future of the Islands. The +presidio of Caldera was destroyed by the Moros. Following this +victory, in the year 1599, the Moros of Jolo and Maguindanao equipped +a piratical fleet of fifty caracoas, and swept the coasts of the +Bisayas. Cebu, Negros, and Panay were ravaged, their towns burned, +and their inhabitants carried off as slaves. + +The following year saw the return of a larger and still more dreadful +expedition. The people of Panay abandoned their towns and fled into +the mountains, under the belief that these terrible attacks had been +inspired by the Spaniards. To check these pirates, Juan Gallinato, +with a force of two hundred Spaniards, was sent against Jolo, +but, like so many expeditions that followed his, he accomplished +nothing. The inability of the Spaniards was now revealed and the +era of Moro piracy had begun. "From this time until the present day" +(about the year 1800), wrote Zuniga, "these Moros have not ceased to +infest our colonies; innumerable are the Indians they have captured, +the towns they have looted, the rancherias they have destroyed, the +vessels they have taken. It seems as if God has preserved them for +vengeance on the Spaniards that they have not been able to subject +them in two hundred years, in spite of the expeditions sent against +them, the armaments sent almost very year to pursue them. In a very +little while we conquered all the islands of the Philippines; but the +little island of Jolo, a part of Mindanao, and other islands near by +we have not been able to subjugate to this day." [32] + +Battle at Mariveles with the Dutch.--In October, 1600, two Dutch +vessels appeared in the Islands; it was the famous expedition of +the Dutch admiral, Van Noort. They had come through the Straits of +Magellan, on a voyage around the world. The Dutch were in great need of +provisions. As they were in their great enemy's colony, they captured +and sunk several boats, Spanish and Chinese, bound for Manila with +rice, poultry, palm-wine, and other stores of food. At Mariveles, +a Japanese vessel from Japan was overhauled. Meanwhile in Manila +great excitement and activity prevailed. The Spaniards fitted up two +galleons and the "Oidor" Morga himself took command with a large crew +of fighting men. + +On November 14, they attacked the Dutch, whose crews were greatly +reduced to only eighty men on both ships. The vessel commanded by +Morga ran down the flagship of Van Noort, and for hours the ships lay +side by side while a hand-to-hand fight raged on the deck and in the +hold. The ships taking fire, Morga disengaged his ship, which was so +badly shattered that it sank, with great loss of life; but Morga and +some others reached the little island of Fortuna. Van Noort was able +to extinguish the fire on his vessel, and escape from the Islands. He +eventually reached Holland. His smaller vessel was captured with its +crew of twenty-five men, who were all hung at Cavite. [33] + +Other Troubles of the Spanish.--In the year 1600, two ships sailed +for Acapulco, but one went down off the Catanduanes and the other was +shipwrecked on the Ladrones. "On top of all other misfortunes, Manila +suffered, in the last months of this government, a terrible earthquake, +which destroyed many houses and the church of the Jesuits." [34] + +The Moros, the Dutch, anxieties and losses by sea, the visitations +of God,--how much of the history of the seventeenth century in the +Philippines is filled with these four things! + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +THE PHILIPPINES THREE HUNDRED YEARS AGO. + + +Condition of the Archipelago at the Beginning of the Seventeenth +Century.--The Spanish Rule Completely Established.--At the close +of the sixteenth century the Spaniards had been in possession of +the Philippines for a generation. In these thirty-five years the +most striking of all the results of the long period of Spanish +occupation were accomplished. The work of these first soldiers and +missionaries established the limits and character of Spanish rule as +it was to remain for 250 years. Into this first third of a century +the Spaniard crowded all his heroic feats of arms, exploration, +and conversion. Thereafter, down to 1850, new fields were explored, +and only a few new tribes Christianized. + +The survey of the archipelago given by Morga soon after 1600 reads +like a narrative of approximately modern conditions. It reveals to +us how great had been the activities of the early Spaniard and how +small the achievements of his countrymen after the seventeenth century +began. All of the large islands, except Paragua and the Moro country, +were, in that day, under encomiendas, their inhabitants paying tributes +and for the most part professing the Catholic faith. + +The smaller groups and islets were almost as thoroughly exploited. Even +of the little Catanduanes, lying off the Pacific coast of Luzon, +Morga could say, "They are well populated with natives,--a good +race, all encomended to Spaniards, with doctrine and churches, and +an alcalde-mayor, who does justice among them." + +He says of the Babuyanes at the extreme north of the archipelago, +"They are not encomended, nor is tribute collected among them, nor +are there Spaniards among them, because they are of little reason and +politeness, and there have neither been Christians made among them, +nor have they justices." They continued in this condition until a few +years before the end of Spanish rule. In 1591, however, the Babuyanes +had been given in encomienda to Esteban de la Serna and Francisco +Castillo. They are put as having two thousand inhabitants and five +hundred "tributantes," but all unsubdued ("todos alcados"). + +On some islands the hold of the Spaniards was more extensive in Morga's +day than at a later time. Then the island of Mindoro was regarded as +important, and in the early years and decades of Spanish power appears +to have been populous along the coasts. Later it was desolated by the +Moro pirates and long remained wild and almost uninhabited except by +a shifting population from the mainland of Luzon. + +The Encomiendas.--The first vessels that followed the expedition of +Legaspi had brought orders from the king that the Islands should be +settled, and divided in encomiendas to those who had conquered and +won them. [35] On this instruction, Legaspi had given the Filipinos +in encomienda to his captains and soldiers as fast as the conquest +proceeded. + +We are fortunate to have a review of these encomiendas, made in 1591, +about twenty-five years after the system was introduced into the +Islands. [36] There were then 267 encomiendas in the Philippines, +of which thirty-one were of the king, and the remainder of private +persons. + +Population under the Encomiendas.--From the enumeration of these +encomiendas, we learn that the most populous parts of the archipelago +were La Laguna, with 24,000 tributantes and 97,000 inhabitants, and the +Camarines, which included all the Bicol territory, and the Catanduanes, +where there were 21,670 tributantes and a population of over 86,000, In +the vicinity of Manila and Tondo, which included Cavite and Marigondon, +the south shore of the bay, and Pasig and Taguig, there were collected +9,410 tributes, and the population was estimated at about 30,000. In +Ilocos were reported 17,130 tributes and 78,520 souls. + +The entire valley of the Cagayan had been divided among the soldiers +of the command which had effected the conquest. In the list of +encomiendas a few can be recognized, such as Yguig and Tuguegarao, +but most of the names are not to be found on maps of to-day. Most of +the inhabitants were reported to be "rebellious" (alcados), and some +were apparently the same wild tribes which still occupy all of this +water-shed, except the very banks of the river; but none the less +had the Spaniards divided them off into "repartimientos." One soldier +had even taken as an encomienda the inhabitants of the upper waters +of the river, a region which is called in the Relacion "Pugao," with +little doubt the habitat of the same Igorrote tribe as the Ipugao, +who still dwell in these mountains. The upper valley of the Magat, +or Nueva Vizcaya, does not appear to have been occupied and probably +was not until the missions of the eighteenth century. + +The population among the Bisayan islands was quite surprisingly +small, considering its present proportions. Masbate, for example, +had but 1,600 souls; Burias, a like number; the whole central group, +leaving out Panay, only 15,833 tributes, or about 35,000 souls. There +was a single encomienda in Butuan, Mindanao, and another on the Caraga +coast. There were a thousand tributes collected in the encomienda of +Cuyo, and fifteen hundred in Calamianes, which, says the Relacion, +included "los negrillos," probably the mixed Negrito population of +northern Palawan. + +The entire population under encomiendas is set down as 166,903 +tributes, or 667,612 souls. This is, so far as known, the earliest +enumeration of the population of the Philippines. Barring the Igorrotes +of northern Luzon and the Moros and other tribes of Mindanao, it is +a fair estimate of the number of the Filipino people three hundred +years ago. + +It will be noticed that the numbers assigned to single encomenderos +in the Philippines were large. In America the number was limited. As +early as 1512, King Ferdinand had forbidden any single person, of +whatever rank or grade, to hold more than three hundred Indians on +one island. [37] But in the Philippines, a thousand or twelve hundred +"tributantes" were frequently held by a single Spaniard. + +Condition of the Filipinos under the Encomiendas.--Frequent +Revolts.--That the Filipinos on many of these islands bitterly +resented their condition is evidenced by the frequent uprisings +and rebellions. The encomenderos were often extortionate and cruel, +and absolutely heedless of the restrictions and obligations imposed +upon them by the Laws of the Indies. Occasionally a new governor, +under the first impulse of instructions from Mexico or Spain, did +something to correct abuses. Revolts were almost continuous during +the year 1583, and the condition of the natives very bad, many +encomenderos regarding them and treating them almost as slaves, and +keeping them at labor to the destruction of their own crops and the +misery of their families. Gov. Santiago de Vera reached the Islands +the following year and made a characteristic attempt to improve the +system, which is thus related by Zuniga:-- + +"As soon as he had taken possession of the government, he studied to +put into effect the orders which he brought from the king, to punish +certain encomenderos, who had abused the favor they had received in +being given encomiendas, whereby he deposed Bartolome de Ledesma, +encomendero of Abuyo (Leyte), and others of those most culpable, +and punished the others in proportion to the offenses which they had +committed, and which had been proven. + +"In the following year of 1585, he sent Juan de Morones and Pablo de +Lima, with a well equipped squadron, to the Moluccas, which adventure +was as unfortunate as those that had preceded it, and they returned to +Manila without having been able to take the fortress of Ternate. The +governor felt it very deeply that the expedition had failed, and wished +to send another armada in accordance with the orders which the king +had given him; but he could not execute this because the troops from +New Spain did not arrive, and because of the Indians, who lost no +occasion which presented itself to shake off the yoke of the Spaniards. + +"The Pampangos and many inhabitants of Manila confederated with the +Moros of Borneo, who had come for trade, and plotted to enter the city +by night, set it on fire, and, in the confusion of the conflagration, +slay all the Spaniards. This conspiracy was discovered through an +Indian woman, who was married to a Spanish soldier, and measures to +meet the conspiracy were taken, before the mine exploded, many being +seized and suffering exemplary punishment. + +"The islands of Samar, Ybabao, and Leyte were also in disturbance, +and the encomendero of Dagami, pueblo of Leyte, was in peril of losing +his life, because the Indians were incensed by his thievings in the +collection of tribute, which was paid in wax, and which he compelled +them to have weighed with a steelyard which he had made double the +legal amount, and wanted to kill him. They would have done so if he +had not escaped into the mountains and afterwards passed by a banca +to the island of Cebu. The governor sent Captain Lorenzo de la Mota +to pacify these disturbances; he made some punishments, and with +these everything quieted down." [38] + +Three years later, however, the natives of Leyte were again in +revolt. In 1589 Cagayan rose and killed many Spaniards. The revolt +seems to have spread from here to the town of Dingras, Ilocos, where +the natives rose against the collectors of tribute, and slew six +Spaniards of the pueblo of Fernandina. (Zuniga, Historia de Filipinas, +p. 165.) [39] + +Effects of the Spanish Government.--The Spanish occupation had brought +ruin and misery to some parts of the country. Salazar describes with +bitterness the evil condition of the Filipinos. In the rich fields +of Bulacan and Pampanga, great gangs of laborers had been impressed, +felling the forests for the construction of the Spanish fleets and +manning these fleets at the oars, on voyages which took them for +four and six months from their homes. The governor, Don Gonzalez de +Ronquillo, had forced many Indians of Pampanga into the mines of +Ilocos, taking them from the sowing of their rice. Many had died +in the mines and the rest returned so enfeebled that they could +not plant. Hunger and famine had descended upon Pampanga, and on +the encomienda of Guido de Lavazares over a thousand had died from +starvation. [40] + +The Taxes.--The taxes were another source of abuse. Theoretically, +the tax upon Indians was limited to the "tributo," the sum of eight +reales (about one dollar) yearly from the heads of all families, +payable either in gold or in produce of the district. But in fixing the +prices of these commodities there was much extortion, the encomenderos +delaying the collection of the tribute until the season of scarcity, +when prices were high, but insisting then on the same amount as +at harvest-time. + +The principal, who occupied the place of the former dato, +or "maharlica," like the gobernadorcillo of recent times, was +responsible for the collecting of the tribute, and his lot seems +to have been a hard one. "If they do not give as much as they ask, +or do not pay for as many Indians as they say there are, they abuse +the poor principal, or throw him into the pillory (cepo de cabeza), +because all the encomenderos, when they go to make collections, take +their pillories with them, and there they keep him and torment him, +until forced to give all they ask. They are even said to take the wife +and daughter of the principal, when he can not be found. "Many are the +principales who have died under these torments, according to reports." + +Salazar further states that he has known natives to be sold into +slavery, in default of tribute. Neither did they impose upon adults +alone, but "they collect tribute from infants, the aged and the slaves, +and many do not marry because of the tribute, and others slay their +children." [41] + +Scarcity of Food.--Salazar further charges that the alcaldes mayores +(the alcaldes of provinces), sixteen in number, were all corrupt, +and, though their salaries were small, they accumulated fortunes. For +further enumeration of economic ills, Salazar details how prices had +evilly increased. In the first years of Spanish occupation, food was +abundant. There was no lack of rice, beans, chickens, pigs, venison, +buffalo, fish, cocoanuts, bananas, and other fruits, wine and honey; +and a little money bought much. A hundred gantas (about three hundred +pints) of rice could then be bought for a toston (a Portuguese coin, +worth about a half-peso), eight to sixteen fowls for a like amount, a +fat pig for from four to six reales. In the year of his writing (about +1583), products were scarce and prices exorbitant. Rice had doubled, +chickens were worth a real, a good pig six to eight pesos. Population +had decreased, and whole towns were deserted, their inhabitants having +fled into the hills. + +General Improvement under Spanish Rule.--This is one side of the +picture. It probably is overdrawn by the bishop, who was jealous of the +civil authority and who began the first of those continuous clashes +between the church and political power in the Philippines. Doubtless +if we could see the whole character of Spanish rule in these decades, +we should see that the actual condition of the Filipino had improved +and his grade of culture had arisen. No one can estimate the actual +good that comes to a people in being brought under the power of a +government able to maintain peace and dispense justice. Taxation is +sometimes grievous, corruption without excuse; but almost anything +is better than anarchy. + +Before the coming of the Spaniards, it seems unquestionable that +the Filipinos suffered greatly under two terrible grievances that +inflict barbarous society,--in the first place, warfare, with its +murder, pillage, and destruction, not merely between tribe and tribe, +but between town and town, such as even now prevails in the wild +mountains of northern Luzon, among the primitive Malayan tribes; +and in the second place, the weak and poor man was at the mercy of +the strong and rich. + +The establishment of Spanish sovereignty had certainly mitigated, if +it did not wholly remedy, these conditions. "All of these provinces," +Morga could write, "are pacified and are governed from Manila, +having alcaldes mayores, corregidors, and lieutenants, each one of +whom governs in his district or province and dispenses justice. The +chieftains (principales), who formerly held the other natives in +subjection, no longer have power over them in the manner which they +tyrannically employed, which is not the least benefit these natives +have received in escaping from such slavery." [42] + +Old Social Order of the Filipinos but Little Disturbed.--Some governors +seem to have done their utmost to improve the condition of the people +and to govern them well. Santiago de Vera, as we have seen, even went +so far as to commission the worthy priest, Padre Juan de Plasencia, +to investigate the customs and social organization of the Filipinos, +and to prepare an account of their laws, that they might be more +suitably governed. This brief code--for so it is--was distributed +to alcaldes, judges, and encomenderos, with orders to pattern their +decisions in accordance with Filipino custom. [43] + +In ordering local affairs, the Spaniards to some extent left the +old social order of the Filipinos undisturbed. The several social +classes were gradually suppressed, and at the head of each barrio, +or small settlement, was appointed a head, or cabeza de barangay. As +these barangays were grouped into pueblos, or towns, the former datos +were appointed captains and gobernadorcillos. + +The Payment of Tribute.--The tribute was introduced in 1570. [44] +It was supposed to be eight reales or a peso of silver for each +family. Children under sixteen and those over sixty were exempt. In +1590 the amount was raised to ten reales. To this was added a real +for the church, known as "sanctorum," and, on the organization of the +towns, a real for the caja de communidad or municipal treasury. Under +the encomiendas the tribute was paid to the encomenderos, except +on the royal encomiendas; but after two or three generations, as +the encomiendas were suppressed, these collections went directly +to the insular treasury. There was, in addition to the tribute, +a compulsory service of labor on roads, bridges, and public works, +known as the "corvee," a feudal term, or perhaps more generally as the +"polos y servicios." Those discharging this enforced labor were called +"polistas." + +Conversion of the Filipinos to Christianity.--The population had +been very rapidly Christianized. All accounts agree that almost +no difficulty was encountered in baptizing the more advanced +tribes. "There is not in these islands a province," says Morga, +"which resists conversion and does not desire it." [45] Indeed, +the Islands seem to have been ripe for the preaching of a higher +faith, either Christian or Mohammedan. For a time these two great +religions struggled together in the vicinity of Manila, [46] but +at the end of three decades Spanish power and religion were alike +established. Conversion was delayed ordinarily only by the lack of +sufficient numbers of priests. We have seen that this conversion of +the people was the work of the missionary friars. In 1591 there were +140 in the Islands, but the Relacion de Encomiendas calls for 160 +more to properly supply the peoples which had been laid under tribute. + +Coming of the Friars.--The Augustinians had been the first to come, +accompanying Legaspi. Then came the barefooted friars of the Order of +Saint Francis. The first Jesuits, padres Antonio Sedeno and Alonzo +Sanchez, came with the first bishop of the Islands, Domingo de +Salazar, in 1580. They came apparently without resources. Even their +garments brought from Mexico had rotted on the voyage. They found +a little, poor, narrow house in a suburb of Manila, called Laguio +(probably Concepcion). "So poorly furnished was it," says Chirino, +"that the same chest which held their books was the table on which +they ate. Their food for many days was rice, cooked in water, without +salt or oil or fish or meat or even an egg, or anything else except +that sometimes as a regalo they enjoyed some salt sardines." [47] +After the Jesuits, came, as we have seen, the friars of the Dominican +order, and lastly the Recollects, or unshod Augustinians. + +Division of the Archipelago among the Religious Orders.--The +archipelago was districted among these missionary bands. The +Augustinians had many parishes in the Bisayas, on the Ilocano coast, +some in Pangasinan, and all of those in Pampanga. The Dominicans +had parts of Pangasinan and all of the valley of Cagayan. The +Franciscans controlled the Camarines and nearly all of southern Luzon, +and the region of Laguna de Bay. All of these orders had convents +and monasteries both in the city of Manila and in the country round +about. The imposing churches of brick and stone, which now characterize +nearly every pueblo, had not in those early decades been erected; +but Morga tells us that "the churches and monasteries were of wood, +and well built, with furniture and beautiful ornaments, complete +service, crosses, candlesticks, and chalices of silver and gold." [48] + +The First Schools.--Even in these early years there seem to have +been some attempts at the education of the natives. The friars had +schools in reading and writing for boys, who were also taught to +serve in the church, to sing, to play the organ, the harp, guitar, +and other instruments. We must remember, however, that the Filipino +before the arrival of the Spaniard had a written language, and even +in pre-Spanish times there must have been instruction given to the +child. The type of humble school, that is found to-day in remote +barrios, conducted by an old man or woman, on the floor or in the +yard of a home, where the ordinary family occupations are proceeding, +probably does not owe its origin to the Spaniards, but dates from +a period before their arrival. The higher education established by +the Spaniards appears to have been exclusively for the children of +Spaniards. In 1601 the Jesuits, pioneers of the Roman Catholic orders +in education, established the College of San Jose. + +Establishment of Hospitals.--The city early had notable foundations +of charity. The high mortality which visited the Spaniards in +these islands and the frequency of diseases early called for the +establishment of institutions for the orphan and the invalid. In +Morga's time there were the orphanages of San Andres and Santa +Potenciana. There was the Royal Hospital, in charge of three +Franciscans, which burned in the conflagration of 1603, but was +reconstructed. There was also a Hospital of Mercy, in charge of +Sisters of Charity from Lisbon and the Portuguese possessions of India. + +Close by the Monastery of Saint Francis stood then, where it stands +to-day, the hospital for natives, San Juan de Dios. It was of +royal patronage, but founded by a friar of the Franciscan order, +Juan Clemente. "Here," says Morga, "are cured a great number of +natives of all kinds of sicknesses, with much charity and care. It +has a good house and offices of stone, and is administered by the +barefooted religious of Saint Francis. Three priests are there and +four lay-brethren of exemplary life, who, with the doctors, surgeons, +and apothecaries, are so dexterous and skilled that they work with +their hands marvelous cures, both in medicine and surgery." [49] + +Mortality among the Spaniards.--Mortality in the Philippines in +these years of conquest was frightfully high. The waste of life in +her colonial adventures, indeed, drained Spain of her best and most +vigorous manhood. In the famous old English collection of voyages, +published by Hakluyt in 1598, there is printed a captured Spanish +letter of the famous sea-captain, Sebastian Biscaino, on the Philippine +trade. Biscaino grieves over the loss of life which had accompanied +the conquest of the Philippines, and the treacherous climate of the +tropics. "The country is very unwholesome for us Spaniards. For within +these 20 years, of 14,000 which have gone to the Philippines, there +are 13,000 of them dead, and not past 1,000 of them left alive." [50] + +The Spanish Population.--The Spanish population of the Islands +was always small,--at the beginning of the seventeenth century +certainly not more than two thousand, and probably less later in +the century. Morga divides them into five classes: the prelates and +ecclesiastics; the encomenderos, colonizers, and conquerors; soldiers +and officers of war and marine; merchants and men of business; and +the officers of his Majesty's government. "Very few are living now," +he says, "of those first conquistadores who won the land and effected +the conquest with the Adelantado Miguel Lopez de Legaspi." [51] + +The Largest Cities.--Most of this Spanish population dwelt in Manila +or in the five other cities which the Spaniards had founded in the +first three decades of their occupation. Those were as follows:-- + +The City of Nueva Segovia, at the mouth of the Cagayan, was founded +in the governorship of Ronquillo, when the valley of the Cagayan was +first occupied and the Japanese colonists, who had settled there, +were expelled. It had at the beginning of the seventeenth century two +hundred Spaniards, living in houses of wood. There was a fort of stone, +where some artillery was mounted. Besides the two hundred Spanish +inhabitants there were one hundred regular Spanish soldiers, with +their officers and the alcalde mayor of the province. Nueva Segovia +was also the seat of a bishopric which included all northern Luzon. The +importance of the then promising city has long ago disappeared, and the +pueblo of Lallo, which marks its site, is an insignificant native town. + +The City of Nueva Caceres, in the Camarines, was founded by Governor +La-Sande. It, too, was the seat of a bishopric, and had one hundred +Spanish inhabitants. + +The Cities of Cebu and Iloilo.--In the Bisayas were the Cities of +the Holy Name of God (Cebu), and on the island of Panay, Arevalo (or +Iloilo). The first maintained something of the importance attaching +to the first Spanish settlement. It had its stone fort and was also +the seat of a bishopric. It was visited by trading-vessels from the +Moluccas, and by permit of the king enjoyed for a time the unusual +privilege of sending annually a ship loaded with merchandise to New +Spain. Arevalo had about eighty Spanish inhabitants, and a monastery +of the Augustinians. + +The City of Fernandina, or Vigan, which Salcedo had founded, was nearly +without Spanish inhabitants. Still, it was the political center of the +great Ilocano coast, and it has held this position to the present day. + +Manila.--But all of these cities were far surpassed in importance +by the capital on the banks of the Pasig. The wisdom of Legaspi's +choice had been more than justified. Manila, at the beginning of the +seventeenth century, was unquestionably the most important European +city of the East. As we have already seen, in 1580 Portugal had been +annexed by Spain and with her had come all the Portuguese possessions +in India, China, and Malaysia. After 1610, the Dutch were almost +annually warring for this colonial empire, and Portugal regained her +independence in 1640. But for the first few years of the seventeenth +century, Manila was the political mistress of an empire that stretched +from Goa to Formosa and embraced all those coveted lands which for +a century and a half had been the desire of European states. + +The governor of the Philippines was almost an independent +king. Nominally, he was subordinate to the viceroy of Mexico, but +practically he waged wars, concluded peaces, and received and sent +embassies at his own discretion. The kingdom of Cambodia was his ally, +and the states of China and Japan were his friends. + +The Commercial Importance of Manila.--Manila was also the commercial +center of the Far East, and the entrepot through which the kingdoms +of eastern Asia exchanged their wares. Here came great fleets of +junks from China laden with stores. Morga fills nearly two pages +with an enumeration of their merchandise, which included all manner +of silks, brocades, furniture, pearls and gems, fruits, nuts, tame +buffalo, geese, horses and mules, all kinds of animals, "even to +birds in cages, some of which talk and others sing, and which they +make perform a thousand tricks; there are innumerable other gew-gaws +and knickknacks, which among Spaniards are in much esteem." [52] + +Each year a fleet of thirty to forty vessels sailed with the new moon +in March. The voyage across the China Sea, rough with the monsoons, +occupied fifteen or twenty days, and the fleet returned at the end of +May or the beginning of June. Between October and March there came, +each year, Japanese ships from Nagasaki which brought wheat, silks, +objects of art, and weapons, and took away from Manila the raw silk +of China, gold, deer horns, woods, honey, wax, palm-wine, and wine +of Castile. + +From Malacca and India came fleets of the Portuguese subjects of Spain, +with spices, slaves, Negroes and Kafirs, and the rich productions of +Bengal, India, Persia, and Turkey. From Borneo, too, came the smaller +craft of the Malays, who from their boats sold the fine palm mats, +the best of which still come from Cagayan de Sulu and Borneo, slaves, +sago, water-pots and glazed earthenware, black and fine. From Siam +and Cambodia also, but less often, there came trading-ships. Manila +was thus a great emporium for all the countries of the East, the +trade of which seems to have been conducted largely by and through +the merchants of Manila. + +Trade with Mexico and Spain Restricted.--The commerce between the +Philippines, and Mexico and Spain, though it was of vast importance, +was limited by action of the crown. It was a commerce which apparently +admitted of infinite expansion, but the shortsighted merchants and +manufacturers of the Peninsula clamored against its development, +and it was subjected to the severest limitations. Four galleons +were at first maintained for this trade, which were dispatched two +at a time in successive years from Manila to the port of Acapulco, +Mexico. The letter on the Philippine trade, already quoted, states that +these galleons were great ships of six hundred and eight hundred tons +apiece. [53] They went "very strong with soldiers," and they carried +the annual mail, reinforcements, and supplies of Mexican silver for +trade with China, which has remained the commercial currency of the +East to the present day. Later the number of galleons was reduced +to one. + +The Rich Cargoes of the Galleons.--The track of the Philippine galleon +lay from Luzon northeastward to about the forty-second degree of +latitude, where the westerly winds prevail, thence nearly straight +across the ocean to Cape Mendocino in northern California, which +was discovered and mapped by Biscaino in 1602. Thence the course lay +down the western coast of North America nearly three thousand miles +to the port of Acapulco. + +We can imagine how carefully selected and rich in quality were the +merchandises with which these solitary galleons were freighted, +the pick of all the rich stores which came to Manila. The profits +were enormous,--six and eight hundred per cent. Biscaino wrote that +with two hundred ducats invested in Spanish wares and some Flemish +commodities, he made fourteen hundred ducats; but, he added, in 1588 +he lost a ship,--robbed and burned by Englishmen. On the safe arrival +of these ships depended how much of the fortunes of the colony! + +Capture of the Galleons.--For generations these galleons were probably +the most tempting and romantic prize that ever aroused the cupidity of +privateer. The first to profit by this rich booty was Thomas Cavendish, +who in 1584 came through the Straits of Magellan with a fleet of five +vessels. Like Drake before him, he ravaged the coast of South America +and then steered straight away across the sea to the Moluccas. Here +he acquired information about the rich commerce of the Philippines +and of the yearly voyage of the galleon. Back across the Pacific went +the fleet of Cavendish for the coast of California. + +In his own narrative he tells how he beat up and down between Capes +San Lucas and Mendocino until the galleon, heavy with her riches, +appeared. She fell into his hands almost without a fray. She carried +one hundred and twenty-two thousand pesos of gold and a great and +rich store of satins, damask, and musk. Cavendish landed the Spanish +on the California coast, burned the "Santa Anna," and then returned +to the Philippines and made an attack upon the shipyard of Iloilo, +but was repulsed. He sent a letter to the governor at Manila, boasting +of his capture, and then sailed for the Cape of Good Hope and home. + +There is an old story that tells how his sea-worn ships came up +the Thames, their masts hung with silk and damask sails. From this +time on the venture was less safe. In 1588 there came to Spain the +overwhelming disaster of her history,--the destruction of the Great +Armada. From this date her power was gone, and her name was no longer +a terror on the seas. English freebooters controlled the oceans, +and in 1610 the Dutch appeared in the East, never to withdraw. + +The City of Manila Three Hundred Years Ago.--We can hardly close this +chapter without some further reference to the city of Manila as it +appeared three hundred years ago. Morga has fortunately left us a +detailed description from which the following points in the main are +drawn. As we have already seen, Legaspi had laid out the city on the +blackened site of the town and fortress of the Mohammedan prince, +which had been destroyed in the struggle for occupation. He gave it +the same extent and dimensions that it possesses to this day. + +Like other colonial capitals in the Far East, it was primarily a +citadel and refuge from attack. On the point between the sea and +the river Legaspi had built the famous and permanent fortress of +Santiago. In the time of the great Adelantado it was probably only a +wooden stockade, but under the governor Santiago de Vera it was built +up of stone. Cavendish (1587) describes Manila as "an unwalled town and +of no great strength," but under the improvements and completions made +by Dasmarinas about 1590 it assumed much of its present appearance. Its +guns thoroughly commanded the entrance to the river Pasig and made +the approach of hostile boats from the harbor side impossible. + +It is noteworthy, then, that all the assaults that have been made +upon the city, from that of Limahong, to those of the British in 1763, +and of the Americans in 1898, have been directed against the southern +wall by an advance from Paranaque. Dasmarinas also inclosed the city +with a stone wall, the base from which the present noble rampart has +arisen. It had originally a width of from seven and a half to nine +feet. Of its height no figure is given, Morga says simply that with +its buttresses and turrets it was sufficiently high for the purposes +of defense. + +The Old Fort.--There was a stone fort on the south side facing Ermita, +known as the Fortress of Our Lady of Guidance; and there were two +or more bastions, each with six pieces of artillery,--St. Andrew's, +now a powder magazine at the southeast corner, and St. Gabriel's, +over-looking the Parian district, where the Chinese were settled. + +The three principal gates to the city, with the smaller wickets and +posterns, which opened on the river and sea, were regularly closed +at night by the guard which made the rounds. At each gate and wicket +was a permanent post of soldiers and artillerists. + +The Plaza de Armas adjacent to the fort had its arsenal, stores, +powder-works, and a foundry for the casting of guns and artillery. The +foundry, when established by Ronquillo, was in charge of a Pampangan +Indian called Pandapira. + +The Spanish Buildings of the City.--The buildings of the city, +especially the Casas Reales and the churches and monasteries, had been +durably erected of stone. Chirino claims that the hewing of stone, the +burning of lime, and the training of native and Chinese artisans for +this building, were the work of the Jesuit father, Sedeno. He himself +fashioned the first clay tiles and built the first stone house, and so +urged and encouraged others, himself directing, the building of public +works, that the city, which a little before had been solely of timber +and cane, had become one of the best constructed and most beautiful +in the Indies. [54] He it was also who sought out Chinese painters +and decorators and ornamented the churches with images and paintings. + +Within the walls, there were some six hundred houses of a private +nature, most of them built of stone and tile, and an equal number +outside in the suburbs, or "arrabales," all occupied by Spaniards +("todos son vivienda y poblacion de los Espanoles"). [55] + +This gives some twelve hundred Spanish families or establishments, +exclusive of the religious, who in Manila numbered at least one +hundred and fifty, [56] the garrison, at certain times, about four +hundred trained Spanish soldiers who had seen service in Holland and +the Low Countries, and the official classes. + +The Malecon and the Luneta.--It is interesting at this early date to +find mention of the famous recreation drive, the Paseo de Bagumbayan, +now commonly known as the Malecon and Luneta. "Manila," says our +historian, "has two places of recreation on land; the one, which is +clean and wide, extends from the point called Our Lady of Guidance +for about a league along the sea, and through the street and village +of natives, called Bagumbayan, to a very devout hermitage (Ermita), +called the Hermitage of Our Lady of Guidance, and from there a good +distance to a monastery and mission (doctrina) of the Augustinians, +called Mahalat (Malate)." [57] The other drive lay out through the +present suburb of Concepcion, then called Laguio, to Paco, where was +a monastery of the Franciscans. + +The Chinese in Manila.--Early Chinese Commerce.--We have seen that +even as long ago as three hundred years Manila was a metropolis of +the Eastern world. Vessels from many lands dropped anchor at the +mouth of the Pasig, and their merchants set up their booths within +her markets. Slaves from far-distant India and Africa were sold under +her walls. Surely it was a cosmopolitan population that the shifting +monsoons carried to and from her gates. + +But of all these Eastern races only one has been a constant and +important factor in the life of the Islands. This is the Chinese. It +does not appear that they settled in the country or materially affected +the life of the Filipinos until the establishment of Manila by the +Spaniards. The Spaniards were early desirous of cultivating friendly +relations with the Empire of China. Salcedo, on his first punitive +expedition to Mindoro, had found a Chinese junk, which had gone +ashore on the western coast. He was careful to rescue these voyagers +and return them to their own land, with a friendly message inviting +trading relations. Commerce and immigration followed immediately the +founding of the city. + +The Chinese are without question the most remarkable colonizers in the +world. They seem able to thrive in any climate. They readily marry with +every race. The children that follow such unions are not only numerous +but healthy and intelligent. The coasts of China teem with overcrowding +populations. Emigration to almost any land means improvement of the +Chinese of poor birth. These qualities and conditions, with their +keen sense for trade and their indifference to physical hardship and +danger, make the Chinese almost a dominant factor wherever political +barriers have not been raised against their entrance. + +The Chinese had early gained an important place in the commercial and +industrial life of Manila. A letter to the king from Bishop Salazar +shows that he befriended them and was warm in their praise. [58] +This was in 1590, and there were then in Manila and Tondo about +seven thousand resident Chinese, and they were indispensable to the +prosperity of the city. + +Importance of Chinese Labor and Trade.--In the early decades +of Spanish rule, the Philippines were poor in resources and the +population was sparse, quite insufficient for the purposes of the +Spanish colonizers. Thus the early development of the colony was +based upon Chinese labor and Chinese trade. As the early writers are +fond of emphasizing, from China came not only the finished silks and +costly wares, which in large part were destined for the trade to New +Spain and Europe, but also cattle, horses and mares, foodstuffs, +metals, fruits, and even ink and paper. "And what is more," says +Chirino, "from China come those who supply every sort of service, +all dexterous, prompt, and cheap, from physicians and barbers to +burden-bearers and porters. They are the tailors and shoemakers, +metal-workers, silversmiths, sculptors, locksmiths, painters, masons, +weavers, and finally every kind of servitors in the commonwealth." [59] + +Distrust of the Chinese.--In those days, not only were the +Chinese artisans and traders, but they were also farmers and +fishermen,--occupations in which they are now not often seen. But in +spite of their economic necessity, the Chinese were always looked +upon with disfavor and their presence with dread. Plots of murder +and insurrection were supposedly rife among them. Writers object that +their numbers were so great that there was no security in the land; +their life was bad and vicious; through intercourse with them the +natives advanced but little in Christianity and customs; they were +such terrible eaters that they made foods scarce and prices high. + +If permitted, they went everywhere through the Islands and committed +a thousand abuses and offenses. They explored every spot, river, +estero, and harbor, and knew the country better even than the Spaniard +himself, so that if any enemy should come they would be able to cause +infinite mischief. [60] When we find so just and high-minded a man as +the president of the Audiencia, Morga, giving voice to such charges, +we may be sure that the feeling was deep and terrible, and practically +universal among all Spanish inhabitants. + +The First Massacre of the Chinese.--Each race feared and suspected the +other, and from this mutual cowardice came in 1603 a cruel outbreak +and massacre. Three Chinese mandarins arrived in that year, stating +that they had been sent by the emperor to investigate a report that +there was a mountain in Cavite of solid precious metal. This myth was +no more absurd than many pursued by the Spaniards themselves in their +early conquests, and it doubtless arose from the fact that Chinese +wares were largely purchased by Mexican bullion; but the Spaniards +were at once filled with suspicion of an invasion, and their distrust +turned against the Chinese in the Islands. + +How far these latter were actually plotting sedition and how far they +were driven into attack by their fears at the conduct of the Spaniards +can hardly be decided. But the fact is, that on the evening of Saint +Francis day the Chinese of the Parian rose. The dragon banners were +raised, war-gongs were beaten, and that night the pueblos of Quiapo +and Tondo were burned and many Filipinos murdered. + +In the morning a force of 130 Spaniards, under Don Luis Dasmarinas and +Don Tomas Bravo, were sent across the river, and in the fight nearly +every Spaniard was slain. The Chinese then assaulted the city, but, +according to the tradition of the priests, they were driven back in +terror by the apparition on the walls of Saint Francis. They threw up +forts on the site of the Parian and in Dilao, but the power of their +wild fury was gone and the Spaniards were able to dislodge and drive +them into the country about San Pablo de Monte. From here they were +dispersed with great slaughter. Twenty-three thousand Chinese are +reported by Zuniga to have perished in this sedition. If his report +is true, the number of Chinese in the Islands must have increased +very rapidly between 1590 and 1603. + +Restriction of Chinese Immigration and Travel.--Commerce and +immigration began again almost immediately. The number of Chinese, +however, allowed to remain was reduced. The Chinese ships that came +annually to trade were obliged to take back with them the crews and +passengers which they brought. Only a limited number of merchants and +artisans were permitted to live in the Islands. They were confined +to three districts in the city of Manila, and to the great market, +the Alcayceria or Parian. + +The word "Parian" seems to have been also used for the Chinese quarter +in and adjoining the walled city, but here is meant the district in +Binondo about the present Calle San Fernando. A block of stores with +small habitations above them had been built as early as the time of +Gonsalez. It was in the form of a square, and here were the largest +numbers of shops and stores. + +They could not travel about the Islands, nor go two leagues from the +city without a written license, nor remain over night within the city +after the gates were closed, on penalty of their lives. They had their +own alcalde and judge, a tribunal and jail; and on the north side of +the river Dominican friars, who had learned the Chinese language, +had erected a mission and hospital. There was a separate barrio +for the baptized Chinese and their families, to the number of about +five hundred. + +The Chinese in the Philippines from the earliest time to the present +have been known by the name of "Sangleyes." The derivation of this +curious word is uncertain; but Navarrete, who must have understood +Chinese well, says that the word arose from a misapprehension of +the words spoken by the Chinese who first presented themselves at +Manila. "Being asked what they came for, they answered, 'Xang Lei,' +that is, 'We come to trade.' The Spaniards, who understood not their +language, conceiving it to be the name of a country, and putting the +two words together, made one of them, by which they still distinguish +the Chinese, calling them Sangleyes." + +The Japanese Colony.--There was also in those early years quite a +colony of Japanese. Their community lay between the Parian and the +barrio of Laguio. There were about five hundred, and among them the +Franciscans claimed a goodly number of converts. + +The Filipino District of Tondo.--We have described at some length +the city south of the river and the surrounding suburbs, most of them +known by the names they hold to-day. North of the Pasig was the great +district of Tondo, the center of that strong, independent Filipino +feeling which at an early date was colored with Mohammedanism and to +this day is strong in local feeling. This region has thriven and built +up until it has long been by far the most important and populous part +of the metropolis, but not until very recent times was it regarded as +a part of the city of Manila, which name was reserved for the walled +citadel alone. + +A bridge across the Pasig, on the site of the present Puente de Espana, +connected the two districts at a date later than Morga's time. It was +one of the first things noticed by Navarrete, who, without describing +it well, says it was very fine. It was built during the governorship +of Nino de Tabora, who died in 1632. [61] Montero states that it was +of stone, and that this same bridge stood for more than two centuries, +resisting the incessant traffic and the strength of floods. [62] + +The Decline of Manila during the Next Century.--Such was Manila +thirty-five and forty years after its foundation. It was at the zenith +of its importance, the capital of the eastern colonies, the mart of +Asia, more splendid than Goa, more powerful than Malacca or Macao, more +populous and far more securely held than Ternate and Tidor. "Truly," +exclaimed Chirino, "it is another Tyre, so magnified by Ezekiel." It +owed its great place to the genius and daring of the men who founded +it, to the freedom of action which it had up to this point enjoyed, +and to its superlative situation. + +In the years that followed we have to recount for the most part only +the process of decline. Spain herself was fast on the wane. A few +years later and the English had almost driven her navies from the +seas, the Portuguese had regained their independence and lost empire, +the Dutch were in the East, harrying Portuguese and Spaniard alike +and fast monopolizing the rich trade. The commerce and friendly +relations with the Chinese, on which so much depended, were broken +by massacre and reprisal; and, most terrible and piteous of all, the +awful wrath and lust of the Malay pirate, for decade after decade, +was to be visited upon the archipelago. + +The colonial policy of the mother-land, selfish, shortsighted, and +criminal, was soon to make its paralyzing influence felt upon trade +and administration alike. These things were growing and taking place +in the next period which we have to consider,--the years from 1600 +to 1663. They left the Philippines despoiled and insignificant for a +whole succeeding century, a decadent colony and an exploited treasure. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +THE DUTCH AND MORO WARS. 1600-1663. + + +Loss of the Naval Power of Spain and Portugal.--The seizure of +Portugal by Philip II. in 1580 was disastrous in its consequences to +both Portugal and Spain. For Portugal it was humiliation and loss +of colonial power. Spain was unequal to the task of defending the +Portuguese possessions, and her jealousy of their prosperity seems to +have caused her deliberately to neglect their interests and permit +their decline. In one day Portugal lost possession of that splendid +and daring navy which had first found a way to the Indies. Several +hundred Portuguese ships, thousands of guns, and large sums of money +were appropriated by Spain upon the annexation of Portugal. [63] +Most of these ill-fated ships went down in the English Channel with +the Great Armada. + +When the terrible news of the destruction of this powerful armament, +on which rested Spanish hopes for the conquest and humiliation of +England, was brought to the Escorial, the magnificent palace where +the years of the king were passed, Philip II., that strange man, +whose countenance never changed at tidings of either defeat or +victory, is reported to have simply said, "I thank God that I have +the power to replace the loss." He was fatuously mistaken. The loss +could never be made good. The navies of Spain and Portugal were never +fully rebuilt. In that year (1588), preeminence on the sea passed to +the English and the Dutch. + +The Netherlands Become an Independent Country.--Who were these Dutch, +or Hollanders? How came they to wrest from Spain and Portugal a +colonial empire, which they hold to-day without loss of prosperity or +evidence of decline? In the north of Europe, facing the North Sea, +is a low, rich land, intersected by rivers and washed far into its +interior by the tides, known as Holland, the Low Countries, or the +Netherlands. Its people have ever been famed for their industry and +hardihood. In manufacture and trade in the latter Middle Age, they +stood far in the lead in northern Europe, Their towns and cities were +the thriftiest, most prosperous, and most cleanly. + +We have already explained the curious facts of succession by which +these countries became a possession of the Spanish king, Emperor +Charles the Fifth. The Low Countries were always greatly prized by +Charles, and in spite of the severities of his rule he held their +affection and loyalty until his death. It was in the city of Antwerp +that he formally abdicated in favor of his son, Philip II., and, +as described by contemporary historians, this solemn and imposing +ceremony was witnessed with every mark of loyalty by the assembly. + +The Rebellion.--But the oppressions and persecutions of Philip's +reign drove the people to rebellion. The Netherlands had embraced the +Protestant religion, and when, in addition to plunder, intimidation, +the quartering of Spanish soldiery, and the violation of sovereign +promises, Philip imposed that terrible and merciless institution, +the Spanish Inquisition, the Low Countries faced the tyrant in a +passion of rebellion. + +War, begun in 1556, dragged on for years. There was pitiless cruelty, +and the sacking of cities was accompanied by fearful butchery. In +1575 the seven Dutch counties declared their independence, and formed +the republic of the Netherlands. Although the efforts of Spain to +reconquer the territory continued until the end of the century, +practical independence was gained some years before. + +Trade between Portugal and the Netherlands Forbidden.--A large portion +of the commerce of the Low Countries had been with Lisbon. The +Portuguese did not distribute to Europe the products which their +navies brought from the Indies. Foreign merchants purchased in Lisbon +and carried these wares to other lands, and to a very large degree +this service had been performed by the Dutch. But on the annexation +of Portugal, Philip forbade all commerce and trade between the two +countries. By this act the Dutch, deprived of their Lisbon trade, +had to face the alternative of commercial ruin or the gaining of those +Eastern products for themselves. They chose the latter course with all +its risks. It was soon made possible by the destruction of the Armada. + +The Dutch Expeditions to the Indies.--In 1595 their first expedition, +led by one Cornelius Houtman, who had sailed in Portuguese galleons, +rounded the Cape of Good Hope and entered the Indian domain. The +objective point was Java, where an alliance was formed with the +native princes and a cargo of pepper secured. Two things were shown +by the safe return of this fleet,--the great wealth and profit of +the Indian trade, and the inability of Spain and Portugal to maintain +their monopoly. + +In 1598 the merchants of Amsterdam defeated a combined Spanish and +Portuguese fleet in the East, and trading settlements were secured +in Java and Johore. In 1605 they carried their factories to Amboina +and Tidor. + +Effect of the Success of the Dutch.--The exclusive monopoly over the +waters of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, which Portugal and Spain +had maintained for a century, was broken. With the concurrence of +the Roman See, they had tried to divide the New World and the Orient +between them. That effort was now passed. They had claimed the right +to exclude from the vast oceans they had discovered the vessels of +every other nation but their own. + +This doctrine in the History of International Law is known as that +of mare clausum, or "closed sea." The death-blow to this domination +was given by the entrance of the Dutch into the Indies, and it is +not a mere coincidence that we find the doctrine of closed sea itself +scientifically assailed, a few years later, by the great Dutch jurist, +Grotius, the founder of the system of international law in his work, +De Libero Mare. + +The Trading Methods of the Dutch.--The Dutch made no attempts in the +Indies to found great colonies for political domination and religious +conversion. Commerce was their sole object. Their policy was to form +alliances with native rulers, promising to assist them against the +rule of the Portuguese or Spaniard in return for exclusive privileges +of trade. In this they were more than successful. + +In 1602 they obtained permission to establish a factory at +Bantam, on the island of Java. This was even then a considerable +trading-point. "Chinese, Arabs, Persians, Moors, Turks, Malabars, +Peguans, and merchants from all nations were established there," +the principal object of trade being pepper. [64] + +The character of the treaty made by the Dutch with the king of Bantam +is stated by Raffles. "The Dutch stipulated to assist him against +foreign invaders, particularly Spaniards and Portuguese; and the king, +on his side, agreed to make over to the Dutch a good and strong fort, +a free trade, and security for "their persons and property without +payment of any duties or taxes, and to allow no other European nation +to trade or reside in his territories." + +Spanish Expedition against the Dutch in the Moluccas.--The Spaniards, +however, did not relinquish the field to these new foes without +a struggle, and the conflict fills the history of the eighteenth +century. When the Dutch expelled the Portuguese from Amboina and Tidor +in February, 1605, many of the Portuguese came to the Philippines +and enlisted in the Spanish forces. The governor, Don Pedro Bravo de +Acuna, filled with wrath at the loss of these important possessions, +with great activity organized an expedition for their conquest. + +In the previous year there had arrived from Spain eight hundred +troops, two hundred of them being native Mexicans. Thus Acuna was +able to organize a powerful fleet that mounted seventy-five pieces +of artillery and carried over fourteen hundred Spaniards and sixteen +hundred Indians. [65] The fleet sailed in January, 1606. Tidor was +taken without resistance and the Dutch factory seized, with a great +store of money, goods, and weapons. The Spaniards then assailed +Ternate; the fort and plaza were bombarded, and then the town was +carried by storm. + +Thus, at last was accomplished the adventure which for nearly a +century had inspired the ambitions of the Spaniards, which had drawn +the fleet of Magellan, which had wrecked the expeditions of Loyasa and +Villalobos, for which the Spaniards in the Philippines had prepared +expedition after expedition, and for which Governor Dasmarinas had +sacrificed his life. At last the Moluccas had been taken by the forces +of Spain. + +Capture of a Dutch Fleet at Mariveles.--So far from disposing of +their enemies, however, this action simply brought the Dutch into +the Philippines. In 1609, Juan de Silva became governor of the +Islands and in the same year arrived the Dutch admiral, Wittert, +with a squadron. After an unsuccessful attack on Iloilo, the Dutch +fleet anchored off Mariveles, to capture vessels arriving for the +Manila trade. + +At this place, on the 25th of April, 1610, the Spanish fleet, which had +been hastily fitted at Cavite, attacked the Dutch, killing the admiral +and taking all the ships but one, two hundred and fifty prisoners, and +a large amount of silver and merchandise. These prisoners seem to have +been treated with more mercy than the captives of Van Noort's fleet, +who were hung at Cavite. The wounded are said to have been cared for, +and the friars from all the religious orders vied with one another +to convert these "Protestant pirates" from their heresy. + +An Expedition against the Dutch in Java.--Spain made a truce of her +European wars with Holland in 1609, but this cessation of hostilities +was never recognized in the East. The Dutch and Spanish colonists +continued to war upon and pillage each other until late in the +century. Encouraged by his victory over Wittert, Silva negotiated with +the Portuguese allies in Goa, India, to drive the Dutch from Java. A +powerful squadron sailed from Cavite in 1616 for this purpose. It +was the largest fleet which up to that date had ever been assembled +in the Philippines. The expedition, however, failed to unite with +their Portuguese allies, and in April, Silva died at Malacca of +malignant fever. + +The Dutch Fleets.--Battles near Corregidor.--The fleet returned +to Cavite to find that the city, while stripped of soldiers and +artillery, had been in a fever of anxiety and apprehension over the +proximity of Dutch vessels. They were those of Admiral Spilbergen, +who had arrived by way of the Straits of Magellan and the Pacific. He +has left us a chart of the San Bernadino Straits, which is reproduced +here. Spilbergen bombarded Ilolio and then sailed for the Moluccas. + +A year later he returned, met a Spanish fleet of seven galleons and +two galleras near Manila and suffered a severe defeat. [66] The battle +began with cannonading on Friday, April 13, and continued throughout +the day. On the following day the vessels came to close quarters, +the Spaniards boarded the Dutch vessels, and the battle was fought +out with the sword. + +The Dutch were overwhelmed. Probably their numbers were few. The +Relacion states they had fourteen galleons, but other accounts put +the number at ten, three vessels of which were destroyed or taken by +the Spaniards. One of them, the beautiful ship, "The Sun of Holland," +was burned. This combat is known as the battle of Playa Honda. Another +engagement took place in the same waters of Corregidor, late in 1624, +when a Dutch fleet was driven away without serious loss to either side. + +The Dutch Capture Chinese Junks, and Galleons.--But through +the intervening years, fleets of the Hollanders were continually +arriving, both by the way of the Cape of Good Hope and the Straits +of Magellan. Those that came across the Pacific almost invariably +cruised up the Strait of San Bernadino, securing the fresh provisions +so desirable to them after their long voyage. + +The prizes which they made of Chinese vessels, passing Corregidor +for Manila, give us an idea of how considerably the Spaniards in the +Philippines relied upon China for their food. Junks, or "champans," +were continually passing Corregidor, laden with chickens, hogs, rice, +sugar, and other comestibles. [67] + +The Mexican galleons were frequently destroyed or captured by these +lurking fleets of the Dutch, and for a time the route through the +Straits of San Bernadino had to be abandoned, the galleons reaching +Manila by way of Cape Engano, or sometimes landing in Cagayan, +and more than once going ashore on the Pacific side of the island, +at Binangonan de Lampon. + +The Dutch in Formosa.--The Dutch also made repeated efforts to wrest +from Portugal her settlement and trade in China. As early as 1557 +the Portuguese had established a settlement on the island of Macao, +one of these numerous islets that fill the estuary of the river of +Canton. This is the oldest European settlement in China and has been +held continuously by the Portuguese until the present day, when it +remains almost the last vestige of the once mighty Portuguese empire +of the East. It was much coveted by the Dutch because of its importance +in the trade with Canton and Fukien. + +In 1622 a fleet from Java brought siege to Macao, and, being +repulsed, sailed to the Pescadores Islands, where they built a +fort and established a post, which threatened both the Portuguese +trade with Japan and the Manila trade with Amoy. Two years later, on +the solicitation of the Chinese government, the Dutch removed their +settlement to Formosa, where they broke up the Spanish mission stations +and held the island for the succeeding thirty-five years. Thus, +throughout the century, these European powers harassed and raided +one another, but no one of them was sufficiently strong to expel the +others from the East. + +The Portuguese Colonies.--In 1640 the kingdom of Portugal freed +itself from the domination of Spain. With the same blow Spain lost +the great colonial possessions that came to her with the attachment of +the Portuguese. "All the places," says Zuniga, "which the Portuguese +had in the Indies, separated themselves from the crown of Castile and +recognized as king, Don Juan of Portugal." "This same year," he adds, +"the Dutch took Malacca." [68] + +The Moros.--Increase of Moro Piracy.--During all these years the raids +of the Moros of Maguindanao and Jolo had never ceased. Their piracies +were almost continuous. There was no security; churches were looted, +priests killed, people borne away for ransom or for slavery. Obviously, +this piracy could only be met by destroying it at its source. Defensive +fortifications and protective fleets were of no consequence, when +compared with the necessity of subduing the Moro in his own lairs. In +1628 and 1630 punitive expeditions were sent against Jolo, Basilan, and +Mindanao, which drove the Moros from their forts, burned their towns, +and cut down their groves of cocoanut trees. But such expeditions +served only to inflame the more the wrathful vengeance of the Moro, +and in 1635 the government resolved upon a change of policy and the +establishment of a presidio at Zamboanga. + +Founding of a Spanish Post at Zamboanga.--This brings us to a new +phase in the Moro wars. The governor, Juan Cerezo de Salamanca, +was determined upon the conquest and the occupation of Mindanao and +Jolo. In taking this step, Salamanca, like Corcuera, who succeeded him, +acted under the influence of the Jesuits. Their missions in Bohol and +northern Mindanao made them ambitious to reserve for the ministrations +of their society all lands that were conquered and occupied, south +of the Bisayas. + +The Jesuits were the missionaries on Ternate and Siao and wherever in +the Moluccas and Celebes the Spanish and Portuguese had established +their power. The Jesuits had accompanied the expedition of Rodriguez +de Figueroa in 1595, and from that date they never ceased petitioning +the government for a military occupation of these islands and for +their own return, as the missionaries of these regions. The Jesuits +were brilliant and able administrators. For men of their ambition, +Mindanao, with its rich soil, attractive productions, and comparatively +numerous populations, was a most enticing field for the establishment +of such a theocratic commonwealth as the Jesuits had created and +administered in America. [69] + +On the other hand, the occupation of Zamboanga was strenuously +opposed by the other religious orders; but the Jesuits, ever +remarkable for their ascendancy in affairs of state, were able to +effect the establishment of Zamboanga, though they could not prevent +its abandonment a quarter of a century later. + +Erection of the Forts.--The presidio was founded in 1635, by a force +under Don Juan de Chaves. His army consisted of three hundred Spaniards +and one thousand Bisaya, The end of the peninsula was swept of Moro +inhabitants and their towns destroyed by fire. In June the foundations +of the stone fort were laid under the direction of the Jesuit, Father +Vera, who is described as being experienced in military engineering +and architecture. + +To supply the new site with water, a ditch was built from the river +Tumaga, a distance of six or seven miles, which brought a copious +stream to the very walls of the fort. The advantage or failure of +this expensive fortress is very hard to determine. Its planting was +a partisan measure, and it was always subject to partisan praise +and partisan blame. Sometimes it seemed to have checked the Moros +and sometimes seemed only to be stirring them to fresh anger and +aggression. + +The same year that saw the establishment of Zamboanga, Hortado de +Corcuera became governor of the Philippines. He was much under the +influence of the Jesuits and confirmed their policy of conquest. + +Defeat of the Moro Pirate Tagal.--A few months later a notable fleet +of pirates, recruited from Mindanao, Jolo, and Borneo, and headed by +a chieftain named Tagal, a brother of the notorious Correlat, sultan +of Maguindanao, went defiantly past the new presidio and northward +through the Mindoro Sea. For more than seven months they cruised the +Bisayas. The islands of the Camarines especially felt their ravages. In +Cuyo they captured the corregidor and three friars. Finally, with +650 captives and rich booty, including the ornaments and services of +churches, Tagal turned southward on his return. + +The presidio of Zamboanga had prepared to intercept him and a fierce +battle took place off the Punta de Flechas, thirty leagues to the +northeast of Zamboanga. According to the Spanish writers, this point +was one held sacred by Moro superstitions. A deity inhabited these +waters, whom the Moros were accustomed to propitiate on the departure +and arrival of their expeditions, by throwing into the sea lances and +arrows. The victory was a notable one for the Spanish arms. Tagal +and more than 300 Moros were killed, and 120 Christian captives +were released. + +Corcuera's Expedition against the Moros at Lamitan.--Corcuera had +meanwhile been preparing an expedition, which had taken on the +character of a holy war. Jesuit and soldier mingled in its company +and united in its direction. The Jesuit saint, Francis Xavier, was +proclaimed patron of the expedition, and mass was celebrated daily +on the ships. Corcuera himself accompanied the expedition, and at +Zamboanga, where they arrived February 22, 1637, he united a force +of 760 Spaniards and many Bisayans and Pampangas. + +From Zamboanga the force started for Lamitan, the stronghold of +Correlat, and the center of the power of the Maguindanao. It seems +to have been situated on the coast, south of the region of Lake +Lanao. The fleet encountered rough weather and contrary winds off Punta +de Flechas, which they attributed to the influence of the Moro demon. + +To rid the locality of this unholy influence, Padre Marcello, the +Jesuit superior, occupied himself for two days. Padre Combes has left +us an account of the ceremony. [70] The demon was dispossessed by +exorcism. Mass was celebrated. Various articles, representing Moro +infidelity, including arrows, were destroyed and burnt. Holy relics +were thrown into the waters, and the place was finally sanctified by +baptism in the name of Saint Sebastian. + +On the 14th of March the expedition reached Lamitan, fortified and +defended by two thousand Moro warriors. The Spanish force, however, +was overwhelming, and the city was taken by storm. Here were captured +eight bronze cannon, twenty-seven "versos" (a kind of small howitzer), +and over a hundred muskets and arquebuses and a great store of Moro +weapons. Over one hundred vessels were destroyed, including a fleet +of Malay merchant praos from Java. Sixteen villages were burned, and +seventy-two Moros were hung. Correlat, though pursued and wounded, +was not captured. [71] + +The Conquest of Jolo.--Corcuera returned to Zamboanga and organized an +expedition for the conquest of Jolo. Although defended by four thousand +Moro warriors and by allies from Basilan and the Celebes, Corcuera took +Jolo after some months of siege. The sultan saved himself by flight, +but the sultana was taken prisoner. Corcuera reconstructed the fort, +established a garrison of two hundred Spaniards and an equal number +of Pampangas, left some Jesuit fathers, and, having nominated Major +Almonte chief of all the forces in the south, returned in May, 1638, +to Manila, with all the triumph of a conqueror. + +Almonte continued the work of subjugation. In 1639 he conquered the +Moro dato of Buhayen, in the valley of the Rio Grande, where a small +presidio was founded. And in the same year the Jesuits prevailed upon +him to invade the territory of the Malanao, now known as the Laguna +de Lanao. This expedition was made from the north through Iligan, +and for a time brought even this warlike and difficult territory +under the authority of the governor and the spiritual administration +of the Jesuits. + +Loss of the Spanish Settlement on Formosa.--The full military success +of Corcuera's governorship was marred by the loss of Macao and the +capture of the Spanish settlement on the island of Formosa by the +Dutch. In the attempt to hold Macao, Corcuera sent over the encomendero +of Pasig, Don Juan Claudio. The populace of Macao, however, rose in +tumult, assassinated the governor, Sebastian Lobo, and pronounced in +favor of Portugal. Later, by decree of the Portuguese governor of Goa, +all the Spanish residents and missionaries were expelled. The Dutch +seizure of Formosa, a year later, has already been described. + +The Archipelago and the Religious Orders.--During these decades, +conflict was almost incessant between the archbishop of Manila and +the regular orders. In the Philippines the regulars were the parish +curates, and the archbishop desired that all matters of their curacy, +touching the administration of the sacraments and other parish duties, +should be subject to the direction of the bishops. This question of +the "diocesan visit" was fought over for nearly two hundred years. + +The Governor and the Archbishop.--Even more serious to the colony +were the conflicts that raged between the governor-general and the +archbishop. All the points of dissension between Church and State, +which vexed the Middle Ages, broke out afresh in the Philippines. The +appointment of religious officers; the distribution of revenue; the +treatment of the natives; the claim of the church to offer asylum to +those fleeing the arm of the law; its claims of jurisdiction, in its +ecclesiastical courts, over a large class of civil offenses--these +disputes and many others, occasioned almost incessant discord between +the heads of civil and ecclesiastical authority. + + +The "Residencia."--We have seen that the power of the governor was +in fact very large. Theoretically, the Audiencia was a limit upon +his authority; but in fact the governor was usually the president of +this body, and the oidores were frequently his abettors and rarely +his opponents. At the end of each governor's rule there took place a +characteristic Spanish institution, called the "Residencia." This was +a court held by the newly elected governor, for an examination into +the conduct of his predecessor. Complaints of every description were +received, and often, in the history of the Philippines, one who had +ruled the archipelago almost as an independent monarch found himself, +at the end of his office, ruined, and in chains. + +It was upon the occasion of the Residencia that the ecclesiastical +powers, after a governorship stormy with disputes, exercised their +power for revenge. Unquestionably many a governor, despite his actual +power, facing, as he did, the Residencia at the termination of his +rule, made peace with his enemies and yielded to their demands. + +Corcuera had continuous troubles with the archbishop and with the +religious orders other than the Jesuits. In 1644, when his successor, +Fajardo, relieved him, the Franciscans, Augustinians, and Recollects +procured his imprisonment and the confiscation of his property. For +five years, the conqueror of the Moros lay a prisoner in the fortresses +of Santiago and Cavite, when he was pardoned by the Council of the +Indies, and appointed governor of the Canaries by the king. + +Weakening of the Governor's Power.--This power of private and +religious classes to intimidate and overawe the responsible head of the +Philippine government was an abuse which continued to the very close +of the Spanish rule. This, together with the relatively short term of +the governor's office, his natural desire to avoid trouble, his all +too frequent purpose of amassing a fortune rather than maintaining the +dignity of his position and advancing the interests of the Islands, +combined decade after decade to make the spiritual authority more +powerful. In the end the religious orders, with their great body of +members, their hold upon the Filipinos, their high influence at the +court, and finally their great landed wealth, governed the Islands. + +The Educational Work of the Religious Orders.--In any criticism of +the evils connected with their administration of the Philippines, +one must not fail to recognize the many achievements of the missionary +friars that were worthy. To the Dominicans and the Jesuits is due the +establishment of institutions of learning. The Jesuits in 1601 had +planted their College of San Jose. The Dominicans, here as in Europe, +the champions of orthodox learning, had their own institution, the +College of Santo Tomas, inaugurated in 1619, and were the rivals of +the Jesuits for the privilege of giving higher instruction. + +In 1645 the pope granted to the Dominicans the right to bestow higher +degrees, and their college became the "Royal and Pontifical University +of Saint Thomas Aquinas." This splendid name breathes that very spirit +of the Middle Ages which the Dominican order strove to perpetuate in +the Philippines down to modern days. [72] Dominicans also founded +the College of San Juan de Letran, as a preparatory school to the +University. + +We should not pass over the educational work of the religious +orders without mention of the early printing-plants and their +publications. The missionary friars were famous printers, and in the +Philippines, as well as in America, some noble volumes were produced +by their handicraft. + +Founding of Hospitals by the Franciscans.--Nor had the Franciscans +in the Philippines neglected the fundamental purpose of their +foundation,--that of ministration to the sick and unprotected. A +narrative of their order, written in 1649, gives a long list of their +beneficent foundations. [73] Besides the hospital of Manila, they +had an infirmary at Cavite for the native mariners and shipbuilders, +a hospital at Los Banos, another in the city of Nueva Caceras. Lay +brethren were attached to many of the convents as nurses. + +In 1633 a curious occurrence led to the founding of the leper hospital +of San Lazaro. The emperor of Japan, in a probably ironical mood, +sent to Manila a shipload of Japanese afflicted with this unfortunate +disease. These people were mercifully received by the Franciscans, and +cared for in a home, which became the San Lazaro hospital for lepers. + +Life and Progress of the Filipinos.--Few sources exist that can +show us the life and progress of the Filipino people during these +decades. Christianity, as introduced by the missionary friars, +was wonderfully successful, and yet there were relapses into +heathenism. Old religious leaders and priestesses roused up from +time to time, and incited the natives to rebellion against their new +spiritual masters. The payment of tribute and the labor required for +the building of churches often drove the people into the mountains. + +Religious Revolt at Bohol and Leyte.--In 1621 a somewhat serious +revolt took place on Bohol. The Jesuits who administered the island +were absent in Cebu, attending the fiestas on the canonization +of Saint Francis Xavier. The whisper was raised that the old +heathen deity, Diwata, was at hand to assist in the expulsion of +the Spaniards. The island rose in revolt, except the two towns of +Loboc and Baclayan. Four towns were burned, the churches sacked, and +the sacred images speared. The revolt spread to Leyte, where it was +headed by the old dato, Bancao of Limasaua, who had sworn friendship +with Legaspi. This insurrection was put down by the alcalde mayor of +Cebu and the Filipino leaders were hung. On Leyte, Bancao was speared +in battle, and one of the heathen priests suffered the penalty, +prescribed by the Inquisition for heresy--death by burning. + +Revolt of the Pampangas.--The heavy drafting of natives to fell trees +and build the ships for the Spanish naval expeditions and the Acapulco +trade was also a cause for insurrection. In 1660 a thousand Pampangas +were kept cutting in the forests of that province alone. Sullen at +their heavy labor and at the harshness of their overseers, these +natives rose in revolt. The sedition spread to Pangasinan, Zambales, +and Ilocos, and it required the utmost efforts of the Spanish forces +on land and water to suppress the rebellion. + +Uprising of the Chinese.--In spite of the terrible massacre, that had +been visited upon the Chinese at the beginning of the century, they +had almost immediately commenced returning not only as merchants, but +as colonists. The early restrictions upon their life must have been +relaxed, for in 1639 there were more than thirty thousand living in +the Islands, many of them cultivating lands at Calamba and at other +points on the Laguna de Bay. + +In that year a rebellion broke out, in which the Chinese in Manila +participated. They seized the church of San Pedro Mecati, on the Pasig, +and fortified themselves. From there they were routed by a combined +Filipino and Spanish force. The Chinese then broke up into small +bands, which scattered through the country, looting and murdering, +but being pursued and cut to pieces by the Filipinos. For five months +this pillage and massacre went on, until seven thousand Chinese were +destroyed. By the loss of these agriculturists and laborers Manila +was reduced to great distress. + +Activity of the Moro Pirates.--The task of the Spaniards in controlling +the Moro datos continued to be immensely difficult. During the years +following the successes of Corcuera and Almonte, the Moros were +continually plotting. Aid was furnished from Borneo and the Celebes, +and they were further incited by the Dutch. In spite of the vigilance +of Zamboanga, small piratical excursions continually harassed the +Bisayas and the Camarines. + +Continued Conflicts with the Dutch.--The Dutch, too, from time to time +showed themselves in Manila. In 1646 a squadron attacked Zamboanga, +and then came north to Luzon. The Spanish naval strength was quite +unprepared; but two galleons, lately arrived from Acapulco, were +fitted with heavy guns, Dominican friars took their places among +the gunners, and, under the protection of the Virgin of the Rosary, +successfully encountered the enemy. + +A year later a fleet of twelve vessels entered Manila Bay, and nearly +succeeded in taking Cavite. Failing in this, they landed in Bataan +province, and for some time held the coast of Manila Bay in the +vicinity of Abucay. The narrative of Franciscan missions in 1649, +above cited, gives town after town in southern Luzon, where church +and convent had been burned by the Moros or the Dutch. + +The Abandonment of Zamboanga and the Moluccas.--The threat of the Dutch +made the maintenance of the presidio of Zamboanga very burdensome. In +1656 the administration of the Moluccas was united with that of +Mindanao, and the governor of the former, Don Francisco de Esteybar, +was transferred from Ternate to Zamboanga and made lieutenant-governor +and captain-general of all the provinces of the south. + +Six years later, the Moluccas, so long coveted by the Spaniards, and so +slowly won by them, together with Zamboanga, were wholly abandoned, and +to the Spice Islands the Spaniards were never to return. This sudden +retirement from their southern possessions was not, however, occasioned +by the incessant restlessness of the Moros nor by the plottings of +the Dutch. It was due to a threat of danger from the north. + +Koxinga the Chinese Adventurer.--In 1644, China was conquered by the +Manchus. Pekin capitulated at once and the Ming dynasty was overthrown, +but it was only by many years of fighting that the Manchus overcame +the Chinese of the central and southern provinces. These were years +of turbulence, revolt, and piracy. + +More than one Chinese adventurer rose to a romantic position during +this disturbed time. One of these adventurers, named It Coan, had been +a poor fisherman of Chio. He had lived in Macao, where he had been +converted to Christianity, and had been a cargador, or cargo-bearer, +in Manila. He afterwards went to Japan, and engaged in trade. From +these humble and laborious beginnings, like many another of his +persistent countrymen, he gained great wealth, which on the conquest +of the Manchus he devoted to piracy. + +His son was the notorious Kue-Sing, or Koxinga, who for years resisted +the armies of the Manchus, and maintained an independent power over +the coasts of Fukien and Chekiang. About 1660 the forces of the Manchus +became too formidable for him to longer resist them upon the mainland, +and Koxinga determined upon the capture of Formosa and the transference +of his kingdom to that island. + +For thirty-eight years this island had been dominated by the Dutch, +whose fortresses commanded the channel of the Pescadores. The colony +was regarded as an important one by the Dutch colonial government at +Batavia. The city of Tai-wan, on the west coast, was a considerable +center of trade. It was strongly protected by the fortress of Zealand, +and had a garrison of twenty-two hundred Dutch soldiers. After months +of fighting, Koxinga, with an overpowering force of Chinese, compelled +the surrender of the Hollanders and the beautiful island passed into +his power. + +A Threatened Invasion of the Philippines.--Exalted by his success +against European arms, Koxinga resolved upon the conquest of +the Philippines. He summoned to his service the Italian Dominican +missionary, Ricci, who had been living in the province of Fukien, and +in the spring of 1662 dispatched him as an ambassador to the governor +of the Philippines to demand the submission of the archipelago. + +Manila was thrown into a terrible panic by this demand, and indeed +no such danger had threatened the Spanish in the Philippines since +the invasion of Limahong. The Chinese conqueror had an innumerable +army, and his armament, stores, and navy had been greatly augmented +by the surrender of the Dutch. The Spaniards, however, were united +on resistance. The governor, Don Sabiano Manrique de Lara, returned a +defiant answer to Koxinga, and the most radical measures were adopted +to place the colony in a state of defense. + +All Chinese were ordered immediately to leave the Islands. Fearful +of massacre, these wretched people again broke out in rebellion, +and assaulted the city. Many were slain, and other bands wandered +off into the mountains, where they perished at the hands of the +natives. Others, escaping by frail boats, joined the Chinese colonists +on Formosa. Churches and convents in the suburbs of Manila, which might +afford shelter to the assailant, were razed to the ground. More than +all this, the Moluccas were forsaken, never again to be recovered by +Spaniards; and the presidios of Zamboanga and Cuyo, which served as a +kind of bridle on the Moros of Jolo and Mindanao, were abandoned. All +Spanish troops were concentrated in Manila, fortifications were +rebuilt, and the population waited anxiously for the attack. But the +blow never fell. Before Ricci arrived at Tai-wan, Koxinga was dead, +and the peril of Chinese invasion had passed. + +Effects of These Events.--But the Philippines had suffered +irretrievable loss. Spanish prestige was gone. Manila was no longer, +as she had been at the commencement of the century, the capital of +the East. Spanish sovereignty was again confined to Luzon and the +Bisayas. The Chinese trade, on which rested the economic prosperity +of Manila, had once again been ruined. For a hundred years the history +of the Philippines is a dull monotony, quite unrelieved by any heroic +activity or the presence of noble character. [74] + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +A CENTURY OF OBSCURITY AND DECLINE. 1663-1762. + + +Political Decline of the Philippines.--For the hundred years succeeding +the abandonment of the Moluccas, the Philippines lost all political +significance as a colony. From almost every standpoint they were +profitless to Spain. There were continued deficits, which had to be +made good from the Mexican treasury. The part of Spain in the conquest +of the East was over, and the Philippines became little more than a +great missionary establishment, presided over by the religious orders. + +Death of Governor Salcedo by the Inquisition.--In 1663, Lara was +succeeded by Don Diego de Salcedo. On his arrival, Manila had high +hopes of him, which were speedily disappointed. He loaded the Acapulco +galleon with his own private merchandise, and then dispatched it +earlier than was usual, before the cargoes of the merchants were +ready. He engaged in a wearisome strife with the archbishop, and +seems to have worried the ecclesiastic, who was aged and feeble, +into his grave. At the end of a few years he was hated by every one, +and a conspiracy against him was formed which embraced the religious, +the army, the civil officials, and the merchants. Beyond the reach of +the power of ordinary plotters, he fell a victim to the commissioner +of the Inquisition. + +The Spanish Inquisition, which wrought such cruelty and misery in the +Peninsula, was carried also to the Spanish colonies. As we have seen, +it was primarily the function of the Dominican order to administer +the institution. The powers exercised by an inquisitor can scarcely +be understood at the present day. His methods were secret, the +charges were not made public, the whole proceedings were closeted, +and yet so great were the powers of this court that none could +resist its authority, or inquire into its actions. Spain forbade +any heretics, Jews, or Moors going to the colonies, and did the +utmost to prevent heresy abroad. She also established in America the +Inquisition itself. Fortunately, it never attained the importance in +the Philippines that it had in Spain. In the Philippines there was no +"Tribunal," the institution being represented solely by a commissioner. + +Death of the Governor.--In 1667, when the unpopularity of Governor +Salcedo was at its height, this commissioner professed to discover in +him grounds of heresy from the fact that he had been born in Flanders, +and decided to avenge the Church by encompassing his ruin. By secret +arrangement, the master of the camp withdrew the guard from the palace, +and the commissioner, with several confederates, gained admission. The +door of the governor's room was opened by an old woman, who had been +terrified into complicity, and the governor was seized sleeping, +with his arms lying at the head of his bed. + +The commissioner informed the governor that he was a prisoner of the +Holy Office. He was taken to the convent of the Augustinians. Here he +was kept in chains until he could be sent to Mexico, to appear before +the Tribunal there. The government in Mexico annulled the arrest of +the commissioner, but Salcedo died at sea on the return of the vessel +to the Philippines in 1669. + +Colonization of the Ladrone Islands.--In 1668 a Jesuit mission under +Padre Diego Luis de Sanvitores was established on the Ladrones, the +first of the many mission stations, both Roman Catholic and Protestant, +in the South Pacific. The islands at that time were well populated +and fertile, and had drawn the enthusiasm of Padre Sanvitores in 1662 +when he first sailed to the Philippines. + +The hostility of the Manchus in China, the Japanese persecutions, +and the abandonment of Mindanao had closed many mission fields, +and explains the eagerness with which the Jesuits sought the royal +permission to Christianize these islands, which had been so constantly +visited by Spanish ships but never before colonized. With Padre +Sanvitores and his five Jesuit associates were a number of Christian +Filipino catechists. + +Settlement of Guam.--The mission landed at Guam, and was favorably +received. Society among these islanders was divided into castes. The +chiefs were known as chamorri, which has led to the natives of the +Ladrones being called "Chamorros." A piece of ground was given the +Jesuits for a church at the principal town called Agadna (Agana), and +here also a seminary was built for the instruction of young men. The +queen regent of Spain, Maria of Austria, gave an annual sum to this +school, and in her honor the Jesuits changed the name of the islands +to the Marianas. The Jesuits preached on eleven inhabited islands +of the group, and in a year's time had baptized thirteen thousand +islanders and given instruction to twenty thousand. + +Troubles with the Natives at Guam.--This first year was the most +successful in the history of the mission. Almost immediately after, +the Jesuits angered the islanders by compulsory conversions. There were +quarrels in several places, and priests, trying to baptize children +against the wishes of their parents, were killed. In 1670 the Spaniards +were attacked, and obliged to fortify themselves at Agana. + +The Jesuits had a guard of a Spanish captain and about thirty Spanish +and Filipino soldiers, who, after some slaughter of the natives, +compelled them to sue for peace. The conditions imposed by the Jesuits +were that the natives should attend mass and festivals, have their +children baptized, and send them to be catechised. The hatred of the +natives was unabated, however, and in 1672 Sanvitores was killed by +them. His biographer claims that at his death he had baptized nearly +fifty thousand of these islanders. [75] + +Depopulation of the Ladrone Islands.--About 1680 a governor was +sent to the islands, and they were organized as a dependency of +Spain. The policy of the governors and the Jesuits was conversion by +the sword. The natives were persecuted from island to island, and in +the history of European settlements there is hardly one that had more +miserable consequences to the inhabitants. Disease was introduced and +swept off large numbers. Others fell resisting the Spaniards, and an +entire island was frequently depopulated by order of the governor, or +the desire of the Jesuits to have the natives brought to Guam. Many, +with little doubt, fled to other archipelagoes. + +If we can trust the Jesuit accounts, there were in the whole group one +hundred thousand inhabitants when the Spaniards arrived. A generation +saw them almost extinct. Dampier, who touched at Guam in 1686, says +then that on the island, where the Spaniards had found thirty thousand +people, there were not above one hundred natives. In 1716 and 1721 +other voyagers announced the number of inhabitants on Guam at two +thousand, but only one other island of the group was populated. When +Anson in 1742 visited Guam, the number had risen to four thousand, +and there were a few hundred inhabitants on Rota; but these seem +to have been the whole population. The original native population +certainly very nearly touched extinction. The islands were from time +to time colonized from the Philippines, and the present population +is very largely of Filipino blood. + +Conflicts between Governor and Archbishop.--Meanwhile, in the +Philippines the conflict of the governor with the archbishop and +the friars continued. The conduct of both sides was selfish and +outrageous. In 1683 the actions of Archbishop Pardo became so violent +and seditious that the Audiencia decreed his banishment to Pangasinan +or Cagayan. He was taken by force to Lingayan, where he was well +accommodated but kept under surveillance. The Dominicans retaliated by +excommunication, and the Audiencia thereupon banished the provincial of +the order from the Islands, and sent several other friars to Mariveles. + +But the year following, Governor Vargas was relieved by the arrival +of his successor, who was favorable to the ecclesiastical side of +the controversy. The archbishop returned and assumed a high hand. He +suspended and excommunicated on all sides. The oidores were banished +from the city, and all died in exile in remote portions of the +archipelago. The ex-governor-general, Vargas, being placed under +the spiritual ban, sued for pardon and begged that his repentance +be recognized. + +The archbishop sentenced him to stand daily for the space of four +months at the entrances to the churches of the city and of the Parian, +and in the thronged quarter of Binondo, attired in the habit of a +penitent, with a rope about his neck and carrying a lighted candle +in his hand. He was, however, able to secure a mitigation of this +sentence, but was required to live absolutely alone in a hut on an +island in the Pasig River. He was sent a prisoner to Mexico in 1689, +but died upon the voyage. + +The various deans and canons who had concurred in the archbishop's +banishment, as well as other religious with whom the prelate had had +dissensions, were imprisoned or exiled. The bodies of two oidores +were, on their death and after their burial, disinterred and their +bones profaned. + +Degeneration of the Colony under Church Rule.--Archbishop Pardo +died in 1689, but the strife and confusion which had been engendered +continued. There were quarrels between the archbishop and the friars, +between the prelate and the governor. All classes seem to have shared +the bitterness and the hatred of these unhappy dissensions. + +The moral tone of the whole colony during the latter part of the +seventeenth century was lowered. Corruption flourished everywhere, +and the vigor of the administration decayed. Violence went unrebuked, +and the way was open for the deplorable tragedy in which this strife of +parties culminated. Certainly no governor could have been more supine, +and shown greater incapacity and weakness of character, than the one +who ruled in the time of Archbishop Pardo and those that succeeded him. + +Improvements Made by Governor Bustamante.--Enrichment of the +Treasury.--In the year 1717, however, came a governor of a different +type, Fernando Manuel de Bustamante. He was an old soldier, stern of +character and severe in his measures. He found the treasury robbed +and exhausted. Nearly the whole population of Manila were in debt +to the public funds. Bustamante ordered these amounts paid, and to +compel their collection he attached the cargo of silver arriving +by the galleon from Acapulco. This cargo was owned by the religious +companies, officials, and merchants, all of whom were indebted to the +government. In one year of his vigorous administration he raised the +sum of three hundred thousand pesos for the treasury. + +With sums of money again at the disposal of the state, Bustamante +attempted to revive the decayed prestige and commerce of the Islands. + +Refounding of Zamboanga.--In 1718 he refounded and rebuilt the +presidio of Zamboanga. Not a year had passed, since its abandonment +years before, that the pirates from Borneo and Mindanao had failed +to ravage the Bisayas. The Jesuits had petitioned regularly for its +reestablishment, and in 1712 the king had decreed its reoccupation. The +citadel was rebuilt on an elaborate plan under the direction of the +engineer, Don Juan Sicarra. Besides the usual barracks, storehouses, +and arsenals, there were, within the walls, a church, hospital, and +cuartel for the Pampangan soldiers. Sixty-one cannon were mounted upon +the defenses. Upon the petition of the Recollects, Bustamante also +established a presidio at Labo, at the southern point of the island of +Paragua, whose coasts were attacked by the Moros from Sulu and Borneo. + +Treaty with Siam.--In the same year he sent an embassy to Siam, +with the idea of stimulating the commerce which had flourished a +century before. The reception of this embassy was most flattering; +a treaty of peace, friendship, and commerce was made, and on ground +ceded to the Spaniards was begun the erection of a factory. + +Improvements in the City of Manila.--How far this brave and +determined man might have revived the colony it is impossible to +say. The population of Manila, both ecclesiastical and civil, was at +this time so sunk in corruption and so degenerate as to make almost +impossible any recuperation except under the rule of a man equally +determined as Bustamante, but ruling for a long period of time. He +had not hesitated to order investigations into the finances of the +Islands, which disclosed defalcations amounting to seven hundred +thousand pesos. He fearlessly arrested the defaulters, no matter what +their station. The whole city was concerned in these peculations, +consequently the utmost fear and apprehension existed on all sides; +and Bustamante, hated as well as dreaded, was compelled to enforce +his reforms single-handed. + +His Murder.--He was opposed by the friars and defied by the archbishop, +but, notwithstanding ecclesiastical condemnation, he went to the point +of ordering the arrest of the prelate. The city rose in sedition, +and a mob, headed by friars, proceeded to the palace of the governor, +broke in upon him, and, as he faced them alone and without support, +killed him in cold blood (October 11, 1719). + +The archbishop proclaimed himself governor and president of the +Audiencia. The oidores and officials who had been placed under +arrest by Bustamante were released, and his work overthrown. The new +government had neither the courage nor the inclination to continue +Bustamante's policy, and in 1720 the archbishop called a council of +war, which decreed the abandonment of the fort at Labo. + +When the news of this murder reached Spain, the king ordered an +investigation and the punishment of the guilty, and in 1721 Governor +Torre Campo arrived to put these mandates into execution. The culprits, +however, were so high and so influential that the governor did not +dare proceed against them; and although the commands of the king were +reiterated in 1724, the assassins of Bustamante were never brought +to justice. + +Treaty with the Sultan of Jolo.--In spite of the cowardly policy +of the successors of Bustamante, the presidio of Zamboanga was not +abandoned. So poorly was it administered, however, that it was not +effective to prevent Moro piracy, and the attacks upon the Bisaya and +Calamianes continued. In 1721 a treaty was formed with the sultan of +Jolo providing for trade between Manila and Jolo, the return or ransom +of captives, and the restitution to Spain of the island of Basilan. + +The Moro Pirates of Tawi Tawi.--To some extent this treaty seems to +have prevented assaults from Jolo, but in 1730 the Moros of Tawi Tawi +fell upon Paragua and the Calamianes, and in 1731 another expedition +from the south spent nearly a whole year cruising and destroying +among the Bisayas. + +Deplorable State of Spanish Defenses.--The defenses of the Spaniards +during these many decades were continually in a deplorable state, their +arms were wretched, and, except in moments of great apprehension, +no attention was given to fortifications, to the preservation of +artillery, nor to the supply of ammunition. Sudden attacks ever +found the Spaniards unprepared. Military unreadiness was the normal +condition of this archipelago from these early centuries down to the +destruction of the Spanish armament by the American fleet. + +The Economic Policy of Spain.--Restrictions of Trade.--During the +closing years of the seventeenth century and the beginning of the +eighteenth, commerce seemed to have been actually paralyzed. That +brilliant trade which is described by Morga, and which was at its +height about 1605, was a few years later defeated by the miserable +economic policy of Spain, pandering to the demands of the merchants +of Cadiz and Seville. + +Spain's economic policy had only in view benefits to the +Peninsula. "The Laws of the Indies" abound with edicts for the purpose +of limiting and crippling colonial commerce and industry, wherever it +was imagined that it might be prejudicial to the protected industries +of Spain. The manufacturers of Seville wished to preserve the colonies, +both of America and of the Indies, as markets for their monopoly wares; +and in this policy, for two centuries, they had the support of the +crown. The growing trade between Mexico and the Philippines had early +been regarded with suspicion, and legislation was framed to reduce +it to the lowest point compatible with the existence of the colony. + +None of the colonies of America could conduct commerce with the +Philippines except Mexico, and here all communication must pass +through the port of Acapulco. This trade was limited to the passage +of a single vessel a year. In 1605 two galleons were permitted, but +their size was reduced to three hundred tons. They were allowed to +carry out 500,000 pesos of silver, but no more than 250,000 pesos' +worth of Chinese products could be returned. Neither the Spaniards +of Mexico nor any part of America could traffic directly with China, +nor could Spanish vessels pass from Manila to the ports of Asia. Only +those goods could be bought which Chinese merchants themselves brought +to the Philippines. + +Selfishness of Merchants in Spain.--Even these restrictions did +not satisfy the jealousy of the merchants of Spain. They complained +that the royal orders limiting the traffic were not regarded, and +they insisted upon so vexatious a supervision of this commerce, +and surrounded infractions of the law with such terrible penalties, +that the trade was not maintained even to the amount permitted by +law. Spanish merchants even went to the point of petitioning for the +abandonment of the Philippines, on the ground that the importations +from China were prejudicial to the industry of the Peninsula. + +The colonists upon the Pacific coast of America suffered from the +lack of those commodities demanded by civilized life, which could +only reach them as they came from Spain through the port of Porto +Bello and the Isthmus of Panama. Without question, an enormous and +beneficial commerce could have been conducted by the Philippines with +the provinces of western America. [76] + +Trade Between South America and the Philippines Forbidden.--But this +traffic was absolutely forbidden, and to prevent Chinese and Philippine +goods from entering South America, the trade between Mexico and Peru +was in 1636 wholly suppressed by a decree. This decree, as it stands +upon the pages of the great Recopilacion, is an epitome of the insane +economic policy of the Spaniard. It cites that whereas "it had been +permitted that from Peru to New Spain there should go each year two +vessels for commerce and traffic to the amount of two hundred thousand +ducats [which later had been reduced to one hundred thousand ducats], +and because there had increased in Peru to an excessive amount the +commerce in the fabrics of China, in spite of the many prohibitions +that had been imposed, and in order absolutely to remove the occasion +for the future, we order and command the officers of Peru and New +Spain that they invariably prohibit and suppress this commerce and +traffic between the two kingdoms by all the channels through which +it is conducted, maintaining this prohibition firmly and continually +for the future." [77] + +In 1718 the merchants of Seville and Cadiz still complained that their +profits were being injured by even the limited importation of Chinese +silks into Mexico. Thereupon absolute prohibition of import of Chinese +silks, either woven or in thread, was decreed. Only linens, spices, +and supplies of such things as were not produced in Spain could be +brought into Mexico. This order was reaffirmed in 1720, with the +provision that six months would be allowed the people of Mexico to +consume the Chinese silks which they had in their possession, and +thereafter all such goods must be destroyed. + +Ineffectiveness of These Restrictions.--These measures, while ruining +the commerce of the Philippines, were as a matter of fact ineffective +to accomplish the result desired. Contraband trade between China +and America sprang up in violation of the law. Silks to the value +of four million pesos were annually smuggled into America. [78] In +1734 the folly and uselessness of such laws was somewhat recognized +by the Council of the Indies, and a cedula was issued restoring the +permission to trade in Chinese silks and raising the value of cargoes +destined for Acapulco to five hundred thousand pesos, and the quantity +of silver for return to one million pesos. The celebrated traffic of +the galleon was resumed and continued until the year 1815. + +An Attempt to Colonize the Carolines.--Southeastward of the +Philippines, in that part of the Pacific which is known as Micronesia, +there is an archipelago of small islands called the Carolines. The +westernmost portion of the group also bear the name of the Pelews, +or Palaos. Inasmuch as these islands were eventually acquired by +Spain and remained in her possession down to the year 1898, it may +be well to state something at this time of the attempt made by the +Jesuits in 1731 to colonize them. + +Certain of these little islands were seen several times by expeditions +crossing the Pacific as early as the latter part of the sixteenth +century, but after the trade between Mexico and the Philippines had +been definitely settled upon, a fixed course was followed westward +from Acapulco to Guam, from which there was little variation, and +during the seventeenth century these islands passed quite out of mind; +but in the year 1696 a party of natives, twenty men and ten women, +were driven by storms far from their home in the Carolines upon the +eastern coast of Samar. It seems that similar parties of castaways +from the Pelew and Caroline Islands had been known to reach Mindanao +and other parts of the Philippines at an even earlier date. These +last came under the observation of the Jesuit priests on Samar, who +baptized them, and, learning from them of the archipelago from which +they had been carried, were filled with missionary ambition to visit +and Christianize these Pacific islanders. + +This idea was agitated by the Jesuits, until about 1730 royal +permission was granted to the enterprise. A company of Jesuits in +the following year sailed for the Ladrones and thence south until +the Carolines were discovered. They landed on a small island not +far from Yap. Here they succeeded in baptizing numerous natives and +in establishing a mission. Fourteen of their number, headed by the +priest, Padre Cantava, remained on the island while the expedition +returned to secure reenforcements and supplies. Unfortunately, this +succor was delayed for more than a year, and when Spanish vessels +with missionary reenforcements on board again reached the Carolines +in 1733, the mission had been entirely destroyed and the Spaniards, +with Padre Cantava, had been killed. These islands have been frequently +called the "New Philippines." + +Conditions of the Filipinos during the Eighteenth Century.--During the +most of the eighteenth century, data are few upon the condition of the +Filipino people. There seems to have been little progress. Conditions +certainly were against the social or intellectual advance of the +native race. Perhaps, however, their material well-being was quite +as great during these years, when little was attempted, as during +the governorships of the more ambitious and enterprising Spaniards +who had characterized the earlier period of Philippine history. + +Provincial Governments.--Provincial administration seems to have +fallen almost wholly into the hands of the missionaries. The priests +made themselves the local rulers throughout the Christianized portion +of the archipelago. + +Insurrection in Bohol.--Insurrection seems especially to have +troubled the island of Bohol during most of the eighteenth century, +and in 1750 an insurrection broke out which practically established +the independence of a large portion of the island, and which was not +suppressed for thirty-five years. The trouble arose in the town of +Inabanga, where the Jesuit priest Morales had greatly antagonized and +imbittered the natives by his severity. Some apostasized, and went to +the hills. One of these men was killed by the orders of the priest and +his body refused Christian burial, and left uncared for and exposed. + +A brother of this man, named Dagohoy, infuriated by this indignity, +headed a sedition which shortly included three thousand natives. The +priest was killed, and his own body left by the road unburied. In +spite of the efforts of the alcalde of Cebu, Dagohoy was able to +maintain himself, and practically established a small native state, +which remained until the occupation of the island by the Recollects, +after the Jesuits had been expelled from the Spanish dominions. + +Activity of the Jesuits.--During the eighteenth century the Jesuits +alone of the religious orders seemed to have been active in prosecuting +their efforts and seeking new fields for conversion. The sloth and +inactivity which overcame the other orders place in greater contrast +the ambition and the activities, both secular and spiritual, of +the Jesuits. + +Conversion of the Sultan Alim ud Din.--In 1747 they established +a mission even on Jolo. They were unable to overcome the intense +antagonism of the Moro panditas and datos, but they apparently won the +young sultan, Alim ud Din, whose strange story and shifting fortunes +have been variously told. One of the Jesuits, Padre Villelmi, was +skilled in the Arabic language, and this familiarity with the language +and literature of Mohammedanism doubtless explains his ascendency +over the mind of the sultan. Alim ud Din was not a strong man. His +power over the subordinate datos was small, and in 1748 his brother, +Bantilan, usurped his place and was proclaimed sultan of Jolo. + +Alim ud Din, with his family and numerous escort, came to Zamboanga, +seeking the aid of the Spanish against his brother. From Zamboanga he +was sent to Manila. On his arrival, January 3, 1749, he was received +with all the pomp and honor due to a prince of high rank. A house for +his entertainment and his retinue of seventy persons was prepared in +Binondo. A public entrance was arranged, which took place some fifteen +days after his reaching the city. Triumphal arches were erected +across the streets, which were lined with more than two thousand +native militia under arms. The sultan was publicly received in the +hall of the Audiencia, where the governor promised to lay his case +before the king of Spain. The sultan was showered with presents, which +included chains of gold, fine garments, precious gems, and gold canes, +while the government sustained the expense of his household. [79] + +Following this reception, steps were taken for his conversion. His +spiritual advisers cited to him the example of the Emperor Constantine +whose conversion enabled him to effect triumphant conquests over +his enemies. Under these representations Alim ud Din expressed his +desire for baptism. The governor-general, who at this time was a +priest, the bishop of Nueva Segovia, was very anxious that the rite +should take place; but this was opposed by his spiritual superior, +the archbishop of Manila, who, with some others, entertained doubts +as to the sincerity of the sultan's profession. + +In order to accomplish his baptism, the governor sent him to his own +diocese, where at Paniqui, on the 29th of April, 1750, the ceremony +took place with great solemnity. On the return of the party to Manila, +the sultan was received with great pomp, and in his honor were held +games, theatrical representations, fire-works, and bull-fights. This +was the high-water mark of the sultan's popularity. + +Failure to Reinstate Alim ud Din.--Meanwhile the usurper, Bantilan, +was giving abundant evidence of his hostility. The Spaniards were +driven from Jolo, and the fleets of the Moros again ravaged the +Bisayas. In July arrived the new governor, the Marquis of Obando, +who determined to restore Alim ud Din and suppress the Moro piracy. + +An expedition set sail, with the sultan on board, and went as far as +Zamboanga, but accomplished nothing. Here the conduct of the sultan +served to confirm the doubts of the Spaniards as to the sincerity of +his friendship. He was arrested, and returned to Manila, and imprisoned +in the fortress of Santiago. With varying treatment he remained in +the hands of the Spaniards until 1763, when he was returned to Jolo +by the English. + +Great Increase in Moro Piracy.--The year 1754 is stated to have been +the bloodiest in the history of Moro piracy. No part of the Bisayas +escaped ravaging in this year, while the Camarines, Batangas, and Albay +suffered equally with the rest. The conduct of the pirates was more +than ordinarily cruel. Priests were slain, towns wholly destroyed, +and thousands of captives were carried south into Moro slavery. The +condition of the Islands at the end of this year was probably the +most deplorable in their history. + +Reforms under General Arandia.--The demoralization and misery with +which Obando's rule closed were relieved somewhat by the capable +government of Arandia, who succeeded him. Arandia was one of the few +men of talent, energy, and integrity who stood at the head of affairs +in these islands during two centuries. + +He reformed the greatly disorganized military force, establishing +what was known as the "Regiment of the King," made up very largely +of Mexican soldiers. He also formed a corps of artillerists composed +of Filipinos. These were regular troops, who received from Arandia +sufficient pay to enable them to live decently and like an army. + +He reformed the arsenal at Cavite, and, in spite of opposition on +all sides, did something to infuse efficiency and honesty into the +government. At the head of the armament which had been sent against +the Moros he placed a Jesuit priest, Father Ducos. A capable officer +was also sent to command the presidio at Zamboanga, and while Moro +piracy was not stopped, heavy retaliation was visited upon the pirates. + +Arandia's most popular act of government was the expulsion of the +Chinese from the provinces, and in large part from the city. They +seem to have had in their hands then, perhaps even more than now, the +commerce or small trade between Manila and provincial towns. To take +over this trade, Arandia founded a commercial company of Spaniards +and mestizos, which lasted only for a year. The Christianized Chinese +were allowed to remain under license, and for those having shops in +Manila Arandia founded the Alcayceria of San Fernando. It consisted +of a great square of shops built about an open interior. It stood +in Binondo, on the present Calle de San Fernando, in what is still +a populous Chinese quarter. + +Death of Arandia and Decline of the Colony.--Arandia died in May, 1759, +and the government was assumed by the bishop of Cebu, who in turn was +forced from his position by the arrival of the archbishop of Manila, +Don Manuel Rojo. The archbishop revoked the celebrated orders of good +government which Arandia had put into force, and the colony promised +to relapse once more into its customary dormant condition. This was, +however, prevented by an event which brought to an end the long period +of obscurity and inertia under which the colony had been gradually +decaying, and introduced, in a way, a new period of its history. This +was the capture of the Philippine Islands by the British in 1762. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +THE PHILIPPINES DURING THE PERIOD OF EUROPEAN REVOLUTION. 1762-1837. + + +The New Philosophy of the Eighteenth Century.--The middle of the +eighteenth century in Europe was a time when ideas were greatly +liberalized. A philosophy became current which professed to +look for its authority not to churches or hereditary custom and +privilege, but to the laws of God as they are revealed in the natural +world. Men taught that if we could only follow nature we could not do +wrong. "Natural law" became the basis for a great amount of political +and social discussion and the theoretical foundation of many social +rights. The savage, ungoverned man was by many European philosophers +and writers supposed to live a freer, more wholesome and more natural +life than the man who is bound by the conventions of society and the +laws of state. + +Most of this reasoning we now know to be scientifically untrue. The +savage and the hermit are not, in actual fact, types of human +happiness and freedom. Ideal life for man is found only in governed +society, where there is order and protection, and where also should be +freedom of opportunity. But to the people of the eighteenth century, +and especially to the scholars of France, where the government was +monarchical and oppressive, and where the people were terribly burdened +by the aristocracy, this teaching was welcomed as a new gospel. Nor +was it devoid of grand and noble ideas--ideas which, carried out in +a conservative way, might have bettered society. + +It is from this philosophy and the revolution which succeeded it that +the world received the modern ideas of liberty, equality, fraternity, +and democracy. These ideas, having done their work in America and +Europe, are here at work in the Philippines today. It remains to +be seen whether a society can be rebuilt here on these principles, +and whether Asia too will be reformed under their influence. + +Colonial Conflicts between the Great European Countries.--During +the latter half of the eighteenth century there culminated the long +struggle for colonial empire between European states which we have +been following. We have seen how colonial conquest was commenced +by the Portuguese, who were very shortly followed by the Spaniards, +and how these two great Latin powers attempted to exclude the other +European peoples from the rich Far East and the great New World which +they had discovered. + +We have seen how this attempt failed, how the Dutch and the English +broke in upon this gigantic reserve, drove the Spanish fleets from +the seas, and despoiled and took of this great empire almost whatever +they would. The Dutch and English then fought between themselves. The +English excluded the Dutch from North America, capturing their famous +colony of New Amsterdam, now New York, and incorporating it (1674) +with their other American colonies, which later became the United +States of America. But in the East Indies the Dutch maintained their +trade and power, gradually extending from island to island, until +they gained--what they still possess--an almost complete monopoly of +spice production. + +War between England and France.--In India, England in the eighteenth +century won great possessions and laid the foundation for what has +been an almost complete subjugation of this Eastern empire. Here, +however, and even more so than in America, England encountered a +royal and brilliant antagonist in the monarch of France. + +French exploration in North America had given France claims to the +two great river systems of the St. Lawrence and the Mississippi, +the latter by far the greatest and richest region of the temperate +zone. So, during much of this eighteenth century, England and France +were involved in wars that had for their prizes the possession of +the continent of North America and the great peninsula of India. + +This conflict reached its climax between 1756 and 1763. Both states +put forth all their strength. France called to her support those +countries whose reigning families were allied to her by blood, +and in this way Spain was drawn into the struggle. The monarchs of +both France and Spain belonged to the great house of Bourbon. War was +declared between England and Spain in 1761. Spain was totally unfitted +for the combat. She could inflict no injury upon England and simply +lay impotent and helpless to retaliate, while English fleets in the +same year took Havana in the west and Manila in the east. + +English Victory over French in India and America.--English power in +India was represented during these years by the greatest and most +striking figure in England's colonial history--Lord Clive. To him is +due the defeat of France in India, the capture of her possessions, and +the founding of the Indian Empire, which is still regarded as England's +greatest possession. The French were expelled from India in the same +year that the great citadel of New France in America--Quebec--was +taken by the English under General Wolfe. + +The Philippines under the English.--Expedition from India to the +Philippines.--Lord Clive was now free to strike a blow at France's +ally, Spain; and in Madras an expedition was prepared to destroy +Spanish power in the Philippines. Notice of the preparation of this +expedition reached Manila from several sources in the spring and summer +of 1762; but with that fatality which pursued the Spaniard to the end +of his history in the Philippines, no preparations were made by him, +until on the 22d of September a squadron of thirteen vessels anchored +in Manila Bay. + +Through the mist, the stupid and negligent authorities of Manila +mistook them for Chinese trading-junks; but it was the fleet of +the English Admiral Cornish, with a force of five thousand British +and Indian soldiers under the command of General Draper. For her +defense Manila had only 550 men of the "Regiment of the King" and +eighty Filipino artillerists. Yet the Spaniards determined to make +resistance from behind the walls of the city. + +Surrender of Manila to the English.--The English disembarked and +occupied Malate. From the churches of Malate, Ermita, and Santiago +the British bombarded Manila, and the Spaniards replied from the +batteries of San Andres and San Diego, the firing not being very +effective on either side. + +On the 25th, Draper summoned the city to surrender; but a council of +war, held by the archbishop, who was also governor, decided to fight +on. Thirty-six hundred Filipino militia from Pampanga, Bulacan, +and Laguna marched to the defense of the city, and on the 3rd of +October two thousand of these Filipinos made a sally from the walls +and recklessly assaulted the English lines, but were driven back with +slaughter. On the night of the 4th of October a breach in the walls +was made by the artillery, and early in the morning of the 5th four +hundred English soldiers entered almost without resistance. A company +of militia on guard at the Puerto Real was bayoneted and the English +then occupied the Plaza, and here received the surrender of the fort +of Santiago. + +The English agreed not to interfere with religious liberty, and honors +of war were granted to the Spanish soldiers. Guards were placed +upon the convent of the nuns of Santa Clara and the beaterios, and +the city was given over to pillage, which lasted for forty hours, +and in which many of the Chinese assisted. + +Independent Spanish Capital under Anda at Bulacan.--The English were +thus masters of the city, but during their period of occupation +they never extended their power far beyond the present limits of +Manila. Previous to the final assault and occupation of Manila, the +authorities had nominated the oidor, Don Simon de Anda y Salazar, +lieutenant-governor and captain-general of the Islands, with +instructions to maintain the country in its obedience to the king of +Spain. Anda left the capital on the night of October 4, passing in a +little banca through the nipa swamps and esteros on the north shore +of Manila Bay to the provincial capital of Bulacan. + +Here he called together the provincial of the Augustinian monks, +the alcalde mayor of the province, and some other Spaniards. They +resolved to form an independent government representing Spain, and +to continue the resistance. This they were able to do as long as +the British remained in the Islands. The English made a few short +expeditions into Bulacan and up the Pasig River, but there was no +hard fighting and no real effort made to pursue Anda's force. The +Chinese welcomed the English and gave them some assistance, and for +this Anda slew and hung great numbers of them. + +The Philippines Returned to Spain.--By the Treaty of Paris in 1763, +peace was made, by which France surrendered practically all her +colonial possessions to England; but England returned to Spain her +captures in Cuba and the Philippines. In March, 1764, there arrived +the Spanish frigate "Santa Rosa," bringing the first "Lieutenant of +the King for the Islands," Don Francisco de la Torre, who brought +with him news of the Treaty of Paris and the orders to the English +to abandon the Islands. + +Resistance of the English by the Friars.--In resistance to the English +and in the efforts to maintain Spanish authority, a leading part had +been taken by the friars. "The sacred orders," says Martinez de Zuniga, +[80] "had much to do with the success of Senor Anda. They maintained +the Indians of their respective administrations loyal to the orders; +they inspired the natives with horror against the English as enemies of +the king and of religion, inciting them to die fighting to resist them; +they contributed their estates and their property; and they exposed +their own persons to great dangers." The friars were certainly most +interested in retaining possession of the Islands and had most to +lose by their falling into English hands. + +Increase of the Jesuits in Wealth and Power.--In this zealous movement +for defense, however, the Jesuits bore no part; and there were charges +made against them of treasonable intercourse with the English, which +may have had foundation, and which are of significance in the light +of what subsequently occurred. + +At the close of the eighteenth century, all the governments of +Catholic Europe were aroused with jealousy and suspicious hatred +against the Jesuits. The society, organized primarily for missionary +labor, had gradually taken on much of a secular character. The society +was distinguished, as we have seen in its history in the Philippines, +by men with great capacity and liking for what we may call practical +affairs as distinguished from purely religious or devotional life. The +Jesuits were not alone missionaries and orthodox educators, but they +were scientists, geographers, financiers, and powerful and almost +independent administrators among heathen peoples. They had engaged +so extensively and shrewdly in trade that their estates, warehouses, +and exchanges bound together the fruitful fields of colonial provinces +with the busy marts and money-centers of Europe. Their wealth was +believed to be enormous. Properly invested and carefully guarded, +it was rapidly increasing. + +What, however, made the order exasperating alike to rulers and +peoples were the powerful political intrigues in which members of +the order engaged. Strong and masterful men themselves, the field of +state affairs was irresistibly attractive. Their enemies charged that +they were unscrupulous in the means which they employed to accomplish +political ends. It is quite certain that the Jesuits were not patriotic +in their purposes or plans. They were an international corporation; +their members belonged to no one nation; to them the Society was +greater and more worthy of devotion than any state, in which they +themselves lived and worked. + +Dissolution of the Society of Jesus.--Europe had, however, reached +the belief, to which it adheres today, that a man must be true to +the country in which he lives and finds shelter and protection and +in which he ranks as a political member, or else incur odium and +punishment. Thus it was their indifference to national feeling that +brought about the ruin of the Jesuits. It is significant that the +rulers, the most devoted to Catholicism, followed one another in +decreeing their expulsion from their dominions. In 1759 they were +expelled from Portugal, in 1764 from France, and April 2, 1767, +the decree of confiscation and banishment from Spain and all Spanish +possessions was issued by King Carlos III. Within a year thereafter, +the two most powerful princes of Italy, the king of Naples and the +Duke of Parma, followed, and then the Grand Master of the Knights of +Malta expelled them from that island. The friends of the order were +powerless to withstand this united front of Catholic monarchs, and in +July, 1773, Pope Clement XIV. suppressed and dissolved the society, +which was not restored until 1814. + +The Jesuits Expelled from the Philippines.--The order expelling the +Jesuits from the Philippines was put into effect in the year 1767. The +instructions authorized the governor in case of resistance to use +force of arms as against a rebellion. [81] Besides their colleges in +Manila, Tondo, Cavite, Leyte, Samar, Bohol, and Negros, the Jesuits +administered curacies in the vicinity of Manila, in Cavite province, +in Mindoro and Marinduque, while the islands of Bohol, Samar, and +Leyte were completely under their spiritual jurisdiction. In Mindanao +their missions, a dozen or more in number, were found on both the +northern and southern coasts. Outside of the Philippines proper they +were the missionaries on the Ladrones, or Marianas. Their property in +the Philippines, which was confiscated by the government, amounted to +1,320,000 pesos, although a great deal of their wealth was secreted +and escaped seizure through the connivance of the governor, Raon. + +Governor Anda's Charges against the Religious Orders.--Don Simon +de Anda had been received in Spain with great honor for the defense +which he had made in the Islands, and in 1770 returned as governor +of the Philippines. His appointment was bitterly resented by the +friars. In 1768, Anda had addressed to the king a memorial upon the +disorders in the Philippines, in which he openly charged the friars +with commercialism, neglect of their spiritual duties, oppression +of the natives, opposition to the teaching of the Spanish language, +and scandalous interference with civil officials and affairs. Anda's +remedy for these abuses was the rigorous enforcement of the laws +actually existing for the punishment of such conduct and the return +to Spain of friars who refused to respect the law. + +He was, however, only partially successful in his policy. During the +six years of his rule, he labored unremittingly to restore the Spanish +government and to lift it from the decadence and corruption that had so +long characterized it. There were strong traits of the modern man in +this independent and incorruptible official. If he made many enemies, +it is, perhaps, no less to the credit of his character; and if in the +few years of his official life he was unable to restore the colony, +it must be remembered that he had few assistants upon whom to rely +and was without adequate means. + +The Moro Pirates.--The Moros were again upon their forays, and in +1771 even attacked Aparri, on the extreme northern coast of Luzon, +and captured a Spanish missionary. Anda reorganized the Armada de +Pintados, and toward the end of his life created also the Marina Sutil, +a fleet of light gunboats for the defense of the coasts against the +attacks of pirates. + +Failure of an English Settlement.--The hostility of the Moro rulers +was complicated by the interference of the English, who, after the +evacuation of Manila, continued to haunt the Sulu archipelago with +the apparent object of effecting a settlement. By treaty with the +Moro datos, they secured the cession of the island of Balanbangan, +off the north coast of Borneo. This island was fortified and a factory +was established, but in 1775 the Moros attacked the English with great +fury and destroyed the entire garrison, except the governor and five +others, who escaped on board a vessel, leaving a great quantity of +arms and wealth to the spoils of the Moros. The English factors, who +had taken up business on the island of Jolo, fled in a Chinese junk; +and these events, so unfortunate to the English, ended their attempts +to gain a position in the Jolo archipelago until many years later. + +Increase in Agriculture.--Anda died in October, 1776, and his +successor, Don Jose Basco de Vargas, was not appointed until July, +1778. With Basco's governorship we see the beginning of those numerous +projects for the encouragement of agriculture and industry which +characterized the last century of Spanish rule. His "Plan general +economico" contemplated the encouragement of cotton-planting, the +propagation of mulberry-trees and silk-worms, and the cultivation of +spices and sugar. Premiums were offered for success in the introduction +of these new products and for the encouragement of manufacturing +industries suitable to the country and its people. + +Out of these plans grew the admirable Sociedad Economica de Amigos del +Pais, which was founded by Basco in 1780. The idea was an excellent +one, and the society, although suffering long periods of inactivity, +lasted for fully a century, and from time to time was useful in the +improvement and development of the country, and stimulated agricultural +experiments through its premiums and awards. + +Establishment of the Tobacco Industry.--Up to this time the Philippine +revenues had been so unproductive that the government was largely +supported by a subsidy of $250,000 a year paid by Mexico. Basco was +the first to put the revenues of the Islands upon a lucrative basis. To +him was due the establishment, in 1782, of the famous tobacco monopoly +(estanco de tabacos) which became of great importance many years +later, as new and rich tobacco lands like the Cagayan were brought +under cultivation. + +Favorable Commercial Legislation.--The change in economic ideas, +which had come over Europe through the liberalizing thought of the +eighteenth century, is shown also by a most radical step to direct into +new channels the commerce of the Philippines. This was the creation +in 1785 of a great trading corporation with special privileges and +crown protection, "The Royal Company of the Philippines." + +The company was given a complete monopoly of all the commerce between +Spain and the Philippines, except the long-established direct traffic +between Manila and Acapulco. All the old laws, designed to prevent +the importation into the Peninsula of wares of the Orient, were swept +away. Philippine products were exempted from all customs duty, either +on leaving Manila or entering Spain. The vessels of the company were +permitted to visit the ports of China, and the ancient and absurd +prohibition, which prevented the merchants of Manila from trading +with India, and China, was removed. + +Though still closing the Philippines against foreign trade, this +step was a veritable revolution in the commercial legislation of the +Philippines. Had the project been ably and heartily supported, it might +have produced a development that would have advanced prosperity half +a century; but the people of Manila did not welcome the opening of +this new line of communication. The ancient commerce with Acapulco +was a valuable monopoly to those who had the right to participate +in it, and their attitude toward the new company was one either of +indifference or hostility. + +In 1789 the port of Manila was opened and made free to the vessels of +all foreign nations for the space of three years, for the importation +and sale exclusively of the wares of Asia; but the products of Europe, +with the exception of Spain, were forbidden. + +The Royal Company was rechartered in 1805, and enjoyed its monopoly +until 1830, when its privileges lapsed and Manila was finally opened +to the ships of foreign nations. + +Conquest of the Igorrote Provinces of Luzon.--Basco was a zealous +governor and organized a number of military expeditions to occupy +the Igorrote country in the north. In 1785 the heathen Igorrotes of +the missions of Ituy and Paniqui in Nueva Vizcaya revolted and had +to be reconquered by a force of musketeers from Cagayan. + +Conquest of the Batanes Islands.--Basco also effected the conquest of +the Batanes Islands to the north of Luzon, establishing garrisons and +definitely annexing them to the colony. The Dominican missionaries +long before this time had attempted to convert these islands to +Christianity; but the poverty of the people and the fierceness of the +typhoons which sweep these little islands prevented the cultivation of +anything more than camotes and taro, and had made them unprofitable +to hold. Basco was honored, however, for his reoccupation of these +islands, and on his return to Spain, at the expiration of his +governorship, received the title of "Count of the Conquest of the +Batanes." [82] + +A Scientific Survey of the Coast of the Islands.--About 1790 the +Philippines were visited by two Spanish frigates, the "Descubierta" and +the "Atrevida," under the command of Captain Malaspina. These vessels +formed an exploring expedition sent out by the Spanish government to +make a hydrographic and astronomic survey of the coasts of Spanish +America, the Ladrones, and the Philippines. It was one of those +creditable enterprises for the widening of scientific knowledge which +modern governments have successively and with great honor conducted. + +The expedition charted the Strait of San Bernardino, the coasts of +several of the Bisayan Islands, and Mindanao. One of the scientists +of the party was the young botanist, Don Antonio Pineda, who died +in Ilocos in 1792, but whose studies in the flora of the Philippines +thoroughly established his reputation. A monument to his memory was +erected near the church in Malate, but it has since suffered from +neglect and is now falling in ruins. + +Establishment of a Permanent Navy in the Philippines.--The intentions +of England in this archipelago were still regarded with suspicion by +the Spanish government, and in 1795 and 1796 a strong Spanish fleet, +sent secretly by way of the coast of South America, was concentrated in +the waters of the Philippines under the command of Admiral Alava. Its +object was the defense of the Islands in case of a new war with +Great Britain. News of the declaration of war between these two +countries reached Manila in March, 1797, but though for many months +there was anxiety, England made no attempt at reoccupation. These +events led, however, to the formation of a permanent naval squadron, +with head-quarters and naval station at Cavite. [83] + +The Climax of Moro Piracy.--The continued presence of the Moros in +Mindoro, where they haunted the bays and rivers of both east and west +coasts for months at a time, stealing out from this island for attack +in every direction, was specially noted by Padre Zuniga, and indicated +how feebly the Spaniards repulsed these pirates a hundred years ago. + +It was the last severe phase of Malay piracy, when even the strong +merchant ships of England and America dreaded the straits of Borneo and +passed with caution through the China Sea. Northern Borneo, the Sulu +archipelago, and the southern coasts of Mindanao were the centers from +which came these fierce sea-wolves, whose cruel exploits have left +their many traditions in the American and British merchant navies, +just as they periodically appear in the chronicles of the Philippines. + +Five hundred captives annually seem to have been the spoils taken +by these Moros in the Philippines Islands, and as far south as +Batavia and Macassar captive Filipinos were sold in the slave marts +of the Malays. The aged and infirm were inhumanly bartered to the +savage tribes of Borneo, who offered them up in their ceremonial +sacrifices. The measures of the Spanish government, though constant +and expensive, were ineffective. Between 1778 and 1793, a million and +a half of pesos were expended on the fleets and expeditions to drive +back or punish the Moros, but at the end of the century a veritable +climax of piracy was attained. + +Pirates swarmed continually about the coasts of Mindoro, Burias, +and Masbate, and even frequented the esteros of Manila Bay. Some +sort of peace seems to have been established with Jolo and a friendly +commerce was engaged in toward the end of the century, but the Moros +of Mindanao and Borneo were increasing enemies. In 1798 a fleet of +twenty-five Moro bancas passed up the Pacific coast of Luzon and fell +upon the isolated towns of Paler, Casiguran, and Palanan, destroying +the pueblos and taking 450 captives. The cura of Casiguran was ransomed +in Binangonan for the sum of twenty-five hundred pesos. For four years +this pirate fleet had its rendezvous on Burias, whence it raided the +adjacent coasts and the Catanduanes. + +The Great Wars in America and Europe.--The English reoccupied +Balanbangan in 1803, but held the island for only three years, when +it was definitely abandoned. For some years, however, the coasts of +the Philippines were threatened by English vessels, and there was +reflected here in the Far East the tremendous conflicts which were +convulsing Europe at this time. The wars which changed Europe at the +close of the eighteenth century, following the French Revolution, +form one of the most important and interesting periods of European +history, but it is also one of the most difficult periods to judge and +describe. We will say of it here only so much as will be sufficient +to show the effect upon Spain and so upon the Philippines. + +The Revolution of the English Colonies in America.--In 1776 the +thirteen English colonies on the Atlantic coast of North America +declared their independence of Great Britain. In the unfair treatment +of the British king and Parliament they had, they believed, just +grounds for revolution. For nearly eight years a war continued by which +England strove to reduce them again to obedience. But at the end of +that time England, having successively lost two armies of invasion +by defeat and capture, made peace with the American colonists and +recognized their independence. In 1789 the Americans framed their +present constitution and established the United States of America. + +The French Revolution.--Condition of the People in France.--In their +struggle for independence the Americans had been aided by France, +who hoped through this opportunity to cripple her great colonial +rival, England. Between America and France there was close sympathy +of political ideas and theories, although in their actual social +conditions the two countries were as widely separated as could +be. In America the society and government were democratic. All +classes were experienced in politics and government. They had behind +them the priceless heritage of England's long struggle for free and +representative government. There was an abundance of the necessaries +of life and nearly complete freedom of opportunity. + +France, like nearly every other country of continental Europe, was +suffering from the obsolete burden of feudalism. The ownership of the +land was divided between the aristocracy and the church. The great +bulk of the population were serfs bound to the estates, miserably +oppressed, and suffering from lack of food, and despoiled of almost +every blessing which can brighten and dignify human life. The life +of the court and of the nobility grew more luxurious, extravagant, +and selfish as the economic conditions in France became worse. The +king was nearly an absolute monarch. His will was law and the earlier +representative institutions, which in England had developed into the +splendid system of parliamentary government, had in France fallen +into decay. + +In the other countries of Europe--the German States, Austria, Italy, +and Spain--the condition of the people was quite as bad, probably in +some places even worse than it was in France. But it was in France +that the revolt broke forth, and it was France which led Europe in +a movement for a better and more democratic order. Frenchmen had +fought in the armies of America; they had experienced the benefits of +a freer society, and it is significant that in the same year (1789) +that saw the founding of the American state the Revolution in France +began. It started in a sincere and conservative attempt to remedy +the evils under which France was suffering, but the accumulation of +injustice and misery was too great to be settled by slow and hesitating +measures. The masses, ignorant, and bitter with their wrongs, broke +from the control of statesman and reformer, threw themselves upon the +established state and church, both equally detestable to them, and tore +them to pieces. Both king and queen died by beheading. The nobility +were either murdered or expelled. The revolutionary government, if +such it could be called, fell into the hands of wicked and terrible +leaders, who maintained themselves by murder and terrorism. + +Effects of the Revolution.--These are the outward and terrible +expressions of the Revolution which were Seized upon by European +statesmen and which have been most dwelt upon by historical +writers. But, apart from the bloody acts of the years from 1793 +to 1795, the Revolution modernized France and brought incalculable +gains to the French people. By the seizure of the great estates and +their division among the peasantry, the agricultural products of the +country were doubled in a single year, and that terrible condition +of semi-starvation which had prevailed for centuries was ended. + +The other monarchies of Europe regarded the events in France with +horror and alarm. Monarchs felt their own thrones threatened, and a +coalition of European monarchies was formed to destroy the republic +and to restore the French monarchy and old regime. France found herself +invaded by armies upon every frontier. It was then that the remarkable +effects produced by the Revolution upon the people of France appeared. + +With a passionate enthusiasm which was irresistible, the people +responded to the call for war; great armies were enlisted, which by +an almost uninterrupted series of victories threw back the forces of +the allies. Men rose from obscurity to the command of armies, and +there was developed that famous group of commanders, the marshals +of France. Out of this terrible period of warfare there arose, +too, another, who was perhaps, if we except the Macedonian king, +Alexander, the greatest man ever permitted to lead armies and to rule +men--Bonaparte, later the emperor, Napoleon the First. + +The New Republic under Napoleon the First.--From 1795, when Bonaparte +was given command of the invasion of Italy, until 1815, when he was +finally defeated at Waterloo in Belgium, Europe experienced almost +continuous war. The genius of Napoleon reduced to the position of +vassal states Italy, Switzerland, Holland, Belgium, Germany, and +Austria. In all these countries the ancient thrones were humbled, +feudalism was swept away, and the power of a corrupt church and +aristocracy was broken. In spite of the humiliation of national +pride, these great benefits to Europe of Napoleon's conquests can +not be overestimated. Wherever Napoleon's power extended there +followed the results of the Revolution--a better system of law, +the introduction of the liberal "Code Napoleon," the liberation of +the people from the crushing toils of mediaevalism, and the founding +of a better society. These are the debts which Europe owes to the +French Revolution. + +The Decline of Spain.--Lack of Progress.--In this advance and progress +Spain did not share. The empire of Napoleon was never established +in the Peninsula. In 1811 the Spaniards, with, the assistance of the +English under the great general, Wellington, repulsed the armies of +the French. This victory, so gratifying to national pride, was perhaps +a real loss to Spain, for the reforms which prevailed in other parts +of Europe were never carried out in Spain, and she remains even yet +unliberated from aristocratic and clerical power. + +A liberal constitutional government was, however, set up in Spain in +1812 by the Cortes; but in 1814 King Ferdinand, aided by the Spanish +aristocracy and clergy, was able to overthrow this representative +government and with tyrannical power to cast reforms aside. Fifty +thousand people were imprisoned for their liberal opinions, +the Inquisition was restored, the Cortes abolished, and its acts +nullified. The effect of these acts upon the Philippines will be +noticed presently. + +Separation of the Philippines from Mexico.--The events of these years +served to separate the Philippines from their long dependency on +Mexico. In 1813 the Cortes decreed the suppression of the subsidized +Acapulco galleon. The Mexican trade had long been waning and voyages +had become less profitable. The last of the galleons left Manila in +1811 and returned from Acapulco in 1815, never again to attempt this +classical voyage. + +The cessation of these voyages only briefly preceded the complete +separation from America. From the first period of settlement, +the Philippines had in many respects been a sub-dependency of New +Spain. Mexico had until late afforded the only means of communication +with the mother-country, the only land of foreign trade. Mexican +officials frequently administered the government of the Islands, +and Mexican Indians formed the larger part of the small standing +army of the Philippines, including the "Regiment of the King." As we +have seen, a large subsidy, the situado, was annually drawn from the +Mexican treasury to support the deficient revenues of the Philippines. + +Rebellion of the South American Countries.--But the grievances of +the Spanish American colonists were very great and very real. The +revolution which had successively stirred North America and Europe +now passed back again to the Spanish countries of the New World, +and between 1810 and 1825 they fought themselves free of Spain. The +last of the colonies from which the Spaniards were forced to retire +was Peru. Mexico achieved her separation in 1820. Spain lost every +possession upon the mainland of both Americas, and the only vestiges +of her once vast American empire were the rich islands of the Greater +Antilles--Cuba and Porto Rico. + +Limited Trade with the Philippines.--The Philippines were now forced to +communicate by ship directly with Spain. The route for the next fifty +years lay by sailing-vessels around the Cape of Good Hope. It occupied +from four to six months, but this route had now become practically a +neutral passage, its winds and currents were well understood, and it +was annually followed by great numbers of vessels of Europe, England, +and the United States. + +Trade was still limited to the ships of the Royal Philippine Company, +and this shipping monopoly lasted until 1835, when a new era in the +commercial and industrial life of the Philippines opened. An English +commercial house was established in Manila as early as 1809. + +Volcanic Eruptions.--The terrible eruptions of Mount Taal, the last +of which occurred in 1754, were followed in the next century by the +destructive activity of Mount Mayon. In 1814 an indescribable eruption +of ashes and lava occurred, and the rich hemp towns around the base +of this mountain were destroyed. Father Francisco Aragoneses, cura of +Cagsaua, an eye-witness, states that twelve thousand people perished; +in the church of Budiao alone two hundred lay dead. [84] + +Rebellions in the Philippines.--The Liberal Spanish Cortes.--Two +revolts in the Philippines that occurred at this period are of much +importance and show the effect in the Philippines of the political +changes in Spain. In 1810 the liberal Spanish Cortes had declared that +"the kingdoms and provinces of America and Asia are, and ought to +have been always, reputed an integral part of the Spanish monarchy, +and for that same, their natives and free inhabitants are equal in +rights and privileges to those of the Peninsula." + +This important declaration, which if carried out would have +completely revolutionized Spain's colonial policy, was published in +the Philippines, and with that remarkable and interesting facility by +which such news is spread, even among the least educated classes of +Filipinos, this proclamation had been widely disseminated and discussed +throughout the Islands. It was welcomed by the Filipino with great +satisfaction, because he believed it exempted him from the enforced +labor of the polos and servicios. These were the unremunerated tasks +required of Filipinos for the construction of public works, bridges, +roads, churches, and convents. + +Effect of the Repeal of the Declaration of the Cortes.--King Ferdinand +VII. in May, 1814, on his return to power, as we have seen, published +the famous decree abolishing constitutional government in Spain and +annulling all the acts of the Cortes, including those which aimed +to liberalize the government of the colonies. These decrees, when +published in the Philippines, appeared to the Filipinos to return +them to slavery, and in many places their disaffection turned to +rebellion. In Ilocos twelve hundred men banded together, sacked +convents and churches, and destroyed the books and documents of +the municipal archives. Their fury seems to have been particularly +directed against the petty tyrants of their own race, the caciques +or principales. + +The result of Spanish civilization in the Philippines had been to +educate, and, to a certain degree, enrich a small class of Filipinos, +usually known as principales or the gente ilustrada. It is this class +which has absorbed the direction of municipal and local affairs, +and which almost alone of the Filipino population has shared in those +benefits and opportunities which civilized life should bring. + +The vast majority of the population have, unfortunately, fallen or +remained in a dependent and almost semi-servile position beneath +the principales. In Ilocos this subordinate class, or dependientes, +is known as kailian, and it was these kailian who now fell upon +their more wealthy masters, burning their houses and destroying +their property, and in some instances killing them. The assignment of +compulsory labor had been left to the principales in their positions +as gobernadorcillos and cabezas de barangay, and these officials had +unquestionably abused their power and had drawn down upon themselves +the vengeance of the kailian. [85] + +This revolt, it will be noticed, was primarily directed neither +against friars nor Spanish authorities, but against the unfortunate +social order which the rule of Spain maintained. + +A Revolt Lead by Spaniards.--A plot, with far more serious motives, +took place in 1823. The official positions in the regiments and +provinces had previously been held almost entirely by Spaniards born +in America or the Philippines. The government now attempted to fill +these positions with Spaniards from Manila. The officials, deprived of +their positions, incited the native troops which they had commanded, +into a revolt, which began in the walled city in Manila. About eight +hundred soldiers followed them, and they gained possession of the +Cuartel of the King, of the Royal Palace, and of the Cabildo, but +they failed to seize the fortress of Santiago. It was not properly a +revolt of Filipinos, as the people were not involved and did not rise, +but it had its influence in inciting later insurrection. + +Insurrection on Bohol.--Since the insurrection on Bohol in 1744, when +the natives had killed the Jesuit missionaries, a large part of the +island had been practically independent under the leader Dagohoy. After +the expulsion of the Jesuits, Recollects were placed in special +charge of those towns along the seacoast, which had remained loyal to +Spain. An effort was made to secure the submission of the rebels by +the proclamation of a pardon, but the power of the revolt grew rather +than declined, until in 1827 it was determined to reduce the rebellion +by force. An expedition of thirty-two hundred men was formed in Cebu, +and in April, 1828, the campaign took place, which resulted in the +defeat of the rebels and their settlement in the Christian towns. + +The New Provinces of Benguet and Abra.--It is proper to notice +also the slow advances of Spanish authority, which began to be made +about this time among the heathen tribes of northern Luzon. These +fierce and powerful tribes occupy the entire range of the Cordillera +Central. Missionary effort in the latter half of the eighteenth +century had succeeded in partly Christianizing the tribes along the +river Magat in Neuva Vizcaya, but the fierce, head-hunting hillmen +remained unsubdued and unchristianized. + +Between 1823 and 1829 the mission of Pidigan, under an Augustinian +friar, Christianized some thousands of the Tinguianes of the river +Abra. In 1829 an expedition of about sixty soldiers, under Don +Guillermo Galvey, penetrated into the cool, elevated plateau of +Benguet. The diary of the leader recounts the difficult march up the +river Cagaling from Aringay and their delight upon emerging from the +jungle and cogon upon the grassy, pine-timbered slopes of the plateau. + +They saw little cultivated valleys and small clusters of houses and +splendid herds of cattle, carabaos, and horses, which to this day have +continued to enrich the people of these mountains. At times they were +surrounded by the yelling bands of Igorrotes, and several times they +had to repulse attacks, but they nevertheless succeeded in reaching the +beautiful circular depression now known as the valley of La Trinidad. + +The Spaniards saw with enthusiasm the carefully separated and walled +fields, growing camotes, taro, and sugarcane. The village of about +five hundred houses was partly burned by the Spaniards, as the +Igorrotes continued hostile. The expedition returned to the coast, +having suffered only a few wounds. The commandancia of Benguet was +not created until 1846, in which year also Abra was organized as +a province. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +PROGRESS AND REVOLUTION. 1837-1897. + + +Progress during the Last Half-Century of Spanish Rule.--We have +now come to the last half-century and to the last phase of Spanish +rule. In many respects this period was one of economic and social +progress, and contained more of promise than any other in the history +of the Islands. During this last half-century the Spanish rulers +had numerous plans for the development and better administration of +the Philippines, and, in spite of a somewhat wavering policy and the +continual sore of official peculation, this was a period of wonderful +advancement. Revolution and separation from Spain came at last, as +revolutions usually do, not because there was no effort nor movement +for reform, but because progress was so discouragingly slow and so +irritatingly blocked by established interests that desired no change. + +Effect of Opening the Port of Manila to Foreign Trade.--Increase in +Agriculture.--The opening of the port of Manila to foreign trade, in +1837, was followed by a period of rising industry and prosperity. Up +to this time the archipelago had not been a producing and exporting +country, but the freeing of trade led to the raising of great harvests +for foreign export, which have made world-wide the fame of certain +Philippine productions. Chief among these are of course Manila hemp +and tobacco. These were followed by sugar and coffee culture, the +latter plant enriching the province of Batangas, while the planting +of new cocoanut groves yearly made of greater importance the yield +of that excellent product, copra. These rich merchandises had entered +very little into commerce during the early decades of the century. + +Increase in Exports.--In 1810 the entire imports of the Philippines +amounted in value to 5,329,000 dollars, but more than half of this +consisted of silver sent from Mexico. From Europe and the United +States trade amounted to only 175,000 dollars. The exports in the +same year amounted to 4,795,000 dollars, but a million and a half of +this was Mexican silver exported on to China, and the whole amount +of exports to Europe and the United States was only 250,000 dollars. + +In 1831 the exportation of hemp amounted to only 346 tons. But the +effect upon production of opening Manila to foreign trade is seen +in the export six years later of 2,585 tons. By 1858 the exportation +of hemp had risen to 412,000 piculs, or 27,500 tons. Of this amount, +nearly two thirds, or 298,000 piculs, went to the United States. At +this time the North Atlantic seaboard of America was the center of +a most active ship-building and ship-carrying trade. The American +flag was conspicuous among the vessels that frequented these Eastern +ports, and "Manila hemp" was largely sought after by American seamen +to supply the shipyards at home. Of sugar, the export in 1858 amounted +to 557,000 piculs, of which more than half went to Great Britain. + +After 1814 general permission had been given to foreigners to +establish trading-houses in Manila, and by 1858 there were fifteen such +establishments, of which seven were English and three American. [86] + +Other Ports Opened to Foreign Commerce.--In 1855 three other ports +were opened to foreign commerce--Sual in Pangasinan on the Gulf of +Lingayan, Iloilo, and Zamboanga. In 1863, Cebu likewise was made an +open port. The exports of Sual consisted only of rice, and in spite +of its exceptional harbor this port never flourished, and is to-day +no more than an unfrequented village. + +Iloilo exported leaf tobacco, sugar, sapan or dyewood (an industry +long ago ruined), hemp, and hides. Zamboanga through the Chinese had a +small trade with Jolo and the Moro Islands, and exported the produce of +these seas--sea-slug (tripang), shark fins, mother-of-pearl, tortoise +shell, etc. For some years the customs laws in these ports were +trying and vexatious, and prevented full advantage being taken of the +privileges of export; but in 1869 this service was, by royal decree, +greatly liberalized and improved. Since that date the Philippines +have steadily continued to grow in importance in the commercial world. + +The Form of Government under the Spanish.--General Improvements.--This +is perhaps a convenient place to examine for the last time the +political system which the Spaniards maintained in the country. In +1850 there were thirty-four provinces and two politico-military +commandancias. In these provinces the Spanish administration was +still vested solely in the alcalde mayor, who until after 1886 was +both governor or executive officer and the judge or court for the +trial of provincial cases and crimes. + +Many of the old abuses which had characterized the government of +the alcaldes had been at least partially remedied. After 1844 they +had no longer the much-abused monopoly privilege of trade, nor had +they as free a hand in controlling the labor of the inhabitants; but +opportunities for illegal enrichment existed in the administration +of the treasury and tax system, and these opportunities were not +slighted. Up to the very end of Spanish rule the officials, high and +low, are accused of stealing public money. + +The Pueblo.--The unit of administration was the pueblo, or township, +which ordinarily embraced many square miles of country and contained, +numerous villages, or "barrios." The center of the town was naturally +the site where for centuries had stood the great church and the +convent of the missionary friars. These locations had always been +admirably chosen, and about them grew up the market and trading-shops +of Chinese and the fine and durable homes of the more prosperous +Filipinos and mestizos. + +About 1860 the government began to concern itself with the construction +of public buildings and improvements, and the result is seen in many +pueblos in the finely laid-out plazas and well-built municipal edifices +grouped about the square--the "tribunal," or town house, the jail, +and the small but significant schoolhouses. The government of the +town was vested in a "gobernadorcillo" and a council, each of the +"consejales" usually representing a hamlet or barrio. + +But the Spanish friar, who in nearly every pueblo was the parish +curate, continued to be the paternal guardian and administrator of the +pueblo. In general, no matter was too minute for his dictation. Neither +gobernadorcillo nor councillors dared act in opposition to his wishes, +and the alcalde of the province was careful to keep on friendly terms +and leave town affairs largely to his dictation. The friar was the +local inspector of public instruction and ever vigilant to detect +and destroy radical ideas. To the humble Filipino, the friar was the +visible and only representative of Spanish authority. + +The Revolt of 1841.--Repression of the People by the +Friars.--Unquestionably in the past, the work of the friars had been +of very great value; but men as well as institutions may lose their +usefulness, as conditions change, and the time was now approaching when +the autocratic and paternal regime of the friars no longer satisfied +the Filipinos. Their zeal was no longer disinterested, and their +work had become materialized by the possession of the vast estates +upon which their spiritual charges lived and labored as tenants or +dependents. The policy of the religious orders had, in fact, become +one of repression, and as the aspirations of the Filipinos increased, +the friars, filled with doubt and fear, tried to draw still tighter +the bonds of their own authority, and viewed with growing distrust +the rising ambition of the people. + +Apolinario de la Cruz.--The unfortunate revolution of 1841 shows the +wayward and misdirected enthusiasm of the Filipino; and the unwisdom +of the friars. Apolinario de la Cruz, a young Filipino, a native +of Lukban, Tayabas, came up to Manila filled with the ambition to +lead a monastic life, and engaged in theological studies. By his +attendance upon lectures and sermons and by imitation of the friar +preachers of Manila, Apolinario became, himself, quite an orator, +and, as subsequent events showed, was able to arouse great numbers +of his own people by his appeals. + +It was his ambition to enter one of the regular monastic orders, +but this religious privilege was never granted to Filipinos, and he +was refused. He then entered a brotherhood known as the Cofradia, or +Brotherhood of San Juan de Dios, composed entirely of Filipinos. After +some years in this brotherhood, he returned in 1840 to Tayabas and +founded the Cofradia de San Jose, his aim being to form a special +cult in honor of Saint Joseph and the Virgin. For this he requested +authorization from Manila. It was here that the lack of foresight of +the friars appeared. + +The Opposition of the Friars.--Instead of sympathizing with these +religious aspirations, in which, up to this point, there seems to have +been nothing heretical, they viewed the rise of a Filipino religious +leader with alarm. Their policy never permitted to the Filipino any +position that was not wholly subordinate. They believed that the +permanence of Spanish power in these islands lay in suppressing any +latent ability for leadership in the Filipino himself. Their influence, +consequently, was thrown against Apolinario, and the granting of the +authority for his work. They secured not only a condemnation of his +plan, but an order for the arrest and imprisonment of all who should +attend upon his preaching. + +Apolinario Forced to Rebel.--Apolinario thereupon took refuge +in independent action. His movement had already become a strong +one, and his followers numbered several thousand people of Laguna, +Tayabas, and Batangas. The governor of Tayabas province, Don Joaquin +Ortega, organized an expedition to destroy the schism. Accompanied +by two Franciscan friars, he attacked Apolinario in the month of +October, 1840, and was defeated and killed. One account says that +Apolinario was assisted by a band of Negritos, whose bowmanship was +destructive. There are still a very few of these little blacks in +the woods in the vicinity of Lukban. + +Apolinario was now in the position of an open rebel, and he fortified +himself in the vicinity of Alitao, where he built a fort and chapel. + +His religious movement became distinctly independent and heretical. A +church was formed, of which he was first elected archbishop and then +supreme pontiff. He was also charged with having assumed the title of +"King of the Tagalog." + +Finally a force under the new alcalde, Vital, and General Huet early in +November attacked Apolinario's stronghold and after a fierce struggle +defeated the revolutionists. About a thousand Filipinos perished in +the final battle. Apolinario was captured and executed. He was then +twenty-seven years of age. + +Organization of Municipal Governments.--In 1844 an able and liberal +governor, General Claveria, arrived, and remained until the end of the +year 1849. A better organization of the provincial governments, which +we have seen, followed Claveria's entrance into office, and in October, +1847, came the important decree, organizing the municipalities in +the form which we have already described, and which remained without +substantial modification to the end of Spanish rule, and which has +to a considerable extent been followed in the Municipal Code framed +by the American government. + +Subjection of the Igorrote Tribes.--With Claveria began a decisive +policy of conquest among the Igorrote tribes of northern Luzon, and +by the end of Spanish rule these mountains were dotted with cuartels +and missions for the control of these unruly tribes. The province of +Nueva Vizcaya has been particularly subject to the raids of these +head-hunting peoples. Year after year the Christian towns of the +plains had yielded a distressing sacrifice of life to satisfy the +savage ceremonials of the Igorrotes. [87] + +In 1847, Claveria nominated as governor of Nueva Vizcaya, Don Mariano +Ozcariz, whose severe and telling conquests for the first time checked +these Igorrote outrages and made possible the development of the +great valleys of northern Luzon. + +Spanish Settlements on Mindanao.--Zamboanga.--With Claveria's +governorship we enter also upon the last phase of Moro piracy. In spite +of innumerable expeditions, Spain's occupation of South Mindanao and +the Sulu archipelago was limited to the presidio of Zamboanga. She had +occupied this strategic point continuously since the reestablishment +of Spanish power in 1763, The great stone fort, which still stands, +had proved impregnable to Moro attack, and had long been unmolested. + +Distributed for a distance of some miles over the rich lands at this +end of the Zamboanga peninsula was a Christian population, which +had grown up largely from the descendants of rescued captives of the +Moros. Coming originally from all parts of the Bisayas, Calamianes, and +Luzon, this mixed population has grown to have a somewhat different +character from that of any other part of the Islands. A corrupt +Spanish dialect, known as the "Chabucano," has become the common +speech, the only instance in the Philippines where the native dialect +has been supplanted. This population, loyal and devotedly Catholic, +never failed to sustain the defense of this isolated Spanish outpost, +and contributed brave volunteers to every expedition against the +Moro islands. + +Activity of Other Nations.--But Spain's maintenance of Zamboanga was +insufficient to sustain her claims of sovereignty over the Sulu and +Tawi-Tawi groups. Both the Dutch and English planned various moves for +their occupation and acquisition, and in 1844 a French fleet entered +the archipelago and concluded a treaty with the sultan of Sulu for +the cession of the island of Basilan for the sum of one million +dollars. Writings of the French minister and historian, M. Guizot, +show that France hoped, by the acquisition of this island, to obtain +a needed naval base in the East and found a great commercial port +within the sphere of Chinese trade. [88] + +Conquest of the Gulf of Davao.--But this step roused the Spaniards +to activity and the occupation of the island. A naval vessel subdued +the towns along the north coast, and then proceeding to the mouth of +the Rio Grande, secured from the sultan of Maguindanao the cession +of the great Gulf of Davao. Spain took no immediate steps to occupy +this gulf, but in 1847 a Spaniard, Don Jose Oyanguran, proposed to +the governor, Claveria, to conquer the region at his own expense, +if he could be furnished with artillery and munitions and granted a +ten years' government of Davao, with the exclusive privilege of trade. + +His offer was accepted by the governor and the Audiencia, and Oyanguran +organized a company to secure funds for the undertaking. In two +years' time he had subdued the coast regions of this gulf, expelled +the pirates who harbored there, and founded the settlement of Nueva +Vergara. He seems to have been making progress toward the conquest +and commercial exploitation of this region, when jealous attacks in +Manila induced Governor Urbistondo to cancel his privilege and to +relieve him by an officer of the government. + +In subsequent years the Jesuits had a few mission stations here and +made a few converts among the Bagobos; but the region is still an +unsubdued and unutilized country, whose inhabitants are mainly pagan +tribes, and whose rich agricultural possibilities lie undeveloped +and unclaimed. + +The Samal Pirates.--The Sulu.--The piratical inhabitants of the +Sulu archipelago are made of two distinct Malayan peoples--the Sulu +(or Sulug), and the Samal, who are known throughout Malaysia as the +"Bajau" or "Orang laut" (Men of the Sea). The former appear to be +the older inhabitants. They occupy the rich and populous island of +Jolo and some islands of the Siassi group, immediately south. + +The Samal.--The Samal, or Bajau, are stated to have come originally +from Johore. Many of them live almost exclusively in their boats, +passing their lives from birth to death upon the sea. They are found +throughout most parts of Malaysia, the position of their little fleets +changing with the shifting of the monsoons. In the Sulu archipelago +and a few points in South Mindanao, many of these Samal have shifted +their homes from their boats to the shore. Their villages are built +on piles over the sea, and on many of the low coral reefs south of +Siassi and east of Tawi-Tawi there are great towns or settlements +which have apparently been in existence a long while. + +Fifty years ago the Samal were very numerous in the many islands +between Jolo and Basilan, and this group is still known as the Islas +Samales. Like the Sulu and other Malays, the Samal are Mohammedans, +and scarcely less persistent pirates than their fellow-Malays. With the +decline of piratical power among the Sulu of Jolo, the focus of piracy +shifted to these settlements of the Samal, and in the time of Claveria +the worst centers were the islands of Balanguingui and Tonquil, lying +just north of the island of Jolo. From here pirate and slaving raids +upon the Bisayan Islands continued to be made, and nearly every year +towns were sacked and burned and several hundred unfortunate captives +carried away. The captives were destined for slavery, and regular marts +existed for this traffic at Jolo and on the Bay of Sandakan in Borneo. + +Arrival of Steam Warships.--In 1848 the Philippines secured the +first steam war vessels. These were the "Magellanes," the "Elcano," +and the "Reina de Castilla." They were destined to revolutionize +Moro relations. + +The Destruction of the Samal Forts.--Hitherto it had been possible +for the great Moro war praos, manned by many oarsmen, to drop their +masts on the approach of an armed sailing-vessel, and, turning +toward the "eye of the wind," where no sailing-ship could pursue, +row calmly away from danger. Steam alone was effective in combating +these sea-wolves. Claveria took these newly arrived ships, and with +a strong force of infantry, which was increased by Zamboangueno +volunteers, he entered the Samal group in February, 1848, and landed +on the island of Balanguingui. + +There were four fortresses situated in the mangrove marshes of the +island. These, in spite of a desperate resistance, were carried by +the infantry and Zamboanguenos and the pirates scattered. The conduct +of the campaign appears to have been admirable and the fighting +heroic. The Moros were completely overwhelmed; 450 dead were burned +or interred; 124 pieces of artillery--for the most part, the small +brass cannon called "lantacas"--were captured, and 150 Moro boats were +destroyed. The Spaniards cut down the cocoanut groves, and with spoil +that included such rich pirate loot as silks, silver vases, ornaments, +and weapons of war, and with over two hundred prisoners and three +hundred rescued captives, returned to Zamboanga. This was the most +signal victory ever won by Europeans in conflict with Malay piracy. The +effectiveness of this campaign is shown by the fact that while in +the preceding year 450 Filipinos had suffered capture at the hands +of Moro pirates, in 1848 and the succeeding year there was scarcely +a depredation. But in 1850 a pirate squadron from Tonquil, an island +adjacent to Balanguingui, fell upon Samar and Camaguin. Fortunately, +Governor Urbistondo, who had succeeded Claveria, vigorously continued +the policy of his predecessor, and an expedition was promptly +dispatched which destroyed the settlements and strongholds on Tonquil. + +Destruction of the Moro Forts at Jolo.--A year later war broke out +again with Jolo, and after a varied interchange of negotiations and +hostilities, the Spaniards stormed and took the town in February, +1851. The question of permanent occupation of this important site was +debated by a council of war, but their forces appearing unequal to +the task, the forts of the Moros were destroyed, and the expedition +returned. Jolo is described at this time as a very strongly guarded +situation. Five forts and a double line of trenches faced the +shore. The Moro town is said to have contained about seven thousand +souls, and there was a barrio of Chinese traders, who numbered about +five hundred. + +Treaty with the Sultan of Jolo.--A few months later the governor of +Zamboanga concluded a treaty with the sultan of Jolo by which the +archipelago was to be considered an incorporated part of the Spanish +possessions. The sultan bound himself to make no further treaties +with or cessions to foreign powers, to suppress piracy, and to fly the +Spanish flag. The Moros were guaranteed the practice of their religion, +the succession of the sultan and his descendants in the established +order, boats of Jolo were to enjoy the same trading privileges in +Spanish ports as other Filipino vessels, and the sultan retained +the right to all customs duties on foreign trading-vessels. Finally, +"in compensation for the damages of war," the sultan was to be paid +an annual subsidy of 1,500 pesos and 600 pesos each to three datos +and 360 pesos to a sherif. [89] + +The End of Malay Piracy.--In these very years that Malay piracy was +receiving such severe blows from the recuperating power and activity +of the Spanish government on the north, it was crushed also from +the south by the merciless warfare of a great Englishman, the Raja +Charles Brooke of Sarawak. The sources of pirate depredation were +Maguindanao, the Sulu archipelago, and the north and west coasts of +the great island of Borneo. We have seen how these fleets, century +after century, swept northward and wasted with fire and murder the +fair islands of the Philippines. + +But this archipelago was not alone in suffering these ravages. The +peaceful trading inhabitants of the great island groups to the south +were persistently visited and despoiled. Moreover, as the Chinese +trade by the Cape of Good Hope route became established in the first +half of the nineteenth century, these pirates became a great menace +to European shipping. They swarmed the China Sea, and luckless indeed +was the ship carried too far eastward on its course. Every American +schoolboy is familiar with the stories of fierce hand-to-hand struggles +with Malay pirates, which have come down from those years when the +American flag was seen everywhere in the ports of the Far East. + +About 1839 a young English officer, [90] who had been in the Indian +service, Charles Brooke, having armed and equipped a yacht of about +140 tons, set sail for the coast of Borneo, with the avowed intent of +destroying Malay piracy and founding an independent state. In all the +romantic stories of the East there is no career of greater daring than +that of this man. In 1841, having engaged in several bloody exploits, +Brooke forced from the sultan of Borneo the cession of Sarawak, +with the government vested in himself as an independent raja. + +Brooke now devoted himself with merciless severity to the destruction +of the pirates in the deep bays and swampy rivers, whence they had +so long made their excursions. Later he was assisted by the presence +of the English man-of-war "Dido," and in 1847 the sultan of Brunei +ceded to Great Britain the island of Labuan. In 1849, Brooke visited +Zamboanga in the English man-of-war "Moeander," and concluded a treaty +with the sultan of Sulu, which greatly alarmed the Spaniards. + +Brooke's private correspondence shows that he was ambitious and hopeful +of acquiring for England parts of the Dutch possessions in the south +and the Spanish Philippines in the north; but his plans were never +followed up by England, although in 1887 North Borneo was ceded to +an English company, and all the northern and eastern portions of this +great island are now under English protection. [91] + +Liberal Ideas among the Filipinos.--The release from Moro +piracy, the opening of foreign commerce, and the development of +agricultural production were rapidly bringing about a great change +in the aspirations of the Filipino people themselves. Nearly up to +the middle of the nineteenth century the Filipinos had felt the +full effect of isolation from the life and thought of the modern +world. But the revolutionary changes in Europe and the struggles +for constitutional government in Spain had their influence, even +in these far-away Spanish possessions. Spaniards of liberal ideas, +some of them in official positions, found their way to the Islands, +and an agitation began, originating among Spaniards themselves, +against the paternal powers of the friars. + +Influence of the Press.--The growth of periodic literature accelerated +this liberalizing movement. The press, though suffering a severe +censorship, has played a large part in shaping recent thought in +these islands and in communicating to the Filipino people those +ideas and purposes which ever inspire and elevate men. [92] The first +newspaper to make its appearance in the Philippines was in 1822--"El +Philantropo"; but journalism assumed no real importance until the +forties, when there were founded "Semanario Filipino" (1843), and +almost immediately after several others--"El Amigo de Pais" (1845), +"La Estrella" (1846), and "La Esperanza" (1847), the first daily. These +were followed by "Diario de Manila" (1848); in 1858 "El Comercio" +appeared, the oldest of the papers still in existence. [93] + +Papers conducted by Filipinos and in the Filipino tongues are of more +recent origin, but these early Spanish periodicals had a real effect +upon the Filipinos themselves, training up a class familiar with the +conduct of journalism and preparing a way for the very influential +work of the Filipino press in recent years. + +Establishment of an Educational System.--Return of the Jesuits.--But +more important than all other influences was the opening of education +to Filipinos. In 1852 a royal decree authorized the Jesuits to return +to the Philippines. The conditions under which they came back were +that they should devote themselves solely to missions in the unoccupied +fields of Mindanao, and to the higher education of the Filipinos. + +The Public Schools.--In 1860, O'Donnell, the Spanish minister of +war and colonies (Ultramar), founded the system of public primary +instruction. A primary school for boys and one for girls was to +be established in each pueblo of the Islands. In these schools, +instruction was to be given in the Spanish language. A superior +commission of education was formed, which consisted of the governor, +the archbishop, and seven other members added by the governor himself. + +The system was not secular, for it primarily was devoted to the +teaching of religious doctrine. The Spanish friar, the pueblo curate, +was the local inspector of schools and practically directed their +conduct. It was not wholly a free system, because tuition was required +of all but the poorest children; nor was it an adequate system, +because, even when most complete, it reached only a small proportion +of the children of a parish, and these very largely were of the +well-to-do families. And yet this system, for what it accomplished, +is deserving of great credit. + +Besides the church, the convent, and the tribunal, nearly every town +in the Philippines, toward the close of Spanish rule, had also, in the +public plaza, its public school buildings for boys and for girls. In +these towns a number of Filipinos were taught to converse in the +Spanish language and at least the rudiments of Spanish education. But +this system did not give opportunity for education to the little +child of the humble fisherman and the husbandman. + +The Manila Normal School.--To prepare Filipino teachers to do this +work of primary instruction, a decree of 1863 established the Manila +Normal School. In charge of the Jesuits, this school was inaugurated +in January, 1865. And about the same date the government decreed the +foundation of the Jesuit "Ateneo Municipal" for higher instruction +in the classics and sciences that should conduct the student to the +degree of bachelor of arts. The influence of these institutions upon +the development of the Filipino has been remarkable. In one or the +other of them have been trained nearly all of those young men who in +recent years have stirred the Filipino people to wide ambitions and +demands. At the same time the excellent Jesuit observatory, which has +done such important work in meteorology, was established in charge +of Padre Faura. + +Increase in Spanish Population.--The opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 +brought immense changes to the Islands. Previous to this date Spanish +residents had been few. Almost the only class deeply interested in the +Islands and permanently established here had been the friars. But with +communication by steamer in thirty days from Barcelona to Manila, +a new interest was felt by Spaniards in the Philippines, though +unfortunately this interest was greatest among the politicians. Some +of the projects planned and decreed can only be regarded as visionary +and beyond the point of serviceability, and others, more unfortunately +still, had for their purpose the creation of offices and emoluments +for Peninsula politicians; but they all contributed to bring to an +end the paternal government under which there was no prospect of +further enlightenment or progress for the Filipino. + +Increase in the Number of Wealthy, Educated Filipinos.--The +Filipino had now become embarked upon a new current of intellectual +experience--a course of enlightenment which has been so full of +unexpected development, and which has already carried him so far from +his ancestor of one hundred years ago, that we can not say what advance +another generation or two may bring. Throughout all the towns of the +Islands a class was rapidly growing up to which the new industries +had brought wealth. Their means enabled them to build spacious and +splendid homes of the fine, hard woods of the Philippines, and to +surround themselves with such luxuries as the life of the Islands +permitted. This class was rapidly gaining education. It acquired a +knowledge of the Spanish language, and easily assumed that graceful +courtesy which distinguishes the Spaniard. + +The only misfortune, as regards this class, was that it was very +small. It could embrace but a few families in each populous town. Some +of these had Chinese and Spanish blood in their veins, but other +notable families were pure Filipinos. + +Attitude of the Spanish and the Friars toward Filipino Education.--The +great mistake committed by the Spaniard was that he rarely welcomed +the further progress of the native population, and the center of +this opposition to the general enlightenment of the race was the +friars. Thus those who had been the early protectors and educators, +little by little, because of their extreme conservatism and their +fear of loosening the ties that bound the Filipino to the church and +to Spain, changed into opponents of his progress and enemies of his +enlightenment; but the education which the church itself had given to +the Filipino, and which had been fostered by the state and especially +in recent times by the Jesuits, had made the Filipino passionately +ambitious for more enlightenment and freedom. + +The Rule of Governor Torre.--Liberal Reforms.--In 1868, Queen +Isabella II. of Spain was deposed, and a little later a revolutionary +government, the "Republic of Spain," was founded. It was the brief +triumph of that reforming and liberal spirit which for so many years +had been struggling to free Spain from the burdens of aristocracy +and ecclesiasticism. + +The natural consequence was the sending of a liberal governor +to the Philippines and the publication of liberal principles and +reforms. This governor was General de la Torre. He was a brave and +experienced soldier and a thorough democrat at heart. He dispensed +with the formality and petty pomp with which the governors of Manila +had surrounded themselves; he dismissed the escort of halberdiers, +with their mediaeval uniforms and weapons, which had surrounded the +governor-generals since 1581, and rode out in civilian's clothes and +without ostentation. His efforts were directed to encouraging the +Filipinos and to attaching them to Spain. In the eyes of the Spanish +law, for a brief period, Spaniard and colonists had become equal, +and La Torre tried to enforce this principle and make no distinction +of race or birth. While Filipinos were encouraged and delighted, +it is impossible to describe the disgust of the Spanish population +and the opposition of the friars. La Torre was attacked and opposed, +and the entire course of his governorship was filled with trouble, +in which, naturally, liberal ideas gained wider and wider currency +among the Filipinos. + +Effect of the Opposition of the Friars.--The friars, being the most +influential opponents of the Filipino, naturally came to be regarded +by the Filipinos as their greatest enemies, and the anti-friar spirit +daily spread and intensified. A party was formed which demanded that +the friars vacate the parishes, and that their places be filled by +secular priests, in accordance with the statutes of the Council of +Trent. This party was headed by a native priest, Dr. Jose Burgos. + +A Filipino Movement for Reform.--After the fall of the republic in +Spain and the restoration of the monarchy, the administration in the +Philippines attempted to extirpate the rising tide of liberal thought; +but these ideas had taken root and could not be suppressed. The +Filipino party, if so we may call it, continued to plan and work +for reform. It numbered not only those of Filipino blood, but many +of Spanish descent, born in the Philippines. There is no certain +evidence that they were at this time plotting for independence, or +that their actions were treasonable; but the fear and hatred felt +by the Spaniards resulted frequently in the exile and punishment of +known advocates of reform. + +The Cavite Revolt.--In 1872 there occurred an important outbreak +known as the Cavite Revolt. Two hundred native soldiers at the +Cavite arsenal rose, killed their officers, and shouted "Death to +Spain!" They had fellow-conspirators among the troops in Manila, +but owing to mistakes in their plans these failed to rise with them +and the revolt was easily suppressed. + +It was immediately followed by the arrest of a large number of +Filipinos who had been conspicuous in La Torre's time and who were +advocates of reform. This number included the three priests, Fathers +Burgos, Zamora, and Gomez, besides Don Antonio Regidor, Don Joaquin +Pardo de Tavera, Don Pedro Carillo, and others. A council of war +condemned to death forty-one of the participants in the Cavite riot, +and these were shot on the morning of the 27th of January, 1872, +on the Field of Bagumbayan. On the 6th of February a council of war +condemned to death eleven more soldiers of the regiment of artillery, +but this sentence was commuted by the governor to life imprisonment. On +the 15th of February the same council of war sentenced to death upon +the garrote, the priests Burgos, Zamora, Gomez, and a countryman, +Saldua; and this sentence was executed on the morning of the 17th. + +The Spread of Secret Organizations.--Masonry.--New ground for fear +was now found in the spread of secret organizations, which were +denounced as Free Masonry. This is a very ancient institution which, +in Protestant countries like England and America, has a very large +membership, and in these countries its aims are wholly respectable. It +has never in any way been connected with sedition or other unworthy +movements. Its services are, in fact, largely of a religious character +and it possesses a beautiful and elaborate Christian ritual; but in +Latin countries Masonry has been charged with political intrigue and +the encouragement of infidelity, and this has resulted in clerical +opposition to the order wherever found. The first Masonic lodge in the +Philippines was established about 1861 and was composed entirely of +Spaniards. It was succeeded by others with Filipino membership, and +in one way or another seems to have inspired many secret organizations. + +The "Liga Filipina," and Dr. Rizal.--Large numbers of Filipinos were +now working, if not for independence, at least for the expulsion of the +friars; and while this feeling should have been met by a statesmanlike +and liberal policy of reform, the government constantly resorted to +measures of repression, which little by little changed the movement +for reformation into revolution. + +In 1887 the "Liga Filipina," was formed by a number of the +younger Filipino patriots, chief among whom was Dr. Jose Rizal y +Mercado. Rizal, by his gifts, his noble character, and his sad fate, +has gained a supreme place in the hearts of Filipinos and in the +history of the Islands. He was born in 1861 at Calamba, on Laguna de +Bay, and even as a child he was affected with sadness at the memory of +the events of 1872 and with the backward and unhappy condition of his +countrymen. He was educated by the Jesuits at the Ateneo Municipal in +Manila, and his family having means, he was enabled to study in Spain, +where he took a degree in medicine, and later to travel and study in +France, England, and Germany. + +It was in this latter country that he produced his first novel, +Noli Me Tangere. He had been a contributor to the Filipino paper +published in Spain, "La Solidaridad," and, to further bring the +conditions and needs of his country to more public notice, he wrote +this novel dealing with Tagalog life as represented at his old home on +Laguna de Bay and in the city of Manila. Later he published a sequel, +El Filibusterismo, in which even more courageously and significantly +are set forth his ideas for reform. + +His work made him many enemies, and on his return to Manila he found +himself in danger and was obliged to leave. He returned again in 1893, +and was immediately arrested and sentenced to deportation to Dapitan, +Mindanao. Here he remained quietly in the practice of his profession +for some years. + +The Katipunan.--Meanwhile the ideas which had been agitated by the +wealthy and educated Filipinos had worked their way down to the +poor and humble classes. They were now shared by the peasant and +the fisherman. Especially in those provinces where the religious +orders owned estates and took as rental a portion of the tenants' +crop, there was growing hatred and hostility to the friars. The +"Liga Filipina" had been composed of cultivated and moderate men, +who while pressing for reform were not inclined to radical extremes, +nor to obtain their ends by violent means. + +But there now grew up and gradually spread, until it had its +branches and members in all the provinces surrounding Manila, a +secret association composed largely of the uneducated classes, whose +object was independence of Spain, and whose members, having little to +lose, were willing to risk all. This was the society which has since +become famous under the name of "Katipunan." This secret association +was organized in Cavite about 1892. Its president and founder was +Andres Bonifacio. Its objects were frankly to expel the friars, and, +if possible, to destroy the Spanish government. + +Rebellion of 1896.--A general attack and slaughter of the Spaniards +was planned for the 20th of August, 1896. The plot was discovered +by the priest of Binondo, Padre Gil, who learned of the movement +through the wife of one of the conspirators, and within a few hours +the government had seized several hundred persons who were supposed to +be implicated. The arrests included many rich and prominent Filipinos, +and at the end of some weeks the Spanish prisons contained over five +thousand suspects. Over one thousand of these were almost immediately +exiled to far-distant Spanish prisons--Fernando Po, on the west coast +of Africa, and the fortress of Ceuta, on the Mediterranean. + +Meanwhile the Katipunan was organizing its forces for struggle. On +the 26th of August, one thousand insurgents attacked Caloocan, +and four days later a pitched battle was fought at San Juan del +Monte. In this last fight the insurgents suffered great loss, +their leader, Valenzuela, was captured and, with three companions, +shot on the Campo de Bagumbayan. The rising continued, however, +and the provinces of Pampanga, Bulacan, and Nueva Ecija were soon in +full rebellion. The center of revolt, however, proved to be Cavite, +This province was almost immediately cleared of Spaniards, except the +long neck of land containing the town of Cavite and protected by the +fleet. Here the insurgents received some organization under a young +man, who had been prominent in the Katipunan--Emilio Aguinaldo. + +The governor-general, Blanco, a humane man, who afterwards for a short +time commanded in Cuba, was recalled, and General Polavieja replaced +him. The Spanish army at the beginning of the revolt had consisted +of but fifteen hundred troops, but so serious was the revolt regarded +that Spain, although straining every energy at the moment to end the +rebellion in Cuba, strengthened the forces in the Philippines, until +Polavieja had an army of twenty-eight thousand Spaniards assisted by +several loyal Filipino regiments. With this army a fierce campaign +in Cavite province was conducted, which after fifty-two days' hard +fighting ended in the defeat of the insurgents and the scattering of +their forces. + +Death of Dr. Rizal.--For the moment it looked as though the rebellion +might pass. Then the Spanish government of Polavieja disgraced itself +by an act as wanton and cruel as it was inhuman and impolitic. + +Four years Dr. Rizal had spent in exile at Dapitan. He had lived +quietly and under surveillance, and it was impossible that he could +have had any share in this rebellion of 1898. Wearied, however, with +his inactivity, he solicited permission to go as an army doctor to the +dreadful Spanish hospitals in Cuba. This request was granted in July, +and Rizal had the misfortune to arrive in Manila at the very moment +of discovery of the rebellion in August. Governor Blanco hastened to +send him to Spain with a most kindly letter to the minister of war, +in which he vouched for his independence of the events which were +taking place in Manila. + +His enemies, however, could not see him escape. Their persecution +followed him to the Peninsula, and, upon his arrival in Spain, Rizal +was at once arrested and sent back to Manila a prisoner. His friend +Blanco had gone. Polavieja, the friend and tool of the reactionary +party, was busy punishing by imprisonment, banishment or death all +Filipinos who could be shown to have the slightest part or association +in the movement for reform. And by this clique Dr. Rizal was sentenced +to execution. He was shot early on the morning of December 30, +1896. [94] At his death the insurrection flamed out afresh. It now +spread to Pangasinan, Zambales, and Ilocos. + +End of the Revolt by Promises of Reform.--Polavieja returned to Spain, +and was succeeded by Gen. Primo de Rivera, who arrived in the spring +of 1897. The Spanish troops had suffered several recent reverses and +the country swarmed with insurgents. The policy of Primo de Rivera +was to gain by diplomacy where the energy of his predecessor had +failed. In July, 1897, an amnesty proclamation was issued, and in +August the governor-general opened negotiations with Aguinaldo, whose +headquarters were now in the mountains of Angat in Bulacan. Primo +de Rivera urged the home government to make some reforms, which +would greatly lessen the political importance of the friars. He +was vehemently opposed by the latter, but it was probably upon the +promise of reform that Aguinaldo and his fellow-insurgents agreed, +for the payment of 1,700,000 pesos, to surrender their arms, dismiss +the insurgent forces, and themselves retire from the Islands. This +agreement was made, and on December 27, 1897, Aguinaldo left the port +of Sual for Hongkong. + +The Spanish Misrule Ended.--Conditions in the provinces still continued +very unsatisfactory, and in its very last hours the Spanish government +lost the remnant of its prestige with the people by a massacre in +Calle Camba, Binondo, of a company of Bisayan sailors. Ten days after +this occurrence a revolt blazed out on the island of Cebu. Had events +taken their course, what would have been the final conclusion of the +struggle between Spaniards and Filipinos it is impossible to say. On +the 25th day of April the United States declared war upon Spain, +and the first day of May an American fleet reached Manila harbor, +and in the naval fight off Cavite, Spanish dominion, which had lasted +with only one brief interruption for 332 years, was broken. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +AMERICA AND THE PHILIPPINES. + + +Beginning of a New Era.--With the passing of the Spanish sovereignty +to the Americans, a new era began in the Philippines. Already the +old Spanish rule seems so far removed that we can begin to think of +it without feeling and study it without prejudice. + +Development of the United States of America.--The American nation is +the type of the New World. Beginning in a group of colonies, planted +half a century later than the settlement of the Philippines, it has +had a development unparalleled in the history of states. Although +peopled by emigrants from Europe, who rigidly preserved both their +purity of race and pride of ancestry, the American colonists, at the +end of a century, were far separated in spirit and institutions from +the Old World. + +Struggle with the wilderness and with the savage produced among them +a society more democratic and more independent than Europe had ever +known; while their profound religious convictions saved the colonists +from barbarism and intellectual decline. It can truthfully be held, +that in 1775, at the outbreak of the American Revolution, the colonists +had abler men and greater political ability than the mother-country of +England. It was these men who, at the close of the Revolution, framed +the American Constitution, the greatest achievement in the history of +public law. This nation, endowed at its commencement with so precious +an inheritance of political genius, felt its civil superiority to the +illiberal or ineffective governments of Europe, and this feeling has +produced in Americans a supreme and traditional confidence in their own +forms of government and democratic standards of life. Certainly their +history contains much to justify the choice of their institutions. + +A hundred and twenty-five years ago, these colonies were a small nation +of 2,500,000 people, occupying no more than the Atlantic coast of +the continent. Great mountain chains divided them from the interior, +which was overrun by the fiercest and most warlike type of man that +the races have produced--the American Indian. With an energy which +has shown no diminishing from generation to generation, the American +broke through these mountain chains, subdued the wilderness, conquered +the Indian tribes, and in the space of three generations was master +of the continent of North America. + +Even while engaged in the War for Independence, the American +frontiersman crossed the Appalachians and secured Kentucky and the +Northwest Territory, and with them the richest and most productive +regions of the Temperate Zone,--the Mississippi Valley. In 1803, the +great empire of Louisiana, falling from the hand of France, was added +to the American nation. In 1818, Florida was ceded by Spain, and in +1857, as a result of war with Mexico, came the Greater West and the +Pacific seaboard. This vast dominion, nearly three thousand miles in +width from east to west, has been peopled by natural increase and by +immigration from Europe, until, at the end of the nineteenth century, +the American nation numbered seventy-four million souls. + +This development has taken place without fundamental change in the +constitution or form of government, without loss of individual liberty, +and constantly increasing national prosperity. Moreover, the States +have survived the Civil War, the most bloody and persistently fought +war of all modern centuries--a war in which a million soldiers fell, +and to sustain which three and a half billion dollars in gold were +expended out of the national treasury. This war accomplished the +abolition of negro slavery, the greatest economic revolution ever +effected by a single blow. + +Such in brief is the history of the American nation, so gifted with +political intelligence, so driven by sleepless energy, so proud of +its achievements, and inwardly so contemptuous of the more polished +but less liberal life of the Old World. Europe has never understood +this nation, and not until a few years ago did Europeans dream of +its progress and its power. + +Relation of the United States to South American Republics.--Toward +the republics of Spanish America the United States has always stood +in a peculiar relation. These countries achieved their independence of +Spain under the inspiration of the success of the United States. Their +governments were framed in imitation of the American, and in spite of +the turbulence and disorder of their political life, the United States +has always felt and manifested a strong sympathy for these states as +fellow-republics. She has moreover pledged herself to the maintenance +of their integrity against the attacks of European powers. This +position of the United States in threatening with resistance the +attempt of any European power to seize American territory is known +as the Monroe Doctrine, because it was first declared by President +Monroe in 1823. + +Sympathy of American People for the Oppressed Cubans.--The fact that +the American nation attained its own independence by revolution has +made the American people give ready sympathy to the cause of the +revolutionist. The people of Cuba, who made repeated ineffective +struggles against Spanish sovereignty, always had the good wishes +of the American people. By international usage, however, one nation +may not recognize or assist revolutionists against a friendly power +until their independence is practically effected. + +Thus, when rebellion broke out afresh in Cuba in 1894, the United +States government actively suppressed the lending of assistance to +the Cubans, as was its duty, although the American people themselves +heartily wished Cuba free. The war in Cuba dragged along for years and +became more and more merciless. The passions of Cubans and Spaniards +were so inflamed that quarter was seldom given, and prisoners were +not spared. Spain poured her troops into the island until there were +120,000 on Cuban soil, but the rebellion continued. + +The Spanish have always been merciless in dealing with +revolutionists. Americans, on the other hand, have always conceded +the moral right of a people to resist oppressive government, and in +the entire history of the United States there has scarcely been a +single punishment for political crime. Although probably the fiercest +war in history was the American Civil War from 1861 to 1865, there +was not a single execution for treason. Thus the stories of the +constant executions of political prisoners, on an island in sight +of its own shores, greatly exasperated America, as did the policy of +Governor-general Weyler, which was excessive in its severity. + +War with Spain.--Destruction of the "Maine."--As the contest proceeded +without sign of termination, the patience of the American people grew +less. Then, February 15, 1898, occurred one of the most deplorable +events of recent times. The American battleship "Maine," lying in the +harbor of Havana, was, in the night, blown to destruction by mine or +torpedo, killing 266 American officers and sailors. It is impossible +to believe that so dastardly an act was done with the knowledge of +the higher Spanish officials; but the American people rightly demanded +that a government such as Spain maintained in Cuba, unable to prevent +such an outrage upon the vessel of a friendly power, and that could +neither suppress its rebellion nor wage war humanely, should cease. + +Declaration of War.--On April 19th the American Congress demanded +that Spain withdraw from the island and recognize the independence of +Cuba. This was practically a declaration of war. Spain indignantly +refused, and resolved upon resistance. Unfortunately, the ignorant +European press claimed for Spain military and naval superiority. + +The war was brief, and was an overwhelming disaster to Spain. Every +vessel of her proud navy that came under the fire of American guns +was destroyed. + +For a few months battle raged along the coasts of Cuba, and then +Spain sued for peace. + +Dewey's Victory in Manila Bay.--But meanwhile the war, begun without +the slightest reference to the Philippine Islands, had brought about +surprising consequences here. + +At the opening of the war, both Spain and the United States had +squadrons in Asiatic waters. The Spanish fleet lay at Cavite, the +American ships gathered at Hongkong. Immediately on the declaration of +war, the American naval commander, Dewey, was ordered to destroy the +Spanish fleet, which was feared on the Pacific coast of America. Dewey +entered the Bay of Manila in darkness on the morning of May 1st, +and made direct for the Spanish vessels at Cavite. His fleet was the +more powerful and immeasurably the more efficient. In a few hours +the Spanish navy was utterly destroyed and Manila lay at the mercy +of his guns. + +A New Insurrection, under Aguinaldo.--At this signal catastrophe +to Spain, the smoldering insurrection in the Islands broke out +afresh. The Spanish troops not in Manila were driven in upon their +posts, and placed in a position of siege. The friars, so hated by the +revolutionists, were captured in large numbers and were in some cases +killed. With the permission and assistance of the American authorities, +Aguinaldo returned from Singapore, and landed at Cavite. Here he +immediately headed anew the Philippine insurrection. + +Capture of Manila.--Troops were dispatched from San Francisco for the +capture of Manila. By the end of July, 8,500 men lay in the transports +off Cavite. They were landed at the little estuary of Paranaque, +and advanced northwards upon Fort San Antonio and the defenses of +Malate. The Spaniards behind the city's defenses, although outnumbering +the Americans, were sick and dispirited. One attempt was made to drive +back the invading army, but on the following day the Americans swept +through the defenses and line of blockhouses, and Manila capitulated +(August 13, 1898). + +The Filipinos had scarcely participated in the attack on the city, and +they were excluded from occupying it after its surrender. This act was +justified, because the Filipino forces had been very recently raised, +the soldiers were undisciplined, and had they entered the city, with +passions as they were inflamed, it was feared by the Americans that +their officers might not be able to keep them from looting and crime. + +Misunderstanding between Americans and Filipinos.--Up to this point, +the relations between the American and Filipino armies had been +friendly. But here began that misunderstanding and distrust which +for so many months were to alienate these two peoples and imbitter +their intercourse. + +Provisional Government of the Filipinos.--In the interval between +the destruction of the Spanish fleet and the capture of Manila, +the Filipinos in Cavite had organized a provisional government and +proclaimed the independence of the archipelago. + +American Ideas in Regard to the Philippines.--The idea of returning +these islands to the Spanish power was exceedingly repugnant to +American sentiment. Spain's attitude toward revolutionists was well +understood in America, and the Filipinos had acted as America's friends +and allies. On the other hand, the American government was unwilling +to turn over to the newly organized Filipino republic the government +of the archipelago. It was felt in America, and with reason, that +this Filipino government was not truly representative of all the +people in the Philippines, that the Filipino leaders were untried +men, and that the people themselves had not had political training and +experience. The United States, having overthrown the Spanish government +here, was under obligation to see that the government established in +its place would represent all and do injustice to none. The Filipinos +were very slightly known to Americans, but their educated class was +believed to be small and their political ability unproven. Thus, no +assurances were given to the Filipino leaders that their government +would be recognized, or that their wishes would be consulted in the +future of the Islands. In fact, these matters could be settled only +by action of the American Congress, which was late in assembling and +slow to act. + +The Terms of Peace.--Spain and America were now negotiating terms of +peace. These negotiations were conducted at Paris, and dragged on +during many critical weeks. The Filipinos were naturally very much +concerned over the outcome. + +Finally, the American government demanded of Spain that she cede the +Islands to the United States and accept the sum of $20,000,000 gold, +for public works and improvements which she had made. + +Suspicions of the Filipino Leaders.--These terms became known in +December, 1898. They served to awaken the worst suspicions of the +Filipino leaders. Many believed that they were about to exchange +the oppressive domination of Spain for the selfish and equally +oppressive domination of America. There is reason to believe that some +leaders counseled patience, and during the succeeding months made a +constant effort to maintain the peace, but the radical party among +the Filipinos was led by a man of real gifts and fiery disposition, +Antonio Luna. He had received an education in Europe, had had some +instruction in military affairs, and when in September the Filipino +government was transferred to Malolos, Luna became the general in +chief of the military forces. He was also editor of the most radical +Filipino newspaper, "La Independencia." + +New Filipino Government.--On January 4, 1899, President McKinley +issued a special message to General Otis, commanding the armies of the +United States in the Philippines, declaring that American sovereignty +must be recognized without conditions. It was thought in the United +States that a firm declaration of this kind would be accepted by +the Filipinos and that they would not dare to make resistance. The +intentions of the American president and nation, as subsequent events +have proven, were to deal with the Filipinos with great liberality; +but the president's professions were not trusted by the Filipinos, +and the result of Mr. McKinley's message was to move them at once to +frame an independent government and to decide on war. + +This new government was framed at Malolos, Bulacan, by a congress +with representatives from most of the provinces of central Luzon. The +"Malolos Constitution" was proclaimed January 23, 1899, and Don Emilio +Aguinaldo was elected president. The cabinet, or ministry, included +Don Apolinario Mabini, secretary of state; Don Teodoro Sandico, +secretary of interior; General Baldomero Aguinaldo, secretary of war; +General Mariano Trias, secretary of treasury; Don Engracio Gonzaga, +secretary of public instruction and agriculture. + +War with the Americans.--Battle of Manila.--The Filipino forces were +impatient for fighting, and attack on the American lines surrounding +Manila began on the night of February 4th. It is certain that battle +had been decided upon and in preparation for some time, and that +fighting would have been begun in any case, before the arrival +of reenforcements from America; but the attack was precipitated a +little early by the killing at San Juan Bridge of a Filipino officer +who refused to halt when challenged by an American sentry. On that +memorable and dreadful night, the battle raged with great fury along +the entire circle of defenses surrounding the city, from Tondo +on the north to Fort San Antonio de Abad, south of the suburb of +Malate. Along three main avenues from the north, east, and south +the Filipinos attempted to storm and enter the capital, but although +they charged with reckless bravery, and for hours sustained a bloody +combat, they had fatally underestimated the fighting qualities of +the American soldier. + +The volunteer regiments of the American army came almost entirely from +the western United States, where young men are naturally trained to +the use of arms, and are imbued by inheritance with the powerful and +aggressive qualities of the American frontier. When morning broke, +the Filipino line of attack had, at every point, been shattered and +thrown back, and the Americans had advanced their positions on the +north to Caloocan, on the east to the Water Works and the Mariquina +Valley, and on the south to Pasay. + +Declaration of War.--Unfortunately, during the night attack and before +the disaster to Filipino arms was apparent, Aguinaldo had launched +against the United States a declaration of war. This declaration +prevented the Americans from trusting the Filipino overtures which +followed this battle, and peace was not made. + +The Malolos Campaign.--On March 25th began the American advance upon +the Filipino capital of Malolos. This Malolos campaign, as it is +usually called, occupied six days, and ended in the driving of the +Filipino army and government from their capital. Hard fighting took +place in the first days of this advance, and two extremely worthy +American officers were killed, Colonels Egbert and Stotsenberg. + +The Filipino army was pursued in its retreat as far as Calumpit, where +on the southern bank of the Rio Grande de Pampanga the American line +rested during the height of the rainy season. During this interval +the volunteer regiments, whose terms of service had long expired, +were returned to the States, and their places taken by regiments of +the regular army. + +The American Army.--The American army at that time, besides the +artillery, consisted of twenty-five regiments of infantry and ten of +cavalry. Congress now authorized the organization of twenty-four new +regiments of infantry, to be known as the 26th to the 49th Regiments +of U. S. Volunteers, and one volunteer regiment of cavalry, the 11th, +for a service of two years. These regiments were largely officered +by men from civil life, familiar with a great variety of callings and +professions,--men for the most part of fine character, whose services +in the months that followed were very great not only in the field, but +in gaining the friendship of the Filipino people and in representing +the character and intentions of the American government. + +Anti-War Agitators in America.--Through the summer of 1899 the war was +not pressed by the American general, nor were the negotiations with +the Filipino leaders conducted with success. The Filipinos were by no +means dismayed. In spite of their reverses, they believed the conquest +of the Islands impossible to foreign troops. Furthermore, the war had +met with tremendous opposition in America. Many Americans believed that +the war was against the fundamental rights of the Filipino people. They +attacked the administration with unspeakable bitterness. They openly +expressed sympathy for the Filipino revolutionary cause, and for the +space of two years their encouragement was an important factor in +sustaining the rebellion. + +Spread of the Insurrection.--In these same summer months the +revolutionary leaders spread their cause among the surrounding +provinces and islands. The spirit of resistance was prominent at first +only among the Tagalog, but gradually nearly all the Christianized +population was united in resistance to the American occupation. + +Occupation of Negros.--The Americans had meanwhile occupied +Iloilo and the Bisayas, and shortly afterwards the presidios in +Mindanao surrendered by the Spaniards. In Negros, also, exceptional +circumstances had transpired. The people in this island invited +American sovereignty; and Gen. James Smith, sent to the island in March +as governor, assisted the people in forming a liberal government, +through which insurrection and disorder in that island were largely +avoided. + +Death of General Luna.--With the cessation of heavy rains, the +fighting was begun again in northern Luzon. The Filipino army had +its headquarters in Tarlac, and its lines occupied the towns of the +provinces of Pangasinan and Nueva Ecija, stretching in a long line of +posts from the Zambales Mountains almost to the upper waters of the +Rio Pampanga. It was still well armed, provisioned, and resolute; but +the brilliant, though wayward, organizer of this army was dead. The +Nationalist junta, which had directed the Philippine government and +army, had not been able to reconcile its differences. It is reported +that Luna aspired to a dictatorship. He was killed by soldiers of +Aguinaldo at Cabanatuan. + +The Campaign in Northern Luzon.--The American generals now determined +upon a strategic campaign. General MacArthur was to command an +advance up the railroad from Calumpit upon Tarlac; General Lawton, +with a flying column of swift infantry and cavalry, was to make a +flanking movement eastward through Nueva Ecija and hem the Filipino +forces in upon the east. Meanwhile, General Wheaton was to convey a +force by transport to the Gulf of Lingayen, to throw a cordon across +the Ilocano coast that should cut off the retreat of the Filipino army +northward. As a strategic movement, this campaign was only partially +successful. MacArthur swept northward, crushing the Filipino line on +his front, his advance being led by the active regiment of General +J. Franklin Bell. Lawton's column scoured the country eastward, +marching with great rapidity and tremendous exertions. Swollen +rivers were crossed with great loss of life, and the column, +cutting loose from its supplies, was frequently in need of food. It +was in this column that the Filipino first saw with amazement the +great American cavalry horse, so large beside the small pony of +the Philippines. Lawton's descent was so swift that the Philippine +government and staff narrowly escaped capture. + +On the night of November 11th, the Filipino generals held their +last council of war at Bayambang on the Rio Agno, and resolved upon +dispersal. Meanwhile, Wheaton had landed at San Fabian, upon the +southern Ilocano coast, but his force was insufficient to establish +an effective cordon, and on the night of November 15th Aguinaldo, +with a small party of ministers and officers, closely pursued by the +cavalry of Lawton under the command of General Young, slipped past, +through the mountains of Pozorubio and Rosario, and escaped up the +Ilocano coast. + +Then began one of the most exciting pursuits in recent wars. The chase +never slackened, except in those repeated instances when for the moment +the trail of the Filipino general was lost. From Candon, Aguinaldo +turned eastward through the comandancias of Lepanto and Bontoc, into +the wild Igorrote country of the Cordillera Central. The trail into +Lepanto leads over the lofty mountains through the precipitous Tila +Pass. On the summit, in what was regarded as an impregnable position, +Gregorio del Pilar, little more than a boy, but a brigadier-general, +with a small force of soldiers, the remnant of his command, attempted +to cover the retreat of his president. But a battalion of the +33d Infantry, under Major March, carried the pass, with the total +destruction of Pilar's command, he himself falling amid the slain. + +Capture of Aguinaldo.--Major March then pursued Aguinaldo into +Bontoc and thence southward into the wild and mountainous territory +of Quiangan. On Christmas night, 1899, the American soldiers camped +on the crest of the Cordillera, within a few miles of the Igorrote +village where the Filipino force was sleeping. Both parties were +broken down and in dire distress through the fierceness of the flight +and pursuit, but for several weeks longer Aguinaldo's party was able +to remain in these mountains and elude its pursuers. A month later, +his trail was finally lost in the valley of the Cagayan. He and his +small party had passed over the exceedingly difficult trail through +the Sierra Madre Mountains, to the little Tagalog town of Palanan +near the Pacific coast. Here, almost entirely cut off from active +participation in the insurrection, Aguinaldo remained until June of +1901, when he was captured by the party of General Funston. + +For some weeks following the disintegration of the Filipino army, the +country appeared to be pacified and the insurrection over. The new +regiments arriving from the United States, an expedition was formed +under General Schwan, which in December and January marched southward +through Cavite and Laguna provinces and occupied Batangas, Tayabas, and +the Camarines. Other regiments were sent to the Bisayas and to northern +Luzon, until every portion of the archipelago, except the islands of +Mindoro and Palawan, contained large forces of American troops. + +Reorganization of the Filipino Army.--The Filipinos had, by no means, +however, abandoned the contest, and this period of quiet was simply +a calm while the insurgent forces were perfecting their organization +and preparing for a renewal of the conflict under a different form. It +being found impossible for a Filipino army to keep the field, there +was effected a secret organization for the purpose of maintaining +irregular warfare through every portion of the archipelago. The Islands +were partitioned into a great number of districts or "zones." At +the head of each was a zone commander, usually with the rank of +general. The operations of these men were, to a certain extent, guided +by the counsel or directions of the secret revolutionary juntas in +Manila or Hongkong, but, in fact, they were practically absolute and +independent, and they exercised extraordinary powers. They recruited +their own forces and commissioned subordinate commanders. They levied +"contributions" upon towns, owners of haciendas, and individuals of +every class, and there was a secret civil or municipal organization +for collecting these revenues. The zone commanders, moreover, exercised +the terrible power of execution by administrative order. + +Assassination of Filipinos.--Many of the Filipino leaders were +necessarily not well instructed in those rules for the conduct of +warfare which civilized peoples have agreed upon as being humane +and honorable. Many of them tried, especially in the latter months +of the war, when understanding was more widely diffused, to make +their conduct conform to international usage; but the revolutionary +junta had committed the great crime of ordering the punishment by +assassination of all Filipinos who failed to support the insurgent +cause. No possible justification, in the light of modern morality, +can be found for such a step as this. The very worst passions were +let loose in carrying out this policy. Scores of unfortunate men were +assassinated, many of them as the results of private enmity. Endless +blackmail was extorted and communities were terrorized from one end +of the archipelago to the other. + +Irregular Warfare of the Filipinos.--Through the surrender of +Spanish forces, the capture of the arsenals of Cavite and Olongapo, +and by purchase through Hongkong, the revolutionary government +possessed between thirty thousand and forty thousand rifles. These +arms were distributed to the different military zones, and the +secret organization which existed in each municipality received its +proportion. These guns were secreted by the different members of the +command, except when occasion arose for effecting a surprise or making +an attack. There were no general engagements, but in some towns there +was almost nightly shooting. Pickets and small detachments were cut +off, and roads became so unsafe throughout most of the archipelago +that there was no travel by Americans except under heavy escort. For a +long time, also, the orders of the commanding general were so lenient +that it was impossible to punish properly this conduct when it was +discovered. + +Death of General Lawton.--The American army, in its attempt to garrison +every important town in the Islands, was cut up into as many as 550 +small detachments of post garrisons. Thus, while there were eventually +sixty thousand American soldiers in the Islands, it was rare for as +many as five hundred to take the field, and most of the engagements +of the year 1900 were by small detachments of fifty to one hundred men. + +It was in one of these small expeditions that the American army +suffered the greatest single loss of the war. A few miles east of +Manila is the beautiful Mariquina Valley, from which is derived the +city's supply of water, and the headwaters of this pretty stream lie in +the wild and picturesque fastness of San Mateo and Montalban. Although +scarce a dozen miles from the capital and the headquarters of a +Filipino brigade, San Mateo was not permanently occupied by the +Americans until after the 18th of December, 1899, when a force under +General Lawton was led around through the hills to surprise the town. + +Early in the morning the American force came pouring down over the +hills that lie across the river from the village. They were met by +a brisk fire from the insurgent command scattered along the banks of +the river and in a sugar hacienda close to the stream. Here Lawton, +conspicuous in white uniform and helmet, accompanying, as was his +custom, the front line of skirmishers, was struck by a bullet and +instantly killed. + +Filipino Leaders Sent to Guam.--In November, 1900, after the reelection +in the United States of President McKinley, a much more vigorous policy +of war was inaugurated. In this month General MacArthur, commanding +the division, issued a notable general order, defining and explaining +the laws of war which were being violated, and threatening punishment +by imprisonment of those guilty of such conduct. Some thousands of +Filipinos under this order were arrested and imprisoned. Thirty-nine +leaders, among them the high-minded but irreconcilable Mabini, were +in December, 1900, sent to a military prison on the island of Guam. + +Campaigning was much more vigorously prosecuted in all military +districts. By this time all the American officers had become familiar +with the insurgent leaders, and these were now obliged to leave the +towns and establish cuartels in remote barrios and in the mountains. + +These measures, pursued through the winter of 1900-01, broke the +power of the revolution. + +The Philippine Civil Commission.--Another very influential factor in +producing peace resulted from the presence and labors of the Civil +Philippine Commission. These gentlemen, Judge William H. Taft, Judge +Luke E. Wright, Judge Henry C. Ide, Professor Dean C. Worcester, +and Professor Bernard Moses, were appointed by the president in the +spring of 1900 to legislate for the Islands and to prepare the way +for the establishment of civil government. President McKinley's letter +of instructions to this commission will probably be ranked as one of +the ablest and most notable public papers in American history. + +The commission reached the Islands in June and began their legislative +work on September 1st. This body of men, remarkable for their high +character, was able at last to bring about an understanding with the +Filipino leaders and to assure them of the unselfish and honorable +purposes of the American government. Thus, by the early winter +of 1900-01 many Filipino gentlemen became convinced that the best +interests of the Islands lay in accepting American sovereignty, and +that they could honorably advocate the surrender of the insurgent +forces. These men represented the highest attainments and most +influential positions in the Islands. In December they formed an +association known as the Federal Party, for the purpose of inducing the +surrender of military leaders, obedience to the American government, +and the acceptance of peace. + +End of the Insurrection.--Under these influences, the insurrection, +in the spring of 1901, went rapidly to pieces. Leader after leader +surrendered his forces and arms, and took the oath of allegiance and +quietly returned home. By the end of June there were but two zone +commanders who had not surrendered,--General Malvar in Batangas, +and General Lukban in Samar. + +The First Civil Governor.--Peaceful conditions and security almost +immediately followed these surrenders and determined the president to +establish at once civil government. On July 4, 1901, this important +step was taken, Judge Taft, the president of the Philippine Commission, +taking office on that date as the first American civil governor of the +Philippines. On September 1st, the Philippine Commission was increased +by the appointment of three Filipino members,--the Hon. T. H. Pardo +de Tavera, M. D., the Hon. Benito Legarda, and the Hon. Jose Luzuriaga +of Negros. + +The Philippine Commission has achieved a remarkable amount of +legislation of a very high order. From September, 1900, to the end +of December, 1902, the commission passed no less than 571 acts of +legislation. Some of these were of very great importance and involved +long preparation and labor. Few administrative bodies have ever worked +harder and with greater results than the Philippine Commission during +the first two years of its activity. The frame of government in all +its branches had to be organized and set in motion, the civil and +criminal law liberalized, revenue provided, and public instruction +remodeled on a very extensive scale. + +The New Government.--The government is a very liberal one, and +one which gives an increasing opportunity for participation to the +Filipinos. It includes what is called local self-government. There +are in the Islands about 1,132 municipalities. In these the residents +practically manage their own affairs. There are thirty-eight organized +provinces in the archipelago, in which the administration rests +with the Provincial Board composed of the governor, treasurer, +and supervisor or engineer. The governor is elected for the +term of one year by the councilors of all the towns united in +assembly. The treasurer and supervisor are appointed by the governor +of the Philippine archipelago under the rules of the Civil Service +Board. The civil service is a subject which has commanded the special +consideration of the Commission. It gives equal opportunity to the +Filipino and to the American to enter the public service and to gain +public promotion; and the Filipino is by law even given the preference +where possessed of the requisite ability. + +The Insular Government.--For the purposes of administration, the +insular, or central government of the Islands is divided into four +branches, called departments, each directed by a secretary who is +also a member of the Philippine Commission. These departments are, +interior, Secretary Worcester; finance and justice, Secretary Ide; +commerce and police, Secretary Wright; and public instruction, +Secretary Moses, until January 1, 1903, and since that date Secretary +Smith. Under each of these departments are a large number of bureaus, +by which the many important activities of the government are performed. + +We have only to examine a list of these bureaus to see how many-sided +is the work which the government is performing. It is a veritable +commonwealth, complete in all the branches which demand the +attention of modern governments. Thus, under the Department of the +Interior, there is the Bureau of Public Health, with its extremely +important duties of combating epidemic diseases and improving public +sanitation, with its public hospitals, sanitariums, and charities; +the Bureau of Government Laboratories for making bacteriological and +chemical investigations; a Bureau of Forestry; a Bureau of Mining; +the Philippine Weather Bureau; a Bureau of Agriculture; a Bureau of +Non-Christian Tribes for conducting the government work in ethnology +and for framing legislation for pagan and Mohammedan tribes; and a +Bureau of Public Lands. + +Under the department of Commerce and Police are the Bureau of Posts; +Signal Service; the Philippines Constabulary, really an insular army, +with its force of some sixty-five hundred officers and men; Prisons; +the Coast Guard and Transportation Service, with a fleet of about +twenty beautiful little steamers, nearly all of them newly built for +this service and named for islands of the archipelago; the Coast and +Geodetic Survey, doing the much-needed work of charting the dangerous +coasts and treacherous waters of the archipelago; and the Bureau of +Engineering, which has under its charge great public works, many of +which are already under way. + +Under the Department of Finance and Justice are the Insular Treasurer; +the Insular Auditor; the Bureau of Customs and Immigration; the +Bureau of Internal Revenue; the Insular Cold Storage and Ice Plant; +and the great Bureau of Justice. + +Under the Department of Public Instruction there is the Bureau of +Education in charge of the system of public schools; a Bureau of +Printing and Engraving, with a new and fully equipped plant; a Bureau +of Architecture; a Bureau of Archives; a Bureau of Statistics; and +the Philippine Museum. + +Revenues and Expenditures.--The maintenance of these numerous +activities calls for an expenditure of large sums of money, but the +insular government and the Filipino people are fortunate in having +had their finances managed with exceptional ability. The revenues +of the Islands for the past fiscal year have amounted to about +$10,638,000, gold. Public expenditures, including the purchase +of equipment such as the coast-guard fleet and the forwarding of +great public works such as the improving of the harbor of Manila, +amounted during fiscal year of 1903 to about $9,150,000, gold. The +government has at all times preserved a good balance in its treasury; +but the past year has seen some diminution in the amount of revenues, +owing to the great depreciation of silver money, the falling off of +imports, the wide prevalence of cholera, and the poverty of many parts +of the country as a result of war and the loss of livestock through +pest. To assist the government of the Philippines, the Congress of +the United States in February, 1903, with great and characteristic +generosity appropriated the sum of $3,000,000, gold, as a free gift +to the people and government of the Philippines. + +The Judicial System.--Especially fortunate, also, have been the labors +of the commission in establishing a judicial system and revising the +Spanish law. The legal ability of the commission is unusually high. As +at present constituted, the judicial system consists of a Supreme +Court composed of seven justices, three of whom at the present time +are Filipinos, which, besides trying cases over which it has original +jurisdiction, hears cases brought on appeal from the Courts of First +Instance, fifteen in number, which sit in different parts of the +Islands. Each town, moreover, has its justices of the peace for the +trial of small cases and for holding preliminary examinations in cases +of crimes. By the new Code of Civil Procedure, the administration of +justice has been so simplified that there are probably no courts in +the world where justice can be more quickly secured than here. + +System of Public Schools.--Probably no feature of the American +government in the Islands has attracted more attention than the +system of public schools. Popular education, while by no means wholly +neglected under the Spanish government, was inadequate, and was +continually opposed by the clerical and conservative Spanish forces, +who feared that the liberalizing of the Filipino people would be the +loosening of the control of both Spanish state and church. On the +contrary, the success of the American government, as of any government +in which the people participate, depends upon the intelligence and +education of the people. Thus, the American government is as anxious to +destroy ignorance and poverty as the Spanish government and the Spanish +church were desirous of preserving these deeply unfortunate conditions. + +Americans believe that if knowledge is generally spread among the +Filipino people, if there can be a real understanding of the genius +and purpose of our American institutions, there will come increasing +content and satisfaction to dwell under American law. Thus, education +was early encouraged by the American army, and it received the first +attention of the commission. The widespread system of public schools +which now exists in these islands was organized by the first General +Superintendent of Public Instruction, Dr. Fred W. Atkinson, and by +Professor Bernard Moses of the Philippine Commission. + +Instruction in the English Language.--The basis of this public +instruction is the English language. This was early decided upon in +view of the great number of Filipino dialects, the absence of a common +native language or literature, and the very moderate acquaintance +with Spanish by any except the educated class. + +It is fortunate for the Filipino people that English has been +introduced here and that its knowledge is rapidly spreading. Knowledge +of language is power, and the more widely spoken the tongue, the +greater the possession of the individual who acquires it. Of all the +languages of the world, English is to-day the most widely spoken and is +most rapidly spreading. Moreover, English is preeminently the language +of the Far East. From Yokohama to Australia, and from Manila to the +Isthmus of Suez, English is the common medium of communication. It is +the language alike of business and of diplomacy. The Filipino people, +so eager to participate in all the busy life of eastern Asia, so +ambitious to make their influence felt and their counsels regarded, +will be debarred from all this unless they master this mighty English +tongue. + +The Filipino Assembly.--Thus, after four and a half years of +American occupation, the sovereignty of the United States has been +established in the archipelago, and a form of government, unique +in the history of colonial administration, inaugurated. One other +step in the contemplation of Congress, which will still further make +the government a government of the Filipino people, remains to be +taken. This is the formation of a Filipino assembly of delegates or +representatives, chosen by popular vote from all the Christianized +provinces of the archipelago. The recent census of the Philippines +will form the basis for the apportionment of this representation. This +assembly will share the legislative power on all matters pertaining +to the Christian people of the Philippines and those parts of the +Islands inhabited by them. When this step shall have been taken, +the government of the Philippine Islands will be like the typical +and peculiarly American form of government known as territorial. + +Territorial Form of Government in the United States.--The American +Union is composed of a number of states or commonwealths which, +while differing vastly in wealth and population, are on absolutely +equal footing in the Union. The inhabitants of these states form +politically the American sovereignty. They elect the president and +Congress, and through their state legislatures may change or amend +the form of the American state itself. + +Besides these states, there have always been large possessions +of the nation called territories. These territories are extensive +countries, too sparsely inhabited or too undeveloped politically to +be admitted, in the judgment of the American Congress, to statehood +in the Union. Their inhabitants do not have the right to vote for +the president; neither have they representation in the American +Congress. These territories are governed by Congress, through +territorial governments, and over them Congress has full sovereign +powers. That is, as the Supreme Court of the United States has decided +and explained, while Congress when legislating for the states in the +Union has only those powers of legislation which have been specifically +granted by the Constitution, in legislating for the territories it has +all the powers which the Constitution has not specifically denied. The +only limitations on Congress are those which, under the American +system of public law, guarantee the liberty of the individual,--his +freedom of religious belief and worship; his right to just, open, +and speedy trial; his right to the possession of his property; and +other precious privileges, the result of centuries of development +in the English-speaking race, which make up civil liberty. These +priceless securities, which no power of the government can take away, +abridge, or infringe, are as much the possession of the inhabitants +of a territory as of a state. [95] + +The government of these territories has varied greatly in form and +may be changed at any time by Congress, but it usually consists of a +governor and supreme court, appointed by the president of the United +States, and a legislature elected by the people. Since 1783 there +has always been territory so held and governed by the United States, +and if we may judge from the remarkable history of these regions, this +form of government of dependent possessions is the most successful and +most advantageous to the territory itself that has ever been devised. + +At the present time, the territories of the United States are Oklahoma, +the Indian Territory, New Mexico, Arizona, Alaska, the Hawaiian +Islands, Porto Rico, the Philippines, and Guam. + +The territorial form of government has frequently been regarded +by American statesmen as a temporary condition to be followed +at a comparatively early date by statehood. But after more than a +century of development, territorial government, as shaped by Congress +and as defined by the Supreme Court, shows itself so flexible and +advantageous that there is no reason why it should not be regarded +as a permanent and final form. Whether it will long prevail in the +Philippines, depends very largely upon the political development and +ultimate desires of the Filipino people themselves. For the present, +it is the only suitable form of government and the only form which +it is statesmanlike to contemplate. + +Filipino Independence.--The events of the last few years +seem to indicate that the American nation will not intrust the +Philippines with independence until they have immeasurably gained +in political experience and social self-control. The question is +too great to be discussed here, but this much may be said: The +rapid march of international politics in this coming century will +not be favorable to the independence of the small and imperfectly +developed state. Independence, while it may fascinate the popular +leader, may not be most advantageous for this people. Independence, +under present tendencies of international trade, means economic +isolation. Independence, in the present age, compels preparedness +for war; preparedness for war necessitates the maintenance of +strong armies, the building of great navies, and the great economic +burdens required to sustain these armaments. Especially would this +be true of an archipelago so exposed to attack, so surrounded by +ambitious powers, and so near the center of coming struggle, as +are the Philippines. Japan, with a population of forty-two million, +wonderful for their industry and economy, and passionately devoted to +their emperor, is independent, but at great cost. The burden of her +splendid army and her modern navy weighs heavily upon her people, +consumes a large proportion of their earnings, and sometimes seems +to be threatening to strain the resources of the nation almost to +the point of breaking. + +Advantages of American Control.--Surely, a people is economically far +more privileged if, like the Philippines under the American government, +or Australia under the British, they are compelled to sustain no +portion of the burden of exterior defense. The navies of the United +States to-day protect the integrity of the Philippine archipelago. The +power of a nation so strong and so terrible, when once aroused, that +no country on the globe would think for a minute of wantonly molesting +its territory, shields the Filipino from all outside interference +and permits him to expend all his energy in the development of those +abilities to which his temperament and endowment inspire him. + +American government means freedom of opportunity. There is no +honorable pursuit, calling, or walk of life under heaven in which the +Filipino may not now engage and in which he will not find his endeavors +encouraged and his success met with generous appreciation. In politics, +his progress may be slow, because progress here is not the development +of the individual nor of the few, but of the whole. But in the no +less noble pursuits of science, literature, and art, we may in this +very generation see Filipinos achieving more than notable success +and distinction, not only for themselves but for their land. + +Patriotic Duty.--Patriotic duty, as regards the Philippines, means +for the American a wholesome belief in the uprightness of the national +purposes; a loyal appreciation of the men who have here worked wisely +and without selfishness, and have borne the brunt of the toil; a +loyalty to the government of the Philippines and of the United States, +so long as these governments live honestly, rule justly, and increase +liberty; and a frank and hearty recognition of every advance made by +the Filipino people themselves. And for the Filipinos, patriotic duty +means a full acceptance of government as it has now been established, +as better than what has preceded, and perhaps superior to what he +himself would have chosen and could have devised; a loyalty to his own +people and to their interests and to the public interests, that shall, +overcome the personal selfishness that has set its cruel mark on every +native institution in this land; and a resolution to obey the laws, +preserve the peace, and use faithfully every opportunity for the +development of his own character and the betterment of the race. + + + + + + + +APPENDIX. + +SPANISH GOVERNORS OF THE PHILIPPINES. + +(1571-1898.) + + +1571-1572 Don Miguel Lopez de Legaspi. +1572-1575 (Tesorero) Guido do Labezares. +1575-1580 Don Francisco La-Sande. +1580-1583 Don Gonzalo Ronquillo. +1583-1584 Don Diego Ronquillo. +1584-1590 Dr. Don Santiago de Vera. +1590-1593 Don Gomez Perez de Dasmarinas. +1593-1595 Luis Perez Dasmarinas. +1595-1596 Don Antonio de Morga. +1596-1602 Don Francisco Tello de Guzman. +1602-1606 Don Pedro Bravo de Acuna. +1606-1608 Royal Audiencia. +1608-1609 Don Rodrigo Vivero. +1609-1616 Don Juan de Silva. +1616-1618 Don Andres Alcazar. +1618-1624 Don Alonso Faxardo y Tenza. +1624-1625 Royal Audiencia. +1625-1626 Don Fernando de Silva. +1626-1632 Don Juan Nino de Tabora. +1632-1633 Royal Audiencia. +1633-1635 Don Juan Zerezo de Salamanca. +1635-1644 Don Sebastian Hurtado de Corcuera. +1644-1653 Don Diego Faxardo y Chacon. +1653-1663 Sabiano Manrique de Lara. +1663-1668 Don Diego Salcedo. +1668-1669 Senor Pena Bonifaz. +1669-1677 Don Manuel de Leon. +1677-1678 Royal Audiencia. +1678-1684 Don Juan de Vargas. +1684-1689 Don Gabriel de Curuzalequi. +1689-1690 Don Alonso de Avila Fuertes. +1690-1701 Don Fausto Cruzat y Gongora. +1701-1709 Don Domingo Zabalburu. +1709-1715 Conde de Lizarraga. +1715-1717 Royal Audiencia. +1717-1719 Don Fernando Manuel de Bustamante. +1719-1721 Archbishop Cuesta. +1721-1729 Don Toribio Jose de Cosio y Campo (Marques de Torre Campo). +1729-1739 Don Fernando Valdes y Tamon. +1739-1745 Don Gaspar de la Torre. +1745-1750 Bishop Father Juan de Arrechedra. +1750-1754 Don Francisco Jose de Obando y Solis. +1754-1759 Don Pedro Manuel de Arandia y Santisteban. +1759-1761 Don Miguel Lino de Ezpeleta (Bishop of Zebu). +1761-1764 Archbishop Don Manuel Antonio Rojo del Rio y Vieyra. +1764-1764 Dr. Don Simon de Anda y Salazar. +1764-1765 Don Francisco de la Torre. +1765-1770 Don Jose Raon. +1770-1778 Dr. Don Simon de Anda y Salazar. +1778-1787 Don Jose Basco y Vargas. +1787-1788 Don Pedro Sarrio. +1788-1793 Don Felix Berenguer de Marquina. +1793-1806 Don Rafael Maria de Aguilar y Ponce de Leon. +1806-1810 Don Mariano Fernandez de Folgueras. +1810-1813 Don Manuel Gonzalez Aguilar. +1813-1816 Don Jose de Gardoqui Jaraveitia. +1816-1822 Don Mariano Fernandez de Folgueras. +1822-1825 Don Juan Antonio Martinez. +1825-1830 Don Mariano Ricafort Palacio y Abarca. +1830-1835 Don Pascual Enrile y Alcedo. +1835-1836 Don Gabriel de Torres. +1836-1838 Don Andres Garcia Camba. +1838-1841 Don Luis Lardizabal y Montojo. +1841-1843 Don Marcelino de Oraa Lecumberri. +1843-1844 Don Francisco de Paula Alcala de la Torre. +1844-1850 Don Narciso Claveria y Zaldua. +1850-1850 Don Antonio Maria Blanco. +1850-1853 D. Antonio de Urbistondo, Marques de la Solana y Teniente + General. +1853-1854 El Mariscal de Campo de Ramon Montero, General Segundo Cabo + (acting). +1854-1854 El Teniente General Marques de Novaliches. +1854-1854 El Mariscal de Campo de Ramon Montero (acting). +1854-1856 El Teniente General de Manuel Crespo. +1856-1857 El Mariscal de Campo de Ramon Montero (acting). +1857-1860 El Teniente General de Fernando de Norzagaray. +1860-1860 El Mariscal de Campo de Ramon Solano y Llanderal (acting). +1860-1861 El Brigadier de Artilleria de Juan Herrera Davila (acting). +1861-1862 El Teniente General de Jose Lemery. +1862-1865 El Teniente General de Rafael Echaguee. +1865-1865 El Mariscal de Campo de Joaquin Solano (acting). +1865-1866 El Teniente General de Juan de Lara e Irigoyen. +1866-1866 El Mariscal de Campo de Juan Laureano Sanz (acting). +1866-1866 El Comandante General de Marina de Antonio Ossorio (acting). +1866-1866 El Mariscal de Campo de Joaquin Solano (acting). +1866-1866 El Teniente General de Jose de la Gandara. +1866-1869 El Mariscal de Campo de Manuel Maldonado (acting). +1869-1871 El Teniente General de Carlos de la Torre. +1871-1873 El Teniente General de Rafael Izquierdo. +1873-1873 El Comandante General de Marina de Manuel MacCrohon (acting). +1873-1874 El Teniente General de Juan Alaminos y Vivar. +1874-1874 El Mariscal de Campo de Manuel Blanco Valderrama (acting). +1874-1877 El Contra Almirante de la Armada de Jose Malcampo y Monje. +1877-1880 El Teniente General de Domingo Moriones y Murillo. +1880-1880 El Comandante General de Marina de Rafael Rodriguez Arias + (acting). +1880-1883 El Teniente General de Fernando Primo de Rivera, Marques + de Estella. +1883-1883 El Mariscal de Campo de Emilio de Molins, General Segundo + Cabo (acting). +1883-1885 El Capitan General del Ejercito de Joaquin Jovellar y Soler. +1885-1885 El Mariscal de Campo de Emilio de Molins (acting). +1885-1888 El Teniente General de Emilio Terrero. +1888-1888 El Mariscal de Campo de Antonio Molto (acting). +1888-1888 El Cotra Almirante de la Armada de Federico Lobaton (acting). +1888-1891 El Teniente General de Valeriano Weyler. +1891-1893 El Teniente General de Eulogio Despojol, Conde de Caspe. +1893-1893 El General de Division de Federico Ochando, General Segundo + Cabo (acting). +1893-1896 El Teniente General de Ramon Blanco y Erenas, Marques + de Pena-Plata. +1896-1897 El Teniente General de Camilo G. de Polavieja, Marques + de Polavieja. +1897-1897 de Jose de Lacharmbre y Dominguez, Teniente General (acting). +1897-1898 de Fernando Primo de Rivera, Capitan General, Marques + de Estella. +1898-1898 de Basilio Augustin Teniente General del Ejercito. +1898-1898 El General Segundo Cabo de Fermin Jaudenes y Alvarez. + + + + + + + +NOTES + + +[1] Relacion de las Islas Filipinas, 2d ed., p. 38. + +[2] See Yule's Marco Polo for a discussion of this point and for the +entire history of this great explorer, as well as a translation of +his narrative. This book of Ser Marco Polo has been most critically +edited with introduction and voluminous notes by the English scholar, +Sir Henry Yule. In this edition the accounts of Marco Polo, covering +so many countries and peoples of the Far East, can be studied. + +[3] See the noted work The Life of Prince Henry of Portugal, surnamed +the Navigator, and its Results, by Richard Henry Major, London, +1868. Many of the views of Mr. Major upon the importance of Prince +Henry's work and especially its early aims, have been contradicted +in more recent writings. The importance of the Sagres Observatory +is belittled. Doubts are expressed as to the farsightedness of +Prince Henry's plans, and the best opinion of to-day holds that he +did not hope to discover a new route to India by way of Africa, but +sought simply the conquest of the "Guinea," which was known to the +Europeans through the Arab Geographers, who called it "Bilad Ghana" +or "Land of Wealth." The students, if possible, should read the essay +of Mr. E. J. Payne, The Age of Discovery, in the Cambridge Modern +History, Vol I. + +[4] The classical work on this famous ruler is Robertson's Life of +Charles the Fifth, but the student should consult if possible more +recent works. + +[5] Primer Viaje alrededor del Mundo, Spanish translation by Amoretti, +Madrid, 1899, page 27. + +[6] The discovery of this famous relationship is attributed to +the Spanish Jesuit Abbe, Lorenzo Hervas, whose notable Catalogo +de las Lenguas de las Naciones conocidas was published in 1800-05; +but the similarity of Malay and Polynesian had been earlier shown by +naturalists who accompanied the second voyage of the famous Englishman, +Captain Cook (1772-75). The full proof, and the relation also of +Malagasy, the language of Madagascar, was given in 1838 by the work +of the great German philologist, Baron William von Humboldt. + +[7] Relacion de las Islas Filipinas, 2d ed., p. 52. + +[8] Another possible explanation of the many Sanskrit terms which +are found in the Philippine languages, is that the period of contact +between Filipinos and Hindus occurred not in the Philippines but in +Java and Sumatra, whence the ancestors of the Filipinos came. + +[9] Relacion de las Islas Filipinas, 2d ed., pp. 58, 59, chap. XVII. + +[10] Arte de la Lengua Tagala. + +[11] This name is derived, in the opinion of Professor Blumentritt, +from Bayi, or Bay, meaning Laguna de Bay. Professor Meyer, in his +Distribution of the Negritos, suggests an identification from this +Chinese record, of the islands of Mindanao, Palawan (called Pa-lao-yu) +and Panay, Negros, Cebu, Leyte, Samar, Bohol, and Luzon. + +[12] Through the courtesy of Professor Zulueta, of the Manila Liceo, +permission was given to use from Chao Ju-kua's work these quotations, +translated from the Chinese manuscript by Professor Blumentritt. The +English translation is by Mr. P. L. Stangl. + +[13] "This would confirm," says Professor Blumentritt, "Dr. Pardo de +Tavera's view that in ancient times the Philippines were under the +influence of Buddhism from India." + +[14] Conquista de las Islas Filipinas, p. 95. + +[15] Relacion de la Conquista de la Isla de Luzon, 1572; in Retana, +Archivo del Bibliofilo Filipino, vol. I. + +[16] Sucesos de las Filipinas, p. 297. + +[17] These data are largely taken from the account of the customs +of the Tagalog prepared by Friar Juan de Plasencia, in 1589, at +the request of Dr. Santiago de Vera, the governor and president +of the Audiencia. Although there are references to it by the early +historians of the Philippines, this little code did not see the light +until a few years ago, when a manuscript copy was discovered in the +convent of the Franciscans at Manila, by Dr. Pardo de Tavera, and was +by him published. It treats of slave-holding, penalties for crime, +inheritances, adoption, dowry, and marriage. (Las Costumbres de los +Tagalog en Filipinas, segun el Padre Plasencia, by T. H. Pardo de +Tavera. Madrid, 1892.) + +[18] See on this matter Diccionario Mitologico de Filipinas, by +Blumentritt; Retana, Archivo del Bibliofilo Filipino, vol. II. + +[19] This word is of Sanskrit origin and is common throughout Malaysia. + +[20] Relacion de las Cosas de las Filipinas hecha por Sr. Domingo +de Salazar, Primer obispo de dichas islas, 1583; in Retana, Archivo, +vol. III. + +[21] The foundation and character of this great colonial administration +have been admirably described by the Honorable Bernard Moses, United +States Philippine Commissioner and the first Secretary of Public +Instruction, in his work, The Establishment of Spanish Rule in America. + +[22] Moses: Establishment of Spanish Rule in America, p. 12. + +[23] Demarcacion del Maluco, hecha por el maestro Medina, in Documentos +ineditos, vol. V., p. 552. + +[24] This and subsequent voyages are given in the Documentos ineditos, +vol. V., and a graphic account is in Argensola's Conquista de las +Islas Molucas. They are also well narrated in English by Burney, +Discoveries in the South Sea, vol. I., chapters V., XII., and XIV. + +[25] Fray Gaspar de San Agustin: Conquista de las Islas Filipinas, +lib. I., c. 13. + +[26] One of the best paintings of the Filipino artist Juan Luna, +which hangs in the Ayuntamiento in Manila, represents Legaspi in the +act of the "Pacto de Sangre" with this Filipino chieftain. + +[27] There is an old account of this interesting expedition by one +who participated. (Relacion de la Conquista de la Isla de Luzon, +Manila, 1572; Retana, Archivo del Bibliofilo Filipino, vol. IV.) + +[28] Morga: Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas, 2d ed., p. 10. + +[29] Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas. P. 316. + +[30] Conquista de la Isla de Luzon, p. 24. + +[31] See the letter of Bishop Salazar to the king, explaining his +motives, in coming to the Philippines. Retana, Biblioteca Filipina, +vol, I.; Relacion, 1583, p. 4. + +[32] Zuniga: Historia de Filipinas, pp. 195, 196. + +[33] Both Van Noort and Morga have left us accounts of this sea-fight, +the former in his journal, Description of the Failsome Voyage Made +Round the World, and the latter in his famous, Sucesos de las Islas +Filipinas. + +[34] Montero y Vidal: Historia de Filipinas, vol. I., p. 199. + +[35] Relacion de la Conquista de Luzon, 1572, p. 15. + +[36] Relacion de las Encomiendas, existentes en Filipinas, Retana, +Archivo del Bibliofilo Filipino, vol. IV. + +[37] Ordenanzas ... para la Reparticion de los Indios de la Isla +Espanola, in Documentos Ineditas, vol. I., p. 236. + +[38] Historia de Filipinos, p. 157, et sq. + +[39] Among other documents, which throw a most unfavorable light upon +the condition of the Filipinos under the encomiendas, is the letter to +the king from Domingo de Salazar, the first bishop of the Philippines, +which describes the conditions about 1583. + +[40] Domingo de Salazar, Relacion de las Cosas de las Filipinas, +1583, p. 5, in Retana Archives, vol. 3. + +[41] Relacion, pp. 13, 14. + +[42] Sucesos de las Filipinas, p. 334. + +[43] Las Costumbres de los Tagalos en Filipinas segun el Padre +Plasencia. Madrid, 1892. + +[44] Blumentritt: Organization Communale des Indigines des Philippines, +traduis de l'Allemand, par A. Hugot. 1881. + +[45] Sucesos de las Filipinas, p. 332. + +[46] See Salazar's relation on this point. + +[47] Chirino: Relacion, pp. 19, 20. + +[48] Morga, p. 329. + +[49] Sucesos de las Filipinas, p. 323. + +[50] The Principal Navigations, Voiages, Traffiques and Discoveries +of the English Nation, ... by Richard Hakluyt, Master of Artes and +sometime Student of Christ Church in Oxford. Imprinted at London, +1598. Vol. I., p. 560. + +[51] Sucesos de las Filipinas, p. 347. + +[52] Sucesos de las Filipinas, p. 352.] + +[53] Laws of the Indies, VIII., 45, 46. + +[54] Relacion de las Islas Filipinas, chap. V., p. 23, and +chap. XIII. p. 47. + +[55] Ibid., p. 323. + +[56] Ibid., p. 321. + +[57] Morga: Sucesos, p. 324. + +[58] Carta Relacion de las Cosas de la China y de los Chinos del +Parian de Manila, 1590; in Retana, Archivo, vol. III. + +[59] Relacion de las Islas Filipinas, p. 18. See also Salazar, +Carta Relacion. + +[60] Sucesos de las Islas Filipinas, p. 364. + +[61] Zuniga: Historia de las Filipinas, p. 252. + +[62] Historia General de Filipinas, vol. I., p. 187. + +[63] Morris: The History of Colonization, vol. I., p. 215 sq. + +[64] Raffles: History of Java, vol. II., p. 116. + +[65] On the history of this notable expedition see Argensola, Conquista +de las Islas Molucas. Madrid, 1609. + +[66] An account of this victory, written the following year, Relacion +Verdadera de la gran vitoria, que el Armada Espanola de la China +tuuo contra los Olandeses Pirates, has been reprinted by Retana, +Archivo Bibliofilo Filipino, vol. II. + +[67] "Just before the naval engagement of Playa Honda, the Dutch +intercepted junks on the way to Manila, bringing, amongst their +cargoes of food, as many as twelve thousand capons."--Foreman: The +Philippine Islands, p. 104. + +[68] Historia de Filipinas, p. 282. + +[69] How attractive the island appeared and how well they knew its +peoples is revealed by the accurate descriptions in the first book +of Combes' Historia de Mindanao y Jolo. + +[70] Historia de Mindanao y Jolo, lib. IV., chap. 7. + +[71] This important victory was commemorated in a number of writings, +some of which have been reprinted by Retana. See Sucesos Felices, que +por Mar y Tierra ha dado N. S. a las armas Espanolas, 1637. Another +is published in the Appendix to Barrantes', Historia de Guerras +Piraticas. The subject is also fully treated by Combes. + +[72] The king did not confer the title of "Royal" until 1735, although +the University was taken under his protection in 1680. + +[73] Entrada de la Seraphica Religion, de Nuestro P. S. Francisco en +las Islas Filipinas. Retana, vol, I. + +[74] The Jesuits, on retiring with the Spanish forces from the +Moluccas, brought from Ternate a colony of their converts. These +people were settled at Marigondon, on the south shore of Manila Bay, +where their descendants can still be distinguished from the surrounding +Tagalog population. + +[75] See the account of the "Settlement of the Ladrones by the +Spaniards," in Burney's Voyages in the Pacific, vol. III. + +[76] Some of the benefits of such a trade are set forth by the Jesuit, +Alonzo de Ovalle, in his Historical Relation of the Kingdom of Chili, +printed in Rome, 1649. In Churchill's Collection of Voyages and +Travels, vol. III. + +[77] Recopilacion de Leyes de las Indias, lib. VIII., titulo 45, +ley 78. + +[78] Montero y Vidal: Historia de Filipinas, vol. I., p. 460. + +[79] Relacion de la Entrada del Sultan Rey de Jolo, in Archivo del +Bibliofilo Filipino, vol. I. + +[80] Historia de Filipinas, p. 682. + +[81] These orders and other documents dealing with the Jesuit +expulsion are printed in Montero y Vidal, Historia de Filipinas, +vol. II. p. 180 sq. + +[82] But the conquest was almost valueless, and a few years later the +inhabitants had to be transported to Cagayan because of the scarcity +of food. + +[83] Alava made a series of journeys through the different provinces +of the Philippines, and on these trips he was accompanied by Friar +Martinez de Zuniga, whose narrative of these expeditions forms a most +interesting and valuable survey of the conditions of the Islands and +the people at the beginning of the nineteenth century. "Estadismo +de las Islas Filipinas, 6 mis viajes por este pais, por el Padre +Fr. Joaquin Martinez de Zuniga. Publica esta obra por primera vez +extensamente anotada W. E. Retana." 2 vols. Madrid, 1893. + +[84] Jagor: Viajes por Filipinas, p. 81. Translated from the +German. Madrid, 1895. + +[85] See Estado de las Islas Filipinas en 1847, by D. Sinibaldo de Mas. + +[86] Bowring: A Visit to the Philippine Islands, p. 387. + +[87] The reports of the Dominican missionaries of Nueva Vizcaya +and Isabela show the extent and persistence of these raids. (See the +files of the missionary publication, El Correo Sino-Annamita, and also +the work by Padre Buenaventura Campa, Los Maybyaos y la Raza Ifugao, +Madrid, 1895. + +[88] Montero y Vidal: Historia de Filipinas, vol. III, p. 99. + +[89] Montero y Vidal: Historia de Filipinas, vol. III., p. 209. The +document is given in Appendix 4 of the same volume. + +[90] See Rajah Brooke, by Sir Spencer St. John, London, 1899. + +[91] Keppel: Expedition to Borneo of H. M. S. Dido for the Suppression +of Piracy, with extracts from the Journal of James Brooke, Esq. 2 +vols. London, 1846. Keppel: A Visit to the Indian Archipelago in +H. M. S. Moeandar. 2 vols. London, 1853. + +[92] Spain established a permanent commission of censorship in +1856. It was composed of eight persons, one half nominated by the +governor and one half by the archbishop. + +[93] El Periodismo Filipino, por W. E. Retana. Madrid, 1895. + +[94] An account of Rizal's trial and execution, together with many +papers on the revolution, is printed by Retana. See Archivo, Tomo +IV. Documentos politicos de Actualidad. + +[95] See the decisions of the Supreme Court in the cases of American +Insurance Co. v. Canter (1 Peters, 511), decided in 1828; National +Bank v. County of Yankton (101 U. S. Reports, 129), decided in 1879; +The Mormon Church v. United States (136 U. S. Reports, 1), decided May, +1890. On the domain of personal liberty possessed by the inhabitants +of a territory, in addition to above cases, see also the cases of +Reynolds v. United States (98 U. S. Reports, 154), 1878; and Murphy +v. Ramsey (114 U. S. Reports, 15), 1884. + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's A History of the Philippines, by David P. 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